 The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Wednesday, September 21, 2005
------------------------- - The looming blades of the Black Horsemen,
- Owning a gold CD
better than a gold record and,
- Will Joel ever be cool enough for New York City?
Absolutely not!
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I was not fully prepared for either one. When your monetarily challenged junior editor stolled into a pizza joint near your own Eric Fry's Wall Street office last week, he expected t 1) Pick up a couple slices of pizza and a panini; 2) Drop $10 on the counter; 3) Wait for change; 4) Walk out of the place. "That'll be $18.75 the pizza guy grumbled." "Come again," I replied. "$18.75" "Um
Do you take checks?" We joked. He did not smile. So, we reached slowly - and painfully - into our thin wallets to withdraw 19 hard-earned dollar bills
The pizza was good, but not $18.75-good. This was but one of many eye-opening experiences of our visit to Manhattan last week. Eric was kind (and patient) enough to share his office with his Baltimore based, antipodean comrade. For good measure, I dragged along our Whiskey and Gunpowder publisher, Greg Grillot. After a rather rude - and very early - awakening last Monday, we boarded the rickety ol' Amtrak and set out for the home of the Yankee's, Wall Street, Donald Trump and, at least, one particularly pungent cab driver
more about this character in a future installment. Shortly after our arrival, we gawked past the stock exchange and walked along Broad Street with Eric. "There is no way to ever be cool enough to NOT be floored by this city every time we end up here, " I remarked. "You will never get over it," came the knowing reply. "You see how cool I am," Eric grinned, "and even after seven years here I'm still floored by the place." Being from the Gold Coast, also know as 'Australia's playground', we are well aware of how annoying gawking tourists - or 'touros' as they are know back home - can be to those attempting to go about their daily business. Taking this into consideration we resist the urge to snap our disposable camera in too obnoxious a fashion
Instead, we decide to do what us Aussies do best
go walkabout!
And most of the time, we had no idea about where we should be walking. But that was part of the fun. I'll reveal more moments from my backstreet travelogue in future editions of the Rude Awakening
An art show from DUMBO (that's Down Under Manhattan Bridge Overpass), the madness of the Wall Street lunch hour and Diane, our homeless friend from 5th and Madison. Until then, Chris Mayer has something far more useful than my ramblings to say. Cheers, Joel Bowman --- Advertisement --- Banned From the Public Since February 1946 The U.S. government banned most of you from investing in the hottest and most ridiculously profitable moneymaking deals in the world. But we've discovered a LEGAL way for you to get around this absurd law and have the chance to make 10 times your money in the process. It involves buying stock in two companies. One is a $3 stock with a potential cure for the deadly SARS virus. And the other has three businesses - each of which could be worth billions in the coming years. Find out how to sidestep this 60-year-old law and make 10 times your money. http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/VPI/WVPIF913 -------------------------BLACK HORSEMEN, WHITE KNUCKLES By Chris Mayer Financial bubbles are like great parties. They're fun
too much fun. No one wants to leave too early, so almost everyone stays much later than prudence would permit. Hangovers are no fun, but they are quickly forgotten
which is why we will eagerly attend the next party. Financial bubbles, though they resemble parties, can impart far more dire consequences than a mere hangover. Indeed, sometimes the consequences seem almost Apocalyptic in magnitude, as Adam Smith, author of The Money Game, explains: "We are all at a wonderful party, and by the rules of the game we know that at some point in time the Black Horsemen will burst through the great terrace doors to cut down the revelers; those who leave early may be saved, but the music and wines are so seductive that we don't want to leave, but we do ask 'What time is it? What time is it?' Only none of the clocks have any hands." Yes, that's it exactly
financial bubbles are an Apocalyptic cocktail party. Over in the housing market, the cocktails have been flowing for a good, long while. Not surprisingly, therefore, most housing bubble participants have become a bit light-headed, especially the mortgage lenders. Intoxicated by their good fortune, the mortgage lenders have become increasingly reckless. They have been mixing up potent cocktails like "interest-only" mortgage and "no doc" mortgage (where the income of the borrower is not verified). Some lenders have also concocted 40-year mortgages. Fannie Mae, the barfly of our metaphor, loves them all. This government-sponsored mortgage lender recently announced that it would accept 40-year mortgages as "conforming loans" - meaning she will buy them. All of these innovative new "lending programs" enable homebuyers to borrow more and more money against less and less equity. As with most bubbles, the spectacle grows increasingly ridiculous as it ages. We also now have 40-year mortgages. Fannie Mae recently announced that it will be stepping up it's purchasing of these loans. This all but assures we'll see more of them - if the bubble can hold it together a little longer. But the Black Horsemen will arrive at some point. As the credit cycle turns "EZ credit" to not-so-EZ credit, the housing bubble might deflate very rapidly. Some banks have been partying harder than others. So these doomed revelers are likely to feel the Horsemen's cold steel across their vulnerable necks sooner than others. In a new report published last Thursday, Standard & Poor's "stress tested" various banks against the possibility of a housing bust. While the authors of the report conclude that most banks would not suffer losses that would result in ratings downgrades, several high-profile lenders would suffer such losses. We are most interested in these feeble members of the herd, as they would seem to offer good bets (as short sales) on the end of the housing bubble. First, let's look at those banks who have the highest exposure to mortgage lending. The following table is a truncated version of S&P's list, showing only those banks, thrifts and specialty finance lenders with residential loans representing at least half of their total loan portfoli
Near the top of any list is Countrywide, the nation's largest mortgage lender. About 94% of Countrywide's loan portfolio, for example, consists of residential mortgage loans.
