September 19, 2008

Not much of a surprise for HP'ers, eh?

Let's recap the past few years on HP:

* We said housing prices would fall 25% to 50% or more - check and still underway
* We said Fannie and Freddie would fail - check
* We said Indymac, Countrywide and WaMu would fail - check
* We said Congress would finally hold an investigation into this mess - almost check
* We said America would socialize the mess with RTC2 - almost check
* We said Obama would become president - almost check
* We said the dollar would tank - check
* We said millions would lose their jobs - check and underway
* We said the illegals would go home - ???
* We said people would be disgusted by homes and realtors - check
* We said George Bush would be seen as the worst president in history - check
* We said Angelo Mozilo would be arrested - DAMMIT

Spooky, eh? And to think people called us tin-foil-hatters, chicken littles, brown shirts, flying monkeys and worse. Just tellin' the truth. When the sheeple and conmen on commission didn't want to hear the truth.

We said a bunch more that's now come to pass, but I'm too lazy to recap. You guys drive.

Strong Push for an RTC-Type Solution to the Crisis

The U.S. once purged bad S&Ls for $85 billion. How much would it cost to clean up a much bigger financial crisis? No one seems to know.

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

Keith,
Keep up the good work. We believe.

Anonymous said...

Now I'm trying to predict what damage all the bail outs are going to do.

Ok, Wall Street lenders get rescued and live to screw the public again while the rich get richer and the majority get poorer by inflation,'lack of wage increases ,and housing bail out tax,(If they can even find a job )

The majority get's to pay for homeowners to live in houses for free ,because that's about what they qualified for .

This goes on for about 5 years ,while real estate never goes up ,and finally the government becomes insolvent and we are attacked by our foreign creditors .

Anonymous said...

Even Greg Swann is pretending he saw it coming now

Anonymous said...

Get ready for Wiemar America. It was war reparations with Germany in the 20s, it will be debt reparations in America in the next 2 years.

Anonymous said...

Keith this is an artical from huffington post...Do you agree?
Don't let them tell you this economic meltdown is a complicated mess. It's not. Our national financial crisis is readily understood by anyone who has seen greed and hypocrisy. But we are now witnessing them on a profound, monumental scale.

Conservative Republicans always want the government to stay out of business and avoid regulation as long as they are making lots of money. When their greed, however, gets them into a fix, they are the first to cry out for rules and laws and taxpayer money to bail out their businesses. Obviously, Republicans are socialists. The Bush administration has decided to socialize the debt of the big Wall Street Firms. Taxpayers didn't get to enjoy any of the big money profits on the phony financial instruments like derivatives or bundled sub-prime paper, but we get the privilege of paying for their debt and failures.

Let's just consider the money. The public bailout of insurance giant (becoming a dwarf) AIG is estimated at $85 billion. According to one report, that's more than the Bush administration spent on Aid to Families with Dependent Children during his entire time in office. That amount of money would also pay for health care for every man, woman, and child in America for at least six months.

How did we get here?

That's pretty easy to answer, too. His name is Phil Gramm. A few days after the Supreme Court made George W. Bush president in 2000, Gramm stuck something called the Commodity Futures Modernization Act into the budget bill. Nobody knew that the Texas senator was slipping America a 262 page poison pill. The Gramm Guts America Act was designed to keep regulators from controlling new financial tools described as credit "swaps." These are instruments like sub-prime mortgages bundled up and sold as securities. Under the Gramm law, neither the SEC nor the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) were able to examine financial institutions like hedge funds or investment banks to guarantee they had the assets necessary to cover losses they were guaranteeing.

This isn't small beer we are talking about here. The market for these fancy financial instruments they don't expect us little people to understand is estimated at $60 trillion annually, which amounts to almost four times the entire US stock market.

