Filed under: 1984, 2-party system, bailout, bear sterns, Big Banks, Big Brother, biometrics, California, central bank, Congress, Control Grid, credit card, credit cards, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dollar, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, fannie mae, Federal Reserve, forclosure, foreclosures, freddie mac, George Bush, global economy, gold, Great Depression, Greenback, henry paulson, House, housing market, imf, indymac, Inflation, IRS, left right paradigm, liquidation, mortgage lenders, national debt, nationalization, neocons, Neolibs, Oppression, orwell, Paulson, Police State, Propaganda, real estate, Ron Paul, Senate, silver, Stock Market, subprime, subprime lending, Surveillance, Taxpayers, US Economy, us national debt, US Treasury, Wall Street | Tags: fingerprints, housing securities, HR 3221, The American Housing Rescue & Foreclosure Preventio
Taxpayers Will Pay $800 BILLION For Failed Mortgage Lenders
House & Senate passes housing bailout bill H.R. 3221 (The American Housing Rescue & Foreclosure Prevention Act) by an overwhelming 272-152 vote, Bush will sign soon.
Youtube
July 24, 2008
Ron Paul talks about the bailout out of the housing industry and how it really just destroys the dollar and adds enormously to the debt.
Also, slipped into the bill, was the stipulation that ALL credit card transactions must now be reported to the IRS.
Details of today’s housing bill by Dr. Ron Paul:
-$2.5B line of credit to the Treasury (Fannie & Freddie – ‘F & F’) is now “open-ended”
- UNLIMITED – Treasury now allowed to buy all ‘F & F’ housing securities
- Congress no longer involved in appropriating funds (Treasury now does)
-National Debt Ceiling Moved up $800 BILLION (buried in the bill)
–Treasury Bills being exchanged for unwanted ‘F & F’ securities
- This is the asset which “backs up our currency”
- Value of these assets are depreciating
- Treasuries have replaced gold and silver to back US Dollar
– Solution breeds inflation
- Places pressure on the US Dollar
-Mortgage industry workers “will now have to be fingerprinted.”
–All credit card transactions will now be reported to the IRS.
Housing bailout bill – another $800 billion gift from the taxpayer to Wall Street
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http://market-ticker.denninger.net/archive..GRESS-IMMINENT.html
Investors worldwide are betting more than $1 trillion on a collapse in American stock prices
http://www.wakeupfromyourslumber.com/node/7529
Faber: Fannie, Freddie Should Not Get Aid
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/n..&sid=a_L_tms03WSI&refer=home
Senate Passes Housing Bill
http://www.axcessnews.com/index.php/articles/show/id/16490
House OKs Fannie Freddie Bailout
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woman commits suicide as home foreclosed
http://www.norwichbulletin.com/new..suicide-as-home-foreclosed
Fannie and Freddie Own A Record $6.9 Billion Foreclosed Homes
http://www.economicpolicyjournal.co..d-freddie-own-record-69.html
U.S. Foreclosures Double
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news..87&sid=aomtw8.Pro2E&refer=home
IMF: U.S. Housing Overvalued By 20%
http://www.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUSN2542244220080726
California foreclosures up 261% from ‘07 levels
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/laland/2008/07/cal-foreclosure.html
Freddie MAC CEO Paid $20 Million A Year
http://money.cnn.com/2008/0.._CEO.ap/index.htm?section=money_latest
Fannie, Freddie rescue pricetag could hit $25B
Housing report bruises Wall Street
Bank of China may hold huge US debt
Dems & Paulson Push Fannie/Freddie Bailout
Filed under: bernanke, Credit Crisis, DEBT, ECB, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Euro, european central bank, Federal Reserve, food prices, foreclosures, gas prices, George Bush, gold, Great Depression, Greenback, housing market, Inflation, interest rate cut, interest rate cuts, Iraq, Oil, palladium, Petrol, platinum, rate cut, silver, south africa, stagflation, sterling, Stock Market, US Economy, wheat
Gold powers to record on oil, eyes $1,000
Reuters
February 29, 2008

Gold powered to a new high near $980 an ounce on Friday after crude oil set an all-time high of above $103 a barrel, igniting inflation worries and another round of buying from investors and speculators.
Palladium jumped to its highest level in more than six years and silver hit a 27-year peak. Platinum rebounded from its lows but given the absence of new developments in South Africa’s supply problems, gains are likely to be capped.
