Showing posts with label financial crisis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label financial crisis. Show all posts

Think this is over? Not by a long shot.

It should be obvious to most now that the "green shoots"... and yes... that phrase is as exciting to me as... oh... painting a barn white... um... the "green shoots" are just a figment of the stimulus-loving media... CNBC .

Now I could go on and on quoting this "secondary indicator" and that "turning point" and this "still negative but not AS negative" garbage... or I could cut to the chase. Show of hands anyone??

I thought so. So let's sift through all the B.S. with one simple article...

United Western Bancorp, Inc. Reports Sale of Mortgaged-Backed Securities

Something this simple escapes the "brilliant" minds in Washington and Central Bankers' offices world-wide. I encourage you to read it, but basically it's a standard "this bank sold these securities for this amount" but what is astounding and absolutely frightening is the devil in the details:

"United Western Bancorp, Inc. (NASDAQ: UWBK - News) (the “Company”), a Denver-based holding company whose principal subsidiary, United Western Bank® (the “Bank”), is a community bank focused on expansion across Colorado’s Front Range market and selected mountain communities, today announced that the Bank sold mortgage-backed securities with an unpaid principal balance of $47.3 million of lower tranche mortgage backed securities secured primarily by “option-adjustable-rate” mortgage loans (the “Option ARM Securities”) to an unaffiliated third party. Total consideration received for the Option ARM Securities was $378,000. "

Hmmm... so let's see... This bank found an interested third party to buy $47,300,000 worth of Option ARM mortgages for.... drum roll please... $378,000. Yep... that's .08% of their face value.

What??? Reeeeallly??? Now... a quick recap of Chapter 1 on "How to Value a Pile of Crap"...

If you have a big pile of crap on your front lawn and you put a sign out that says:

CRAP FOR SALE - $100 or best offer

and after about 2 years someone offers you ONE PENNY for it.... what was it worth?

Now... let's think about this... this small unknown bank was able to find a buyer that would take their 47 MILLION dollars worth of crap for oh... a 99% haircut.

What was their crap really worth?

Now let's think about Bank of America, who has HUNDREDS OF BILLIONS OF DOLLARS of this same CRAP (Option ARM Mortgages) on their books thanks to the Countrywide purchase...

and...

Wells Fargo, who originated HUNDREDS OF BILLIONS OF DOLLARS of this SAME CRAP on their own before swallowing Wachovia, which origniated HUNDREDS OF BILLIONS OF DOLLARS of this SAME CRAP on THEIR own before SWALLOWING Golden West/World Savings, which proudly boasted for years that they ORIGINATED THE IDEA OF THIS CRAP as well as ORIGINATING HUNDREDS OF BILLIONS OF DOLLARS of this SAME CRAP

and....

IndyMac Bank, which LOVED THIS CRAP and then failed... and Washington Mutual, which LOVED THIS CRAP and then failed...

and....

well... HOLY CRAP.


I'd say the market just told us that Wells, BofA and anyone else with this CRAP on their books is pretty likely to take a 99% haircut.

Let's not forget that Option Arm Mortgage defaults are also rising at an exponential rate as foreclosures filed in the latest quarters set... oh... another record. It's getting better out their, isn't it?

And what do they say this crap is worth? Have you seen the earnings reports they cooked up? Hmmmm.... who's lying now????


WAKE UP AMERICA... OUR BANKS HAVE FAILED... OUR SYSTEM IS COMPROMISED.... IT'S TIME TO TAKE IT BACK.

An Email to Friends

Hey guys... I know, I know... another "doomsday" scenario from Chris, ever the pessismist... but I ask both of you, who know me so well... to ask yourselves a serious question... "Was Klein always such a pessismist?"

I think you know the answer to that. I'm not. I'm actually an optimist and an opportunity-taker... if you will.
We are on the precipice of the greatest financial catastrophe in modern history, and I think you are both beginning to realize that. As my father says... this is the time to find your opportunity and make the most of it. The more informed and realistic you are, the better off you will be.

Please read the following.... and take it to heart. I care about both of you very much and I don't see any way out of this mess (given what I know and what I've learned) for a few years. The government is doing everything they can to cover up the mess and protect those who took advantage of all of us... they will fall, as they stood atop the house of cards. The real question is... "Who will rise from the ashes?"




"Despite last summer’s collapse in private-label MBS and related markets, the faltering Wall Street Bubble nonetheless persevered up until the Lehman collapse. While it was problematic that overall system Credit growth had slowed markedly, there remained key sectors of Credit and risk intermediation that remained very much in expansionary mode. In particular, GSE-related obligations, bank Credit, and money market fund assets had expanded rapidly in spite of the subprime collapse. Importantly, the speculator community had maintained easy access to cheap finance. As I have noted often, despite the unfolding bust in mortgage and risk assets, market faith in “money” and the core of the system had held steadfast. This all ended abruptly three weeks ago with the Lehman filing.