And Senator Phil Gramm wanted it completely unregulated. So did Alan Greenspan, who supported the legislation and is now running around to the talk shows jabbering about the horror of it all. Before the highly paid lobbyists were done slinging their gold card guts about the halls of congress, every one from hedge funds to banks were playing with fire for fun and profit.

Gramm didn't just make a fairy tale world for Wall Street, though. He included in his bill a provision that prevented the regulation of energy trading markets, which led us to the Enron collapse. There was no collapse of the house of Gramm, however, because his wife Wendy, who once headed up the Commodities Futures Trading Commission, took a job on the Enron board that provided almost $2 million to their household kitty. And why not? Wendy got a CFTC rule passed that kept the federal government from regulating energy futures contracts at Enron.

If John McCain gets elected and chooses Phil Gramm as his Treasury Secretary, which many politico types see as likely, they will be able to talk about the good old days when Gramm was in congress and McCain was in the senate and they were in the midst of the Savings and Loan crisis.

The S and L scandal, which may look precious when compared to our present cascade of problems, isn't hard to understand, either. But it is impossible to take John McCain seriously on our current financial Armageddon since he was dabbling in the historic collapse of 747 S&Ls that occurred during Ronald Reagan's era. In the early 80s under the Republican president, congress deregulated the savings and loan industry in much the same way that Gramm made sure there were no laws hindering our current financial malefactors on Wall Street. S&Ls simply lobbied until they had less regulation and then began making rampant, unsound investments.

The guy who was going the wildest with financial freedom was Charles Keating, who headed up Lincoln Savings and Loan of California. Because the S&L industry had managed to get congress to increase FDIC insurance from $40,000 to $100,000 on deposits, the irresponsible investing of people like Keating began to put taxpayer insurance funds at great risk of loss. Keating placed money in junk bonds and questionable real estate projects and because so many other S&Ls started acting the same way the Federal Home Loan Bank Board (FHLBB) began to push for a regulation that limited these dangerous speculative "direct" investments to 10% of an S&L's assets.

And Keating didn't like it; he called on a private economist named Alan Greenspan, who promptly produced a study saying that there was no danger in "direct" investments.
But that didn't convince the FHLBB and as further scrutiny showed Lincoln Savings and Loan was making even more historically bad investment decisions, a federal investigation was launched.

So Keating called his home state senator John McCain.

McCain and four other US senators (known to history as the Keating Five) met with Edwin Gray, then chairman of the FHLBB. McCain had been hesitant to attend but had reportedly been called a "wimp" behind his back by Keating. The message to the FHLBB and Gray from the Keating Five was to lay off Lincoln and cool the investigation. Gray and the FHLBB did not relent but Lincoln stayed in business until 1989 when it collapsed with the rest of the S&L industry. The life savings of more than 20,000 elderly investors disappeared with the failure of Lincoln. Keating went to prison for five years.

Charles Keating was John McCain's pal. They met in 1981 and Keating dumped $112,000 in the McCain campaign bank accounts between '82 and '87. A year before McCain met with the FHLBB regulators, his wife Cindy and her father, according to newspaper reports at the time, invested about $360,000 in one of Keating's shopping centers. The Arizona Republic reported McCain and his wife and their babysitter took nine trips on Keating's private jet to the Bahamas to stay at the S&L liar's decadent Cat Cay resort. The senator didn't pay Keating back for the plane rides until years later when he was under investigation.

McCain wasn't found guilty of anything but bad judgment, which is an historic understatement. Republicans, who led deregulation of the S&L industry, delayed the bailout until after the 1988 election to make sure George H. W. won the White House. The cost to taxpayers for helping these 747 bad actors in the S&L industry was finally estimated at $1.4 trillion. If the bailout had begun in 1986 instead of after the presidential election, the cost would have been contained at $20 billion.

And now the Republicans who engineered our present crisis and got us into the S&L debacle of the 80s are before us saying the markets need regulation. No, actually, they don't need regulation. Why don't you Republican capitalists who believe in the free markets get out of the damned way and let them work and allow these various financial nuthouses be crushed by the weight of their own stupidity? When it is all over, we'll have sane and sober people create laws to make sure it doesn't happen again, assuming we survive this chaos.

