Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Zandi Loses His Mind (Assuming He Ever Had One)
- USD liquidity provisions: EUR relief likely to be temporary says Barclays Capital Research
- Sarkozy, Merkel "Convinced" Greece will Remain in Eurozone; Market Convinced of Default; Gold Declines US Dollar Drops; Band-Aids and Rubber-Bands
Zandi Loses His Mind (Assuming He Ever Had One) Posted: 15 Sep 2011 04:44 PM PDT I have really had it will bailouts, all of them, but especially bailouts that come at with a huge cost to taxpayers. The latest heap of Keynesian clown bailout madness comes from economist Mark Zandi on how to jump-start HARP (Obama's Home Affordable Refinance Program). Please consider Experts back expanding Obama mortgage refi effort At issue is the White House's Home Affordable Refinance Program, or HARP, which has seeks to provide refinancing options to millions of underwater borrowers who have no equity in their homes as long as their mortgage is backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-controlled housing giants.Look at the self-serving circular thinking of David Stevens, president of the Mortgage Bankers Association who acknowledged that including borrowers who are even more underwater "would enable more qualified borrowers to refinance". Of course it would. Loosen standards and more qualify for loans, by definition. You can temporarily jump-start nearly anything if you throw enough money at it, and that is exactly what Keynesian clown fools want to do. Unfortunately, no amount of taxpayer money is too great for any cause any fool believes in. Common sense dictates (and history proves), losses accelerate as you loosen standards. Forgo income verification and ignore credit scores as Zandi proposes and losses would soar. It is ludicrous to propose loan modifications to those with no job or no income, and those significantly upside down on their mortgage. The former cannot afford any payment and history proves the latter will walk away anyway. No income and no verification liar loans are among the reasons we are in this mess in the first place. Thus, Zandi clearly has a short memory, if any memory at all, coupled with no common sense whatsoever. The best way to "jump-start" housing is to let the market find a bottom. Once prices get sufficiently low, investors and buyers will step in. Meanwhile, any steps that artificially prop up prices and postpone foreclosures at taxpayer expense will delay the bottom in housing, delay household formation, and delay a jobs recovery as well. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
USD liquidity provisions: EUR relief likely to be temporary says Barclays Capital Research Posted: 15 Sep 2011 11:14 AM PDT Via email, I have no link ... USD liquidity provisions: EUR relief likely to be temporaryI agree with Barclay's analysis calling the liquidity measures a Band-Aids and Rubber-Bands Approach earlier today. Band-Aids and Rubber-BandsMike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 15 Sep 2011 09:22 AM PDT Equities continued their choppy overlapping rally today on news of more liquidity support from the ECB and statements from German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French president Nicholas Sarkozy that Greece will Remain in Currency Union. Bloomberg reports German Bunds Decline as ECB Provides Dollars to Banks; Greek Bonds Surge German two-year notes slid for a fourth day as the European Central Bank said it will lend dollars to euro-region banks to ensure they have enough of the U.S. currency, damping demand for safer assets.Greek Bonds Surge? The Bloomberg headline reads "Greek Bonds Surge". Did they really? No, not really, at least in any meaningful perspective if one bothers to look closer. One-Year Greek Bond Yield That may be a surge, but all it represents is a possible delay in bankruptcy, not that bankruptcy will be avoided. Italy 10-Year Bond Yield No surge where it really matters, that's for sure. Meanwhile the gold-dollar reverse correlation play is back in vogue today, with gold down $41 and the Euro hitting a high of 1.39. Band-Aids and Rubber-Bands That the ECB, FED, Bank of Japan, and Swiss National bank have to provide liquidity to calm the markets is hardly calming news, yet the market continues to react well to band-aid and rubber-band measures ... for now. It won't last because nothing has been solved and attempts to revive the Eurobond idea is Dead-on-Arrival. Either Merkel and Sarkozy are attempting to buy time, hoping beyond hope to preserve their failing legacies, or are delusional. I suggest a combination of the three. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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