Sonntag, 17. Juni 2007

South Florida: Immobilienmarkt im Mai

Der Immobilienmarkt in South Florida sah im Mai alles andere als gesund aus... Mike Larson hat dazu in seinem Blog einen Eintrag "Sneak peek: May housing trends don't look so hot here in South FL"

Diese Zahlen stammen von einem lokalen Immobilienmakler, dessen Zahlen immer ein wenig früher veröffentlicht werden, als die "offiziellen". Allerdings stimmen die relativen Änderungen auch nie so 100% mit den offiziellen Zahlen, aber: man kann zumindest einen Trend erkennen:


  • die Verkäufe sind im Vergleich zum Vorjahresmonat Mai um 70,2% zurückgegangen (von 2.417 auf 720)
  • die zum Verkauf stehenden Objekte sind im Jahresvergleich um 12,9% gestiegen (von 22.008 auf 24.852)
  • der durchschnittliche Preis der zum Verkauf stehenden Immobilien sank im Jahresvergleich um 5,2% (von $305.000 auf $289.000)
  • die durchschnittliche Zeit, die ein Objekt am Markt ist, bis es verkauft werden kann, steigt im Jahresvergleich um 58% (von 91 Tagen auf 144 Tage).

Donnerstag, 14. Juni 2007

Producer Price Index und Consumer Price Index

Link zu wichtigen Daten bzgl. Inflationsentwicklung in den USA:

Consumer Price Indexes (CPI)

Producer Price Index (PPI)

Veröffentlichungsplan

Beige Book vom 13.6.

Das sogenannte "Beige Book" wird 8x im Jahr vom Federal reserve Board veröffentlicht. Darin enthalten sind die Einzel-Reports sämtlicher 12 Federal Reserve Banken mit Einschätzungen zur aktuellen wirtschaftlichen Lage. Diese Einschätzungen basieren hauptsächlich auf Hinweisen aus der Wirtschaft und stellt nicht die "offizielle" Meinung der Fed dar.
Im aktuellsten Beige Book, das am 13.06.2007 veröffentlicht wurde, zeigt sich, dass die Wirtschaft im April und Mai zwar anzog - der Immobilien-Sektor davon aber nur wenig profitieren konnte.
Auszug aus dem kompletten Report:
The real estate and construction industries were marked by continued weakness in the residential sector and increasing strength in the commercial sector. Most Districts characterized their housing markets as soft or weak.

San Francisco reported that sales volumes for both new and existing homes fell further in most areas, with modest price declines in some parts of the District. Minneapolis described the District's housing markets as mostly weak, and Dallas described the District's housing markets as soft, noting high cancellation rates for new home sales in Dallas and continued slowing in the Houston market.

Philadelphia reported no improvement in the housing market, and Cleveland reported that new home sales were stable but prices were down. Atlanta reported that sales stabilized at low levels in parts of Florida but continued to decline in Georgia. Reports from Richmond and St. Louis were mixed, with sales stabilizing or improving in some areas but declining in others.

The most positive report on housing markets came from the New York District where there were signs of strengthening in New York City, parts of Long Island, and some close-in New Jersey suburbs. However, housing markets in the rest of the New York District remain sluggish.

No District reported an increase in new home construction. Moreover, inventories and days on the market continue to rise in some Districts, although the Kansas City District has seen a reduction in inventories. Realtors in the Philadelphia, Cleveland, and Atlanta Districts anticipate that the weakness in the housing market will last several more months at least.

Montag, 11. Juni 2007

"Bear Stearns": Marktmanipulationen?

Tanta: Modifications, Buybacks, True Sales, and Puzzlement

Yes, friends, Tanta is even more puzzled than usual when the subject is hedge funds. May I beg our readers who have more familiarity with this part of the financial markets to help us out here?

The Financial Times and a number of other sources have reported lately that hedge funds are accusing the investment banks--Bear Stearns specifically--of "market manipulation" by modifying deliquent or soon-to-be delinquent securitized mortgages. The hedgies' interest in all this, it appears, is not that they own these bonds--although that is hardly clear to me--but that they have been on the other side of some credit default swaps which means they will lose if the bonds perform better than anticipated.

