06 March 2008

Economics Update

Well, we don't need to feel so alone any more, U.K. house prices Fell 0.3% in February. What the French call "Anglo-Saxon" capitalism seems to be working wonderfully.

Back in the US, the housing market is not looking up, with Foreclosures hitting an all time high:
Over 900,000 households are in the foreclosure process, up 71% from a year ago, according to a survey by the Mortgage Bankers Association. That figure represents 2.04% of all mortgages, the highest rate in the report's quarterly, 36-year history.
Even if you are paying your mortgage, you are probably still losing home equity. Total home equity is below 50% for the first time ever. It was 49.7% in Q2 2007, and 47.9% in Q3 2007, and the total equity dropped from $9.65 trillion from $9.93 trillion, or about $1000 for every man woman and child in the united states.

There is not a whole bunch of confidence in real estate now, so the spread on mortgage backed bonds is at its highest level in 22 years, and S&P has downgraded WaMu to BBB from BBB+.

We don't have a stampede out of mortgages and real estate yet, but there are now rumors that UBS dumped $24 billion in Alt-A residential mortgage backed securities (RMBS). If this is reality, we could very see a stampede for the door, and Alt-A, which is for people with credit ratings above 700, will go the way of subprime.

So it's no wonder that Fannie has dropped to a 12 year low.

It looks like the world is noticing this because the Dollar hit another record low, and oil hit another high.

This may have been driven by the European Central Bank and Bank of England not lowering rates, when it is expected that the Fed will.

We do have some mildly positive news retail sales were good in February, and new unemployment claims have fallen, though continuing claims are still going up.

It seems that Ambac is going to be a laugh a minute, see here, here,
and here. Basically, they have a plan to raise much needed capital, but no one thinks that it will work, and the markets halted trading at one point due to volatility over rumors.

Finally, in a case of the weak helping the even weaker, GM will provide $3 billion in loans to Delphi in an attempt to help them emerge from bankruptcy.

If that ain't good money after bad, I don't know what is.

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