Credit Crunch "Over"? "All Clear"?
The Market Ticker ® - Commentary on The Capital Markets
Posted 2008-05-02 22:03
by Karl Denninger
 
Hmmmm.....

Let's survey the landscape on the back of three back-to-back weeks of gains in the stock market, amid every crooner in the land claiming that "the bottom is in" and even better - "buy now or be priced out forever."

Heh, we've heard that before, haven't we?

I think we have.

Let's take a look at the facts.

First, we'll look at the credit card issue, since The Fed proposed new rules today to "curb abuses." From that report we find the following nuggets:
"The Consumer Federation of America estimates that credit card debt held by consumers is about $850 billion, some four times what it was in 1990. The group says the average debt for those 58 percent of card-holding households that do not pay their balance in full every month is about $17,000."
We also know from a study done by Fitch that 30% of all credit cards are exhibiting patterns of use and payment that show high risk of default. Since we can assume that none of the 42% of the people who pay off monthly are at risk of default (for obvious reasons) this means that about half of the people carrying balances are currently at high risk of default on their credit card bills.

This, over the last few years, has been dealt with by cash-out refinancing the money from one's house, paying off the card, thereby freeing it to be used again. Many people refinanced "serially" in this fashion over the last few years. In fact there is roughly $1 trillion of this debt outstanding between 2nd lines and HELOCs.

How is it performing?

Well, today we find out that S&P will no longer rate 2nd line debt, citing "anomalous" behavior. What is that "anomalous" behavior? Specifically, people walking away. And the performance of that debt is rather simple:

"The downgrades last month left all of the securities with ratings of BBB or lower, compared with 20 percent before the action. BBB is S&P's second-lowest investment grade. About 96 percent dropped to non-investment-grade, or junk, assessments.

'The problem with seconds is it's either good, or it's zero,'' said Brad Golding, a managing director at Christofferson Rob & Co., a New York-based money manager."

There's no middle ground, and S&P can't figure out which is which . That puts a nail in the coffin formed in the belief that you can simply look at FICOs or other forms of consumer "behavior" to figure out who's going to default and who's not.

Did 'ya read that underlined part? Go back and make sure you do. All of this debt is rated BBB of worse - 96% of it worse. BBB, you see, is the lowest "investment grade."

Most of these bonds were originally rated "AAA", "AA" or "A".

Below "BBB" there are a few more levels, including things like "BB", "B", "C" and of course the best of all, "D". As in default.

So the bottom line here is that we have 96% of second line tranches that are either barely investment grade or worse. And the "worse" is bad news, because once in "speculative" territory actual default rates ramp precipitously.

The nasty here is that according to Moody's a bond rated "AAA" should have less than a 7% risk of falling below "AA", an "AA" bond should have less than a 7% risk of falling below "A", and an "A" rated bond should have less than a 5% risk of falling below "BBB", all within five years of rating.

But in fact 96% of all of these bonds failed that test - not 5-7%.

Fraud? You tell me. It sure looks that way from my perspective, and I don't understand why we as citizens are allowing this, or why Congress is. This goes beyond an "honest mistake"; these firms all have economists and people who understand math on their staff, and it is simply beyond the pale that they "rated" debt issues without investigation of the underlying credit quality, not to mention accounting for societal factors (is it even possible to pay back the debt involved, given the overall level of debt load in America?)

Yet there have been no Congressional investigations, no subpoenas, and no indictments.

Speaking of fraud, you do remember that AMBAC has found that 75% of the bonds they examined in detail had violations of the representations and warranties underlying their "wrap", right? It looks like HUD's claim from a couple of years ago that at least 50% of the loans written in the last few years had some sort of fraud associated with them is in fact true.

Now let's talk about what's worse; that would be the Treasury "Borrowing Advisory Report".

Its four pages and required reading, because it gives you a window into the Treasury funding market, which is the underpinning of all debt markets in the United States.

In short, if you don't read this, you don't know jack about what's coming in the bond markets, and without that, you can't make investment decisions.

Here are the money quotes; note that I have omitted some of the more-fluffy material:

"Expectations for economic growth in the first half of 2008 have continued to fall and a number of primary dealers judge the economy currently to be in recession.