Reuters reports that the WSJ reports that the issue is "purchases":

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Hedge fund managers are accusing Bear Stearns Cos. of trying to manipulate the market in securities based on subprime mortgages, the Wall Street Journal reported in its online edition.

The confrontation provides a rare look into the complex trading in the mammoth U.S. mortgage market, which played a critical role in financing the housing boom, and the complicated relationships between hedge funds and investment banks, the paper said.

Hedge funds that had sold short such securities made profits when an index tied to a basket of subprime bonds was falling. But the index has recovered in recent weeks, leading to howls of protest from hedge funds, according to the report.

The chief critic, John Paulson of Paulson & Co., a $12 billion fund, says Bear Stearns wanted to prop up faltering mortgages-backed securities by purchasing individual mortgages that were rapidly losing value to avoid doling out billions in swap payments, the Journal reported.

I am not a subscriber to the Wall Street Journal; perhaps someone who read the original article can help us understand this.

Whatever do they mean by "had sold short such securities"? Are we really talking about a CDS trade? No doubt the "index" in question is the ABX, but can anyone help me decipher the actual trade here?

Furthermore, what could "purchasing individual mortgages that were rapidly losing value" possibly mean in this context? Are we talking about repurchases (EPDs and other rep/warranty failures)? Bear would presumably be the "purchaser" in this case if it had originated the loan (or at least sold it to the security trustee), which would make Bear responsible for taking it back (and, in turn, forcing it back onto whatever hapless originator sold it to Bear in the first place).

Much ink has been spilled on the subject of Bear (and other IBs, particularly Merrill) forcing loans back to originators to the extent of forcing originators into bankruptcy. The implication of the Reuters piece is that Bear, specifically, is accused of doing this not to clean up the security (remove the defective loans at a full payoff of principal and accrued interest to the bondholder) but to avoid having to pay out to the hedge counterparties.

If that's what we're talking about--and feel free to correct me if I'm wrong--then we have a nice can of worms here. Contractual buyback provisions are supposed to protect bondholders from defective loan collateral that can sneak into those securities precisely because the loans are sold on a rep and warranty basis. You can do limited (define that any way you choose) due diligence on the loan collateral itself, relying on the data tapes (the specific "representations" supplied by the loan originator) plus a custodian's report on the presence and acceptability of the note and mortgage documents, because the contract allows you to put back anything that violates those reps.

In addition, these contracts almost always specify that a loan is repurchased at par (the price is the unpaid principal balance plus any interest adjustment for the sale timing). That can easily mean that the original buyer bought the loan for 102 and is putting it back at 100. It almost always means that the originator is buying it back at 100 and going to have to sell it for a lot less than that. The idea is that nobody wins, particularly, in this situation.

Nobody is supposed to win. The traditional "par repurchase" is supposed to mitigate certain kinds of moral hazard. In any case, a par repurchase has exactly the same effect on the bondholder as a refinance (full return of principal). In terms of the reported credit quality of the security, it removes a delinquent loan or a loan that looks like it's going to become delinquent or (in the case of certain kinds of fraud) a loan that looks like it will be hard to recover anything from in foreclosure. Some investors are willing to give the benefit of the doubt on some kinds of loan defects; no one (sane) does anything with a loan that has title or legal mortgage problems except put it back. We have been reading about lenders who suddenly find they cannot foreclose or take possession because of sloppy loan closing or mortgage assignment practices. This threat is real.

The problem appears to be the identity of interest issue: the security sponsor owes the investors the duty of selling defective loans back to the originator at par. This is supposed to be expensive for all parties (think of what you "saved" by not doing your due diligence), but less so than not doing it (the same logic applies to modifications). However, the hedgies seem to be alleging that Bear will also either profit or avoid losses on its CDS trades by forcing these buybacks. I don't know about you all, but it sounds to me like time to clarify how many hats Bear is wearing here: does it own any classes of any of these securities? Is it the sponsor, the servicer, and/or the originator of these loans? Is it buying or selling credit protection? Whose position is it hedging?

