Date:
Sat, March 24, 2007 06:55:25 PMFrom:
The Daily Reckoning
Subject:
The Daily Reckoning's Weekend Edition: Set Up to Fail
Set Up to Fail
The Daily Reckoning - Weekend Edition
March 24-25, 2007
Baltimore, Maryland
by Kate "Short Fuse" Incontrera
VIEWS FROM THE FUSE: SET UP TO FAIL
Moving stinks. Who likes all the packing... organizing... repainting...
and fumes from oven-cleaner?
Even more dreaded than moving yourself: helping others move.
Unfortunately, if you're a male with arms and legs or any sort of truck,
there is pretty much no way to avoid it (luckily, your editor has three
younger brothers and is small enough to always be put on 'guarding the
U-Haul duty').
Unfortunately, the 'too short and weak' excuse didn't fly recently - we
were recruited to help some friends organize their house for a big move
from their apartment into their first home. But, early this morning, we
received a call from our friend telling us to not come over, as it looked
like they might not be closing on their dream house after all.
Apparently, their loan, that they had been told was a done-deal, had
fallen apart. As it turns out, their subprime lender, buckled under the
burden of failed loans and a shortage of cash, and joined the other 44
lenders that have folded since late 2006.
More and more Americans are failing to keep up with their mortgage
payments, finding themselves stuck in loans whose costs keep rising. As
foreclosures and loan defaults rise, the subprime lenders are finding
themselves strapped for cash...and being forced to shut their doors.
But this has hardly caused mainstream economists and the mass media to
furrow their brows. A headline in yesterday's Baltimore Sun read,
"Subprime Damage is Called Limited."
Roger Cole, director of the Fed's Division of Banking Supervision and
Regulation (sounds like a fun job), told Congress on Thursday, "At this
time, we are not observing spillover effects from the problems in the
subprime market to the traditional mortgage portfolios or, more generally,
to the safety and soundness of the banking system."
Okay...let's check out the facts. The piece reports, "about 14 percent of
subprime mortgages are 60 or more days past due" and "lenders currently
have $1.28 trillion in subprime loans outstanding."
That sounds like more than "limited damage" to us. Not to mention the fact
that close to 2 million of those loans' interest rates are going to reset
in the next two years...do they really think that people who didn't have
money to put down in the first place are going to be able to afford
noticeably higher payments. We wouldn't count on it.
But that's the thing about bubbles - they all burst. Has everyone
forgotten about the tech meltdown seven years ago?
Well, Morgan Stanley's Stephen Roach certainly hasn't. And we'll leave you
with his much more succinct analysis:
"The bursting of two bubbles seven years apart - dot-com and housing -
holds the key to the macro outlook. While different in many respects,
these sharp swings in asset markets share one thing in common - the
initial belief that any spillovers would be limited and that the rest of
the economy and financial markets would remain unscathed. Just as that
view turned out to be wrong in the early 2000s, I fear a similar outcome
today.
"... a post-bubble macro contagion that could end up being a good deal
worse over the next year than it was seven years ago. What's especially
worrisome about the current situation is that real GDP growth has already
slowed to just 2% over the past three quarters - far short of the 3.7%
annualized pace of the previous three years. Yet this downshift is largely
an outgrowth of a steep recession in homebuilding activity, together with
collateral impacts of a recent downtrend in business capital spending. By
contrast, the American consumer has barely flinched, with average gains of
3.2% in real consumption since mid-2006 representing only a modest
downshift from the astonishing 3.7% growth trend of the past decade.
Should the consumer move into a more meaningful period of consolidation -
precisely the risk as equity extraction from residential property now
slows in a post-housing-bubble climate - then macro contagion could become
an increasingly serious problem.
"Given the likelihood of meaningful consumer spillovers, I would place
about a 40% probability on an outright recession scenario in late 2007 and
early 2008.
"It would take a Volcker-like toughness to bring this insidious process to
an end. Yet both Greenspan and Bernanke seem to be cut from a very
different cloth."
Short Fuse
The Daily Reckoning
P.S. If you think that this wave of defaults and foreclosures won't effect
you, read this special report. It shows how to hedge your retirement and
property savings against this coming mega-bust...
The "Second Wave" Housing Tsunami
http://www1.youreletters.com/t/1214704/12296005/818169/356/
--- The Daily Reckoning Book of the Week ---
Demise of the Dollar...and why it's great for your investments
by Addison Wiggin
The DR's own Addison Wiggin spent over a week in the #1 slot on Amazon's
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The logical next step was for the book to get on the New York Times
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The Demise of the Dollar examines the reasons for the dollar's slide -
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To purchase your copy, see:
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The "Second Wave" Housing Tsunami of 2007-2011
Just when you were hoping we were "done" with plunging property prices,
think again, and batten down the hatches!
History will remember this as the worst property-led recession of the last
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However, I can give you three very simple, solid ways to hedge against
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---------------------
THIS WEEK in THE DAILY RECKONING: Missed an issue of The Daily Reckoning
this week? No worries - we have them catalogued for you, below...
300 Cretins 03/23/07
by Bill Bonner
"It takes a great deal of courage to stand with only 300 men against
100,000. However, unlike the Spartans at the Battle of Thermopylae, the
small group of men who goaded President Bush into Iraq did so at no great
personal sacrifice. As Bill Bonner explains, it is the common man who will
suffer the greatest sacrifice of this War on Terror. Read on..."
http://www.dailyreckoning.com/Issues/2007/DR032307.html
Filtering Out the Noise 03/22/07
by Kevin Kerr
"When looking at the commodities market, it's hard to decipher what is
critical information, and what is just media fluff. Below, Kevin Kerr
explains how to tune out the noisy chatter - and zero-in on the
significant data from news and media outlets..."
http://www.dailyreckoning.com/Issues/2007/DR032207.html
The Coming of the Second Wave 03/21/07
by Mike "Mish" Shedlock
"Serious housing declines mirror very closely the life cycle of tsunamis.