A recent survey of primary dealers estimates that the deficit for the 2008 fiscal year ending in September will exceed $400 billion with some economists expecting a deficit of more than $500 billion--a significant deterioration from fiscal 2007's deficit of $163 billion. Economic stimulus measures will complement the forces widening the budget deficit. This year's shortfall may surpass fiscal year 2004 as the largest on record in nominal dollars.

Housing remains a notable drag through a variety of channels and that weakness now is being augmented by a more cautious approach to spending by businesses and consumers.

There was also universal agreement on the Committee that the Treasury needs to prepare for additional financing needs over a more intermediate term. In fact, several members argued that the current deterioration in the fiscal outlook might be more than temporary and that the risk of further deterioration outweighs the risk of a surprise improvement in the deficit.

Furthermore, additional members again reiterated their concern that this latest "cyclical" deterioration in the fiscal outlook is particularly troublesome as the longer term "secular" forces of entitlement spending and the aging of the baby boom generation and their effect on the budget deficit are no longer that distant in the future.

The majority of members believe that the addition of the year bill combined with increases to the size and frequency of existing coupon debt over coming quarters will still not be sufficient to satisfy the increased financing needs of the Treasury over the intermediate and longer term.

Committee members were in agreement that the problems in the housing market were significant, and many were concerned that without intervention the problems would grow worse. In fact, housing price data from S&P/Case-Shiller was released hours before our meeting and highlighted that the decline in housing prices is not over but that prices are actually accelerating to the downside. For example, while year-over-year prices were reported to be down almost 13%, prices on a 6-month, 3-month and 1-month basis have declined 21%, 25% and 28% annualized, respectively."

Bullish for the markets? Specifically, additional issue is likely to lead to materially higher interest rates, and we know how good that is for things like the housing market, right? $500 billion in deficits before the end of the fiscal year in September?

And speaking of those deficits, you want to know what's going to add to them in a big way?

The Fed and Congress.

See, The Fed violated the Constitution, and now, having been unleashed from a formal appropriations process as required by that same document, suddenly Congress feels it can call on Sir Fedsalot to fix anything - on the public tit - without being held to account for it! And call on it they have:

"There is 'a potential crisis in the student-loan market' requiring 'similar bold action,' Chairman Christopher Dodd of Connecticut and six other Democrats wrote Bernanke. They want the Fed to swap Treasury notes for bonds backed by student loans. In a separate letter, Pennsylvania Democratic Representative Paul Kanjorski and 31 House members said they want Bernanke to channel money directly to education-finance firms.

Student loans are just the start. Former Fed officials and other Fed-watchers say that Bernanke's actions in saving Bear Stearns will expose the central bank to continuing pressure to use its $889 billion balance sheet to prop up companies or entire industries deemed important by politicians. The Fed satisfied Dodd's request today, expanding the swaps to include securities backed by student debt.

'It is appalling where we are right now,' former St. Louis Fed President William Poole, who retired in March, said in an interview. The Fed has introduced 'a backstop for the entire financial system.'"

You forgot the word "illegal" Mr. Poole.

Now do you know why I was so*****ed off about this? The entire purpose of a Federal Reserve Bank chartered by Congress but operating independently is to stop this sort of crap and force it through Congressional Appropriations - you want to prop up something, you have to vote on it. Having voted on it and gotten the President's signature, you can proceed - but not until.

Suddenly all that's out of the window. And in a world where deficits are running $500 billion a year and counting, perhaps as much as a trillion this year, we run a very real risk that the Treasury Market suffers the dislocation that I have been warning about.

Should it happen, the 1930s are coming back to visit America, and that event is one you can't stuff back in the bottle once it occurs.

Now let's look at employment. Specifically, the employment report Friday. As mentioned in the previous Ticker there are some problems:

"The drop in the U.S. unemployment rate in April partly reflected a jump in part-time workers, raising concern businesses are still scaling back, economists said.

The number of Americans saying they worked part-time last month due to economic reasons -- either because their hours were cut or they couldn't find full-time work -- jumped to 5.22 million from 4.91 million in March, the Labor Department reported today. That helped the jobless rate unexpectedly fall to 5 percent from 5.1 percent.

