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When those of us at www.PonderThis.net started
writing about "the coming asset deflation" in May of 2005, my, my, did our
mailboxes fill up with, "Boy, are you ever wrong. The Fed will make sure these
bubbles go on forever, stupid!" emails. Still, we had our small, rather quaint
following of "fans."
And a motley group we were indeed!
As we developed our argument and saw our stuff get increasingly picked up
by financial websites around the world, our "real estate deflation/credit contraction/liquidity
crunch will sink all boats" theme took hold and the overwhelming majority of
respondents began moving into our camp. Now we receive a stream of emails from
readers demanding an update, wanting to know where things will go from here,
and/or trumpeting their decisions to get out of (name almost any asset class)
while the gettin' was good. Most now think that asset deflation has taken hold.
In two years' time, the worm has certainly turned.
That's probably because, um, for the record -- we were right.
www.PonderThis.net, May, 2005: True,
deflation is not creating headlines right now but that monster is quietly
lurking in the background as existing pockets of inflation ironically add
fuel to the deflationary fire. There is really no way around it, money supply
pumping or no money supply pumping. Safehaven readers should take heed and,
in some cases, take action - the relentless drag of deflation is coming soon
to a theater near you. I hope you'll ready yourself for it…I am referring
to the coming Big Kahuna - a contraction in credit that, once its psychology
takes hold, will change the rules of the asset game for at least a decade.
Update: Indeed, I hope you heeded our advice to sell in May of 2005. That
happened to be the absolute peak of the real estate market, give or take
a 60 day escrow or so. And that Big Kahuna is now moving relentlessly
through American markets, one neighborhood at a time.
www.PonderThis.net, June, 2006: Frankly,
the 2003-2006 "recovery" was substantially a mirage -- built upon the ability
of individuals to borrow money against their homes in order to stimulate
the U.S. economy. U.S. central bankers did their best to give a Code Blue
post-bubble patient handfuls of amphetamines to keep it on its feet until
it had no choice but to collapse. (Now) asset deflation has begun to take
its inevitable post-bubble hold and the next several years will offer investors
a sobering view of what really happens when investment manias end (in this
case, I'm referring to the initial 80% crash of the NASDAQ, which took place
from 2000 to 2002).
Update: You do realize that there really was no "NASDAQ Crash" recovery
at all, right? If not for our idiot Fed's sponsored-borrowing/lending orgy
(1% discount rates do have a way of getting people to run around naked and
drunk), our post-bubble shakeout would have been painful, yes, but relatively
short-lived. Instead, by carelessly adding real estate and credit bubbles
to the mix, the Greenspan Outcome is going to be much more devastating and
possibly decades long. Meanwhile, despite the massive liquidity pumped into
the system by Alan Greenspan's Merry Men, the NASDAQ barely made it back
to 50% of peak 2000 value.
www.PonderThis.net, June, 2006: Using
history as our guide, our call is for a grinding asset deflation, a painful
credit contraction, a potentially severe liquidity crisis (exacerbated by
our country's currently negative savings rate) and an astonishing percentage
decline in real estate values over the next ten years.
Update: Now that the credit contraction/dislocation is making headlines,
hedge funds and mortgage-backed securities markets are getting caught with
their pants down, and the subprime meltdown is moving into Alt. A and even
prime mortgage markets, our call for a credit collapse and liquidity crunch
is right on schedule. It is no longer a question of "when." You're seeing
it take place now, right before your very eyes. Credit markets worldwide
are seizing up and major financial institutions around the world could soon
be going bankrupt.
www.PonderThis.net, June, 2006: If
you currently hold investment real estate, it will likely serve you well
to sell it immediately. Those who work to eliminate debt and maintain safe
cash positions in the coming environment will see the buying power of that
cash increase substantially relative to other asset classes, and those investors
will eventually position themselves to buy assets at substantial discounts.
Update: The credit market meltdown has already dampened buying psychology,
and remaining, unaware, knuckleheaded buyers are finding purchase loans ever-more-difficult
to come by as lenders clamp down. If you stayed in the investment real estate
game, you've already lost money from peak values and it's only going to get
worse. Properties placed on the market tomorrow will likely languish and
buyers will demand discounts of as much as 20% versus prices achievable just
a few short months ago.
www.PonderThis.net, August, 2006: Homebuilders
are catching on, offering free custom upgrades or extras or free swimming
pools, even showcasing "$50,000 discount days." Americans are backing out
of contracts. They're "waiting 'til the price comes down." They're demanding
lower prices and, by George, they're getting them. And it's only the beginning.
Wait until everyone catches on that if you wait six months or until next
year, the prices will be lower still. Wait until this deflationary psychology
takes hold completely.
Update: The Homebuilders Index began its retreat in July of 2005 and it
has essentially crashed at this point. Huge quarterly profits have turned
into massive quarterly losses in one year's time and companies like D.R.
Horton, Standard Homes, Lennar, Pulte, and Beazer Homes are refusing to offer
earnings guidance, walking away from huge deposits and swimming in red ink.
Incentives are everywhere, "25% off!" sales are the rage and some builders
are even trying to finance their sales with their own goof-ball mortgages
(and we're supposed to believe that median prices are down 0.6% year over
year!). As rampant foreclosures add to the mix of inventory, zero down home
loans disappear, lending standards tighten and buyers figure out that now
is certainly no time to buy, the Home Value Nuclear Fallout story edges closer
to reality. Look for a "real estate crash" -- a sudden 20-30% drop in home
values across-the-board by late 2008, and, unfortunately, that won't be the
end of the decline, either.
www.PonderThis.net, August, 2006: Of
course, we could wait until next year to write this. At that point we'll
likely be in agreement that real estate deflation is a fact of life. But
we'd rather put it on the table now and give you a chance to make important
financial decisions while you still have a chance.