Their initial impact on land is often a wave trough as opposed to a wave
crest... with most of the damage yet to come. And that is how housing
markets typically crash. Read on..."
http://www.dailyreckoning.com/Issues/2007/DR032107.html
An Unprecedented Speculative Spree 03/20/07
by Dr. Kurt Richebächer
"Last year set new records everywhere: records in stock prices, records in
mergers and acquisitions, records in private equity deals, record-low
spreads, record-low volatility. Manifestly, there is not the slightest
check on borrowing for financial speculation. Dr. Richebächer wonders,
what can stop this speculative binge? Read on..."
http://www.dailyreckoning.com/Issues/2007/DR032007.html
Mexican Jumping Oil 03/19/07
by The Mogambo Guru
"First the tortilla crisis, now this? Oh Mexico...if only you hadn't put
all your eggs in one chalupa. This week, the Mogambo Guru examines the
Mexican peak oil crisis, and (in perfect Spanish) explains why depending
on oil exports for 40% of your revenue is "no bueno". Read on..."
http://www.dailyreckoning.com/Issues/2007/DR031907.html
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These so-called "boring" stocks don't sell newspapers, or magazines -
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Click on the link below to learn about ten "boring" stocks - nine of which
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---------------------
FLOTSAM AND JETSAM:
Fill 'Er Up...Fast
by Kevin Kerr
Another week of subprime selling in the broader market was initially
pushing down commodity prices, but only initially. Suddenly, after several
weeks of difficult trading over in RTA, we are seeing a lot of what we
predicted coming true. Certain commodities are performing just as we
expected them to, especially the cattle market, which is falling apart
rather rapidly.
Gold and silver have gained quite nicely in the last few sessions,
especially because of all of the inflation data coming out. It seems as
though inflation is a problem after all. Of course, if you've been to a
grocery store or gas station lately, you know this.
I drove by the Mobil near my home and the price had jumped about 40 cents
in two weeks. Looking at this week's EIA numbers, we see refinery runs are
down and gasoline supply is already being impacted... it could be a very
long summer, indeed. Here on the East Coast, the calendar says March 16,
but there is a foot of snow falling outside my window. All of this bodes
very poorly for the summer driving season. The less time refineries have
to switch over from making heating oil to making gasoline, the more they
will be behind the eight ball with gas supplies. Now a new weather concern
is also raising eyebrows in the oil patch.
NOAA predicts that La Nina, evil sister to El Nino, will produce weather
patterns in the Gulf Coast that could ramp up the number of hurricanes
that hit the region. Any direct hit in the Gulf can always have a
devastating impact. The losses are massive, not only in terms of the
individual people whose lives are destroyed, which is the most tragic, but
also to the energy and agriculture industries.
Drilling platforms, refineries, shipping terminals, pipelines, etc. are
all impacted when a direct storm hits and refining and production grinds
to a halt.
This is already driving prices higher in anticipation of more demand and
possibly less supply. It's still a little early to be worrying about
hurricanes, but the reality is they will be here sooner than we think.
Speaking of being here sooner than we think... Have you registered to come
meet Byron and me at the Agora Wealth Symposium? Forget about just seeing
Byron and me, the event is in Vancouver, British Columbia, and some of the
top financial analysts, traders and countless others will be there... and
did I mention it's in Vancouver? I really hope you can join us this year.
For all the info call 1-800-926-6575 for further details.
With gas prices set to soar this summer, Byron and I will be bringing you
some good trades to take advantage of it. I know Byron has some strong
opinions on the subject, and I will discuss them with him when I see him
next week.
Meanwhile, one of the most common questions I get is if I had to pick one
trade, what market do I like the best for 2007? It would have to be orange
juice right now. November OJ, in my estimation, is setting up for a major
rally as more and more bullish news pours in. And surprisingly, the
options are still relatively cheap. I just bought some more of the
November 220 calls in OJ and I feel pretty good about that trade, and we
still have all of summer hurricane season to go.
P.S In Outstanding Investments and Resource Trader Alert, we often write
about the most profitable ways to play the commodities and natural
resource markets - and our readers have been quite pleased with the
results. That's why we've decided to package all of our commodity-related
publications together in one easy package so you can effortlessly take
advantage of the next leg of the massive commodity super boom.
For a very limited time, you can get what we are calling the "Resource
Reserve" for a ridiculously low price. But act now - this offer is only
open to a limited number of people...and spaces are filling up fast. Click
here for all the details:
Resource Reserve - Open to the Public Until April 1, 2007
http://www1.youreletters.com/t/1214704/12296005/817319/404/
Editor's Note: Kevin Kerr is the editor of two highly successful and
acclaimed financial advisory newsletters, Resource Trader Alert and
Outstanding Investments. A veteran commodities trader, Kevin uses his
irreplaceable experience to advise his readers on a variety of commodities
investments on a daily basis. Widely considered one of the nation's top
commodities gurus, Kevin's expert opinions are routinely featured in the
country's premier media outlets.
The above was taken from Kevin's soon-to-be-released book, A Maniac
Commodity Trader's Guide to Making a Fortune. In the book, Kevin dispels
the common myths and misconceptions about these markets, offering an
insider's view of what he calls "the last bastion of pure capitalism on
Earth." Whether you're a novice or an experienced trader, Kevin's
down-to-earth, clear-cut guidance will make you more savvy, more
confident, and more able to jump right in and grab those profit
opportunities that are waiting for you. The book is available for pre-sale
here:
A Maniac Commodity Trader's Guide to Making a Fortune
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0471771902/ref=ase_dailyreckonin-20/
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