Whether we are talking about modifications or repurchases or both, all of this raises some ugly accounting issues, it seems. Reuters, again:
FAS 140 governs whether a bank can treat assets held in various asset-backed securities as sales or secured financing. If the asset is treated as a sale, it allows banks to keep it off their balance sheets.

Banks say the standard prevents them from helping borrowers modify loans easily. But market experts have said the complications are also a legal issue related to the terms set out at the time a mortgage-backed security is created.

The board has revisited FAS 140 several times since it was approved in 2000, but Seidman said on Wednesday it has not gotten any easier.

"What has become clear to me is that, when we look at the way investors and analysts treat securities transactions, if there hasn't been a free and clear sale, they are unwinding the accounting and putting assets and liabilities back on the books," Seidman said. "I've come to the conclusion that ... we're going in the wrong direction -- trying to maintain a standard that's taking assets off the books when investors view it as economically still associated with the seller."

Some more clarity on this issue would certainly be helpful. If I am reading this correctly, the issue is whether the sale of the underlying mortgage loans to the security trust is a "true sale" or not. If it is, the securitization is truly "off balance sheet." If it isn't, the securitization is on-balance sheet financing of the originator's mortgage loans.

That, in turn, has something to do with how the securitizer books gain (or loss) on the securitization transaction, but for our present purposes it seems the issue is how much a "true sale" a transaction treated as off-balance sheet can be if the securitizer can, in essence, "control" the collateral (by modifying it or by forcing the trustee to sell loans back to the issuer). Traditionally, when there is "recourse" in a sale, it generally has to be treated as a financing rather than a true sale, since the seller retains not just an obligation for performance of the collateral but presumably then some rights to make good on that obligation in ways (substitute loans, repurchases, mods) that may benefit the seller as much as the buyer. My guess here--I'm just reading the news, folks, so it's a guess--is that the Financial Accounting Standards Board is fixin' to possibly decide that some of these "nonrecourse" transactions are, actually, recourse transactions, and not true sales, and therefore not on the right balance sheet, and ugly ugly ugly.

So, if I'm following all this, a torrent of buybacks which has already forced a lot of originators into bankruptcy and evaporated a lot of market cap at the same time it has weakened some servicers to the point that nobody's even sure about getting payments collected on the remaining performing loans, not to mention accomplishing those foreclosures for the ones the security couldn't get out from under, has now called into question the accounting basis of the whole deal, which means potentially evil ugly nasty restatements for anyone still in a position (this side of BK) to restate, and at the same time it has dragged the curtain away from this "all risk has been hedged" mantra to show that behind that curtain, the transactions supposed to protect investors' interests are in fact so riddled with conflicts of interest that the liability those who thought they were purchasing "credit protection" may have to the unhappy campers who were providing that credit protection could more than overwhelm the benefit of the insurance.



Auftragseingänge runter - Stronierungen rauf...

Meritage Homes Revises Outlook

Via CNN Money: Weaker Trends in Home Sales Cause Meritage Homes to Revise Its Outlook for 2007

Meritage Homes Corporation ... reported today that April and May home sales have been weaker than expected, as reported by other leading homebuilders, and lower than the Company's first quarter order rates. Preliminary net sales for the first two months of the second quarter were approximately 21% lower than the same period last year, and cancellations increased to a rate of 36% of gross orders, from 27% reported in the first quarter 2007.
Orders down. Cancellations up. Hope gone.
"We were encouraged by sales and cancellation rates that improved each month of the first quarter, leading us to anticipate relatively stronger second quarter sales results," said Steven J. Hilton, chairman and CEO of Meritage. "But these positive trends ended at the beginning of April, as demand slowed and cancellations rose. The weaker conditions we noted in April when we reported our first quarter results, continued through May. Order cancellations increased after widely-reported concerns over credit tightening and difficulties in the subprime markets, which appeared to dampen consumers' confidence and demand for homes."
...
"In light of weaker conditions and reduced expectations, we are reviewing our operating plans for the remainder of the year, as we continue to focus on protecting our balance sheet and maximizing our flexibility through this downturn."