Gold jumped as high as $975.90 an ounce, up from $968.90/969.70 late in New York on Thursday. Gold has gained more than 16 percent this year, and the next upside target pegged by dealers is $1,000.
Record high oil and expectations of more interest rate cuts in the United States add to inflation pressures, elevating gold’s appeal as a hedge against rising prices, while volatile stock markets have encouraged investors to shift some of their money into gold and other precious metals.
“The target is $1,000. I personally hope it will be $1,000 within a month,” said Yukuji Sonoda, precious metals analyst at Daiichi Commodities in Tokyo, adding that gold was likely be driven by movements in oil in coming weeks. Crude oil rallied to another record above $103 a barrel as Ecuador shut a key export pipeline and a fire hit a major European natural gas plant.
While oil is at a record price in inflation-adjusted as well as nominal terms, gold has lagged. According to analysts at GFMS gold’s inflation-adjusted record is $2,079 an ounce.
“Most of the funds are buying inflation hedges such as gold, silver and oil. It’s still a bull market, where hedge funds and banks buy precious metals,” said William Kwan, a dealer at Phillip Futures in Singapore.
“I think inflation is really getting out of hand. I am looking at $955 for support and resistance at $985,” said Kwan, who pegged upside target for silver at $20.
Silver rose as high as $19.92 an ounce, its highest in 27 years, up from $19.74/19.79 an ounce in New York.
Oil Tops $103 For The First Time In History
AP
February 29, 2008

Oil prices briefly surpassed $103 a barrel for the first time Friday as persistent weakness in the U.S. dollar and the prospect of lower interest rates attracted fresh money to the oil market.
Light, sweet crude for April delivery on the New York Mercantile Exchange jumped to a new trading record of $103.05 a barrel in electronic trading before slipping back to $102.02 a barrel, down 57 cents, by midday in Europe.
On Thursday, the contract jumped $2.95 to a record settlement price of $102.59 a barrel.
Prices were supported by comments Thursday from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, who said the American economy is not immediately threatened with stagflation, a combination of economic weakness and rising inflation.
Investors chose to see the comments as confirmation of their beliefs that the Fed will continue cutting interest rates to try to shore up the economy.
“It seems that further interest rate cuts, additional dollar weakness and more investment buying will anchor oil to higher prices,” energy risk management firm Cameron Hanover said in its daily report. “It can’t go on forever, but it looks like it can go on for a while.”
Euro hits fresh high against dollar
Financial Times
February 29, 2008
The dollar hit another record low against the euro on Friday, as data continued to support the view that the European Central Bank will keep interest rates on hold for the foreseeable future.
Headline inflation in the eurozone stood at 3.2 per cent in January, tallying with earlier estimates and market expectations as food and energy prices leapt. Meanwhile, unemployment in the eurozone held at a record low of 7.1 per cent in January.
“With headline inflation running at a 14-year high and the lingering threat of second round effects, it is premature for the ECB to switch to an easing bias in their policy stance just yet,” said Martin van Vliet at ING.
While the ECB remained unlikely to cut eurozone interest rates at its next policy meeting on Thursday, markets were fully pricing in a cut of 50 basis points at the US Federal Reserve’s meeting on March 18.
“Markets are probably wisely bracing themselves for further monetary policy divergence between the US and eurozone over the next few months,” added Mr van Vliet.
The euro rose to a record high of $1.5238, before retreating to $1.5206, little changed on the session.
Recent News:
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Iraq war may cost US USD 7 trillion
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Potato growers warn of food shortages unless pay improves
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U.S. Home Foreclosures Jump 90% as Mortgages Reset
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Iraq war ’caused slowdown in the US’
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$4 Gasoline By Spring Predicted
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USD Falls To Record, Jobless Claims Rise
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Government To Lift Fannie & Freddie Limits
City watchdog warns of ‘permanent’ end to easy credit in wake of crunch
Bank Of America Won’t Let You Access Your Money
Carlyle To Invest $4 Billion In Asian Companies
California City Moves Closer to Bankruptcy Filing
Ron Paul: Bernanke Deliberately Destroying Dollar
Middle Class May Be Subject To Food Rations, Warns UN
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Filed under: Credit Crisis, Credit Suisse, Dow, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Euro, Europe, foreclosures, freddie mac, gas prices, Great Depression, Greenback, housing market, Inflation, Oil, Petrol, S&P, Stock Market, subprime, subprime lending, US Economy, Yen
Stocks Fall as Oil Flirts With $100 a Barrel
NY Times
November 21, 2007
A late sell-off in the final minutes of trading sent stocks down sharply today, with the Dow Jones industrial average closing at its lowest level since April. The Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index, a broad measure of the equity market, fell into negative territory for the year.
