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The
Daily Reckoning PRESENTS:
"The
most obvious consequences will be a further sell-off of the dollar,
sparking an increase in U.S. dollar-yields. This, in turn, would disrupt
millions of financial decisions, making lenders more wary and borrowers
more prudent."
Two important
milestones were reached yesterday.
The Dow
climbed over 13,000 - a new world record, noticed by all.
Meanwhile, ignored by
almost all, the dollar (USD) sank
to its lowest level ever against the euro (EUR).
Of the two, the latter
we consider more interesting, for the decline of the dollar - against
euros, gold, and financial assets generally - undermines Americans'
wealth even as they see themselves living in the lap of prosperity. The
decline of the dollar could also push forward the day on which the
world's big holders of the greenback look at their piles and begin to
worry that they have a trillion or two too many. At that point (which we
have been attending for so long we often forget what we are waiting for)
you should see some real excitement in the world's investment markets.
The most obvious
consequences will be a further sell-off of the dollar, sparking an
increase in U.S. dollar-yields. This, in turn, would disrupt millions of
financial decisions, making lenders more wary and borrowers more
prudent.
That there is still
ample room for movement - towards wariness on the part of the former,
and prudence on the part of the latter - is demonstrated in today's
International Herald Tribune. Yes, dear reader, the mainstream press is
finally catching on to the imperial trend we spotted years ago - towards
widespread, commonly accepted fraud. Today it is 'fraud for housing.'
"Loans that
require little or no documentation of income soared $276 billion, or 46
percent, of all subprime mortgages last year, from $30 billion in
2001," says IHT. Now, these 'liars' loans' are defaulting at eight
times the rate of regular, fully documented prime mortgages.
According to the paper,
many of the buyers didn't even know they were lying about their income;
the mortgage brokers lied on their behalf, inflating income figures in
order to get the loans through the approval process.
"I saw account
executives openly engage in conduct such as altering borrower's W-2
forms or pay stubs, photocopying borrower signatures and copying them
onto other, unsigned documents and similar conduct," said a
witness.
But the FBI is not on
the case. The G-men aren't interested in 'fraud for housing.' They've
got bigger fish to fry - people who lie to get multiple mortgages with
no intention of paying them back, known as 'fraud for profit.'
And don't expect the
local DA or politicians to go after the small fish either. There's
nothing in it for them - no glory…no votes…no path to higher office.
Instead, they will move
to 'protect' the hapless victims of mortgage fraud - in many cases, the
very same people who lied to get loans. Every era produces its own
special variety of fraud; and every great, shining fraud is followed by
paler imitators. Typically, borrowers get themselves into trouble; and
then the politicians thunder about 'debt relief' or a 'moratorium' on
foreclosures.
From Grant's Interest
Rate Observer, we learn that in the midst of the Great Depression, many
debt relief measures were passed. One of them was a clear interference
with the right to contract, and was challenged in the U.S. Supreme
Court. The Supremes affirmed the state's power to meddle, saying it was
justified by the economic emergency. But Justice George Sutherland, who
was writing for the dissent (but who might have been writing for the
Daily Reckoning), expressed the view shared by all economists who aren't
idiots - both of them.
"The present
exigency is nothing new. From the beginning of our existence as a
nation, periods of depression, of industrial failure, of financial
distress, of unpaid and unpayable indebtedness, have alternated with
years of plenty. The vital lesson that expenditure beyond income begets
poverty, that public or private extravagance, financed by the promises
to pay, either must end in complete or partial repudiation, or the
promises be fulfilled by self-denial and painful effort, though
constantly taught by bitter experience, seems never to be learned: and
the attempt by legislative devices to shift the misfortune of the debtor
to the shoulders of the creditor without coming into conflict with the
contract impairment clause has been persistent and oft-repeated."
But in the contest
between the sanctity of contracts and debt relief, the forces are badly
mismatched. For every creditor trying to get his money back, there must
be thousands of debtors armed with voter registration cards, determined
to stop him.
Regards,
Bill
Bonner
The Daily Reckoning

© 2007 Bill Bonner
The
Daily Reckoning Archives
www.dailyreckoning.com
Bill
Bonner is the founder and editor of The Daily Reckoning. He is also the
author, with Addison Wiggin, of The Wall Street Journal best seller
Financial Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of the 21st
Century (John Wiley & Sons).
In
Bonner and Wiggin’s follow-up book, Empire of Debt: The Rise of an
Epic Financial Crisis, they wield their sardonic brand of humor to
expose the nation for what it really is - an empire built on delusions.
Daily Reckoning readers can buy their copy of Empire of Debt - now
available in paperback - just click on the link below:
The
Most Feared Book in Washington! http://www.dailyreckoning.com/empireofdebt.html
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