Update: Our sell signal is still intact. Do not sit around waiting for
a miracle from the Fed or for asset values to bounce back. We have barely
begun the asset deflationary spiral led by real estate's pratfall, along
with the stock market and commodities, including the precious metals. You
will be able to buy these assets later on for less money if you safely set
aside as much cash as possible now.
www.PonderThis.net, September,
2006: You should probably get accustomed to the following, coming-soon-to-the-business-section-of-your-local-newspaper
phraseology: Oversupply, excess inventory, "hard landing," foreclosures, "upside-down" mortgages,
contract cancellations, "fire-sales," bankruptcies, foreclosures, bank failures,
credit crunch, credit contraction, bank crisis, Fannie Mae crisis, liquidity
crisis, real estate deflation, asset deflation, price deflation, foreclosures,
meltdown. Real estate values will fall from peak values somewhere in the
range of 50% to 90%, depending on area, location, property type, "intrinsic
value" and scarcity.
Update: These words ware starting to dominate the evening news, so while
we're at it, let's add a few more to the list: default, contagion, dislocation,
credit crisis, stock market crash, real estate "crash," derivatives, halted
withdrawals, bank runs, REO's, systemic risk. I could go on.
www.PonderThis.net, September, 2006: If
you have leveraged anything, it is time to de-leverage -- now!
Update: That is never more true than today. Don't wait a minute longer
to get yourself out of any and all leveraged positions.
www.PonderThis.net, April, 2007: Robert
Prechter, Jr.: "If people and corporations are unwilling to borrow
and unable to finance debt, and if banks and investors are disinclined to
lend, central banks cannot force them to do so. During deflation, they cannot
even induce them to do so with a zero interest rate. Thus, regardless
of assertions to the contrary, the Fed's purported "control" of borrowing,
lending and interest rates ultimately depends upon an accommodating market
psychology and cannot be set by decree. So ultimately, the Fed does not control
either interest rates or the total supply of credit; the market does."
Update: Unfortunately, the Fed is already powerless to do much of anything.
This is a multi-trillion dollar problem and market participants simply will
not have the appetite to borrow, buy or lend.
www.PonderThis.net, March, 2007: Ordinary
Americans -- statistically with zero savings and previously able (and optimistic
enough) to borrow whatever they needed not only to buy houses but goods and
services -- will be hard-pressed to borrow more and frankly, in a declining
market, not at all in the mood to do so. Lenders and mortgage securities
players will no longer be so absurd (or solvent enough) to take on increasingly
risky loans and the rules of the game will change very substantially. With
no savings to support the average American's rapidly-evaporating net worth,
people will stop spending, stop borrowing and stop hiring as they hunker
down for the coming deflationary depression.
Update: Market cheerleaders will tell you that "the economy is fine, employment
is high, interest rates and inflation are low, earnings are up, it's only
a correction" and so forth. But as real estate and asset deflation spreads
like a disease, all lagging economic positives will quickly turn negative.
Stop looking back; it is time to look forward and play some serious defense.
It's all about financial survival at this point.
www.PonderThis.net, March, 2007: Instead,
my friends, use your gut, your instincts, your sense that the economy is
slowing down in your own community and that people are pulling in their speculative
horns. Turn off the nightly Larry Kudlow sis-boom-bah routine and utilize
your own ability to see through the lunacy.
Update: Tune out the CNBC cheerleading or government statistics that attempt
to assuage your concerns. Trust your instincts. Bookmark our site and keep
an eye out for our weekly market updates. Post comments on our forum. Log
on to www.PrudentBear.com each
day to catch up on financial market headlines. Remember, those cheerleaders
don't give a whit about you and they won't be there to help when you lose
your assets.
www.PonderThis.net, March, 2007: Surviving
lenders, under constant pressure due to rampant foreclosures, will make lending
standards increasingly more stringent and loans more difficult to procure,
meaning more equity will be required to buy property. But Americans have
been living on borrowed money and have no such equity; they've been conditioned
to borrow to buy things because they assumed that the value of their homes
would continue to bail their finances out forever. Another segment of the
buying marketplace will therefore be lopped off.
Update: It's truly a perfect storm for real estate: Credit market dislocations,
mortgage-backed securities disruptions, tightening lending standards, too
much consumer debt, too little consumer savings, zero pent-up demand, rampant
foreclosures, excess homebuilder inventory and the unfolding coup de grace --
severely damaged buying psychology.
www.PonderThis.net, March, 2007: Eventually,
everyone will come to the realization that 1) just like when the NASDAQ bubble
burst back in 2000, real estate values are going down, down, down, then 2)
that this time it's not a "normal real estate cycle" but instead a relentless,
post-bubble and post-bubble-bubble real estate deflation that we expect will
have no historical rival.
Update: Don't underestimate the unfolding change in psychology as pertains
to real estate. As the crisis takes full hold, it will soon be broadly accepted
that "real estate is a bad investment." We expect the asset class to fall
completely out of favor, and possibly for a generation.
Update: www.PonderThis.net,
March, 2007: I applaud you for being here now, keeping an open mind and
putting yourself in position to salvage your family's finances. If so, we will
still buy you a beer and give you a hearty and well-deserved pat on the back
when the time comes. For you will be one of the true survivors.
Update: If you ask me, you're a certifiable APS (Asset Preservation Stud),
just for reading this right now. And, if you've played your cards right already
(or do so now), you'll not only survive -- you'll prosper. Bookmark us at www.PonderThis.net and
we'll do our best to help you keep what you have. Don't forget: There's plenty
of money to be made on the other side.
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