The plunge came as investors remain frightened and uncertain about a credit crisis that does not show any signs of easing. Freddie Mac, considered a backstop for the mortgage industry, said yesterday that it lost $2 billion last quarter because of increased foreclosures tied to subprime mortgage defaults. Oil prices flirted with the symbolic $100-a-barrel level in overnight trading. Markets in Asia and Europe dropped sharply as investors questioned whether the United States economy will slow more than expected. And investors fled to the safety of relatively stable government bonds.
The Dow Jones industrials, off less than 100 points soon before 3 p.m., finished down 211.10 points, to 12,799.04, a 1.6 percent decline. It was the lowest close since April 19. The index fell even below the low ebb of trading during the summer’s credit crisis, when it finished at 12,845.78 on Aug. 16.
The S.& P. 500 index fell 22.93 points, also 1.6 percent, to 1,416.77, putting it down 0.11 percent for the year.
“This is an ugly week,” said James Paulsen, chief investment strategist at Wells Capital Management. Indeed: the Dow lost 2.9 percent of its value in the last three days alone.
Some market watchers suggested that lower trading levels during a holiday week make the market more volatile, but at least one analyst disputed that notion. “I don’t know of anyone taking a day off today,” said Dennis Davitt, who oversees equity derivative trading for Credit Suisse. “Not in these conditions.”
Crude oil futures briefly rose above $99 in overnight trading and an Energy Department report showed that inventories fell slightly last week, leaving investors wondering how soon oil will be nudged above its inflation-adjusted record of $102. Crude settled in New York trading at $97.29, down 74 cents.
The recent run-up in oil prices, which threaten to curb consumer spending, dovetails with a shaky economic outlook released by the Federal Reserve yesterday, which predicted a slowdown in growth over the coming months.
The overnight rout in foreign markets reflected a broad reaction to the Fed’s grim projections and a growing sense that the besieged housing market, which once helped American consumers buy the world’s products and services, has not hit bottom.
Dollar hits new low versus euro
China View
November 22, 2007
NEW YORK, Nov. 21 (Xinhua) — The dollar dropped to new low against the euro for the second straight day Wednesday on worries about credit market losses and the health of the U.S. economy.
The U.S. currency also fell to a two-year low against the yen on Wednesday as investors sold higher-yielding assets financed by borrowing in Japan.
The dollar traded at 1.4858 dollars against the euro late Wednesday. It dropped to a record low of 1.4870 against the euro and 1.1016 versus the Swiss franc in earlier trading on speculation that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates for a third time this year in December to prevent the economy from falling into a recession.
The dollar has declined 11.2 percent this year against the euro since the Federal Reserve began cutting rates in mid-September.
The dollar fell as low as 108.26 yen, the first time it has fell below 109 yen since June 2005, as global stocks weakened and oil prices surged toward 100 dollars a barrel. It stood at 108.63 yen in late trading.
Analysts said further sharp currency moves are likely in the near term, with U.S. markets closed on Thursday for the Thanksgiving holiday and trading likely to be thin on Friday.
Filed under: Canada, canadian dollar, canadian economy, central bank, Charles Prince, China, citigroup, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Deutsche Bank, Draft, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, foreclosures, gas prices, global economy, gold, Great Depression, Greenback, housing market, Inflation, loonie, Merrill Lynch, Oil, peak oil, Petrol, Stock Market, subprime, subprime lending, Taiwan, UBS, US Economy
Relative of Merrill Lynch Founder Predicts Stock Market Crash
Kerri Panchuk
DSNews
October 30, 2007
In a market where fears over the subprime shakedown are spreading pessimism nationwide, Charles Merrill, the cousin of the man who founded Merrill Lynch & Co., is predicting a stock market crash that will put the 1929 crash to shame.