Rede von Bernanke zu Immobilienmarkt und Subprime Krediten

Bernanke: The Housing Market and Subprime Lending

Chairman Bernanke spoke today: The Housing Market and Subprime Lending. This is basically the same speech Bernanke gave back in November 2006. Back then, Bernanke said:

"Over the next year or so, the economy appears likely to expand at a moderate rate, close to or modestly below the economy's long-run sustainable pace."
Now Bernanke says:
On average, over coming quarters, we expect the economy to advance at a moderate pace, close to or slightly below the economy’s trend rate of expansion.
Same thing. But the differences are interesting. Back in November, Bernanke talked about "stabilization" in the housing market. And as recently as April, the Fed's Mishkin saw "minimal" spillover from housing:
"... spillovers to other segments of the mortgage market or to financial markets in general appear to have been minimal."
Now Bernanke talks about further weakness in housing and no "major spillovers".
"... the adjustment in the housing sector is still ongoing, and the slowdown in residential construction now appears likely to remain a drag on economic growth for somewhat longer than previously expected.

... we have not seen major spillovers from housing onto other sectors of the economy."
I do have a problem with Bernanke's "fundamentals":
"... fundamental factors--including solid growth in incomes and relatively low mortgage rates--should ultimately support the demand for housing."
In the short term, the key fundamentals for housing are supply and demand. Income growth is important for the long term. Perhaps Bernanke should read my recent post: Housing Update, June 2007. The outlook for housing is dismal.

And finally, I wish Bernanke would stop talking like a NAR economist when he talks about interest rates. In the near future I'll discuss interest rates and the impact on housing.

"The credit boom is coming to an end..."

Ein sehr interessanter Artikel über die aktuelle Lage an den Aktienmärkten (warum kennt die Wallstreet nur eine Richtung, obwohl das Wirtschaftswachstum ständig nach unten korrigiert werden muss?)...

The Impending Global Liquidity Crisis

By Mike Whitney

Stock markets across the world have been skyrocketing lately. In fact, Forbes reported on Tuesday that: “all 22 of the developed-world markets tracked by Morgan Stanley Capital International are in positive territory year-to-date. …Emerging markets are looking just as flush. Of the 29 emerging market countries that MSCI tracks, only four--Argentina, Sri Lanka, Russia and Venezuela--are in negative territory.”

Yahooo! The markets are soaring and we’ve entered a new “globalized” Age of Prosperity.

Sounds great doesn’t it?

There’s just one little problem; the Commerce Department announced yesterday that that GDP in the first quarter was revised downward to a measly .6%.

Are you kidding me? Economic growth is underwater and yet the stock market is still flying-high? What gives?

It’s easy. The markets are just responding to the growth in the money supply which is in double-digits just about everywhere around the world. When there are more dollars chasing the same number of assets---stocks go up. It’s just that simple. What we’re seeing isn’t the result of investor confidence or industrial output. Heck no! Stocks are rising because our $800 billion current account deficit is recycling into the stock market. What we are really seeing is the first signs of inflation---galloping inflation which will soon spill over into the broader economy.

If we eliminate the “frothy” exuberance of America’s trade deficit, then the stock market would be sucking air through a tube right now. And, you can bet that as soon as our foreign creditors wise-up and start raising interest rates the Dow Jones will quickly become the Dow Doldrums and the economy will nosedive into a 1929-type Depression.

Does that sound overly pessimistic?

