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.

After speaking with quite a few public sector employees and retirees over the years, one thing has always struck me about those who spend most or all of their careers never having worked in private industry – by and large, there is little understanding (or, for that matter, even interest) in where the money comes from to pay for their salaries and benefits. You get that same feeling from listening to most of the interview subjects that were part of this Washington Post story about the Federal government’s two-year pay freeze.

As a point of reference, while the entire U.S. economy has lost a total of about 8 million jobs since the start of the recession back in late-2007, state and local governments have shed about a half million jobs while the Federal government continues to hire, its payrolls increasing by about 200,000 during that same period.

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HAFA Likely to be Worse than HAMP

The WSJ Real Estate blog reports that the government’s HAFA (Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives) program could be even less successful than HAMP (Home Affordable Modification Program) as less than 350 deals have gone through in about five months.

It may be too early to pass judgment on this effort to avoid foreclosures by providing incentives to the involved parties to do a short sale instead but, given the government’s track record in providing assistance to a very troubled housing market, probably not.

Many real-estate agents say banks have largely ignored the program and that they are applying it unevenly. “Banks are initiating the HAFA transaction and then after three weeks they say, ‘Naw, sorry, you didn’t qualify,’” says Greg Markov, a Phoenix real-estate agent. “That three weeks is a huge pain. You wasted all this time.

Industry officials, meanwhile, say that HAFA has been hindered by extensive documentation requirements and restrictive qualification guidelines. A homeowner that’s already relocated isn’t HAFA eligible, for example, and neither are borrowers that apply within 60 days of a foreclosure date.

The program is also voluntary, which may limit participation from second-lien holders and mortgage insurance companies that see a financial reason to avoid a short sale that requires them to forgo the opportunity to seek deficiencies against borrowers.

During our six month long short sale ordeal (see here for full details), HAFA cost us at least a month of that time as the bank put our “file” into the HAFA process when the listing agent knew from the very beginning that the second lien holder was not going to participate in that kind of a deal. Anyone trying to buy a short sale property (particularly with a listing agent who is new to this sort of thing) is advised to ask HAFA questions up front.

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Washington D.C. Housing Market Thrives

Probably the most grating aspect of the recent history of home prices around the country (at least, to me) is that, due in large part to the rise in government bailouts and federal deficit spending, the greater Washington D.C. area has been the best housing market for some time now, holding on to its housing bubble gains better than any other region as shown below in the latest data for the S&P Case-Shiller Home Price Indexes.

And the home price gains near the nation’s capital just keep on coming, the September data showing an increase of 0.2 percent while every other region (except basket case Las Vegas) showed price declines. As is clear to see above, the change in fortune for Washington area home prices began when the bailouts/stimulus began in earnest (i.e., late-2008/early-2009) and, in recent months, the home price index is further separating itself from all others.

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If you want to get a little better understanding of how economists could have failed the world so miserably in recent years, missing what was the largest financial bubble in history as it inflated under their noses, have a look at this Wall Street Journal story about their latest efforts at introspection and how new and revised “models” of the economy and its actors might prevent the next catastrophe. Yeah, right.

Economists’ Grail: A Post-Crash Model

How can we understand a world that has proven far more complex than the most advanced economic models assumed?

The question is far from academic. For decades, most economists, including the world’s most powerful central bankers, have supposed that people are rational enough, and the working of markets smooth enough, that the whole economy can be reduced to a handful of equations. They assemble the equations into mathematical models that attempt to mimic the behavior of the economy. From Washington to Frankfurt to Tokyo, the models inform crucial decisions about everything from the right level of interest rates to how to regulate banks.

In the wake of a financial crisis and punishing recession that the models failed to capture, a growing number of economists are beginning to question the intellectual foundations on which the models are built. Researchers, some of whom spent years on the academic margins, are offering up a barrage of ideas that they hope could form the building blocks of a new paradigm.

“We’re in the ‘let a thousand flowers bloom’ stage,” says Robert Johnson, president of the Institute for New Economic Thinking, launched last year with $50 million from financier George Soros, a big donor to liberal causes who has long been a vocal critic of mainstream economics. The institute so far has approved funding for more than 27 projects, including efforts by Messrs. Farmer and Tuckett aimed at developing new ways to model the economy.

Well, maybe, “let a thousand economists flounder” might be a better characterization…

(more…)

Housing Double-Dip Confirmed

As if anyone (aside from housing perma-bulls) really needed confirmation that the housing double-dip is now underway, that is, after the government stopped paying people to buy houses earlier in the year, the Case-Shiller Home Price Indexes now show a clear downward trend in home prices, the third straight month of declines for the 20-city seasonally adjusted data series as reported(.pdf) by Standard & Poor’s a few minutes ago.

There will be more on this report in just a little bit as it is one of the more important housing data releases in some time, of particular interest (to me at least) being how well the local housing market is holding up around the nation’s capital.

David Blitzer, Chairman of the Index Committee at Standard & Poor’s, stated the obvious when he said this is “another weak report; weaker than last month … there is a large supply of houses on the market and further, hidden, supply due to delinquent mortgages, pending foreclosures or vacant homes. New construction is running at less than half the pace needed to meet normal demand, so a sustained recovery could be a ways off.

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Tuesday Morning Links

MUST READS
WikiLeaks to release a U.S. bank’s documents – Reuters
Buiter: ‘Insolvent’ Portugal Needs Loans Soon – BusinessWeek
Spanish Banks Face Funding Hurdle Amid Bailout Threat – Bloomberg
Contagion strikes Italy as Ireland bail-out fails to calm markets – Telegraph
China taking aim at speculators for rising prices – ChannelNews Asia
European interest rates soar; could it happen to us one day? – McClatchy
Obama proposes two-year pay freeze for federal workers – Washington Post
Bankers Gone Wild in Ireland AND Germany – New Deal 2.0
The Return of Stagflation – Independent Institute
The Gold Standard Never Dies – Mises
Lies Across America – The Burning Platform

MARKETS/INVESTING
Oil Hovers Below $86 Ahead of US Supply Reports – AP
Gold steady; Europe, Koreas cloud market outlook – Reuters
99-week streak of bond fund inflows has come to end – MarketWatch
CFTC to unveil position limit plan Dec 16: source – Reuters
China to beat India in gold consumption – Commodity Online
Dennis Gartman: ‘Eventually, the Euro Breaks Apart’ – CNBC
Analysts Step in Front of Gold Train: ‘Rally is Overextended’ – WSJ
Why I Sold My Gold – Wall St. Cheat Sheet

ECONOMY/WORLD/HOUSING/BANKING
Defining Structural Unemployment – Krugman, NY Times
Senator introduces bill to extend jobless benefits – CNN/Money
Online and Thanksgiving Day sales provide ray of hope – USA Today
Putin: Russia will join the euro one day – Telegraph
China’s Growth Is Poised to Decelerate – China Stakes
India Economy Grows More Than 8%, Stoking Inflation Risk – Bloomberg
Phoenix-area housing double dip looms – Arizona Republic
How the Government Is Creating Another Housing Bubble – The American
Need for QE2 Seen in Pausing Electronics Manufacturing Services – Bloomberg
Anaylysts: Glory days are over for banks – Washington Post
Can the Fed Become Insolvent? – Mises

 
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