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MORTGAGE
MELTDOWN!
by Martin D.
Weiss, Ph.D.
Editor, Safe Money
Report & MoneyandMarkets.com
June 25, 2007
For
many months, Mike Larson has been warning you about a meltdown in
America's vast new market for home mortgages.
Now that meltdown is
here.
He told you home sales
and prices would fall, and they did.
He told you that
American homeowners would default on their mortgage payments in record
numbers, and they have.
He warned this would
shake Wall Street to its core. Now it is.
The evidence is
ubiquitous and indisputable:
- From
their peaks in 2005, existing home sales are down 16.9%; new home
sales, down 29.4%.
- For
the first time since data was collected in 1968, home prices have
declined nationally for nearly a year.
- Worst
of all, American homeowners are falling behind on their mortgage
payments in record numbers: The delinquency rate on low-quality
mortgages has surged to 13.8%. On medium-quality mortgages, it has
more than doubled. And on all mortgages, it has now surpassed the
worst level of the last recession.
This mortgage meltdown
has struck down the stocks of home builders, low-quality lenders, and
now, also the widely owned Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs).
The mortgage meltdown
has mortally wounded or killed 82 higher-risk lenders, delivering huge
loan losses, early payment defaults and funding cutoffs. Some have
severely curtailed lending operations. Others have filed for bankruptcy.
And last week came the
clincher:
The Mortgage
Meltdown Has Just
Precipitated One of the Largest
Hedge Fund Collapses of All Time
The fund's manager,
Bear Stearns, promptly come to its rescue with an astounding sum of $3.2
billion. But the collapse — and even the rescue itself — have raised
a series of urgent questions for investors that few on Wall Street seem
ready to answer:
Urgent Question
#1. The fund's marketing and even its name — High-Grade
Structured Credit Strategies Fund — stressed safety. Were they lying?
Urgent Question
#2. Until recently, the fund's investments were supposedly
holding their value pretty nicely, with relatively modest losses despite
the mortgage meltdown. So how did that value evaporate so quickly?
Urgent Question
#3. The last time a major hedge fund — Long Term Capital
Management — collapsed in the U.S., the Federal Reserve and nearly all
of Wall Street came to its rescue. This time, Bear Stearns acted alone.
And it did so much more quickly. Why?
Urgent Question
#4. Is this an isolated event? Or is it just the tip of the
iceberg?
Urgent Question
#5. What does it mean for other mortgage and real estate
investments — Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgage bonds … homes,
shopping malls, and office buildings … real estate stocks and REITs?
Urgent Question
#6. What should you do about it, regardless of what you invest
in?
Here are our answers
…
Why These
Supposedly "Safe" Investments
Were Really Investment Time Bombs in Disguise
The hedge fund that
collapsed last week invested more than 90% of its assets in securities
that were touted as being as safe as, or almost as safe as, a U.S.
Treasury bond, according to documents reviewed by The Wall Street
Journal.
But the truth is
another matter entirely: These investments are "collaterized debt
obligations," or CDOs, and they're a far cry from Treasuries:
- U.S.
Treasury debt was originally created to finance the American
Revolution in the days of George Washington and Ben Franklin. In
contrast, these CDOs were created by the now-defunct Drexel Burnham
Lambert in 1987, where former junk-bond king Michael Milken made his
home.
- Unlike
Treasury securities, CDOs are not backed by the full faith
and credit of the U.S. Government. Quite to the contrary, they are
based on home mortgages now defaulting in record numbers.
- Unlike
a simple cash investment in bonds, these CDOs were usually leveraged
to the hilt with huge borrowings from major Wall Street firms like
Merrill Lynch, J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs and Barclays.
- Most
important, unlike Treasury securities, they are not traded
in a huge, active market where investors can buy and sell them at
fair prices. Instead they are traded only sparsely, with few buyers
or sellers in the open market.
And therein lies the
crux of the problem …
If These CDO
Investments Aren't
Actively Traded, How Do You Know
What The Heck They're Really Worth?
The answer provided by
companies like Bear Stearns: We guess! More specifically, their
procedure has been to …
Estimate what these CDO
investments should be worth based on assumptions about
delinquency rates … hope that, if their assumptions turn out to be
wrong, no one will find out … and pray that, if someone does find
out, they'll be able to cover it up.
That's precisely what
we believe has happened here!
First, their
assumptions about their CDOs were dead wrong.
They figured it would
be impossible for delinquency rates to be this high, especially without
a recession. But now the "impossible" has happened.
Second, their
hopes about no one finding out were hopelessly naive.
Indeed, in recent days,
as soon as big Wall Street firms got wind of the real nature of the
troubles, they tried to sell some of their CDOs to test the market.