The 19 percent increase over the last six months in the number of people not working a full day because of slack business conditions is the biggest in six years. Fewer hours and smaller pay increases, just as food and fuel prices surge, may continue to undermine consumer spending."

May continue to undermine consumer spending?

One thing we know - consumers will spend so long as they can get credit. Many analysts have thought otherwise only to find their predictions in the dustbin of history. The argument of The Bulls basically devolves down into "The consumer will never stop because he will keep charging his way to prosperity."

There is a problem with this argument, and its the same problem that underlay the Housing Bubble in the first place.

That's mathematics.

See, house prices can not grow to the sky (at a rate that exceeds income growth) nor can spending grow at a rate that exceeds income growth - at least not for very long.

We don't teach our children that, but we should.

The truth is that about 22% of GDP goes to debt service - that is, interest - on existing debt. It doesn't pay down principal, it doesn't do anything productive for society, it builds nothing (other than the banker's vacation house in the Hamptons!) It comes right out of your pocket and into theirs, and it is an absolutely stunning amount of money, to the tune of more than $2 trillion a year, and that's private debt service, not government. In fact, the government spends less on their debt service (from our taxes) than we do as a percentage of GDP!

This has in fact gone so far that we now need five dollars of new debt to produce one dollar of GDP increase. Attempting to push this further is only going to result in a bigger blast radius; the debt must be paid down when possible, and defaulted if not.

The bad part of doing so is that you can't consume with dollars that are used to pay down debt. Therefore, the prudent says we will see not only the new debt stop going into GDP (because it can't; we simply can't afford to take on any more) but in addition the payoffs will reduce GDP as well, forcing it negative.

By how much? That depends on how much of the debt defaults. The more debt defaults, the shorter the pain lasts, but the more severe it is. In any event this is a recipe for a deep and serious recession, not a short and shallow one.

The Press is finally starting to get the idea that perhaps trying to get everyone to buy a house isn't such a good idea. Specifically, believe it or not, The New Republic (and CBS!):
"Indeed, we ought to consider what role the federal government has played in creating this mess. By stimulating home ownership while failing to account for the reasons home ownership is valuable to society, Washington has simply sought to buy our votes with our own debt. As the subprime crisis accelerates and threatens to spread through prime and near-prime markets, policymakers face a watershed moment. To keep us from an economic nightmare, they need to replace the dream of home ownership with policies that actually increase wealth -- not just the illusion of it."
Oh my God, the truth! And from the mainstream media.

Then there's JP Morgan/Chase. You know, Jamie Dimon, who claimed they would have been "just fine" had Bear Stearns imploded, just a short while after Bernanke dissembled about the end of the world? Yes, that Jamie Dimon. What did he have to say over the weekend? Try this on for size, as a counterpoint to the pumpers on CNBC:

"JPMorgan Chase & Co does not expect the U.S. financial crisis to end soon and will remain very cautious, its top executive said in comments published by a German weekly on Saturday.

"But we are not done with the crisis for a long time," Dimon said, adding that it was not the company's job to make bets on the future.

"Imagine we would need to walk up to our shareholders one day and say, sorry but the recession in the USA is so bad, we're broke. We need to be able to rule out at all times that it will not come to that," Dimon said.

Now read the above Treasury paper quotes as well.

The "primary dealers" are people like Dimon - they see the day-to-day and know that this is not over. You're not being told this up front by Bubble TV nor Bubble Newspapers because all of them are heavily invested in trying to suck YOU in to be the bagholder on this mess, just like it was in 1999 and 2000, all the way down until we finally did hit a bottom in 2003.

And just like last time, and indeed just like every bear market in history the true bottom will come when nobody wants to own stocks, everyone believes there will never be any sunshine again, when it will be financial tornado after financial tornado and the market crooners claiming that its all going to be ok will have all shut up and hung their heads in despair.

Of course CONgress is still hell-bent and determined to try to buy more votes (with our own debt), as has been seen recently.

If you're interested in about a 40 minute audio presentation of the stupidity in this regard, listen to this presentation by Nesbitt Burns' Don Coxe - its good - and pretty much lays out at least the macro-level view of the world.

