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As Charles Kindleberger asks in the investment classic Manias, Panics and
Crashes; "the essence of financial distress is loss of confidence. What
comes next - slow recovery of belief in the future as various aspects of
the economy are corrected, or collapse of prices, panic, runs on banks, a
rush to get out of illiquid assets and into money?"
Our timeline of financial distress is below:

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From Foreclosures To Bank Failures
The FDIC is going
on a hiring spree in anticipation of "an increase in failed financial
institutions as the nation's housing and credit markets continue to worsen." Jim
Marino of the FDIC's Division of Resolutions and Receiverships states "the
notion that a bank is too big to fail shouldn't be out there." As we explained
last month, the U.S. banking system is borrowing their entire reserves, currently
-$17B, from the Federal Reserve. TheStreet.com also reports
that "non-current loans exceeded reserves for the first time since 1993." On
Feb 28th, Ben Bernanke said there probably
will be bank failures as the housing slump takes its toll. According
to the FDIC Quarterly
Banking Report:
"Total noncurrent loans -- loans 90 days or more past due or in nonaccrual
status -- rose by $26.9 billion (32.5 percent) in the last three months of
2007. This is the largest percentage increase in a single quarter in the 24
years for which noncurrent loan data are available. Eight institutions accounted
for half of the total increase in noncurrent loans in the fourth quarter, but
noncurrent loans were up at half of all insured institutions. The percentage
of loans that were noncurrent at year-end was 1.39 percent, the highest level
since the third quarter of 2002."
We called the FDIC to inquire about the eight institutions that accounted
for half of the total increase and were told this information is not available
to the public.
They Can Sell Faster Than You
We also mentioned in September that
twenty-six Florida cities defaulted on their bonds after the real estate bubble
of 1927. Now Vallejo,
CA is in trouble. We expect the same thing that happened 80 years ago and
recommend investors to avoid municipal bonds. This will also be a complete
surprise to bond
insurance firms. Banks are already working
on a capital infusion for the insurers due to their subprime losses. The
insurers' rating is supporting the value of $2.4T in loans held mostly by banks
and as CNBC reports "the banks and the rating agencies are aware that, if it
(Ambac) collapses, there will be a huge decline in the stock market."
The Wall Street Firms will know if the Ambac deal fails long before investors.
We commented last
April: "As the editor of The Commercial and Financial Chronicle in
November of 1929 reported on the Great Crash, 'the crowd didn't sell, they
got sold out.' The trading desks of the Wall Street Firms will cash out as
the panic develops, the lady in Omaha will be stuck on the phone with a busy
signal... To avoid this, investors should be moving now to financially healthy
institutions and buying U.S. Treasury Bills."
At Lamont Trading Advisors, we provide wealth preservation strategies for
our clients. For more information, contact
us. Our monthly Investment
Analysis Report requires a subscription fee of $40 a month. Current subscribers
are allowed to freely distribute this report with proper attribution.
***No graph, chart, formula or other device offered can in and
of itself be used to make trading decisions.
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