REMINDER: All investment, economics, and finance related material now appears at the new IaconoResearch.com. For the time being at least, this has become a personal blog covering a variety of mostly unrelated topics.

Feder: “We May See the Bottom Fall Out”

Radar Logic CEO Michael Feder talks to Matt Miller and Carol Massar of Bloomberg about the housing market, saying home sales this summer are likely to be the “lowest activity in years” as a result of the homebuyer tax credit pulling so much demand forward in the spring.

The headline this interview generated at Bloomberg appears in the title of this post above. Feder notes that home sales could decline anywhere between 10 percent and 40 percent now that homebuyers are no longer being paid to buy houses.

Tagged with:  






Reverse Mortgages to Self Regulate Too

While not knowing many of the details behind the recent surge in reverse mortgages (I recall a year or two ago it was looked upon as about the only bright spot in consumer lending for the big banks) you’d have to think that with rising health care costs, the lack of savings, and poor investment returns on what savings they might have, seniors are helping to boost banks’ bottom lines by taking out more and more of these loans and paying more and more fees. Reuters reports on guidance that was offered yesterday on these products.

The Federal Reserve and other top regulators said on Monday reverse mortgages pose “compliance and reputation risks” for lenders, and offered guidance to financial firms on how to avoid such pitfalls.

The Fed said reverse mortgages, which enable borrowers to get a monthly income stream by surrendering a portion of the equity in their homes, are likely to become increasingly popular given an expected rise in the elderly population.

The guidance puts no limits on fees that can be charged for reverse mortgages.

“Reverse mortgages present substantial risks both to institutions and to consumers, and, as with any type of loan that is secured by a consumer’s home, it is crucial that consumers understand the terms of the product and the nature of their obligations,” the regulators said in a statement.

“Lenders must institute controls to protect consumers and to minimize the compliance and reputation risks for the institutions themselves,” they said.

Oh Geez. That sounds a lot like the “guidance” they were dispensing for home equity loans back around 2005. Seniors would be well advised to read the fine print closely before grabbing that money because it sounds like the banks will get at least their fair share.

Tagged with:  

No Boom, Just Gloom and Doom for Bonds

Marc Faber, purveyor of the Gloom, Boom, and Doom Report, thinks that just two of those three characteristics will apply to long-dated U.S. government debt in the period ahead.

Not surprisingly, Faber thinks precious metals are a good place to put your money and he’s bullish on India stocks but not for Chinese shares. On China’s gold problem (i.e., wanting to buy more without driving the price substantially higher), Faber notes the following:

They have the intention to accumulate gold and silver, but, because the Reserve Bank of India bought gold at $1,050, it would be a loss of face to pay more for gold than the Indians paid. So, I think they kind of missed the bull market because they want to increase their gold holdings, but they just don’t know about or aren’t sure about the timing.

Tagged with:  

Economists Incapable of Spotting Bubbles

Fortunately, today’s Future of Housing Finance conference has only one economist on the panel, Moody’s Mark Zandi, so, while slim to begin with, their chances of doing something productive are better than they might otherwise be given that economists continues to shirk any responsibility for the housing bubble, the latest evidence coming in this paper from the Boston Fed in which they claim they don’t have the tools to spot asset bubbles.

Understanding the evolution of real-time beliefs about house price appreciation is central to understanding the U.S. housing crisis. At the peak of the recent housing cycle, both borrowers and lenders appealed to optimistic house price forecasts to justify undertaking increasingly risky loans. Many observers have argued that these rosy forecasts ignored basic theoretical and empirical evidence that pointed to a massive overvaluation of housing and thus to an inevitable and severe price decline. We revisit the boom years and show that the economics profession provided little such countervailing evidence at the time. Many economists, skeptical that a bubble existed, attempted to justify the historic run-up in housing prices based on housing fundamentals. Other economists were more uncertain, pointing to some evidence of bubble-like behavior in certain regional housing markets. Even these more skeptical economists, however, refused to take a conclusive position on whether a bubble existed. The small number of economists who argued forcefully for a bubble often did so years before the housing market peak, and thus lost a fair amount of credibility

Apparently, common sense isn’t part of most economists’ toolkit because, that’s all it took back in 2005 to understand that the only way borrowers were going to be able to service their monstrous new mortgage debt was if home prices continued to rise. The paper argues that,  from an economic theory standpoint, the correct levels for asset prices are, basically, unknowable and that, while their generally rosy view of the world back then turned out to be wrong, it wasn’t unreasonable. Pretty pathetic if you ask me…

Housing Starts Rise, Permits Fall

The Census Bureau reported(.pdf) that housing starts rose 1.7 percent in July, but permits for new construction fell 3.1 percent as residential construction remains in the doldrums, only a small and very short-lived boost coming from the recently expired homebuyer tax credit.

Both measures of new home construction fell short of expectations. Housing starts rose from a downwardly revised annual rate of 537,000 units in June to 546,000 in July, about 20,000 short of consensus estimates, while permits for new construction fell from a downwardly revised rate of 583,000 to just 565,000, the lowest level in 14 months.

Multi-family home construction drove the overall gain for housing starts, up 33 percent in July after a similar sized drop in June. Single-family home starts fell 4.2 percent last month following a 1.7 percent decline the month before and the outlook remains bleak for the homebuilders, as confirmed by the 17-month low in the housing market index yesterday.

Tagged with:  

Tuesday Morning Links

MUST READS
A $148 Billion Sinkhole – HuffPost
2 Zombies to Tolerate for a While – NY Times
Homebuyer Demand All But a ‘Standstill’: Altos Research – Housing Wire
China Cuts Long-Term Treasuries By Most Ever as Yields Drop – Bloomberg
Greenspan And His Disciples Are Intrinsically Terrible Regulators – Business Insider
Hello America: China’s economy overtakes Japan’s in real terms – Economist
Feder Says U.S. Housing Market May Have Bottom Fall Out: Video – Bloomberg
Interest Rates and House Prices: A Murky World – NY Times
The Ecstasy of Empire – InfoWars

MARKETS/INVESTING
Oil snaps 5-day losing streak – Reuters
Gold Edges Up Near $1,230 Amid A Mixed Dollar – RTT News
It’s going to get worse — a whole lot worse – MarketWatch
Eton Park Joins Soros And Paulson in Making GLD Top Holding – Zero Hedge
Tons of gold imports turn to dust on arrival – Emirates 24/7
Don’t Touch 10, 30 Year US Bonds: Marc Faber – CNBC
The Corporate Profit Mirage – The Atlantic

ECONOMY/WORLD/HOUSING/BANKING
July housing starts rise less than forecast – MarketWatch
Economists See Increased Chance Of Double-Dip Recession – HuffPost
Home-builder sentiment slides to 17-month low in Aug – Reuters
BOJ, government officials reportedly plan to meet – MarketWatch
UK Inflation Lingers Above 3%, Forcing King To Explain – RTT News
CoreLogic: House Prices flat in June – Calculated Risk
Fannie, Freddie Summit Preview – Sense on Cents
The Fannie-Freddie turkey shoot – Fortune
Fed says reverse mortgage loans pose risks – Reuters
Ben Bernanke: Wall Street’s Servant – HuffPost

 
© 2010-2011 The Mess That Greenspan Made