Today, confidence has been shattered, and Wall Street finance is a complete and unsalvageable bust. The spigot for Trillions of finance - that for years fueled the asset markets and U.S. Bubble economy – has been essentially shut off and dismantled. In particular, Wall Street finance was a mechanism for intermediating higher-yielding riskier loans. This finance provided rocket fuel for both residential and commercial real estate markets – and the attendant wealth effects. Wall Street finance also grew into the key source of finance for auto purchases, student loans, Credit cards, municipal finance and various business enterprises. Many of these loans were of a risk profile unappealing to traditional bank lending – and, hence, provided the type of higher yields quite appealing to the speculator community.

And, importantly, as the stature of Wall Street finance grew its impact upon the real economy became embedded deep into the Economic Structure. Or, stated differently, risky loans came to play a major role in determining spending and investment patterns throughout the “Bubble” economy. Wall Street finance became a major direct and indirect generator of household incomes and corporate profits. Moreover, Wall Street finance came to dominate the flow of finance both in and out of the securities markets. Wall Street could create its own liquidity and funnel it into the U.S. and global markets – and earn unimaginable returns in the process.

It is today impossible to comprehend the full ramifications from The Bust in Wall Street Finance. Yet we can be rather certain that for the foreseeable future much less Credit and liquidity will be directed to the asset markets. And, at the same time, there will be significantly less Credit Availability for riskier loans of all varieties – for the household, business, financial and the government sectors. Few appreciate that these dynamics are extremely problematic for the U.S. Bubble Economy – an economic system that had come to a large extent to be governed by asset-based and high-risk lending. These dynamics are at the heart of today’s Acute Financial and Economic Fragility and the resulting imploding markets.

The leveraged speculating community played such an integral role in the overall Credit Bubble and, more specifically, to the Bubble in Wall Street Finance. They were instrumental in both spurring financial sector Credit creation/leveraging, while directing this Flood of Finance to the asset markets. And the more the leverage and the greater the Flow to inflating markets, the higher the returns generated by this expanding pool of speculative finance. And the greater the returns, the more robust the “investment” flows into the hedge fund community – spurring more leverage and more potent fuel for additional self-reinforcing asset inflation. Well, this historic speculative Bubble is now in the process of blowing up. One of the greatest manias ever – surely The World's Greatest Episode of “Ponzi Finance” – is absolutely coming apart. And the wreckage is accumulating in all markets – everywhere.

Here at home, our maladjusted economic system will only be sustained by somewhere in the neighborhood of $2.0 TN of new Credit. It’s simply not going to happen. The $700bn from Washington would seem like an enormous amount of support. In reality, it’s nowhere even close to the amount necessary for systemic stabilization. To the $2.0 TN or so of new Credit required this year (and next) add perhaps as much as several Trillion more necessary to accommodate speculative de-leveraging (liquidations forced by huge losses). Importantly, the Bust in Wall Street Finance has ensured that insufficient liquidity will be forthcoming to maintain inflated asset prices and sustain the Bubble economy – creating catastrophe for the leveraged speculating community.

The “Freidmanites” thought they understood the (post-crash) policy mistakes that led to The Great Depression. They believed the “Roaring Twenties” was the “Golden Age of Capitalism.” The great bust could have been avoided with a simple ($5bn or so) banking system recapitalization. As we are witnessing today, the issue is not some manageable amount of new “capital” to replenish banking system losses. Instead, the predicament is the massive and unmanageable amount of new Credit necessary to, on the one hand, sustain a mal-adjusted Bubble Economy and, on the other, the Trillions more required to accommodate a gigantic speculative de-leveraging. I have a very difficult time seeing a way out of this terrible mess."

The above quote is from Prudent Bear

The End Game is Near


Imagine yourself on a pristine beach, watching the seagulls soaring above, the dolphins feeding in the distance all the while feeling that warm, comforting breeze blowing inland. Salt spray caresses your senses and the soft sand beneath your feet comforts your soul.


Gazing seaward, you notice a small vessel on the horizon. As you focus your eyes on the boat, you notice what seems to be a small wave working it's way from the back of your view towards the hapless craft. Thinking nothing of it, you blink, only to discover that the wave has swallowed the boat and nothing is left. You curl your toes in the sand and a slightly uneasy feeling drifts over you. Your concern is mostly for the souls lost when the sea took the vessel to the bottom.


But the smell of the sea and the light breeze soon settle your soul once more. Casting your eyes once again towards the sea, you notice the wave has grown to a small bump, nearer than the horizon. "Must've been a big one... glad it's not near the shore..." you think to yourself.


Sitting down on the sand, you begin to feel comforted again by the fact that you are so far away from this event that it could not possibly affect you. As the seconds pass, you begin to realize that the shore line has extended itself about 500 yards further down the beach. Remembering something you saw on TV a few years back, you come to the realization that this isn't good. Just as you begin to think you should leave the beach, you look up and........................................


Countrywide, Indymac, Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch, AIG, Wachovia, Washington Mutual, National City and over 280 mortgage companies... GONE or GOING TO BE GONE.


Who thinks this crisis is near bottom? Show of hands....