Merrill, in an exclusive interview with a financial author, said, “There is going to be a major stock market crash, so protect your assets. Buy physical gold and hide it.”
Merrill also discussed all the changes at Merrill Lynch that indicate a potential market crises—even alluding to the company’s chief executive officer, who stepped down this week.
“Merrill Lynch is crashing, due to the ineptness of the CEO,” Merrill said. “No matter who is running Merrill Lynch & Co., it’s going to need a regimen of restraint and recuperation after getting badly bruised by the global credit market shakedown. I predict a house of dominos, and the whole stock market is going to crash.”
Lynch’s less-than-encouraging remarks were part of an interview with writer Michael Grace, who is writing a book called, “The Final Great Depression.”
During the interview, Merrill concluded, “There is so much wealth in Palm Springs … from inherited to funny money, and I’m advising my friends to buy gold. Grace’s book on the ‘final depression’ sounds like a novel or fantasy but unfortunately it is a picture of our horrible future here in America. My cousin Charlie must be turning over in his grave.”
Oil Crisis in Summer ’09: War in Iran. Gasoline rationing. A military draft. A Chinese takeover of Taiwan. Double-digit inflation and unemployment
Herald Tribune
November 2, 2007
WASHINGTON: War in Iran. Gasoline rationing. A military draft. A Chinese takeover of Taiwan. Double-digit inflation and unemployment. The draining of the strategic petroleum reserve.
This is where current energy policy is going in the United States, according to a nightmare scenario played out as a policy-making exercise on Thursday by a group of former top government officials.
Two bipartisan business-supported groups sponsored an elaborately staged role-playing game called Oil ShockWave that tried to dramatize the effect of American dependence on oil imported from unstable and unfriendly parts of the world.
The organizers have an agenda: They hope to prompt Congress to act on energy legislation and to push the issue into the presidential campaign.
CDS traders warn of ‘blood on streets’
BBC
October 27, 2007
The mood in credit derivatives markets turned ugly on Thursday, with the cost of insuring corporate debt hitting multi-week highs on both sides of the Atlantic.
Speculation was rife that leading major investment banks were facing additional losses linked to complex mortgage-backed securities, while worries mounted over the health of major financial guarantors.
“It’s scary out there — there’s blood on the streets,” a trader at a US brokerage said. “It’s a real mess.”
In the US, the perceived risk of owning corporate debt jumped to a seven-week high, with the cost to insure a $10m portfolio of investment-grade debt reaching $67,000, data from Phoenix Partners Group showed.
Confidence in Citigroup and Merrill Lynch, as measured by their credit default swaps, slumped to lows not seen since the height of the credit squeeze in August.
Five-year credit default swaps tied to Citigroup widened to 60 basis points, meaning it cost $60,000 annually to insure Citigroup’s debt against default for five years. A couple of weeks ago, that figure stood at $27,000.
Contracts on Merrill Lynch, which last week posted the largest quarterly loss in its 93-year history, rose $18,000 to $103,000. CDS on UBS rose 10bp to 51bp, Deutsche Bank said. The contracts stood at about 6bp in May. Contracts on Credit Suisse rose 4bp to 52bp from 10bp in June.
Bond insurers, or monolines, were also hit hard.
“[These triple-A rated companies are] exposed to the crumbling housing market,” said Gavan Nolan, an analyst at derivatives data provider Markit. “Investors in monolines will be waiting for the coming months of housing data with trepidation,” Mr Nolan said.
CDS on MBIA Insurance rocketed to a four-year high, of 345bp, CMA Datavision said.
Last week the insurer posted $36.6m net loss and halted its share buy-back programme.
Contracts on the bond insurance unit of Ambac Financial climbed to a five-year high of 310bp.
Gimme Credit, an independent research term, downgraded both MBIA and Ambac this week.
In Europe, the iTraxx Crossover index of 50 mostly high-yield companies widened by 18 bp to 338bp, the biggest rise since August, according to Deutsche Bank data.
The iTraxx Europe index, which tracks 125 investment-grade companies, rose 3.75bp to 41bp. It was the biggest one-day jump since early September.
