"It is the dull man who is always sure, and the sure man who is always
dull." - H. L. Mencken 1880-1956, American Editor, Author, Critic,
Humorist

The chart above quite clearly illustrates how household debt has soared to
a point where it accounts for huge portion of the GDP; this monstrous debt
is now equivalent to 90% of the United States GDP. This also clearly illustrates
how this economy has been financed by a mountain of debt; at the end of the
day nothing new has been created other then a huge pile of debt. This sort
of scenario cannot last indefinitely, eventually the assets that were over
inflated must deflate and this is currently what's happening in the housing
sector.

This is a rather extremely important eye opening chart; for once we can truly
see how monstrous this real estate bubble is. This chart represents prices
of homes in the United States going back to the 1880's. When one takes a look
at the big picture one can quite clearly see that the current trend is simply
unsustainable. Another important fact is that we have over 3 trend lines on
this very long term chart (only 3 have been drawn in) and thus a correction
is imminent and in this case it has already begun but one must remember it
has only just begun.

This chart provides a closer look at the housing market for the last 21 years
and even when prices are adjusted for inflation the price move has been rather
huge in the last 4 years. Note to that in this case we have over 5 up trend
lines in place; the trend line rule dictates that the more trend lines you
have in place the more violent the eventual correction is going to be.
Conclusion
The housing correction/bust has only just begun; there are a still a huge
number of mortgages that are going to be reset in the upcoming months. Right
now only the sub prime sector has been affected but in the months to come individuals
with very good credit scores are going to take the beating of their lives;
they let stupidity and greed dictate their actions. These individuals made
the fatal mistake of taking on debt that they cannot service with their present
income. They are only surviving now because their mortgages have not reset,
once these mortgages reset watch the next phase of the blood letting process
begin.
When the real blood letting process begins fear will be rampant as the market
will most likely start to pull back/crash in conjunction with the housing sector.
Investors will start looking for a safe haven and precious metals and energy
sector will provide this.
Bottom line stays far far away from the real estate market.
Random Musings
To date over 36 Mortgage lenders have gone out of business and today it looks
like its lights out or close to lights out for New Century the countries second
largest sub prime mortgage lender. For the past two years we have been warning
that certain individuals who simply did not have the money to put down for
a house should not have been in this market. We also warned that these creative
devilish new mortgages that were being invented with 0% to 2% teaser interest
rates, interest only and so on were dangerous instruments as it was the equivalent
of telling a child to put out a fire with a can of gasoline. At that time we
stated that the day of reckoning was 12-24 months away well that day is here
today and its only going to get worse.
Over 50% of the current foreclosures are coming from the sub prime market.
These individuals bought these houses for little to no money down in the hopes
of jumping on the get rich real estate gravy train. They were dreaming about
locking in gains of 20% plus a year; fast forward many of these house have
lost anywhere from 10-25% of their values and as envisioned the mortgages have
reset. In some cases payments have jumped as much as 100% and faced with lower
prices and mounting new monthly payment these home owners are simply walking
away from their mortgages.
This problem is slowly going to trickle over to many of the larger banks;
a clear cut recent example is HSBC. Once again we advise all our subscribers
as we have been faithfully doing now for over 2 years to stay far away from
the housing sector. The blood letting has only just begun.
The stories below quite clearly illustrate that the worst is yet to come and
had only just barely begun.
New Century on bankruptcy's doorstep
NEW YORK (Reuters) - New Century Financial Corp. (NYSE:NEW - news), the largest
independent U.S. subprime mortgage lender, said on Monday its lenders plan
to halt financing, pushing the company closer to bankruptcy amid dwindling
cash and $8.4 billion in obligations that could come due immediately. New Century's
struggles are part of a wider meltdown among lenders to less-creditworthy home
buyers who are defaulting on mortgages in increasingly large numbers. The contagion
could spread, roiling a larger section of the U.S. economy while hitting investors,
