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Visualizing The Disconnect Between Wall Street and Main Street.

Posted by AGORACOM at 11:49 AM on Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

You’ve heard it time and time again that a healthy stock market does not necessarily mean a strong economy.  After all, markets can move far in advance of the economy as investors anticipate an economic advance or decline.  Having said that, I’ve struggled to reconcile Wall Street bullishness with what is actually happening on the street, which is clearly illustrated by the following graph out of the Financial Armageddon blog:

A Visualization Of The Wall Street / Main Street Disconnect

The graph leads me to the following questions:

  • Who is right?  Wall St or Main St?
  • Is this answer somewhere in the middle?
  • Will QE2 fill this gap?

I hate nothing more than sitting on the fence – but these debates are raging between the smartest minds in the world and no clear consensus has prevailed, which leads me to believe the answer sits somewhere in the middle.  I haven’t made up my mind yet – but plan to and will provide a strong opinion in the next couple of weeks.

Hat tip to Paul Kedrosky for bringing this to my attention via Twitter.

Regards,
George

Will NFL Referees Bailout US Banks From Foreclosuregate Penalty?

Posted by AGORACOM at 4:03 PM on Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

"If It's Uncatchable, I Shouldbn't Be Penalized For Interference"

The “in the event we were fraudulent” backup arguments are already starting:

Losses on the mortgages packaged into bonds come amid “persistently high unemployment and other economic trends, diminishing the likelihood that any loan defect should one exist at all, was the cause of the loan’s default,” Noski said.

The banks are hoping NFL referees will step in and say “There is no flag on the play as we have ruled the ball was uncatchable”

Ah JPM, if only you had sold the crap mortgages to Jerry Jones, this argument might have worked for you.

Regards,
George

Regards,

BREAKING …. Battle Of The Foreclosure Titans Begins

Posted by AGORACOM at 3:06 PM on Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

Via Bloomberg

Pimco, NY Fed Said to Seek Bank of America Repurchase of Mortgages

Pacific Investment Management Co., BlackRock Inc. and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York are seeking to force Bank of America Corp. to repurchase soured mortgages packaged into $47 billion of bonds by its Countrywide Financial Corp. unit, people familiar with the matter said.

A bondholder group wrote to Bank of America and Bank of New York Mellon Corp., the debt’s trustee, citing alleged failures by Countrywide to service the loans properly, their lawyer said yesterday in a statement that didn’t name the firms.

Investors are stepping up efforts to recoup losses on mortgage bonds, which plummeted in value amid the worst slump in home prices since the 1930s. Last month, BNY Mellon declined to investigate mortgage files in response to a demand from the bondholder group, which has since expanded. Countrywide’s servicing failures, including insufficient record keeping, may open the door for investors to seek repurchases by bypassing the trustee, said Kathy Patrick, their lawyer at Gibbs & Bruns LLP.

“We now are in a position where we have to start a clock ticking,” Patrick, who is based in Houston, said today in a telephone interview.

MetLife Inc., the biggest U.S. life insurer, is part of the group represented by Gibbs & Bruns, said the people, who declined to be identified because the discussions aren’t public. TCW Group Inc., the manager of $110 billion in assets, expects to join BlackRock, the world’s largest money manager, and Pimco, which runs the biggest bond fund, in the group, the people said.

Read The Full Story At Bloomberg

First, let’s be clear that the source for the story are “people familiar with the matter.”  As such, it remains to be confirmed by any of the parties involved – but we are going to bet that Bloomberg has the story right.

Second, if and when this story gets confirmed, I’ve been pounding the table on this for the past week and continue to assert this is a problem waaaayyy beyond the US Federal Government.  In fact, I repeat my statement that “The Federal Government Has No Wand To Waive” because this problem involves State pension funds, foreign governments, local homeowners and now industry monsters such as Pimco and BlackRock, let alone the New York Federal Reserve.

This is going to be the bloodbath for the banks and their friends in Washington will not be able to save the day.

Rejoice! At Least 1 Democrat Is Speaking Out On Foreclosure Gate

Posted by AGORACOM at 6:24 AM on Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

I’ve always digged Dylan Ratigan for not towing the party line of his network employers.  No business news Anchor has called for Wall Street jail time and penalties than him.

Hence, if you are a pissed off American that wants to make sure banks are not bailed out by commission (TARP 2) or omission (failure of US Gov to penalize banks under the law), then the following 8 minute video is a must see.

Thanks Dylan. You’re the man.

