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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Housing Crash: Why a 'Soft Landing' is Unlikely

By Mark Weisbrot, AlterNet. Posted December 12, 2007.


Don't let the latest stock market rally fool you.
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If you are like most Americans, you are probably wondering what the hell is going on with the economy. Good question. Since July, when the credit crunch hit, caused by the collapse of all those suddenly not-so-good mortgage-backed securities - often referred to as the "sub-prime" crisis - there have been a lot of pessimistic stories in the business press. The London Financial Times was running front page headlines like "Gloom Envelops World Markets" (November 9) with alarming regularity. The stock market (as measured by the Dow) officially had a "correction," defined as a dip of ten percent or more, between October 9 and November 26.

Of course the stock market is not the economy, as much as the TV news makes us think it is. Nearly half the people in this country don't own any stocks, even in retirement accounts. And most of what is owned by the other half belongs to a fraction of those owners. Not only that, but the stock market can go up because of factors that don't help and that possibly hurt the majority of people: when there is a speculative bubble (as in the 1990s) or because profits are growing relative to wages and salaries.

Still, it is one indicator of what investors think, and in the last two weeks the stock market has been rebounding. It appears that many forecasters and investors think that we can avoid a recession altogether, despite the bursting of an enormous housing bubble and the associated freezing up in credit markets. Some even think that the housing slump may have bottomed out. This would all be great news if it were true, since a recession is a very painful event in which millions of people lose their jobs and many other bad things happen.

However, a "soft landing" doesn't seem likely. Aside from the problems in the financial system and credit markets - which do not seem to have passed -- there is the problem of falling home prices. Just as the fantasy-based prices of the late 1990s stock market were much broader than a "tech bubble," this is not just a "sub-prime" problem. In fact, foreclosure rates on prime mortgages - borrowers with good credit - are now hitting the level of sub-prime borrowers three years ago. From 1995-2006, house prices nationally rose by 70 percent more than inflation. To get an idea of how big a bubble this created, consider that they hardly rose at all, adjusted for inflation, for the previous 45 years. This indicates that some 4 to 8 trillion dollars in bubble wealth was created - comparable in size, at the upper end, to the stock market bubble.

When the stock market bubble began to burst in 2000, it caused a recession in 2001. The housing bubble began to burst last year, but there is still quite a bit more to go. House prices year-over-year are only down about five percent from their peak in July 2006. That is bad - the worst since the Great Depression -- but most likely just a first installment on what's to come, given the unprecedented price explosion of the last decade. The price declines will further constrain consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of the economy. Remember that this current economic recovery, now six years old, has been driven primarily by consumers borrowing on the rising value of their homes, and spending this cash. The big increase in residential construction, as well as the real estate and related sectors, also kicked in. All of these factors - plus the credit crunch - are now working in reverse.


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See more stories tagged with: sub-prime, lening crisis, corporate accountaability

Mark Weisbrot is Co-Director and co-founder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research. He is also president of Just Foreign Policy.


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what's the answer?
Posted by: lexicon on Dec 12, 2007 9:41 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Clearly, we should be stopping the illegal and immoral ban on HEMP. Money made from hemp fibres would be far more resilient to laundering and abuse...er...

...nevermind...


Oh, right! Clearly we need to elect Kuchinich. He would stop the war, and if you take the two first letters off his name, it makes a palindrome....er...oh. sorry.

GOT it this time! Elect Ron Paul! Be part of the Ron Paul Experience! Help make Bretton Woods a household word again.

excuse me? ...oh...sorry.


anyway, all seriousness aside...I'm not exactly sure what we all expected to happen, with the FED dropping the open market rate to A PERCENT. All of that almost-free money wandering around like a half-dressed drunken prom queen in a Fraternity basement party...the "players" are going to do the wrong thing.

I think the real problem, is that our financial system has moved away from the idea of growing wealth through careful nurturing of real fundamentals, to a Pump 'n Dump ideology. The big players have realized that its easier to create and ride arbitrage schemes, than it is to create real wealth.

