|
Foreword
For greater insight into our publication, have a look at the Overview
of Tedbits. It helps current and potential subscribers understand our
mission in serving you. It also gives a broad description of what's unfolding
globally and what you can expect from Tedbits as a regular reader.
Fingers of Instability Series Part VI
In This Issue - 5 Fingers
FIRE SALES!
The Silence is Deafening, Getting Ready to Lie With Numbers, Again!
Are the Stock Markets Just Off Their Highs or Just Off Their Lows?
Pigs in the Investment Python
Crude Realities
FIRE SALES!
Little reported in this week's news was the Fire Sale Hovnanian Homebuilders
conducted over the weekend. Offering 30% discounts on their new homes as they
headed for the sidelines before their peers do. It is an act of yelling "FIRE
IN A THEATRE". Please understand that prices are set at the margin, in other
words, the value of your holdings are determined by the last price at which
they were transacted. In this example with Hovnanian it works out this way:
Homes were sold at 30% discount to reduce inventories and to satisfy creditors
that were getting nervous and demanding payment.
But the result after the sales is that every homeowner in similar homes in
the area just saw the value of their homes drop an equivalent amount. Imagine
a homeowner who had 20% equity in his home before the Hovnanian clearance sale;
he may be a prime-quality borrower and live in a personally-affordable home
(had the income to support his purchase). Presto, he wakes up on Monday and
his is now 10% underwater on his purchase, and since his and many other mortgages
in his area have been SECURITIZED, those previously healthy AAA credits have
been turned into trash with these sales. This person's wealth just suffered
a CRASH, no different than if the value of his or her stock investments declined
in the same manner. Homeowners and homebuilders in general had been holding
their prices up through value-added incentives, such as special countertops
or flooring sales tactics, are now between the proverbial rock and a hard place.
This will no longer work. That sound you hear is the sound of crashing home
values around the country as homebuilder after homebuilder will follow Hovnanian
out the exits.
Do you think any homebuyer within 10 miles of the Hovnanian fire sale will
pay premium prices now? The answer is no. Every home in that area just suffered
devastating losses of equity of up to 30%, as did the homeowners. If you are
an investor or homeowner of homes in that area you just rolled snake eyes.
If you think the other homebuilders did not notice this, think again. They
will now all be heading for the exits before somebody else in the areas they
are developing beat them to the exits. Look for this to happen frequently and
at ever increasing rates. Now, sub-prime is moving up the ladder to McMansions,
and the ability to finance Jumbo mortgages (Loans over the Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac limit of $417,000) are absolutely in freefall. Thousands of homes in the
hottest markets in the United States face this reality, as do the securities
into which the developers' loans were placed. Take a look at this example of
a 1,300 square-foot home in Los Angeles' Hancock Park neighborhood and the
way it's been flipped repeatedly since 1994, as reported originally by Business
Week and reported by Dennis Gartman of www.thegartmenletter.com:
July 1994: a couple purchases the home for $230,000, borrowing $218,000
at 6.75% from Jon Douglas finance.
March 2003: They refinance. Borrowing $313,000 from Downey savings
and Loan at an adjustable rate of 3.5%
July 2005: They sell to a flipper for $815,000. He borrows $570,000
from loan center of California at 6.75% and an additional $244,000 from the
same lender (piggyback loan) from the same lender. He spends $115,000 on
remodeling.
March 2006: The house is sold for $1.29 million. The Buyer borrows
just over $1 million form First Franklin, now a unit of Merrill Lynch at
7.5% and an additional $259,000 from the same source. (Obviously Merrill
used their securitization arm to package and sell the loans to gullible investors)
August 2006: On behalf of mortgage investors (holders of the CMO's).
The house is foreclosed on. It is listed by RE/Max at $900,000. Broker Kenneth
Davis says an offer has been accepted at "close to asking". Thanks Dennis.
