Sunday September 28, 2008
An audience of two
The bailout bill.
From figures I've heard quoted recently my estimate is that there's somewhere around 75 million houses in the USA. The average price is around $200K, which values the total housing market of the order of $15 trillion. (Someone else I was chatting with claimed that the housing value is in fact around $47 trillion, of which the mortgage market represents about half, making $24 trillion, but I have no way of verifying that. With an average value of $200K that would mean almost one house per person - man, woman or child. I find that a little hard to believe even if some of us do have more houses than we can count, so I'm guessing the real figure is between the two.) Most of that debt is perfectly good debt; there was a time when you needed to have a 20% deposit or equivalent in equity to get a loan, otherwise you had to take on a higher rate second mortgage or pay PMI. So how much of that is bad debt? Well one article I read that was dated February of this year quoted the national reposession rate at around 2%. Let's say it's higher now; call it 3%. 3% of $15T is $450B of loans in default. But of course those houses aren't worthless, they are simply worth less than the outstanding debt. Let's say that they are worth only 50% of the value; that's probably a huge undervaluation, but it puts a price on the "subprime crisis" of $225 billion. $225B might seem like a lot of money (because it is) but Washington Mutual alone was worth $300B. The simple fact is that if this was simply a matter of the housing bubble bursting with $225B of debt then the market would easily be able to absorb that. So what's the problem? Well apparently it begins something called Credit Default Swaps (CDS). The idea is that if a bank takes on a loan that ends up being defaulted on they can use CDS to offset the risk of that, as a kind of hedge or insurance. Which is all well and good. Except that there's no requirement that you actually hold a debt in order to take out a CDS. Put it this way: I have a Toyota that's insured for $20K. If I have an accident, the insurance pays me the value of the car. A CDS is rather like you taking out an insurance policy on my car. If I have an accident, you get paid. And you can insure my car for any amount you like. So in effect it's an open-ended bet that I won't crash. So the actual problem is, instead of hedging against bad debts, Banks have been using CDS as a speculation tool. Was all of this legal? I have no idea. It seems odd that something which has had such a catastrophic effect on the world economy should be legal, but then that's the Free Market for you. But when the government talk about the "toxic debt" they aren't talking about the defaulted mortgages, they are talking about these bad speculative bets. So if nothing else, surely someone has been criminally negligent if not downright fraudulent. Knowing this, what I find frustrating is comments putting the blame on anything other than the banks. One target is Property speculators. Certainly there was a lot of this going on, but that's your Free Market at work. At least these people were buying real, tangible assets and gambling with their own credit. Another target is too much regulation (whaaa?) for which the solution is yet more deregulation (Whaaa?). John Boehner claimed that private capital can be drawn into the market by removing regulatory and tax barriers that are currently blocking private capital formation. Too much private capital is sitting on the sidelines during this crisis. Of course it is, they could see that it's a disaster and they pulled out in time. And yet Warren Buffet has invested $5B in Goldman Sachs, so clearly it can't be that bad and there can't be that much regulation. If there really was money to be made you can bet they'd be lining up to get some.
Anyway, the first draft of the bailout bill has been published and you can read it here. It's 110 pages of the usual legal
Update Bradford and Bingley was nationalised this morning. I really don't like the sound of this quote: But many banking analysts argue that the nationalization of the bank could be a boon to taxpayers one day, unlike the U.S. bailout plan, in which the government is simply buying up bad debts.
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Today's Page Hits: 35
Yes, it seems that the numbers don't work out, do they? I'm no economist, but I think the reason for this is the multiplier effect of the fractional reserve system. BobsBank gives you a 300K mortgage loan and immediately sells your "promise to replay(IOU)" to FredsBank. Fred uses the "value" of your IOU ('30-years of steady income') as an asset to back its own borrowing to invest in a $5million strip mall, borrowing from RalphsBank. RalphsBank packages that loan into a security he sells to someone in China where someone uses those assets to leverage construction of a skyscraper. Your house drops in value and you're forced to move. You decide rather than paying $300K+interest for a house you can't sell for $190K, let the bank deal with it. You default. Who is left holding the bag?
Taxpayers I guess.
Imagine my surprise when tiny Ireland (~5 million people) passed a guarantee of over $700 Billion to insure its banks. The property bubble in Ireland is at least as bad as it is anywhere else, but $700 Billion was a h*** of a lot of money, $150K per man woman and child!
The Irish government didn't have the inconvenience of a three party system with voter anger and an impending election to get in the way of their bailout.
Posted by bnitz on September 30, 2008 at 08:59 AM PDT #