At present, the “don’t worry, be happy” crowd still thinks the good times will roll on forever. They don’t see that the US consumer is running out of gas and won’t be able to sustain his gluttonous spending spree much longer. He’s already stopped siphoning the equity out of his home ($600 billion last year) and now he’s has started to max-out his credit cards. (Credit card debt increased 9.2% last month alone!) Now, US consumers are facing a blizzard of bad economic news---rising prices at the gas pump, a 6.7% increase in food prices, and a sickly dollar that keeps losing ground on the currency exchange. (Kuwait is the latest country to announce they will be dumping the dollar for a basket of currencies)

Currently, the US gobbles up two-thirds of the world’s credit each year with no conceivable way of paying it back. That won’t last much longer. Central banks around the world are increasingly hesitant to accept are our flaccid greenbacks and the Chinese are the only ones who are still buying our Treasuries. That’s mainly because it gives them power over political decision-making in Washington. The truth is the Chinese are planning to send the US into receivership and take over as the world’s bank. With dollar-backed reserves of $1.3 trillion, their plan appears to be going “full-steam ahead”.

The bottom line is that we are buried beneath a $9 trillion mountain of debt and there’s no way to dig out. If there’s a break in the liquidity-flows to our stock market---stocks will crash, unemployment will soar, and we’ll be pulled into a deflationary downspin.

Economic soothsayer Elaine Supkis puts it like this:

“World wealth isn't growing, world DEBTS are growing and the place they are growing the fastest is the US which is the sole terminus of world trade at this point. The biggest growth industry today is selling debt instruments. The entire existence of hedge funds, for example, is to funnel profits from uneven trade with the US back into the US via dumping debts onto the backs of any corporations that can run up more debts!” (http://elainemeinelsupkis.typepad.com/money_matters/)

Get it? It’s all just recycled dollars---debt piled on debt piled on debt piled on debt-- repeat ad infinitum. America’s equities portfolio = 1% assets, 99% pure helium.

This may explain why Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson has been frantically beating the bushes for “foreign investment” to keep the stock market bubble afloat. He has no interest in rebuilding America’s industries or increasing our competitiveness. No way. What he’s looking for is a quick liquidity-fix to keep the over-bloated stock market sputtering along while more wealth is shifted to mega-rich corporations. In fact, no one in Washington is even talking about renovating America’s battered manufacturing sector. What do they care if we turn into a nation of busboys and bed-pan cleaners? They’re just hanging around long enough to sell off whatever’s left of our national assets then it’s “off to new markets in the Far East”.

And, they are doing a great job, too! The United States is handing over 1.5% of its national wealth every year to foreign investors while the American public continues to snooze away.

We’re having a giant garage sale and everything must go---roads, water, mineral rights, natural gas etc. We’re getting “picked clean” and no one seems to care.

The boys in Washington and Wall Street don’t work for you and me. They’re destroying the currency and selling everything that isn’t bolted to the floor. Then, they’ll pack-off to Asia and Europe where they can begin the scavenging-cycle all over again.

How bad will it get in the USA?

Consider these comments from Princeton University economist Alan Blinder, who recently attended the business summit at Davos, Switzerland: (summarized by Rep. Ron Paul)

“Word has it that there may be plans yet again to “outsource” highly skilled American jobs to other countries. Approximately 40-million American jobs could be at stake and yet US workers have not been told or consulted about it, until now. Just to put the number of 40 million into perspective, that is more than twice the amount of people that are employed in manufacturing. (According to Alan Blinder) The ‘choice’ jobs of skilled Americans could be lost and given to foreign countries within the next decade or two.”

40 million high-paying US jobs will be outsourced to lower-wage countries within the decade?!?

This is a blueprint for the economic destruction of America!

Maybe this will finally convince the dozy American public that the corporatists who run Washington are a disloyal gaggle of traitorous swine. “Globalization” is public relations swindle designed to steal jobs, plunder the economy, and shift wealth to ruling elites.

The name of the game now is to keep the stock market flying-high for as long as possible while the transfer of wealth continues unabated. That means the hucksters on Wall Street will have to devise even better scams for expanding debt---increasing margin limits, escalating derivatives trading, loosening accounting standards, inflating the booming hedge fund industry, and---the new darling of Wall Street---increasing the mega-mergers, the biggest swindle of all.