Think of it, a small home for a million dollars, up 400% in ten years, it
has a long way to fall, even after this most recent pullback. Every mortgage
and home within that area suffered a devastating 25% or more loss in value
the second that sale closed. People holding CDO's, CLO's and CMO's with that
mortgage paper in it suffered huge 25% losses on the underlying value of the
securitized products they hold. Possibly bigger losses, as well as the value
of the securities, have no way of price discovery. As each Hovnanian competitor
steps into the same course of action, the securities that hold those mortgages
are set to be massacred as well. This is going to domino across the asset-backed
security marketplace as homebuilders race each other out of the burning theatre
to which Hovnanian just lit the matches.
The Silence is Deafening, Getting Ready to Lie With Numbers!
As regular readers know, I have been talking about the poor earnings reports
expected out of the big money center and investment banks. It has been a humbling
experience this week as they have not appeared, and now it is clear why. They
can't! Little reported meetings between the ratings agencies, big banks and
brokers and the financial authorities were taking place all last week. How
can you value CDO, CMO, and CLO Securities when it is impossible to price them?
As each example of what I outlined above takes place, it becomes more difficult
to discover their price. And to report false information is a recipe for the
trial bar to ATTACK on behalf of every investor who bought these poorly-thought-out
products.
So the banks and brokers are going to the government for GUIDANCE in valuing
them in a COMPLIANT manner to reduce the potential liability from misstating
their results and financial condition. Here are some quotes (from Financial
Times article) from US treasury secretary Hank Paulson from last week's meetings:
"The crisis of confidence in credit markets is likely to last longer than
previous financial shocks of the past two decades,"
"the uncertainty in credit markets would last longer than the turmoil that
followed the Asian crisis and the Russian default of the 1990s or the Latin
American debt crisis of the 1980s."
The comments came as it emerged that credit ratings agencies have been called
to a special meeting in Washington by the umbrella body for the world's
securities regulators to explain how they rate structured financial products
based on mortgage assets.
"Secondly, it is the level of complexity," he said, adding that he had met
daily with bankers trying to value asset-backed commercial paper and other
products.
"When they are confident they understand the products, confidence will return," he
said.
Wow, they don't even understand the value of their own holdings, how to
value them, or when they will understand their values. And this is from the
very bankers and brokers who "invented, packaged and sold" them to investors.
Last month investment banks and financial institutions issued just under $77
billion dollars worth of investment-grade securities to shore up their balance
sheets in anticipation of the loss of value of the securities they currently
hold (CDO's, CMO's, CLO,s and MBS's) or for which they provide backup lending
facilities.
Merrill Lynch issued a warning Friday which basically went unreported except
for the European Financial Press. The Bank of England stepped in and rescued
UK mortgage lender "Northern Rock" after saying earlier in the week they would
not do so. This is only the beginning as depositors have continued their run
on the bank even after the bailout. Mervyn King didn't wish to see those lines
of depositors lining up for withdrawals in the headlines, and I promise you,
it made a lasting impression on bank customers throughout the UK and much of
the world. Look for this to happen in the United States soon.
In order to get through the short term look for the "mark to the models" to
return NOW as that is the only way to postpone the write downs of their "fast
dwindling" reserves and announce huge and growing losses. If they "mark to
the market" it is problematic, to say the least. The Federal Reserve is printing
money at an unbelievable rate to underpin the markets; this is inflation in
its purest form. They haven't a clue how to sort through the problems and if
they have devised a plan for it they aren't telling! Markets dislike uncertainty,
when they are uncertain they discount the worst possible scenario, does this
give you an idea where the financial industry valuations may be headed?
Are the Stock Markets Just Off Their Highs or Just Off Their
Lows?
Many are saying the markets are just off their highs. I believe they are about
to make new lows if measure in real money, ie. GOLD versus that thing they
call the US dollar. Below are two pictures of the S&P 500 going back 10
years, the first in dollars and the second in gold.
In dollar terms things don't look too bad at this point. But in terms of the
S&P priced in gold, the chart is rather grim, as the destruction of paper
currency purchasing power is set to accelerate as we can see.

These are monthly charts so their implication on the future direction is strong!
