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LIQUIDITY LOOKED IN THE MIRROR BUT
INSOLVENCY STARED BACK”
by
Richard Benson
Benson's Economic & Market Trends
February 8, 2008
We
continue to read articles in the financial press and elsewhere by
widely-respected mainstream economists who have a tendency to quote
mindlessly from Keynes’ masterpiece “The General Theory of
Employment, Interest and Money”.
They couldn’t be further from the truth, however, when they
claim that the current credit cycle liquidity problems can be corrected
with a little fiscal stimulus and cheap money to jumpstart the ailing
economy.
It is not liquidity that is preventing the money from flowing;
it’s insolvency!
The banks won’t lend to deadbeats anymore!
HELLO!
Sure, cheaper money helps high credit score borrowers refinance
and pay less in interest charges, but cheaper money does nothing for the
existing bad loans backed by No Income, No Collateral, and No Character.
When
we were first introduced to credit back in the late 1960's, bankers
learned about the 3 C's of credit:
Collateral, Character, and Cash Flow.
There was no such thing as a NINA (No Income, No Assets) loan.
Indeed, back then it was virtually unheard of to lend money to an
unqualified borrower.
It wasn't until I arrived on Wall Street some 15 to 20 years
later and was involved in the securitization industry (particularly the
sub-prime industry) that I realized hundreds of institutions, employing
thousands of employees, were willingly making millions of loans to
borrowers with, yep, you guessed it, No collateral, No income, No
character!
Some of these were white shoe institutions with blue-chip stocks.
(The article in the Wall
Street Journal today, “The Rise of Mortgage Walkers”, says it all).
Of course mortgage borrowers are walking away and feeling no
shame as they fling the front door keys to the wind!
I have been writing about this and speaking about it at
conferences for years, and wondered why nobody listened.
As
a result of many years of predatory lending, the United States is facing
an insolvency problem that is unprecedented.
Leverage must be reduced to restore faith in the solvency of
institutions before anyone will trust them again with their hard-earned
cash.
Lending has begun to go back on balance sheet but it’s already
too late to save the ailing SIV’s and if the monoline insurers fail,
say goodbye to the asset-backed CP market.
Why
is America looking so insolvent?
Well, for one reason, the easy money policies of the past have
resulted in at least three trillion of really dodgy loans issued for
mortgages, automobiles, home equity lines of credit (HELOC), and credit
cards.
And, to top it off, last Friday the Bureau of Labor Statistics
finally started to come clean as benchmark revisions showed that jobs
created by the Birth Death Model were just a happy fiction; another
360,000 of jobs just vanished in the employment release.
Over
the next few years, the character of many millions of Americans will be
tested as they are forced to make very tough decisions on how they will
live and spend money.
Will they do the honorable thing and pay down their credit card
or mortgage from Countrywide (after reading that the head of Countrywide
left the firm with a gazillion
bucks), or will they buy groceries for the kids? This
morning Wal-Mart announced their sales figures and, surprise, their
store-offered gift cards are now being used to buy groceries and
necessities, rather than iPods and DVD’s.
At the same time, credit cards are being maxed out for the same
reason!
How
can the Central Bankers, Wall Street bigwigs, rating agencies,
appraisers, bond insurers, and investment bankers sleep at night when
they know they stooped so low to make a profit.
Each time they provided the liquidity to wrap, rate, sell and
finance a mortgage, or security, they took advantage of innocent people.
Sure,
every borrower should read and understand the fine print and be held
accountable when they execute a legal document, but the magnitude of the
predatory lending practices during this bubble reached proportions never
seen before in history.
Many borrowers are now literally struggling to survive and eat,
and will soon be facing foreclosure.
The Happy American Dream has been taken away and replaced by a
nightmare. So;
When
yesterday's liquidity looks in the mirror, it's insolvency that is
staring back!
As
this credit tragedy unfolds, I noticed last week while attending the
Asset Securitization Forum in Las Vegas (which I fondly refer to as
“lost wages”), there were over 6,500 Wall Street preppies there and
over 1,500 had resumes and were looking for jobs.
It looked to me like the entire conference was in a state of
total denial. In
my 25 years of attending these securitization finance conferences, this
one felt more like a job fair than an industry conference.
When I needed to adjust my watch to the correct time, I realized
you never know what time it is in a casino because there are no clocks.
Time doesn’t matter there so it’s never too late to gamble.
Indeed,
the players at the credit casino should have left the gaming table last
year!
Not
all of the attendees at the ASF Conference were bleak, though, and many
were smiling, or perhaps smirking.
The smart smirking ones were crossing the street to the Debt
Buyers Association Conference and were looking to pick up trashed assets
for pennies on the dollar.
A number of people were also employed at firms that perform due
diligence, but they cut deals with the State Attorney General to stay
out of jail in return for immunity and fingering some big-name Wall
Street houses.
These Wall Street firms forgot
to disclose that the large number of loans issued to borrowers with
no verifiable income, was off the charts.
As a result, new law firms are sprouting up like weeds as they
gear up for investor class-action lawsuits.
Misfortune creates opportunity.
Surely,
any author writing a book today about the state of the world economy
should include a few extra chapters devoted to what’s going on in the
credit market.
They would be called “Government Bailouts with your Money”,
“Massive Government Deficits”, “Rising Unemployment”, and,
let’s not forget, “The Great Inflation”.
Perhaps I should write the book.

© 2008 Richard Benson
Specialty Finance Group
Benson's Economic & Market Trends
Editorial Archive l www.sfgroup.org
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