A few months ago, the sub-prime problem seemed to be a mammoth problem
to many investors.
But ... nothing bad happened, so investors thought that this was another
over-hyped problem that really amounted to nothing. Besides, the Fed
was being proactive as our big market-protectors, so there was nothing to
worry about ... Mighty Mouse was here to save the day.
A week ago, Bloomberg had a little news items that was hardly noticed. In
the article, they described how our US Dept. of Housing and Urban Development
Secretary (Alphonso Jackson) was in Beijing.
His US Government mission was to meet with Chinese banking authorities and
ask them to BUY U.S. Mortgage backed securities.
That should have been a "red flag" to
American investors. For our government to try and sell our sub-prime
mortgages to China suggested that "they are scared as hell" and that they
know the sub-prime problems are finally starting to filter down at a visible
level.
The first sub-prime bomb went off last night. Bear Sterns announced
that their was "little value left in its two failed hedge funds" ... zero
value in one, and about 9% left in the other.
Think about it ... Bear Sterns is the second largest underwriter of mortgage
backed securities and a very sharp investment house, and they still couldn't
control the risk or unwinding of these assets until they went to zero?
Like it or not, Bear Sterns is the tip of the iceberg. Secretary
Jackson didn't go to China and beg them to buy our sub-prime problems because
he thought it was a good deal for them. He did it because our government
knows that we are sitting on a mountain of trouble related to mortgage problems.
It bugs me, that I had to go to the India Daily this morning to find out
how much was lost. They reported that 20 billion dollars went to almost zero
in value. You would have expected that our media would be screaming
about the amount and we should be asking why it wasn't headline news when
the two hedge funds had dropped 50% and lost 10 billion.
The incubation time is about done on the sub-primes, and in the next 30,
60, to 90 days ... these problems will begin to unfold and become visible
to the public.
For a couple of weeks, I have been mentioning that the Financial sector
is in trouble and that this was a problem because the Financial sector represents
20.77% of the S&P 500.
If you recall, last Wednesday we said, "One of the things worrying large
investors is fallout from sub-prime loan problems. This
concern is reducing investor interest in banking stocks."
Obviously, our stock market won't be happy about it today. As I have
mentioned before, the thing to keep an eye on is the Banking Index. Its
chart is below ...
Note that the Banking Index is coming to the end of a triangular pattern. If
it loses support on the triangle's bottom line, then there is another 4 1/2
year support line just below it.
If that support is broken, then the Banking Index will see a nasty correction,
and that will spill over to the S&P 500 and other indexes. Take
the time to keep an eye on this index ... its symbol is BKX.

Repeated from last week's posting for your reference:
This chart shows the makeup of the S&P 500 Index by sector. Note
that the Financials Sector makes up 20.77% of the S&P 500.
If the Banking index loses support, the heavy weighting it has in the S&P
will have a very negative affect on the markets.
Thinking about becoming a paid subscriber? Just go to this link for
details on subscription options: Memberships