It should be clear to anyone that this bull market is alive and well, in terms
of Fiat currencies, and about to resume its bear trend when viewed in GOLD!
Everyone looks at the possibility of testing the August lows in the stock market,
the more important low we are about to penetrate is the market measured in
REAL MONEY, ie GOLD! It's now clear why we see huge upward pattern breaks in
gold and crude oil. As money printing accelerates to address the problems in
the credit market collapse, expect the S&P in gold to break lower. If the
S&P breaks lower in terms of dollars, look for the S&P in gold chart
to impulse out of its low and head lower. GOT GOLD ANYONE?
Pigs in the Investment Python
The banks are attempting to do an imitation of Atlas and trying to lift the
distressed lending onto their shoulders. Conduits, SIV's, mortgages, private
equity, asset-backed securities (CLO's, CMO's, CDO's) are all falling back
onto their balance sheets and SUCKING the life out of their reserves. As outlined
in previous editions, the offloading of previously committed lending obligations
of over 350 billion dollars worth of private equity deals has begun, and the
blood has only begun to spill.
The marketplace is putting this back on their plates as there is no place
to sell it, and the treasury and the Federal Reserve are encouraging them to
take it down and feed it into the discount window. The discount window had
its largest inflow since September 2001. But the uncertainty that is sub prime
valuations in the securitized products is now broadening, as we see in the
previous fingers of instability.
Wall Street tried last week to unload the Allison Transmission loans, part
of a $4.2 billion dollar buy out that was postponed in July. They sold only
1 billion at 96 cents on the dollar. They tried to take the KKR buyout of First
Data to the market this last week and failed to garner enough interest to take
down 5 billion of the 25 billion dollar loan commitment they made. Collectively,
they hold over 350 billion dollars of private equity commitments and can't
even move small drops of them into the market place.
At 96 cents on the dollar the losses are 16 Billion, at 90 cents 40 billion
at 85 cents 60 billion. As the securitized paper market woes widen, so will
these losses as the buyers will not take a chance on extending their losses.
How can they rate the NEW paper with Moody's and S&P already on the hook
for their past misdeeds in rating previous offerings? And obviously 96 cents
will not get it done, so it is time to mark them down and try to sell them
again. More and more of these poor lending decisions are coming back to haunt
the banks and brokers that committed to them with plans to sell the trashy
commitments they made to the securitized markets (this is no different than
selling sub prime trash they knew was in previous offerings). The $77 billion
they raised last month to bolster their balance sheets can vaporize in a few
days time. Money can't be created fast enough for these impossible-to-price-and-place
securities and obligations. Gold is set to go a lot higher as the money to "paper
over the problems" is created with the click of a mouse or a flick of the button
on a printing press.
Crude Realities
Crude Oil is breaking out higher as we speak; just like the gold chart I illustrated
last week this other critical component is breaking out higher as well. We
covered crude oil projections to 98 dollars in late July when the monthly chart
finished its bottom pattern and issued its projections. It pulled back over
the 6 weeks since that time and now has issued a second short-term objective
of $88.00 dollars a barrel. It has now been in expanding backwardization that
whole period and has broken out to the upside as this WEEKLY chart illustrates:
As
you can plainly see, crude backed, filled and tested the bull trend line since
the original new high was made. This is a weekly chart so this action is significant
and it is issuing new buy signals as you read this -- there is not one internal
that is not confirming the new highs and buy signals (they are top to bottom,
RSI, slow stochastic's, MACD, ADX and on balance volume). The new price highs
in July were confirmed by all the oscillators at that time, signaling robust,
new price highs are to be expected. You can expect gasoline to make robust
new highs as well, and its weeklies are on buy signals as well. There is only
19 days of inventory in storage, the lowest in decades. As robust demand, short
supplies and rampant money creation set the stage for a powerful new move higher
in the energy sector.
The more money they print the more Oil will just re-price in the lower purchasing
power of the currency, whatever it may be. I saw a story on CNBS er CNBC on
Friday where they trotted out a young oil analyst (he couldn't have been 30
years old) from the Bank of America who said crude oil was fundamentally overpriced.