These over-leveraged mergers create boatloads of new credit, but add nothing to GDP. They reflect the basic disconnect between the stock market and the real economy. May is on track to be the biggest month for global mergers ever recorded. Marketwatch reports:

“For the year to date, companies have announced at least $2.2 trillion in deals worldwide. Of these, US companies have engaged in $830 billion”.

But look at the figures---Do they sound familiar?

Once again, the insightful Elaine Supkis makes this observation:

“Note that the 'deals' roughly equal our trade deficit. This isn't accidental. They are one and the same! And I will never see this fact stated so baldly in our media. No one dares say it in public.”

Wow; she’s right. Our trade deficit is being concealed by these gargantuan mega-deals in the markets.

And there’s something else we need consider about these mergers; they’re not producing growth in the economy. In fact, GDP keeps falling while stocks keep going higher.

Why?

Because the mergers do not increase productivity; they’re an indication of “asset inflation”. As Thorsten Polleit says, “the government-controlled paper money systems have decoupled credit expansion from the from the economy’s productive capacities.” The link between the stock market and GDP has been broken by inflation.

Henry C K Liu explains it like this in his article “Liquidity Boom and Looming Crisis” in the Asia Times:

“The five-year global growth boom and four-year secular bull market may simple run out of steam, or become oversaturated by too many late-coming imitators entering a very specialized and exotic market of high-risk, high-leverage arbitrage. The liquidity boom has been delivering strong growth through asset inflation (property, credit spreads, commodities, and emerging-market stocks) WITHOUT ADDING COMMENSURATE SUBSTANTIVE EXPANSION OF THE REAL ECONOMY. Unlike real physical assets, virtual financial mirages that arise out of thin air can evaporate again into thin air without warning. As inflation picks up, the liquidity boom and asset inflation will draw to a close, leaving a hollowed economy devoid of substance. …A global financial crisis is inevitable”.

Liu’s right. There’s no “expansion in the real economy”—no increase in output; no boost in GDP. It’s all recycled credit which will “evaporate” at the first sign of trouble.

Greenspan’s low interest rates and currency deregulation have set us up for “global liquidity crisis”.

The basic problem is that credit growth has been outpacing GDP for some time now. That means that debt has been building up faster than the rate of growth in the economy. Eventually those imbalances will have to work themselves out by way of a steep recession or perhaps another Great Depression. There’s a price to pay for low interest rates and, inevitably, we will end up paying it.

Thorsten Polleit of the Mises Institute explains it like this in his article “The Dark Side of the Credit Boom”:

“Today's government-controlled paper-money systems have decoupled credit expansion from the economies' productive capacities: "circulation credit" feeds a "credit boom" that is doomed to end in severe economic, social and political crisis. Austrian economists of the Mises Institute fear that the collapse of the credit boom will lead to the destruction of the currency through a deliberate policy of (hyper-)inflation, destroying the free-market order.”

“Destruction of the currency”; is that too strong?

No. In fact, the United Nations issued this gloomy statement just last week:

“The United States dollar is facing IMMINENT COLLAPSE in the face of an unsustainable debt”. America’s current account deficit is now a matter of international concern.

Polleit says that “the increase in debt-to-GDP ratios ….can actually be observed in all major currency areas, not only in the United States”. This is true. Most of the industrial countries in the world have increased their money supplies to dangerous levels to avoid strengthening against the dollar. It is a prescription for disaster.

If the Fed chooses to lower interest rates now; (to ease the slumping housing market) they will only aggravate “existing disequilibria”. In fact lowering of interest rates will only perpetuate “the fateful expansion of circulation credit that must end in a collapse of the monetary system”.

So, why would the Fed engage in such reckless behavior when it violates fundamental laws of economics? According to Polleit, “the ongoing lowering of interest rates and the accompanying rise in circulation credit and debt-to-GDP ratios — the characteristic features of today's state-controlled paper-money systems — is driven by a deep-seated anti-capitalist ideology.”

