Meredith Whitney, managing director at Oppenheimer and one of the first analysts to predict in 2007 that banks would face enormous write-downs and balance sheet problems as a result of the housing downturn, says the crisis is entering a new chapter in which bank on-balance sheet lending will start to shut down. She expects that there will be an actual contraction in the overall US market for mortgage lending, something she says has never happened before in the US.
To watch this 3-part interview, click on the image below:
Bank analyst Meredith Whitney says the credit crisis will extend well into 2009, if not beyond. This means more pressure on financial stocks and bank balance sheets; banks have added $25 billion to loss reserves so far, but face mounting consumer credit losses in a second wave of the crisis that some bank executives have acknowledged will be worse than the first, which has cost hundreds of billions of dollars in write-downs and losses.
Wall Street’s originate-to-distribute model, designed to mitigate risk by spreading it around, actually exacerbated those risks. It encouraged banks to loosen lending standards because more loan volume meant higher profits; then it led to over-leverage, and finally to complacency. More and more paper dollars were created for trading on the assumption that housing prices would always go up. The first wave of the crisis affected trading books, but the second will hit lending. As long as housing values were rising, borrowers could refinance in perpetuity to avoid default. Losses mounted when the refinancing option disappeared. Banks relied too heavily on the securitization markets to boost lending to consumers, particularly in the form of mortgages.
In time, some lending will return, but the sky-high revenues of recent years will be hard to reclaim, says Whitney. The banking sector’s pullback in lending will cause further painful losses. Whitney believes banks will have to reserve an additional $170 billion through the end of next year just to keep up with estimated loan losses. “New and unforeseen strains on consumer liquidity will push more consumers into precarious credit positions and cause consumer credit losses to be far worse than what is currently estimated, even by the most draconian of investors,” Whitney says.
In his latest Investment Outlook, Bill Gross, head honcho at PIMCO, discusses the advent of transitioning from the levering world of pre-2008 into the delevering world we now find ourselves in. He points out that in the 'new' world we should no longe
Government "Expenditures" Gone Wild
http://econompicdata.blogspot.com/2008/11/relative-size-of-pledges-part-iii.html
The current US bailout commitments of $8.2 trillion currently exceed all of the major US expenditures of since the Second World War adjusted for inflation. For a
10-Yr+ US Treasury and Canada Yields Falling
During the December 1st liquidation of stocks, the yield on 10-Yr. US treasury securities fell to 2.81%, a level not seen since 1954. Incidentally, during the 1935-1955 period, the yield on these was at levels far below current levels, this being the
Joe Stiglitz: Bigger is Better
Joe Stiglitz writes in the New York Times:
Joseph Eugene Stiglitz (born February 9, 1943) is an American economist and a professor at Columbia University. He was chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers from 1995 to 1997 and was awarded the N
Paul Krugman: Lest We Forget
Paul Krugman opines that financial reform and regulation of the shadow banking system cannot wait:
Paul Robin Krugman (pronounced /ˈkɹuːɡmən/; born February 28, 1953) is an American economist, columnist, author and intellectual.[2] He is a pr
The Road to Depression
Brad DeLong says two big mistakes made the crisis worse:
James Bradford DeLong (b. June 24, 1960, Boston) commonly known as Brad DeLong, is a professor of economics at the University of California, Berkeley and a former Deputy Assistant Secret
Words from the (investment) wise for the week that was (November 24 – 30, 2008)
We are very pleased to welcome Dr. Prieur du Plessis as an editorial contributor to GreenLightAdvisor.com. Prieur du Plessis has 25 years' of global experience in professional investment research and portfolio management. More than 1,000 of his art
'Encouraged by a wicked wizard, Greenspan, Bernanke toils at his printing press'
The Guardian has published below, an insight-full essay by Hugh Hendry, CIO, Eclectica Asset Management. Hendry's brash and eloquent commentary has earned him a reputation which he best personally describes as heresy, as many in the City of London ha
Credit Crisis Watch (November 28, 2008)
For the world’s financial system to start functioning normally again, it is imperative that confidence in the credit markets be restored. In order to gauge the progress being made to unclog credit markets, I regularly monitor a range of financial s
Must-Read China Reading: World Bank Quarterly
If you read one thing on China this week/month/quarter/season, let it be the new World Bank China Quarterly. Superbly useful stuff.
Get it here.
[via Brad Setser]
'Here are some of Brad Setser's notes from his CFR blog:
1. China
Wise Words
Everything that happens happens as it should, and if you observe carefully, you will find this to be so. — Marcus Aurelius
Manias, Panics, and Crashes: A History of Financial Crises (Wiley Investment ... by Charles P. Kindleberger, Robert Aliber Amazon Price: $13.57
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Gold: The Once and Future Money by Nathan Lewis Amazon Price: $17.03
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Stock Cycles: Why Stocks Won't Beat Money Markets Over the Next Twenty Years by Michael A Alexander Amazon Price: $13.45
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Stay on top of the latest headlines from the Wall Street Journal Online.
Wall Street Journal's What's News, Dec. 3, 2008by The Wall Street Journal
Detroit's Big Three presented turnaround plans to Congress that indicate both GM and Chrysler could collapse by the end of December unless they get billions of dollars in emergency loans ... Treasury Secretary Paulson...
Jeffrey Saut Daily Audio Comment Raymond James
Listen to the recording with one of the media players below:
Jeff Saut’s Daily Audio Comment is recorded every weekday, except Wednesday, at 9 a.m. ET. It is made available to the public on this Web page at approximately 1 p.m. ET.