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Filed under: bernanke, central bank, Credit Crisis, Dow, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Federal Reserve, foreclosures, Great Depression, Greenback, House, housing market, Inflation, interest rate cuts, rate cut, Senate, Stock Market, US Economy, us mint, US Treasury, Wall Street
Fed Pumps $41B Into US Financial System
AP
November 1, 2007
Fed Injects $41 Billion Into US Financial System to Help Ease Credit Problems
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Reserve pumped $41 billion into the U.S. financial system Thursday, the largest cash infusion since September 2001, to help companies get through a credit crunch.
The action came one day after Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and all but one of his central bank colleagues voted to slice a key interest rate. It was the second time in six weeks that policymakers acted to protect the economy from the effects of the housing downturn and credit troubles.
Wall Street took a nosedive with the Dow Jones industrials losing 362.14 points to close at 13,567.87.
The Fed on Wednesday ordered its key rate, called the federal funds rate, to be lowered by one-quarter of a percentage point to 4.5 percent. That followed up on a half-percentage point cut in September. Those two rate reductions might be sufficient to help the economy make its way safely through trouble spots, Fed policymakers indicated.
The funds rate affects many other interest rates charged to millions of individuals and businesses and is the Fed’s most potent tool for influencing economic activity.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which carries out the central bank’s open market operations, moved Thursday to inject $41 billion in temporary reserves into the financial system.
A New York Fed spokesman said it was the largest single day of operations since $50.35 billion was pumped into the system on Sept. 19, 2001, following the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington. He declined further comment.
Fed policymakers at their meeting on Wednesday noted that the “strains from financial markets have eased somewhat on balance.” In the past week, many Fed officials have described the state of financial markets as fragile.
Bernanke and other Fed officials have said it will take time for the markets to fully recover from the credit crisis.
Since August, the Fed has been pumping cash into the financial system to help ease strains from the credit crunch. It also has cut its lending rate to banks — a third such cut came on Wednesday.
US Mint considering cheaper coins
BBC
October 27, 2007
The rising price of copper has prompted the US government to consider making coins with cheaper metals.
The price of copper has risen to just under $8,000 a tonne, driven by demand from countries like China and India.
The US Mint says it is now costing as much as 1.7 cents to produce a “penny” (1 cent) and 10 cents to produce a “nickel” (5 cents).
Reducing the amount of metal used making these coins could save the US government around $100 million a year.
If this was extended to higher denomination coins, the savings are estimated at $400 million.
At the moment, only the US Congress has the power to change the metal composition of US coins.
The proposal by members of the US Senate and House of Representatives would give these powers to the US Treasury.
Change due
Greg Hernandez, Deputy Director of Public Affairs for the US Mint says change is on the cards:
“If the world demand continues to be high for copper, nickel and zinc, then if this legislation is approved, the metal content for the penny and the nickel will be quite different from what it is today.”
In April, the US government finally passed a law to make it illegal to melt down US coins, or export them in any quantity abroad.
Anyone doing so now faces a fine of up to $10 000, in conjunction with five years in prison.
Greg Hernandez says action was taken after the US Mint started receiving enquiries from the public as to whether it was illegal to melt down US coins.
“It was to safeguard against a potential shortage of these coins in circulation, because any wide-spread withdrawal of pennies and nickels could cause coin shortages, and that would be extremely costly to replenish, given the prevailing metal prices and production costs”
Global warning
In India, the government has had to take action after rupee coins were illegally melted down in order to make razor blades.
The Australian Royal Mint has warned its citizens it is illegal to melt down Australian dollars.
The British Royal Mint changed the composition of its one and two pence coins in 1992 from bronze (97% copper) to copper-coated steel.
It has confirmed that the value of the copper in pre-1992 one penny and two penny coins is now greater than the face value.
Royal Mint figures suggest there could be more than eight billion pre-1992 one and two pence coins still in circulation.
However, anyone trying to melt them down could face a fine or two years in prison.
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Filed under: black monday, Britain, California, central bank, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dow, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Euro, european central bank, european union, Federal Reserve, foreclosures, global economy, Goldman Sachs, Great Depression, Greenback, housing market, imf, Inflation, interest rate cuts, liquidation, Oil, Paulson, pound, subprime, subprime lending, US Economy, US Treasury, Wall Street
New credit crunch looms
Telegraph
October 24, 2007
Fresh turmoil in the global debt markets has set off sharp falls in commodity prices and high-risk assets as investors scrambled for safety.
Blog: Is there really a sea of limitless liquidity?
