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A good read. Aaron knows a thing or two.
1) Current house prices are at approximately 5x incomes. Prior long run average was approximately 3x incomes. This argues for a 20 to 30% decline in house prices. But this figure may be optimistic due to:
2) US economy has been supported by consumer purchases sustained by increased mortgage debt. This source of funds will no longer be available.
3) Since wages represent 70% of corporate expenses, a downturn in the economy will result in increased unemployment, and an increasing debt service problem.
4) Labour mobilty has been the key response to a declining local economy. Relocating homeowners will be forced to sell into a declining market and this will further pressure prices.
5) The "oil crash" of the late 1980's was confined to that sector. Those outside the oil sector had no understanding of what took place (and still don't). The dot.com bust was a California problem and a telecom sector problem. Those outside these sectors were not exposed. The housing problem is very different in that 70% of the population is exposed and, apart from a few local markets, all will have concerns. Such concerns will likely lead to a retrenchment of consumer spending. This in turn reinforces 1) above and we go through the cycle again.
6) At some point the path presented above will become clear to the equities markets and these will sell off. The consequence of this is that neither one's house nor one's 401k are likely to hold value. This will occur at a time when a significant proportion of the population will be nearing retirement. This will shape the domestic political environment. With regards the US, I think there is the possibility of significant internal conflict.
7) The international system has basically hinged on US strength as a major global investor and as a safe and secure investment location. Given the above scenario this sentiment is bound to change. Within the US, I suspect rising anger over the fact of a government focus on life in Iraq while paying no attention to domestic issues impacting the citizenry.
8) I don't know how this plays out with respect to PO. I expect the price of oil to rise in US dollar terms and this will deepen the interlinked problems presented above. AGW will also exacerbate this problem set and make a postiive response to this challenge less likely.
I do not see any means for the Fed to undertake a meaningful intervention. This will not be a liquidity crisis so much as a crisis of confidence, a Minsky Moment that results in a reconceptualiztion of personal, domestic, and international relationships.
Comments and critique welcome.
Cheers!
Re#6 and significant internal conflict.
Have you seen some of the proposals making the rounds?
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/
It is a total outrage that they would even consider some of these things. Basically they are saying that if someone lied enough they get a free house, and many of these are illegal aliens.
Why should anyone in the US even work under these rules? Hey quit your job, claim victimhood and get a free house.
There is something very wrong when liars and criminals are rewarded.
From Mish:
Clearly this tracking agency function should be the responsibilty of the Department of Homeland Securitization.
Hi ilargi,
About Pay Options, mentioned in the article, do you know if they are the same as the Option ARM's in the graph of ARM's I've included? If not, can you tell me what an Option ARM is?
from Aarron Krowne article:
Option ARMs come in four flavours:
Minimum Payment - you contract for some minimum payment for a the first year. Unpaid interest will be added to loan principle and will be payable when the loan resets to a standard payment schedule.
Interest Only - For the initial period you pay only interest and no principle. After reset you pay both interest and principle.
Fully Amortized 30 year schedule - same as a fixed 30 year except the rate floats according to prime
I believe the 4th flavor is a 15 year amortization.
I suspect the no-pay option ARM is cynical humour. If you get a minimum payment option ARM you are basically renting the property from the bank. Default and it takes 6 months to evict and reposses so you live for free.
Note that the Credit Swiss graph is a bit out of date and that some of the mortgages had overiding reset clauses which have the effect of moving the rest point forward in time. This may have the effect of removing the valley which exists between the two peaks on the Credit Swiss graph.
Thanks new account,
Interesting about the reset clauses, I guess filling the gap would ease things to some degree? I wonder what proportion of the first two flavours there are in those option ARMS, they seem to be in the second half, in the main.
Six months to evict, eh? I would have loved that as a student ... take out a strip of mortgages and immediately default as they come into effect, I moved pretty often then anyway:)