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The
Unstoppable
Second Crash – On the Way
By Doug Hornig, Editor,
BIG GOLD
Tuesday, October 9, 2007 started as a nice day in New York City. A
lovely early fall day, with the temperature still a balmy 80° at
2:00 in the morning. By evening, though, the temperature had dropped
twenty degrees, the clouds had rolled in, there was thunder and
rain.
As with the weather, there were some hints of trouble here and
there on Wall Street. But all in all, things could not have seemed
better. Little did we know, the stormy end of 10/9/07 signaled a
very large bubble that had just popped.
That was the day when the Dow Jones Industrial Average hit its
historic peak. From there, it was all downhill -- slowly but
steadily at first, and then violently after last August -- until the
Dow bottomed (for now) on March 9 of this year. Over that span, the
index lost 54% of its value.
It’s been a crushing blow to just about everyone. But it’s already
being referred to as the crash. As if the unpleasantness were
now all behind us. More likely, in the future it will be seen as,
simply, the first crash.
Don’t believe it? In a moment you will, when you see the scariest
graph of the year.
But let’s quickly recall what’s already happened. During the late,
great housing boom, interest rates were at microscopic levels, while
bankers were encouraged to grant home loans on little more than a
wink and a nudge. In order to inflate their balance sheets, those
bankers resorted to all sorts of gimmicky, adjustable rate mortgages
(ARMs), whose common feature was an interest rate that would
eventually reset. That is, it would balloon somewhere down the road.
And those most likely to come quickly to grief were the riskiest
borrowers, who held loans known as “subprime.”
“But not to worry,” borrowers were told. “Betting on ever-rising
home prices is the safest wager in the whole wide world. If you have
problems with cash flow when the ARM resets, your house will be
worth a lot more, so you can simply sell it and walk away with a
nice chunk of change in your pocket.” Uh-huh.
The bankers themselves were a little more concerned about the
deterioration of their portfolios. They took out insurance in the
form of credit default swaps (CDSs). These were a brand-new
invention in world financial history, allowing mortgages to be sold
and resold until they were leveraged 20 times over. They became the
shakiest part of a huge global derivatives market, with a nominal
value in the tens of trillions of dollars.
For a while, this Ponzi scheme even worked. But then, as they had
to, the ARMs began resetting, and there were defaults. Then more of
them. Because at the same time, the housing market was cooling off
and the economy was stalling out. More and more people were trapped
in a situation where they owed more on their home than they could
sell it for. Many simply mailed their keys to the bank and moved on.
All of this wreaked havoc in the derivatives market. Sellers of
these exotic packages could no longer establish what they were
worth. Buyers couldn’t determine a fair price and so stopped buying.
As the ripples spread through the world financial system, trust
disappeared and liquidity dried up.
Now consider that the base cause for all that dislocation was the
subprime sector. And how big is that? Not very. Subprime mortgages
account for only about 15% of all home loans. Their influence has
been way out of proportion to their numbers, because of derivatives.
Here’s the good news: the subprime meltdown has about run its
course. These loans were resetting en masse in 2007 and the first
eight months of ’08. Now they’re pretty much done.
And the bad news? No one in the mainstream media seems to be asking
what should be a pretty obvious question: What about loans other
than subprime? Truth is, the banks didn’t just trick up their
subprime loans. ARMs were the order of the day – across the board.
Now, here’s that frightening graph we referred to earlier.

Take a good, long
look. You can see that from the beginning of 2007 through September
of 2008, subprime loans (the gray bars above) were resetting like
crazy. Those are the ones people were walking away from, sending a
shockwave from defaults and foreclosures smack into the middle of
the economy. Now they’re gone.
The ARM market got very quiet between December 2008 and March 2009,
hitting a low that won’t be seen again until November of 2011. Small
wonder a few “green shoots” have poked their heads above ground. But
in April, resets began to increase and will reach an intermediate
peak in June. After that, they tail off a little, going basically
flat for the next ten months.
It’s not until May of 2010 that the next wave really hits. From
there to October of 2011, the resets will be coming fast and
furious. That’s 18 months of further turmoil in the housing market,
and the beginning is still nearly a year away! (Although the months
in between are likely to be no picnic, either.)
While it isn’t subprime ARMs that are resetting this time, neither
are they prime loans. Those eligible for prime loans wisely tended
to stay away from ARMs in the first place, as indicated by the
relatively small space they take up on each bar.
No, the next to go are Alt-A’s (the white bars), Option ARMs (green)
and Unsecuritized ARMs (blue). Alt-A’s are loans to the folks who
are a small step up from subprime. Unsecuritized loans are a 50-50
proposition; either the borrowers were good enough that they weren’t
thrown into the CDS pool, or they were so risky no one would insure
them.
Those two are bad enough. But Option ARMs are the real black sheep,
loans with choices on how large a payment the borrower will make.
The options include interest-only or, worse, a minimum
payment that is less than interest-only, leading to “negative
amortization”—a loan balance that continually gets bigger, not
smaller. Imagine what happens with those when the piper calls.
Once the carnage begins, will it be as bad as the subprime crisis?
That’s the $64K question. Perhaps not. For one thing, subprime loans
were a much larger chunk of the market when they started going
south. For another, there’s been a lot of refinancing as interest
rates dropped; that should help ease the default rate. And the
government has massively intervened, with measures designed to prop
up those who would otherwise lose their homes.
On the other hand, we’re in a severe recession, which wasn’t the
case when the subprime crisis started. More people will be unable to
meet payments. And the housing market has continued to decline,
pressuring both marginal homeowners and banks that can’t sell
foreclosed properties.
Is the stock market’s next 10/9/07 on the way? Yes. Which day will
it be? That’s unknowable. It could be in a week, or not for another
year.
But make no mistake about it, the second crash is coming. It
can’t be prevented, no matter what desperate measures Obama and his
hapless financial advisors come up with. All we can hope for is
that, with a little luck, it won’t be as severe as the first one.
But it will last longer. We aren’t even in the middle of the woods
yet, much less on the way out.
The order of the day is to be very defensive. There will be few safe
havens, but they do exist. Read our report on
“48 Karat Gold,” a gold-related, conservative investment that
has continued going up even while the common stock market bombed.
It’s not too late to profit…
click here to learn more.
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