Thursday, Mar 05, 2009

11% of mortgages are troubled

Cnn: 11% of mortgages are troubled

looks like a second fan full of SH$T is about to hit us all...

Posted by mark @ 06:41 PM (406 views) Add Comment

2 Comments

1. troy said...

That means that housing prices will continue to crash dragging the stock market along behind.


Journalist David K Richards describes the modern credit system in his article "Humpty Dumpty Finance":

"To begin, it is important to recognize how Wall St. has transformed the bank-based credit system, which existed in the 1930's and prevailed until the mid-1990's, into the 'modern' securities-based credit system we have today. Non-bank sources currently supply more than half the credit needs of businesses and consumers. This transformation in the way credit is supplied has made it difficult for the Federal Reserve to reignite credit growth through massive expansion of the Federal Reserve balance sheet, which was the supposed 1930's style antidote. The old-style banking system, in which banks kept the loans they made on their balance sheets, would have responded quickly to Bernanke's interest rate cuts and aggressive injections of excess reserves. But banks today no longer keep most of the credits they underwrite on their own balance sheets, nor do they keep them in the form of individual loans. Instead, banks gather credits together to form asset-based or mortgage-based bonds which they then distribute or sell to pension funds, insurance companies, banks, hedge funds, and other investors worldwide. ("Humpty Dumpty Finance" David K Richards, Huffington Post)

This new "securities-based" credit system emerged almost entirely in the last decade and had never been stress-tested to see if it could withstand normal market turbulence.

As it happens, it couldn't survive the battering. The market for mortgage-backed bonds and other securitized investments disintegrated at the first whiff of grapeshot.

As soon as subprime foreclosures began to rise, investors fled the market en masse and securitization hit the canvas. Now the wholesale funding for MBS and other consumer loans has slowed to a trickle.

That means that housing prices will continue to crash dragging the stock market along behind.

Thursday, March 5, 2009 07:06PM Report Comment
 

2. troy said...

US: Mortgage woes break records again in 4Q

J.W. Elphinstone
Associated Press
Thu, 05 Mar 2009 18:04 UTC

A stunning 48 percent of the nation's homeowners who have a subprime, adjustable-rate mortgage are behind on their payments or in foreclosure, and the rate for homeowners with all mortgage types hit a new record, new data Thursday showed.

But that's not the worst of it.

The reckless lending practices in states like Florida, California and Nevada that were the epicenter of the housing crisis are no longer driving up the nation's delinquency rate.

Instead, the foreclosure crisis now is being fueled by a spike in defaults in states like Louisiana, New York, Georgia and Texas, where the economies are rapidly deteriorating and thousands are losing their jobs.

http://www.sott.net/signs/list_by_category/3-Grand-Theft-Economics

Thursday, March 5, 2009 07:18PM Report Comment
 

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