A lot more to say, no time to say it...


lexicon

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"Them that has will get..."
Posted by: Sojourner on Dec 12, 2007 10:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When it comes to finances all that matters from advisers is: what are the advisers doing with their money? So screw the anecdotes, Weisbrot. What are you doing with your money?

The only prediction that matters for our economy is "When?" Up, down, sideways? All those will happen. A stopped clock is right twice a day.

When will Asia cash in its treasury notes? When will housing prices drop by enough to matter to spending? In a year? In six months? Anyone who cannot locate a prediction within those broad parameters ain't worth the time of day.

I understand a "correction" not just in terms of the 10% but also as a good move. The market was hyped, so it pulled back. The fact that it is not growing gung-ho therefore is not a problem--except for those who planned on it.

People who bought houses for a quick turnaround profit will be disappointed. BFD. They probably own half a dozen already and have a cushion soft enough for the princess and the pea.

Etc., etc., etc.

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One of the reasons there will be no soft landing is that there is now $1.3 trillion in subprime
Posted by: yellow on Dec 12, 2007 1:16 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...mortgages about 16% of which is 90 past due. Subprime mortgages have increased by leaps and bounds in absolute and proportional terms over the past twenty years. In 1986, just as the US economy was set for an upswing, Congress made mortgage interest tax deductable. This ultimately contributed to the housing bubble as much as anything else did. When the US economy took off in the "go-go nineties" and a rash of mortgage refinancing drove consumer spending as it shifted trillions in high interest credit card and other consumer debt into mortgage debt. As house prices escalated borrowing against this form of appreciating collateral drove the late '90s economy as it shifted trillions in consumer debt into the mortgage market making the economy vulnerable to a burst in the housing bubble. And this is exactly what has happened. It wasn't the fault of the fed. Greenspan cut rates to keep the economy from tanking preventing more harm than was created by the bubble. The real origins of the housing bubble, as we well know, lay in the growing financialization of a chronically stagnant US economy whose growth has come to depend upon debt and borrowing.

Now a real crisis is looming and housing prices are falling below the point where the sale of the house can cover the bank loan. Forclosures are at an all time high and have not been this prevailent since the Great Depression. The rate cuts and other attempts to keep the economy up are only temporary palliatives. We need to address the issue not through monetary or FED policy but through a pattern of three decades of skewing the distribution of wealth and of making the middle and working classes financially unviable. This is a social not a monetary issue. The economy is stagnant because we are trying to save the unfettered growth of profits not the economy itself. Redistributing wealth through taxing and wage and benefit based income shifts will renew the stability of the middle classes and restore growth based on the domestic expansion of real production not paper speculation. Whole new labor intensive sectors of the economy can be opened up like mass transit and renewable energy. This will require massive federal government involvement in conjunction with the private sector. This vision can only come about in a new economy based on human needs not corporate greed.

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The 'credit crunch' is a misnomer
Posted by: Gegner on Dec 13, 2007 6:28 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
there isn't a 'lack of funds' so one can only wonder what those nitwits at the Fed think they are doing.

The 'problem' in a nutshell is there is a lack of borrowers who have the wherewithal to pay!

The US consumer is tapped out.

That 70% of the economy that is driven by consumer spending is what's drying up!

So the only thing the Fed is doing by pumping cash into the money supply is propping up the banks while they erode your purchasing power!

Unfortunately, since the banks have no one to lend this money to, this tactic will do little good.

The 'crisis' lies within the ability to pay...if you can't pay you may still get the loan but if you don't 'take the money and run' well, you know what happens.

Worse, the list of 'defaults' is growing. Folks aren't buying cars and home equity lines of credt are defaulting at a rate near the subprime level. The overburdened consumer is certainly spending less on Christmas this year as package counts are down over a third of what they were last year.

It is also disturbing to note that nobody had credit cards during the last Depression, something that adds a while new layer of indebtedness to the picture.

Imagine what it will be like when tens of millions are living in the streets. The 'lucky' ones will move in with thier relatives...but only for as long as they can contribute to keeping that house afloat.

Charity begins at home but if your presence puts too much of a strain on that household, you'll be asked to leave.

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» RE: The 'credit crunch' is a misnomer Posted by: tommy_slothrop