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Remember that catchy love song that Frank Sinatra made popular in the 1960s, "The
Best Is Yet To Come"?
"The best is yet to come and, babe, won't that be fine?
You think you've seen the sun, but you ain't seen it shine."
At the risk of mixing musical metaphors and styles, it looks more like the
sun has deserted us right now in the financial markets, and we're about to
see "The Dark Side of the Moon," the title of Pink Floyd's 1973 smash album.
With the subprime
mortgage problems reaching farther and farther out to touch hedge funds,
U.S. and European banks, mortgage companies and money-market funds, what we're
going to experience sounds more like "The Worst is Yet To Come."
That's because the financial markets must contend not only with the credit
crunch brought on by rising foreclosures now; they must also deal
with the repercussions from more foreclosures over the next 18 months as
more adjustable-rate mortgages (whether subprime or not) reset from low teaser
rates to higher interest-rate levels.
How bad can it get? Investment adviser John Mauldin recently published a month-by-month
account of the dollar amount of mortgages that will be reset through 2008,
and the largest reset amounts pop up in the first six months of
next year. In fact, as he points out, the $197 billion of mortgage
resets so far this year is "less than we will see in two months (February and
March) of next year. The first six months of next year will see more than the
total for 2007, or $521 billion."
So, we haven't even begun to feel the pain yet. It's bad enough for the folks
who will find that they can't keep up with the higher mortgage payments and
will have to move out of their homes. But the financial markets won't be catching
a break either. The antiseptic phrase used to describe the situation is "repricing
risk." That means that investors have woken up to the fact that the AAA-rated
mortgage-backed securities and derivatives they invested in look more like
junk bonds now. This eye-opener causes them to want higher yields from what
they now see as riskier vehicles.
That new investor caution plays out this way: investment banks, hedge funds
and any other entity that bought securities backed by subprime loans now find
it hard to sell the darn things. It's almost the same as homeowners trying
to find buyers for their homes ? nearly impossible in a market where home
prices are falling. In the financial markets, it's nearly impossible because
no one even wants to attach a price to a collateralized debt obligation today
for fear that it will be priced much lower tomorrow.
The Fed can try to calm such fears all it wants by lowering the discount rate
and giving banks more time to pay back loans (from overnight to 30 days), but
the real problem can't be fixed with more access to credit. The fact is nobody
wants any more of that. What they really want is cash to pay off their debts,
be it a mortgage or an unwinding of a securities bet.
Wall Street's denizens are in the dark about how much their schemes depend
on the ocean of liquidity created by the bull market, say Elliott Wave International's
analysts, Steve Hochberg and Pete Kendall. They are particularly struck by
the image of the Grim Reaper that Business Week magazine put on its
cover recently with the headline, "Death Bonds:"
"The grim reaper is the perfect visage to welcome the arriving wave of liquidation;
it will wreak havoc with their work. The field's dark fate is clear in one
fund manager's description of what caused 'forced sales' at another fund:
'The models work when they look at history, but not when history is all new.'
What's 'new' is that for the first time in the experience of many model makers,
confidence is on the run. As they rob Peter to pay Paul, all assets will
be impacted in negative ways that do not compute in their models." (The
Elliott Wave Financial Forecast, August 2007)
And the bad news just keeps accumulating:
- Housing prices dropped 3.2% percent in the second quarter compared with
last year, the largest drop since Standard
& Poor's started tracking home prices in 1987.
- CIT Group closed its mortgage unit this week, while Lehman Brothers closed
its own last week. Mortgage companies that specialize in low-quality mortgages
are either going out of business (London-based HSBC) or struggling (California-based
Countrywide).
- The Wall Street Journal lists the number of fired employees at seven
mortgage companies, including First Magnus (6,000), Capitol One's Greenpoint
(1,900), Associated Home Lenders (1,600) and Lehman (1,200), which totals
more than 12,000 suddenly unemployed mortgage writers.
To top it off, Bloomberg reports that the subprime mess may lead to lower
bonuses for the first time in five years on Wall Street, according to Options
Group, a company that's been tracking this kind of information for a decade.
Somewhere, the world's smallest violin is playing a sad song for the fund managers
and investment bankers who won't be taking home that million-dollar-plus bonus
this year. And Frank Sinatra is singing a sad refrain? "The worst is yet to
come."
For more information on the housing market and the credit crisis, access
the free report, "The
Real State of Real Estate," from Elliott Wave International.
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