Why Is Gold Rocketing? Foreclosure-Gate Is Bigger Than You Think

Posted by AGORACOM at 1:26 PM on Wednesday, October 13th, 2010

As I write, DEC Gold is up $25 to $1,372.  Most commentators are discussing the usual suspects, which can be summarized as follows:

  • Weakening $USD
  • Anticipation of QE2
  • Erosion of confidence in $US (and all fiat currencies)
  • etc., etc.

However, I strongly believe a big reason behind gold’s recent surge has been the very issue I raised on October 5th in my article:  Checkmate – US Real Estate On The Verge Of Imploding, Pushing Gold Closer To $2,200.

If you are not fully up to date on this issue, then you need to read the article and get up to speed now.   Specifically, I stated:

Well, we are about to learn that markets can only be artificially maintained for so long. Eventually, they break free and revert to their true pricing levels. US Real estate is about to go through a mean dose of reversion, while simultaneously providing gold with additional fuel for $2,200.

Since then, in just a matter of a week, the problem has escalated to the point of this headline earlier today: Attorneys General in 49 States Join Foreclosure Probe. Highlights of the story include:

  • The states will conduct a coordinated inquiry into whether banks and loan servicers used false documents and signatures to justify hundreds of thousands of foreclosures
  • States including California and Colorado asked lenders to stop foreclosures.
  • The attorney general of Ohio last week sued Ally Financial Inc., claiming fraud in foreclosure practices.
  • In December, a GMAC employee said in a deposition in a foreclosure case in West Palm Beach, Florida, that his team of 13 people signed about 10,000 documents a month without verifying them.
  • Bank of America Corp., the largest U.S. lender, extended a freeze on foreclosures to all 50 states Oct. 8 as concern spread among federal and state officials that homes were being seized based on faulty data.

HOW BAD IS THIS AND WHAT DOES IT MEAN?

I can go on and on – but the most important question that should be on your mind is “What are the potential economic and market implications of this?”. The answer can be summarized in the following statement by Georgetown Law Prof Adam Levitin:

The mortgage is still owed but there’s going to be a problem figuring out who actually holds the mortgage, and they would be the ones bringing the foreclosure.

You have a trust that has been getting payments from borrowers for years that it has no right to receive. So you might see borrowers suing the trusts saying give me my money back, you’re stealing my money.

You’re going to then have trusts that don’t have any assets that have been issuing securities that say they’re backed by a whole bunch of assets, and you’re going to have investors suing the trustees for failing to inspect the collateral files, which the trustees say they’re going to do, and

You’re going to have trustees suing the securitization sponsors for violating their representations and warrantees about what they were transferring.

If this were to come to pass — and plaintiffs lawyers will certainly be eager to show that their clients were paying the wrong mortgage holders — the value of all instruments (including the performing ones) could plummet.

BANKS COULD GET CRUSHED AS THIS MAY BE “TOO BIG TO SAVE”

In short, the whole system could freeze overnight.  I’m not so sure it hasn’t already frozen.  With the exception of brand new homes, who would risky buying a re-sale home now?  Title Insurance companies have already stopped insuring re-sales of foreclosed homes – but how long will it be until that is extended to all homes that:

  • Were bought out of foreclosure in the past 5 years
  • Whose mortgage may be in good standing (or slightly delinquent) but is “Title Undefined”

The big losers will be the banks and Wall Street because:

  • They are not receiving any payments
  • They will be sued by customers that purchased Mortgage Backed Securities that failed to properly have mortgages attached to them
  • Underwriters face the threat of making CDO investors whole (Trillions of dollars)
  • If fraud is proven, mortgage originators could be help liable.  They may be long gone but the securitizers (Wall Street) are not.

Given the fact we are talking about Trillions of dollars, the banks and Wall street firms can potentially go from “Too Big To Fail” to a problem that is “Too Big To Save”.  Major US banks could literally be shut down overnight, with shareholders losing every penny and bond holders forced to take a major hair cut.

Yep, it could get that bad.  Even it was 1/2 as bad, the inevitable outcome is another economic crisis of epic proportions that pushes investors away from the $USD and into gold.

Stay tuned.

