List of What's Changed
- Perception has changed.
- Any perception of the Fed as being concerned about inflation went out the window.
- Any perception of the Fed as being concerned about the dollar went out the window.
- Bulls are happiest they have been in months.
- The stock market is higher.
- Gold is higher.
- Oil is higher.
- The Prime Rate dropped 50 basis points.
List of What Hasn't Changed
- Mortgage Rates. (Actually mortgage rates rose since last week as the chart below shows).
- Auto Loan Rates. Nearly identical to last week.
- Home Equity Loan Rates. Nearly identical to last week.
- The outlook for jobs. (If anything the outlook is weaker judging from the Fed's panic).
- Credit Card Interest Rates.
- The foreclosures outlook did not change. It is still bleak.
The above chart is from 2007-09-19 with thanks to Bankrate.Com
Bernanke's Bullet Misses The Mark
So did that 50 basis point cut help anyone? Yes, it helped (temporarily) those in the stock market. It helped (again temporarily) bail out Bernanke's banking buddies by providing more short term liquidity. It helped those short the dollar and long gold.
But did it do anything to address cash strapped consumers in way over their heads in houses they cannot afford? The answer to that is no.
Borrowers Lose Home At Record Pace
Bloomberg is reporting Subprime Borrowers to Lose Homes at Record Pace as Rates Rise.
As many as half of the 450,000 subprime borrowers whose mortgage payments increase in the next three months may lose their homes because they can't sell, refinance or qualify for help from the U.S. government.The article also mentioned the plight of a homeowner who admitted he "didn't pay enough attention" when he took out a five-year adjustable-rate mortgage in 2002. Noting that the Fed pumped $62 billion pumped into the banking system on Aug. 9 and Aug. 10 the homeowner asked the Fed to do the same for him. "If they gave us that money, we'd be able to be out of this predicament".
The number of borrowers whose mortgage payments jump in the next three months will be the second-highest ever for a quarter, according to Credit Suisse Group, Switzerland's second-biggest bank. Twenty-seven percent have already missed a payment, said First American LoanPerformance, which owns the largest database of U.S. mortgages. That makes them ineligible for the Federal Housing Administration bailout proposed last month by President George W. Bush.
There's no lifeline in sight for subprime borrowers, who face an average increase of 26 percent, or $400 a month, according to CoreLogic.
"There are a number of people who have mortgage debt that's more than the value of their house, and a lot of those people are going to walk away," said David Olson, president of Wholesale Access Mortgage Research & Consulting Inc. in Columbia, Maryland. "That will put more homes on the market, which already has too many."
"There is no silver bullet from Washington that will prevent home prices from falling further," Laperriere said. "A lot of people are operating on a mistaken impression."
The myth here is that the resets have been the driver of payment delinquencies, but the fact is if the borrower can't afford the teaser rate payments, then they can't afford to ever pay back the loan," he said.
Everyone wants "free money" from the Fed because they weren't thinking. And so far Bernanke seems willing (not to provide money but rather to provide liquidity) regardless of the moral hazards of doing so.
For a nice summation of who's to blame, Minyanville professor Vitaliy Katsenelson hits the bullseye with his missive: Pointing the Housing Blame at a New Target, the Homeowner.
The Fundamentals Have Not Changed
- Massive numbers of foreclosures are still going to happen.
- Banks are going to be stuck in huge numbers of REOs.
- Home inventories are still rising.
- The economic ship is still sinking (see Righting The Economic Ship?)
- The jobs market remains grim (see Moonbats Active Again in Massive Jobs Disaster)
While the Fed can attempt to provide liquidity, the Fed cannot dictate where that liquidity goes, if indeed it goes anywhere at all. And if liquidity does go anywhere this time around, I suspect gold is as likely as anything be the beneficiary. If so, that will bring little comfort to cash strapped consumers out of a home and out of a job.
Mike Shedlock / Mish
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/