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It’s easy to talk about
the credit bubble, but a picture is still worth a thousand words—or in
this case millions of dollars. Below are some charts created by
Houston-based Bearing
Asset Management that illustrate just how crazy (and familiar)
today’s market has become. As Bearing’s Bill Laggner puts it,
“Complacency is near an all-time high and mutual fund cash positions
are near an all-time low. Bank loan loss reserves are falling due
to the illusion of credit default swaps. Everyone is writing default
insurance!”
Viewing these charts in
sequence, a few things jump out:
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The
stocks that make up Bearing's credit bubble index (banks, brokers,
homebuilders) didn’t miss a beat when tech crashed in 2000; they
kept on rising and have now, despite the homebuilders’ recent
weakness, hit levels comparable to the NASDAQ before its crash.
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Subprime
lending has driven the latest stage of the credit bubble, which puts
it on very shaky ground indeed. From Bearing: “32.6% of new
mortgages and home-equity loans in 2005 were interest only, up from
0.6% in 2000; 43% of first-time home buyers in 2005 put no money
down; 15.2% of 2005 buyers owe at least 10% more than their home is
worth (negative equity); 10% of all home owners with mortgages have
no equity in their homes (zero equity); $2.7 trillion dollars in
loans will adjust to higher rates in 2006 and 2007.”
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Instead
of a single isolated bubble, there has been a series of rolling
bubbles, with new ones forming to replace those that burst. Each, in
other words, is part of one mega-bubble that’s fueled by an
ongoing flood of new dollars.






© 2006 John Rubino
DollarCollapse.com | Financial
Sense Editorial Archive
John
Rubino is
the author of The
Coming Collapse of the Dollar (co-written with James Turk), How
to Profit From the Coming Real Estate Bust (Rodale, 2003), and Main Street, Not Wall Street (William Morrow, 1998). A former Wall
Street financial analyst and columnist with theStreet.com, he
currently writes for Fidelity Magazine and CFA Magazine He lives in Moscow,
Idaho. Contact by Email.
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