German team damn UK economic ‘miracle’ as a sham
The dollar soared as US investors liquidated foreign holdings, ending at $1.4129 against the euro and £2.0276 against the pound, in one of the most dramatic currency moves this year.
Libor spreads in Europe’s interbank market jumped to 64 basis points, roughly the level that set off the credit crisis last summer and prompted a liquidity rescue by the European Central Bank. The iTraxx Crossover index that measures spreads on corporate bonds has jumped 100 basis since last week to 364 yesterday.
“It’s the summer that won’t end,” said Peter Berezin, a strategist at Goldman Sachs.
He said investors were shaken by last week’s drop in US home-builder sentiment to an all-time low and by fresh falls in the ABX index for sub-prime debt. “We continue to learn that it pays to respect the sell-offs in ABX and housing-related credit. This has elements of the February and August sell-offs, where credit markets signalled problems,” he said.
The lowest tier of ABX debt has fallen to a record low of 20.72 – from par of 100 – pointing to huge losses that have yet to surface.
Wall Street yesterday avoided a repeat of Black Monday, eking out a recovery after the Dow’s 368-point dive on Friday. The fall-out triggered tumbles in Tokyo, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Korea, Taiwan, and Turkey. Lead, copper, zinc, and nickel all fell hard on growing fears of a global economic slowdown, while gold dropped $13 to $754 an ounce. Brent crude fell 61 cents to $83.18.
There are concerns that a $75bn (£37bn) rescue operation put together by US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson to stabilise the sub-prime market is intended to mask the scale of the crisis.
“This rescue has back-fired,” said Hans Redeker, currency chief at BNP Paribas. “The central banks don’t want anything to do with it. There is a fear that the big four US banks are trying to hide their debts,” he said.
The US market for asset-backed commercial paper (ABCP) contracted a further $11bn last week as lenders refused to roll over short-term debt. This form of paper has shrunk by 25pc since August, cutting off almost $300bn of funding.
Dr Suki Man, an analyst at Société Générale, said “shutters” had gone up across the debt markets. “Has it just got ugly again? The jury’s out, but it’s enough to make one feel the chill. All this is offset by a US economy still expected to grow by more than 2pc, and China and India still growing at breakneck speed,” he said.
Mr Redeker said yesterday’s dollar spike was caused by US investors pulling money out of Turkey, South Africa, Hungary and other emerging markets. They had invested $300bn in bonds and stocks over the last year.
“This is just profit-taking on risky assets. The dollar is going to fall further because long-term funding for US assets has collapsed since the sub-prime crisis,” he said.
Outgoing IMF chief Rodrigo Rato warned yesterday that the adjustment may be brutal. “An abrupt fall in the dollar could either be triggered by, or itself trigger, a loss of confidence in dollar assets,” he said.
Existing U.S. homes sales plunge in largest decline since 1999
Sales of Existing Homes Fall by Largest Amount on Record in September
AP
October 24, 2007
WASHINGTON (AP) — Sales of existing homes plunged by a record amount in September as turmoil in mortgage markets added more problems to a housing industry in its worst slump in 16 years.
The National Association of Realtors reported Wednesday that sales of existing homes fell 8 percent in September, the largest decline to show up in records dating to 1999. The seasonally adjusted annual sales rate of 5.04 million existing homes was also the slowest pace on record.
The weakness in sales translated into further pressure on prices. The median price — the point at which half the homes sold for more and half for less — fell to $211,700 in September, down by 4.2 percent from the sales price a year ago. It marked the 13th time out of the past 14 months that the year-over-year sales price has decreased.
The 8 percent decline in sales was bigger than the 4.5 percent decline that had been expected.
Analysts blamed the bigger-than-expected slump on the turmoil that hit credit markets and mortgage markets in August as worries increased over rising mortgage foreclosures.
Those worries resulted in a drying up of the availability of so-called jumbo mortgages, loans over $417,000, which are particularly important in high-cost areas such as California.
“Mortgage problems were peaking back in August when many of the September closings were being negotiated and that slowed sales notably in higher priced areas that rely more on jumbo loans,” said Lawrence Yun, senior economist for the Realtors.
By region of the country sales were down 10 percent in the Northeast, 9.9 percent in the West, 7 percent in the Midwest and 6 percent in the South.