Never mind that the S&P announcement on the 28th on Bloomberg related to CDOs, which I covered in a ticker earlier this week, in which S&P laid forth the stark reality of what is both at The Fed and also sitting on the balance sheets of the investment and commercial banks - at par:
"The CDOs covered by S&P's revision are at least 40 percent invested in some U.S. home-loan bonds created since Sept. 30, 2005 or pieces of other CDOs with such holdings, according to a statement today. The most-senior bonds from the CDOs originally rated AAA should recover 60 percent of principal owed, while securities rated A or lower will get nothing, S&P said.

Investors should recover 35 percent of principal after defaults on securities from the CDOs junior to their so-called super-senior classes but also originally rated AAA, S&P said today. Originally AA classes should recover 5 percent, it said."

Let that sink in for a while folks - if you have "Senior Tranches" of CDOs that are "AAA" rated, you are going to take a 40% loss. If you have ordinary "AAA" rated CDO tranches rated "AAA", you're going to take a 65% loss.

Remember folks, these pieces of the CDO tranche process are the ones that are sitting on the bank's balance sheets and, now, are also the ones that are sitting at The Fed!

Absolutely NONE of these writedowns have been taken.

NONE.

How does all this end?

Very badly.

If you want to know how badly, read that Treasury Report and think about it long and hard.

I'm surprised they published it, to be frank.

No, my friends, our capital markets problem and the consumer issues are not over.

We have roughly $1 trillion worth of 2nd Line/HELOC spending from the last few years that has been withdrawn. It will not, and cannot, return - that money is gone, leaving the debt behind.

Housing prices will correct to at least their long-term trendlines, and likely beyond. This is a mathematical certainty.

Lending will return to sound standards simply due to self-defense by the banks, not from desire. This means 20% down will become the norm once again to get a mortgage, along with a fixed-rate, 15 or 30 year loan. The world of "HELOC" and "Cash Out" refinances is essentially gone on a permanent basis.

We have recognized $300 billion of losses but it has all been derivative loss. The $2.5-$3 trillion in credit loss from housing is still to come, plus all the credit card and other debt that cannot be paid down, likely a couple hundred billion more - at best.

The capitalization of the banks is nowhere near adequate as of yet to clear that bad debt. Financial institutions need to raise tremendous amounts of capital beyond what they have raised thus far in order to survive.

Bernanke's games will not solve this, as providing the banks with more "vig" to make this possible just sucks the money out of your pocket anyway (where do you think it comes from, ultimately?) either via direct monetary inflation if he does something stupid, or via taxes and direct payments if not.

Either way the check is now on the table and must be paid.

We're nowhere near done with this mess.

Discuss this entry (registration required to post)
 

Main Navigation
Full-Text Search & Archives
Archive Access
Get Adobe Flash player





Blogtalk 3:30 CT Mondays
Items To Look At


Discuss The Capital Markets along with daily technical analysis with our Gold Donor program.

Where We Are, Where We're Heading (2012) - The annual 2012 Ticker

Links and Blogroll
Our policy on reciprocal links: Send us an email with your information and why you think your blog or news site would make a good addition - in most cases reciprocal link requests will be granted.
Seeking Alpha Certified
Legal Disclaimer

The content on this site is provided without any warranty, express or implied. All opinions expressed on this site are those of the author and may contain errors or omissions.

NO MATERIAL HERE CONSTITUTES "INVESTMENT ADVICE" NOR IS IT A RECOMMENDATION TO BUY OR SELL ANY FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO STOCKS, OPTIONS, BONDS OR FUTURES.

The author may have a position in any company or security mentioned herein. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Looking for "The Best of Market Ticker"? Check out
Ticker Classics.

Visit the forum to discuss this and other investing-related topics; see the FAQ on the forum for information about Gold Donor status including access to our technical analysis video server.

Market charts, when present, used with permission of TD Ameritrade/ThinkOrSwim Inc. Neither TD Ameritrade or ThinkOrSwim have reviewed, approved or disapproved any content herein.

Market Ticker content may be reproduced or excerpted online provided full attribution is given and the original article source is linked to. Please contact Karl Denninger for reprint permission in other media.