Grant's Interest Rate Observer has identified numerous worrisome trends within Countrywide's loan portfolio. For example, Countrywide's leverage has skyrocketed since 2000 - which dramatically increases the company's susceptibility to a rapid and steep earnings drop when things slowdown. Additionally, Countrywide has been increasing its market share, even as lending standards have been deteriorating. In other words, the big bank has been increasing its market share by INCREASING its lending to high-risk borrowers. "Operating in bubble markets," James Grant observes, "many people lose their bearings. They become disoriented, financially or morally. As most investors shrugged at the preposterous high-tech valuations of early 2000 (they had become used to them), so they are prepared to explain away the risk-fraught mortgage-lending practices of 2005." The mortgage bubble looks every bit the equivalent of the insanity achieved in the late 1990s tech-bubble. And Countrywide is one of the best pure bets that the bubble will find its pin. I've got puts on Countrywide in my trading service, CrisisPoint Trader. But there is another way to look at this. Here we get to S&P's stress test. S&P assumes a 20% decline in housing prices over a two-year period. The report also makes reasonable assumptions about default rates by using historical episodes of housing market busts. For example, housing prices declined 30% in the 1980s in Texas - and nearly 16% of Houston's housing market entered foreclosure between 1982-87. Such pockets of disaster are bound to happen somewhere again. Financial history tends to repeat, at least loosely. But S&P's stress test assumes an average default rate of less than 2% for nearly all loan types. The report compared the prospective losses to first quarter net income, as a basis to "gauge a financial institution's capacity from an earnings perspective to withstand a spike in both residential mortgage credit losses and higher nonaccrual loans, without negatively affecting its capital position." Based on its assumptions, the S&P report found most banks did all right in terms of the losses they might take from such spikes. However, the test seriously indicts the strength of several lenders. The table below presents the lenders that would suffer at least a 90% drop, according to S&P's test.  Each of the stocks on this table suffers severe losses in earnings from a housing bust, losses that would virtually wipe out their entire quarterly net income and harm their financial health. In S&P's bubble bursting scenario, for example, IndyMac would suffer losses more than six-times its first quarter net income - a scenario that would surely devastate its stock price and affect its capital position.
The magnitude of the losses would depend mostly on the product mix within each lenders loan portfolio. IndyMac, for example, has a lot of construction loans on its books, which tend to fare particularly poorly in bad markets. In a real bust, the losses would fall unevenly across the country. Standard & Poor's chief economist David Wyss believes a 20% fall in average price would consist of something like a 30% drop on the coasts and a 10% drop in the Midwest. The top five booming markets, according to the FDIC, are Los Angeles, New York, Boston, Washington, D.C and San Diego. We can infer that these markets, and the institutions that serve them, would be more vulnerable than Midwest counterparts. And with the widespread acceptance of unconventional and riskier mortgages on an unprecedented scale, there is a further wild card in the mix. A real full-scale housing bear market has not yet tested these products. In any event, these tables may provide fresh new candidates for those looking for plays on the housing bubble finding its pin. If only those clocks had hands! [Joel's Note: Apart from being a decent bloke, Chris Mayer is one of the savviest investors going. His Crisis Point Trader service has been quietly notching up some impressive gains. Perfecting a 100 year old trading system has allowed Chris to predict when the horseman will be wielding their blades
and make a fistful of cash along the way. Check this out: Chris Mayer's Crisis Point Trader ------------------------- And the Markets
| Tuesday | Monday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,482 | 10,558 | 69 | -2.8% | S&P | 1,221 | 1,231 | 13 | 0.8% | NASDAQ | 2,131 | 2,145 | 2 | -2.0% | 10-year Treasury | 4.26 | 4.25 | 16.00 | 4.22 | 30-year Treasury | 4.53 | 4.55 | 21.00 | 4.48 | Russell 2000 | 661 | 667 | 7 | 1.4% | Gold | $463.95 | $464.40 | $32.55 | 6.0% | Silver | $7.31 | $7.29 | $0.57 | 7.3% | CRB | 325.16 | 327.41 | -6.03 | 14.5% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $66.60 | $67.08 | -$3.21 | 53.3% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 111.92 | JPY 111.47 | -0.63 | -9.1% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2126 | $1.2156 | 91 | 10.5% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7999 | $1.8045 | -137 | 6.2% |
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