This is also true. The serial “bubble-makers” at the Federal Reserve secretly hate the free market system; that’s why they are engaged in plutocratic social engineering. They're using interest rates as a means for shifting wealth from one class to another and creating a centrally-controlled economy. There actions are essentially anti-free market and “anti-capitalist” as Polleit says. We can see this trend even more clearly in US foreign policy where the pretense of “free markets” has been abandoned altogether and America is securing its resources with gunboats and missiles rather than with a checkbook.

The current credit bubble is bigger than anything we’ve ever seen before. For example “The total market volume of credit derivatives outstanding was an estimated US $20.2 trillion in 2006, amounting to around 1.5 times annual nominal US GDP….The market is expected to grow further to US$33.1 trillion until 2008. In fact, the credit derivative market has become the biggest market segment of the international banking business already. The problem, however, is that the “credit derivative markets have emerged on the back of a government-controlled credit and money supply system. And as the latter is assumed to be crisis prone, credit derivative markets might be seen as a multiplier of the crisis potential inherent in today's monetary system”.

In other words, the whole $20 trillion derivative’s market is at risk because it is built on a shaky foundation of hyper-inflated currency. Once again, if money supply exceeds GDP there’ll eventually be a day of reckoning. We expect that derivatives and hedge funds will get hammered once the huge imbalances begin rumble through the markets.

So, what should we be looking for now?

Any break in the liquidity chain will send markets into downward spiral. The likely catalyst for such a crash could be contagion from the housing bubble creeping into the stock market, a sudden downturn in the Shanghai stock market, (which is up nearly 300% in just 2 years) or an increase in Japan’s interest rates. Any one of these could potentially trigger a massive sell-off on Wall Street.

Today’s stock market needs a steady flow of cheap capital to stay aright. That’s why Paulson is desperately looking for new investors. But there’s a basic problem which the markets cannot escape. Inflation is surfacing in all the countries where the stock markets are soaring because of their increases in the money supply. When the central banks are finally forced to raise interest rates; money will tighten up, it’ll be harder for creditors to make their payments or for banks to issue additional loans. As credit dries up more people will default on their loans, demand will drop off for consumer goods, prices will fall, and we will go into deep recession.

Once this process begins, speculators will be forced to abandon their positions, liquidity will continue to evaporate and the market will go into freefall.

Markets are self-correcting. Eventually the overleveraged debt-instruments, which pushed the Dow to historic highs, will be expelled from the system, but not without considerable pain for everyone involved.

Here’s an excerpt from Paul Lamont’s excellent article “Credit Collapse—May 10” which provides a compelling description of what happens a credit bubble begins to unwind:

“On May 10, 1837, the banks of New York suspended gold and silver payments for their notes. Fear of a bank run spread throughout the United States. The young country fell into a 7 year depression. How could two decades of prosperity end so suddenly? According to America: A Narrative History: “monetary inflation had fueled an era of speculation in real estate, canals, and railroad stocks.” Cracks in the dam were visible much earlier, as the stock market peaked in inflation-adjusted value three years prior. According to Rolf Nef, debt levels in the private sector rose to 150% of GDP. In late 1836, the Bank of England concerned with inflation raised interest rates. As rates rose in England, credit tightened, and U.S. asset prices began to fall.

On May 10, investors panicked and scrambled for cash. “By the fall of 1837 one third of the work force was jobless, and those still fortunate to have jobs saw their wages fall 30-50% within 2 years. At the same time, prices for food and clothing soared.”

We can expect a similar scenario in the very near future. When interest rates are kept below the rate of inflation for an extended period of time; enormous equity bubbles arise and threaten the entire system. The stock market is undergoing a period of asset inflation. It has broken free from the real economy and is headed for a crash. As Edward Chancellor, author of “Devil Take the Hindmost: A History of Financial Speculation” says: “The growth of credit has created an illusory prosperity while producing profound imbalances” in the American economy….At some point the system will have to adjust “to face a new reality. The process of adjustment is likely to be painful. It may well end in either an extraordinary deflation...or an extraordinary inflation."

Get ready. The credit boom is coming to an end.