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Back in January I posted a short
piece on how banks tend to pile into whatever is hot just as it's about
to implode. Bank of America's acquisition of credit card giant MBNA, at a
time when consumer debt was setting records was, I predicted, the deal that
would put an exclamation point at the end of history's longest credit boom.
Okay, maybe that was a little premature. The real orgy, it seems, is just
beginning:
Earlier this week, money center bank Wachovia agreed to buy Golden West Financial,
California's second largest S&L, for $25 billion. The deal gives Wachovia
120 new branches in California and more than doubles its home-loan portfolio.
And -- get this -- almost all of Golden West's mortgages are adjustable rate. "We
now have the geographies that we have coveted in this deal, and we will focus
on these high-growth markets," said Wachovia CEO Kennedy Thompson.
The next day, MarketWatch ran an article titled "Wachovia deal may force more
mergers", which concluded that other banks will now feel compelled to make
big acquisitions "to avoid losing ground in the huge California market." And
then today Bloomberg reports that Merrill Lynch is shopping around for a major
mortgage lender. As amazing as it sounds, the big banks are suddenly hot to
get into real estate, especially California real estate.
So...let's take this piece by piece, working from broad to narrow:
Household debt. In 1990 American families owed banks, car dealers and
credit card companies about $3.6 trillion. Today we owe nearly $12 trillion.
The cost of servicing this debt eats up about 17% of disposable income, a level
typically associated with the onset of recession. AND since much of this debt
is in the form of variable rate mortgages and adjustable rate credit cards,
its cost is ratcheting up as rates rise across the yield curve. Not the profile
of a society about to make mortgages a growth market.

The housing market in general. That some formerly hot markets are imploding
is common knowledge by now. But it's still fun to see the numbers and hear
the stories.
From the Honolulu Star Bulletin, May 6: Honolulu home sales down 41% year
over year in April, and Maui condo sales off by 50%.
The New York Times, May 9: The inventory of homes for sale in the Fort Lauderdale
area has quadrupled, year over year, to 20,000.
Dow Jones Newswire, May 8: "Preliminary reports from builders Hovnanian Enterprises
Inc. (HOV) and Toll Brothers Inc. (TOL), whose quarters ended April 30, indicate
demand is falling faster and more sharply than previously thought, and that
the pullback is no longer confined to hot markets that had seen sharp home
price run-ups in the past few years. Hovnanian's orders fell 20% in its fiscal
second quarter - an about-face from the 5.5% order growth reported in its fiscal
first quarter. Toll's orders declined 32%, which is steeper than the 29% dropoff
posted in its fiscal first quarter.
For Toll, the order decline was across the board as all of its geographical
regions reported year-over-year decreases in demand. Chairman Robert Toll attributed
the declining demand to higher cancellations and to speculative buyers who
are dropping out of the market and putting the homes they recently acquired
up for sale. Although Toll said his company doesn't sell to speculators, 'we
have certainly been impacted by the overall increase in supply.'"
According to real estate consultancy Majestic Research, new-home sales in
all 40 markets it tracks fell during February and March. Some examples:
Washington, D.C., -22%
Tucson, Ariz. -50%
Phoenix -37%
The major homebuilders, instead of pulling back in the face of falling sales,
are apparently trying to make it up on volume. According to Dow Jones, "Toll
Brothers plans to open 80 communities during the next six months, and expects
to wrap up fiscal 2006 with 295 subdivisions, up from 230 in fiscal 2005."
As all those adjustable rate mortgages ratchet up, it's getting harder for
last year's marginal homebuyers to make ends meet. According to real estate
consultancy RealtyTrac, "A total of 323,102 properties nationwide entered some
stage of foreclosure in the first quarter of 2006, a 72 percent year-over-year
increase from the first quarter of 2005 and a 38 percent increase from the
previous quarter."
The California housing market. 80% of San Diego homebuyers chose adjustable
rate mortgages in both 2004 and 2005. Home sales are down 46% in Sacramento,
30% in San Francisco, and 50% in Los Angeles/Long Beach, year-over-year. From
the New York Times: "A house at 57 Marina Boulevard in San Rafael, across the
bay from San Francisco, was originally listed at $1.45 million. The owner recently
dropped the price to $949,000 when a competing house on the same street lowered
its price to $959,000, from $989,000...In Marin County, the prices of about
a quarter of all listings have been reduced....In Santa Cruz, inventories have
tripled to 124 days, from 42 days."
As for the idea that California's population will keep growing because everyone
wants to live there, real estate analyst Rich Toscano at Piggington.com notes
that San Diego's population actually shrank in 2005. "But it's even worse than
that, because much of the population growth of recent years has been due to
births. Until Countrywide goes live with their Fetal Lending Division, we can
probably just focus on migration: people moving in and out of San Diego (or,
put another way, population growth with the effects of births and deaths removed)." Analyzed
this way, it turns out that for three years running, more people have moved
out of San Diego than have moved in -- and the trend is strengthening.

More from the New York Times: "For the first time in nearly a decade, you
can smell the anxiety. The listing agent for a four-bedroom home on Scripps
Trail in San Diego informed other agents in the multiple-listing service that
a "very, very motivated seller will entertain all reasonable offers" and "will
help with closing costs." The house was listed in September at $810,000. After
a previous price cut, the seller is now willing to entertain offers as low
as $685,000. But they didn't attract much interest...Inventories in the San
Diego area have risen 25 percent in the last year, to more than 19,000 unsold
homes, a record."
And on a personal note, my little town in northern Idaho is crawling with
transplanted Californians. A neighbor (and recent immigrant from Sonoma) is
a real estate appraiser, and says that the last five houses he's done have
been for Californians moving in.
A final word from Rich Toscano: "There has been zero upward price pressure
this spring, for the first spring in who knows how long. It looks like things
are truly going to start falling apart."
Classic short. What does all this mean for banks? Well, since they
make money by lending it out and getting paid back, a crash in home
sales and a spike in defaults would seem to be a bad thing. As Fleckenstein
Capital's Bill Fleckenstein put it in early April:
"It is indeed the financial institutions that are most at risk in the real-estate
market (which is not to say that consumers and speculators won't get hurt).
The lenders will bear the brunt of the pain, because in many cases, they loaned
the entire purchase prices of many homes. As I have said often, the housing
bubble has been more a lending bubble. It will be the impairment of the financial
institutions that will stop the flow of credit to the real-estate market. In
turn, that will accelerate the collapse in house prices somewhere along the
way."
So Wachovia has done us two favors with one stroke of a pen. First, it has
validated the idea that the longer a credit expansion goes on the crazier bankers
become. Second, it has handed the Sound Money community another classic short.
When the housing crash moves from business section to front page, and stories
of dispossessed formerly middle class Californians are everywhere, and bad
loans are chewing through bank income statements like demented termites, the
owners of Wachovia LEAPS puts will be rich. Load up the wagons!
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