Also, while you are handing out our tax money to idiots on Wall Street, save a little of the long green for the unemployed auto and construction workers and all of the other people who have lost their jobs because you were too stupid to notice what Phil Gramm was doing and you were convinced everything was going to be just fine because the markets work.

These, then, are the people -- the Republicans -- who want to run our government for four more years. John McCain isn't just one of them. He rides their jets. He takes their campaign donations. He makes them his campaign advisors. And he tells us to trust him.

He must think we are a nation of village idiots.

Hell, maybe we are.

Anonymous said...

Oh so all of a sudden the housing bubble is Phil Gramm's fault? WTF

Hey Keith what happened to blaming greedy FBs, realtors, NAR, mortgage lenders, Casey Serin, HGTV etc? How quickly you change your tune. All of a sudden all those people were just innocent bystanders. And all the blame now goes to big bad Wall Street.

Anonymous said...

Where's the Time magazine cover? Oh, yeah - that won't come out until the crash is over.

consultant said...

The working out of this is just way too complicated to do in the short time the totally f#cked up Bush Administration has left.

Bush & Paulson are doing to financials what Bush & "Brownie" did to New Orleans.

McCain=Bush. Palin=Palin.

Insanity=voting for McCain in November.

Mammoth said...

Keith sez:
"We said Indymac, Countrywide and WaMu would fail - check"
---------------------
Sorry to tell you this, but the lights were still on at WAMU headquarters in Seattle this morning.

Let's see what happens over the weekend...
---------------------
On Monday at work, one colleague said to me, "Greenspan is out."

Thinking the worst, I asked, "what happened to him?" and his response was, "I just fired him and will hire you as my financial advisor."

I told hin, "don't thank me, thank HousingPanic and http://www.boom2bust.com"

-Mammoth

Anonymous said...

They've just magnified the problem enormously by heaping the problem on US tax-payers.

When people lose their jobs, or walk-away from their debt traps, who's to say there will be a big enough tax-payer pool of money to support this debt?

We'll have to see how this plays out, but it certainly won't stop the free-fall in housing prices - especially here in Southern Ca.

Anonymous said...

Let's be honest...

HPer's said gold to $5000, realtors would be discredited forever, everyone had better stock up on ammo and start a garden, Ron Paul would win the presidency, Obama would win by a landslide, etc. etc.

You're wrong as often as you're right. If you can't see that you are fooling yourself.

blogger said...

I didn't say gold to $5000. I didn't say Ron Paul would win.

I have said and do say that Obama will win. I have said and do say that realtors are discredited liars, never to be trusted again.

Nice job though trying to lie on our behalf. Nice tactic - learn it from Rove?

Anonymous said...

er... if you remove all the rules and laws put in place after the last depression as a method to prevent another depression...what do you suppose will happen if you did not profit from the rule changes and put your money to safety out of thge country......hillarys 50 million and paraguay?

Anonymous said...

Reagans million dollar japan speach when a million was real money............. only to mention the top doggies

Anonymous said...

Anon 11:50 AM

Thanks for posting that from the Huff. Blogs RULE !!

And keith is a God damned PROPHET !!

Anonymous said...

Hey Huffington/Messiah sheeple, let's set the record straight:

1. Conservative Republicans always want the government to stay out of business and avoid regulation as long as they are making lots of money.

Fannie Mae and Fredie were Democratic party creations that were run by Democrats and their cronies, including Obama's vetter James Johnson. The Democrats created and bankrupted Fannie & Freddie. McCain, for instance, wanted to increase regulation on both F&F but the Democrats always blocked him. True fact. Put that in your limited head once for all.

2. Phil Gramm. Check Biden's record to see that he's been voting with Gramm on EVERYTHING since the 80s.