What a laugh it was as Sue Herrera told the audience don't worry we are here
to tell you this is not a problem. This guy was an "amiable dunce" of the first
order. I remember myself when I was 30 and I didn't have a clue, how he made
it into the frontlines of CNBC (CNBC world is a much more honest organization,
and not a wholly owned subsidiary of the New York establishment) is a testament
to their complicity in trying to dupe you into what they wish you to think.
Are you stupid? No I think not. But they are for trying to tell you these things!
Do you think 100 dollar crude oil could be a problem? Of course it will be!
IN CONCLUSION: Stock market rallies are the result of the money creation
and it is going into the markets rather then into the credit problems. This
rally has been done with very low volume. 100's of billions of dollars of new
money can be expected to be created to address the emerging "financial system" problems.
China is so ripe for a large pullback it is incredible. One poor lending decision
after another is being revealed, and the securities they are packaged in are
crumbling! What is unfolding in the housing markets is now becoming nothing
less than a crash, ask the people that lived near Hovnanian's FIRE SALE. Globally,
economies are on good footing, but financially the underpinnings are caving
in like a house of cards as investors around the world in over-the-counter
derivatives (CDOs, CMOs, MBS, CLOs,) have been fooled by the banks, investment
houses and the ratings agencies. No one wants to pay the piper and the cover-up
of their malfeasance continues.
There are no shortages of dollars, Yen, Swiss Francs, Yuan, Aussie dollars,
etc. In fact, there are more of them served up on a daily basis in quantities
that would boggle your mind. Assets will just re-price in the devalued scripts.
There is a "shortage of confidence" in whom you can trust as losses have not
been revealed and the bodies have not yet surfaced. So uncertainty rules the
day, all solutions are inflationary in nature.
It's clear the financial authorities in Washington and New York want the story
never to surface. They will sooner or later. The problem is not isolated to
a small group of players, so its watch and wait. I don't understand why they
don't want to fess up and get it behind them, unless the truth is too harsh
to reveal. I don't believe this is the end of the world, only an opportunity
if you have prepared yourself. Have you made money during this turmoil? If
not, figure out why, research investments that did and diversify your portfolios.
What is unfolding are nothing but opportunities for the prepared investor!
I apologize for getting carried away with my commentary last week, I did not
mean to frighten you! And I stand corrected on my line about no responsible
public servants as my readers peppered me with the name of that last American
hero "Ron Paul". Of course, I know him as I am a libertarian (as he is) and
voted for Ross Perot when he spouted the truth, and got Bill Clinton. So let's
not hold our breath as good policy is not a winning recipe for elections in
the lands of the "something for nothing" personality. What a terrible state
of affairs in the political arenas of the G7. This week promises to hold a
lot of surprises as the investment banks start to report and the Federal Reserve
meets on Tuesday. Will they come clean or try and postpone reckoning day? My
guess now is the latter. We will be discussing this commentary and more on
Commodity Classics videocast on www.commodityclassics.com and
Market news 1st, www.mn1.com on Wednesdays
at 4 p.m. cst and on www.mn1.com on Fridays
at 1:30 pm cst. Don't miss the exciting next edition of Tedbits and the "fingers
of instability" series. If you enjoyed this commentary send it to a friend
and subscribe its free at www.TraderView.com Thank
you.
If you enjoyed this edition of Tedbits then subscribe
- it's free, and we ask you to send
it to a friend and visit
our archives for additional insights from previous editions, lively thoughts,
and our guest commentaries. Tedbits is a weekly publication.
Ty Andros LIVE on web TV. Don't miss Ty interviewed live by Michael
Yorba from Commodity Classics. Catch Ty's interview every Wednesday at www.MN1.com or www.CommodityClassics.com at
4pm Central Standard Time.
Click here and
I will prepare a complimentary, no-obligation, custom-tailored set of portfolio
recommendations designed to specifically meet your investment needs. Thank
you.
Subscribe to Tedbits - Click
Here
Tell a Friend About TedBits - Click
Here
|