The slowdown in sales meant that the inventory of unsold homes rose to 4.4 million units in September. At the September sales pace, it would 10.5 months to eliminate the overhang of unsold homes, a record length of time.
Economists are worried that the huge levels of unsold existing and new homes will put further downward pressure on prices.
Yun said that the price declines should be put into perspective in that they are occurring after a five-year housing boom which pushed prices up to record levels.
He forecast that prices will decline by about 1.5 percent this year. That would be the first annual price decline on Realtors’ records going back four decades.
The troubles in housing have been a drag on overall economic growth, increasing worries that the housing slump and related credit market troubles could become so severe that they will push the country into a recession.
However, many private economists believe that the Federal Reserve, which cut a key interest rate for the first time in four years last month, will continue cutting rates in a campaign to make sure that the weakening economy does not tumble into a full-blown recession.
Analysts said the price declines will worsen in coming months until inventories are reduced to more sustainable levels. Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, predicted that the housing troubles will prompt the Fed to cut rates by a quarter-point at its meeting next week.
“The housing crunch is accelerating. The Fed can’t stand by and watch,” Shepherdson said.
Filed under: bernanke, Credit Crisis, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Federal Reserve, foreclosures, Great Depression, henry paulson, housing market, Inflation, subprime, subprime lending, US Economy, US Treasury
Treasury chief: Housing crisis a ‘significant risk’ to economy
AP
October 16, 2007
Paulson: Aggressive Action Needed for Housing Crisis, Which Is ‘Significant Risk’ to Economy WASHINGTON (AP) — Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson called Tuesday for an aggressive response to deal with an unfolding housing crisis that he said presents a significant risk to the economy.
In the administration’s most detailed reaction to the steepest housing slump in 16 years, Paulson said that government and the financial industry should provide immediate help for homeowners trying to refinance current mortgages before they reset at much higher rates.
He also called for an overhaul of laws and regulations governing mortgage lending to halt abusive practices that contributed to the current crisis.
“Let me be clear, despite strong economic fundamentals, the housing decline is still unfolding and I view it as the most significant current risk to our economy,” Paulson said in a speech delivered at Georgetown University’s law school. “The longer housing prices remain stagnant or fall, the greater the penalty to our future economic growth.”
In his most somber assessment of the crisis to date, Paulson said that the housing correction is “not ending as quickly” as it had appeared it would and that “it now looks like it will continue to adversely impact our economy, our capital markets and many homeowners for some time yet.”
Paulson spoke a day after officials from the nation’s three biggest banks announced the creation of a fund with up to $100 billion in resources to buy troubled assets such as mortgage-backed securities.
Treasury Department officials participated in the behind-the-scenes discussions that led to creation of the fund, but no government resources have been pledged to the effort.
Paulson said that the government must balance the need to help homeowners stay in their homes against the threat that government action can encourage investors to make risky decisions in the future.
“We must help as many able homeowners as possible stay in their homes,” Paulson said. “Foreclosures are costly and painful for homeowners.”
But Paulson also stated, “When investors are relieved of the cost of bad decisions, they are more likely to repeat their mistakes. I have no interest in bailing out lenders or property speculators.”
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Monday that the housing problem would be a “significant drag” on economic growth into next year and that it would take time for Wall Street to fully recover from a significant credit crunch.
In August, financial markets around the world were roiled by the worst credit crisis in nearly a decade as investors became worried about rising defaults in the mortgage market, causing credit to dry up in a number of markets including the market for commercial paper, short-term loans used extensively by businesses.
At the time, Paulson insisted that the country would be able to work through the problems without any lingering adverse effects. However, as the extent of the troubles in subprime mortgages has grown and the housing slump has deepened, the administration has worked to increase its efforts.
Democrats have also been critical of many of the administration’s proposals so far, saying they will offer too little help in the face of the prospect that 2 million mortgages homeowners obtained with low introductory “teaser” rates will reset at much higher rates in the coming 18 months.
Paulson said in his speech that it was crucial for more mortgage companies to join in an industrywide effort dubbed Hope Now to boost the number of homeowners who can be reached with credit counseling and help to refinance to mortgages they can afford.
In remarks aimed at lenders, Paulson said, “We have an immediate need to see more loan modifications and refinancing and other flexibility. For many families, this will be the only viable solution. The current process is not working well. This is not about finger-pointing; it is about putting an aggressive plan together and moving forward.”