such as pension funds, which bought securities backed by suspect home loans,
analysts say.
If home prices remain flat this year and next, mortgage defaults could total
$225 billion, creating a real risk of pulling down the broader housing market
and weighing on borrowers with good credit, Lehman Brothers analysts said in
a research note. "Our expectations of defaults at about 1.5 million to 2 million
units are fairly significant in a soft housing market," the analysts said recently.
The largest U.S. mortgage lender, Countrywide Financial Corp. (NYSE:CFC -
news), warned that sub prime turmoil may hurt near-term profit, sending its
stock down 2.7 percent. Full
Story
While all the experts were busy ranting and raving that the worst was over
(liars as they lost the ability to tell the truth) we calmly stated that the
worst was yet to come. Believe it or not we are still not even half way through
the cleansing process; there is a lot more carnage in the works. Now individuals
that should have never even considered buying a house are plagued with the
thought of how are we going to come up with our monthly payments? The next
stage will be when they start asking the question where are going to live?
As far as the lending institutions go we expect several more of them to fold
and at least 1-3 banks are going to take a massive beating; one that comes
readily to mind is HSBC. The story below further highlights how the sub prime
was nothing but very stupid investment to get involved in. The punishment for
stupid investments is extreme pain and from a pain perspective we are just
on the paper cut stage and we need to all the way to the lost a limb or being
severely wounded stage; its safe to say that we still have a long way to go
before things calm down. The story below further illustrates how rapidly the
situation is deteriorating.
Sub Prime Mortgages
The sub prime mortgage business took another hit as Accredited Home Lenders
said it would have to find new financing after its creditors demanded more
money to cover rising loan defaults. (Bloomberg) The nation's second largest
lender to people with poor credit -- New Century Financial -- is scrambling
to stay afloat after its banks cut off its financing. "Connect the dots and
it looks like it's a bankruptcy filing," said analyst Chris Brendler of Stifel
Nicolaus. (AP in Yahoo! Finance) The meltdown could deepen the housing slump
by flooding the market with foreclosed homes and removing risky borrowers from
the pool of buyers. "Every party has its hangover," said appraiser George Hatch. Full
Story
Mortgage problems
Distress continued to make headlines, putting a personal face on the story.
One tale from a community worker in San Diego suggests the hardships of variable
rate home loans are affecting more than just those who have spotty borrowing
records.
Andy Sobel had good credit, a decent job and modest savings, but he needed
to stretch to buy a home in the white-hot San Diego housing market in 2004.
Three years later, Sobel has lost his home and his savings, and he faces a
big tax bill as a consequence of a failed subprime mortgage held by Countrywide
Financial Corp. (NYSE:CFC - news), which he said he should never have been
made.
"You never think that this could happen to you. You feel like an idiot," said
Sobel, 48, who has a doctorate in education. "You fall down and they stab you." A
couple in Massachusetts, Thomas Hilchey and Robin Crevier, are taking legal
action against their lender, Ameriquest Mortgage Co., accusing it of deceit
and saying its salesman failed to provide documents and disclosures on the
loan required by state and federal law. Such stories are likely to remain commonplace
for some time to come, say analysts. Still, there is disagreement as to just
how widely beyond the sub prime sector these problems will extend. Economists
see eye to eye on one thing though: the health of the U.S. economy hinges on
an orderly resolution of the housing debacle. Full
Story
Ignorance is no excuse one should always educate oneself when one is about
to make the second most important decision in their lives. We will talk about
the first one sometime next week and we are pretty sure that most of you will
be drawing the wrong conclusion till then.
It seems that everyone is getting hit now as greed knows no limits. The masses
never learn from history regardless of whether they have a high IQ or one that
is almost non existent. The key point here is that the mass mindset refuses
to study history and learn from it. Remember this and drill it into your head
and the heads of your loved ones; never ever buy into something when everyone
thinks its going to go up.
"Men hate the individual whom they call avaricious only because nothing
can be gained from him." - Voltaire 1694-1778, French Historian,
Writer