But the values that
were being assumed for these CDOs were a fiction. In the real world, the
bids that sellers got weren't 90 cents on the dollar — not even 80 or
70 cents on the dollar. No. For most of the material, they got bids of
50 cents on the dollar or, worse, no bids at all.
Result: If they try to
sell any notable quantity of these CDOs, they could wind up with as
little as 20 cents or even 10 cents on the dollar!
Third, it appears
that …
The Main Reason
Bear Stearns Is
Bailing Out Its Failed Fund Is
To COVER UP the Sinking Value of
These Esoteric Securities
If major Wall Street
firms go ahead and sell these in the open market, everyone will find out
how little they're really worth. And if everyone knows that they're
really worth only a fraction of their stated value, the game is up.
Bear Stearns' credit
and Bear Stearns' shares will sink like a rock. Major banks will lose
fortunes. And ultimately, most of America's mortgage markets could
collapse.
In our view, that's the
key reason Bear Stearns acted so swiftly last week. And that's why Bear
Stearns didn't wait around for other major banks to join in the
bail-out.
But it's also why …
It Could
Already Be Too Late!
Look: The truth is out.
It's all over the front page of Saturday's New York Times and
Saturday's Wall Street Journal.
Plus, earlier in the
week, Bloomberg scooped them both with this report about the first major
firm that tried to sell a substantial amount of these securities …
"Merrill Lynch
& Co.'s threat to sell $800 million of mortgage securities seized
from Bear Stearns Cos. hedge funds is sending shudders across Wall
Street.
"A sale would give
banks, brokerages and investors the one thing they want to avoid: a real
price on the bonds in the fund that could serve as a benchmark …
"Because there is
little trading in the securities, prices may not reflect the highest
rate of mortgage delinquencies in 13 years. An auction that confirms
concerns that CDOs are overvalued may spark a chain reaction of
writedowns that causes billions of dollars in losses."
This Is
Serious!
It reminds me of the
1970s, the first time I warned of an equally massive cover-up —
thousands of S&Ls that were grossly overstating the value of their
assets.
It reminds me of a
similar episode in the early 1990s, when we broke the news that major
life and health insurance companies were covering up the true value of
their junk bonds.
And we saw it happen again
when most Wall Street firms put out hundreds of "buy"
ratings on companies they knew were going bankrupt.
Moreover, if anyone
tells you this is an "isolated event," show them to the door.
Indeed …
This is Not the
Only Bear Stearns Hedge Fund in Danger!
Bear Is Not the Only Big Wall Street Firm Involved!
And Wall Street Is Not the Only Place This Is Happening!
First, Bear
Stearns manages another, similar, fund that's bigger and riskier —
the High Grade Structured Strategies Enhanced Leverage Fund.
Together, The Wall
Street Journal reports that the two funds have commanded
investments of more than $20 billion. So we figure that, if
they're down 50% or more, even if Bear Stearns triples its rescue effort
and puts up as much as $10 billion, it may still not be enough.
Second, Bear
Stearns is just one of several big players in the CDO market
— a market which has mushroomed in size from virtually nothing a few
years ago to over $1 trillion today.
Just in 2006,
industry-wide sales reached $503 billion, a fivefold increase
in three years. And more than HALF of those were based on mortgages
issued to people with poor credit, little loan history, or high debt,
according to Moody's Investors Service.
Third, as
I noted at the outset, this is not just a Wall Street phenomenon.
Rather, it's caused by a broader mortgage meltdown, which, in turn, is
part and parcel of an even broader real estate bust.
So even if Bear Stearns
can put out this particular fire, it's going to be very hard pressed to
contain the crisis for long. That's why we believe …
Nearly ALL Real
Estate Investments Are,
Or Will Soon Be, in Grave Jeopardy
This crisis is
expanding in concentric circles.
First, it affected just
the niche players in the non-prime mortgage business.
Then, it spread to
mid-grade mortgages.
And now it's hitting
Wall Street in the gut.
Next, don't be
surprised to see investors snub higher quality mortgage-backed
securities like those backed by Fannie Mae and Ginnie Mae, where
underlying default rates are also rising, and where well-publicized
accounting shenanigans have not yet been fully overcome.
Plus, given Mike
Larson's frequent warnings, it should come as no surprise that REITs
stocks have also begun to tumble — an advance warning that commercial
properties themselves, including shopping malls and office buildings,
are destined for a similar fate.
Above all, stay
safe!
Good luck and God
Bless!
Martin

© 2007 Martin D. Weiss,
Ph.D.
Editorial Archive
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15430 Endeavour Drive
Jupiter, FL 33478
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