Regards,
George

Making You A Better Investor – Tuesday October 5th, 2010

Posted by AGORACOM at 9:00 AM on Tuesday, October 5th, 2010

MAKING YOU A BETTER INVESTOR …. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5TH

1.  Checkmate – US Real Estate Prices On The Verge Of Imploding As Foreclosure System Breaks Down. George says Gold prices Will Drive Higher AGORACOM Blog

2.  States of Texas, Delaware and Maryland All Call For Halt To Foreclosures View AGORACOM Twitter Stream

3. Gold Up $10 Overnight To $1,325. AGORACOM Gold Matrix Headlines Say Bank of Japan Rate Cut Was Catalyst, George Points To US Real Estate Concerns

4. Jim Rogers On CNBC. What He Said – And You Should Know – About $USD, US Economy and Ben Bernanke AGORACOM Twitter

5.  Level 2 Time and Sales Update- Full functionality has now resumed

QUOTE OF THE DAY

Bernanke Does Not Know What He Is Doing.  The Whole Thing Is Dead Wrong

– Jim Rogers on CNBC Yesterday

Checkmate – US Real Estate On The Verge Of Imploding, Pushing Gold Closer To $2,200

Posted by AGORACOM at 1:28 AM on Tuesday, October 5th, 2010

As mentioned earlier, Ollick confirms that according to rumors, the government is going to impose “some kind of 90 day foreclosure moratorium on the banks which would melt down the housing market.”  – Zero Hedge

If you are a frequent reader of this blog or our Twitter stream, then you know my clear and unequivocal stance on the US real estate recovery – there isn’t one and, in fact, US real estate is headed for a crash of epic proportions.  Forget the charts, data and expert analysis.  At times like this, you simply need to rely on your Grandfather’s logic.  Specifically:

  • The people are out of money
  • The people are underwater
  • The sub-prime scam jig is up
  • The banks are not lending money
  • “Prime” neighborhoods are strewn with abandoned homes, squatters or perpetually delinquent owners
  • Despite the propaganda, we all know that real estate shadow inventory dwarfs current inventory
  • Despite the propaganda,  Americans have no faith or hope of any “recovery”

… And now, perhaps the biggest bombshell of all …

  • Title Undefined Mortgages.  Translation? Nobody knows who truly holds the mortgages on millions of US homes.
  • As a result, title insurers are refusing to insure mortgages in foreclosure or otherwise, uncertain as to who actually owns the title.  Problem? Lenders won’t write mortgages without title insurance.
  • Further problem? Investors that have been buying homes in hopes of catching the bottom are going to dry up overnight for fear of buying a foreclosed home whose title is undefined.

For a little further insight into the matter  Watch The Full Video Below.

It’s terrible that real estate may come to this – but it was inevitable given the farcical game that Wall Street and the government have been playing with real estate. Most notably, by not forcing banks to mark-to-market the true value of their residential mortgages, the government artificially maintained a real estate market that was truly in need of playing the only card it had left – catharsis.

Well, we are about to learn that markets can only be artificially maintained for so long.  Eventually, they break free and revert to their true pricing levels.  US Real estate is about to go through a mean dose of reversion, while simultaneously providing gold with additional fuel for $2,200.

CNBC’s Erin Burnett Blows A Gasket On Bond Bear.

Posted by AGORACOM at 6:19 PM on Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

(Hat tip to Zero Hedge for putting us onto this story)

For some strange reason, Erin Burnett of CNBC blew a gasket today when Bond Bear Mike Pento made his case for a bubble bond market.  She claims that he “was rude” but I just don’t see it.  What I see is a “moderator” (what she called herself) that didn’t like hearing someone make the case for a blowup in the US bond market.

Given the fact a Bond Bull was also on the show at the exact same time, you would think that a moderator would love salivate over such a strong opposing opinion to make great TV.

Nope.

Rather than sitting back and having the Bull and Bear go at it, Burnett decides to take the bull position by making a statement in the form of a question that challenge Pento’s bear position.  OK, it’s her show …. but why does she blow a gasket when Pento begins – rightfully so – challenging her?  He wasn’t rude in the least.  He was firm in his position.  I don’t care if you think the guy is right or wrong – you have to love the fact he is taking a position and backing it up.

So why does she blow a gasket?  Cheerleaders don’t like the opposing team.  Unfortunately, Burnett forgot she was the referee and the other team had already taken the field.

Am I wrong? You decide and let me know.

Regards,
George

Bob Chapman – The Reckless Mess Created By The Fed. A Must Read

Posted by AGORACOM at 1:51 PM on Monday, September 6th, 2010

I came across this very insightful article by Bob Chapman today.  It is potentially scary and will be viewed by some as fear mongering supported by great data and a smattering of conspiracy theories.

Personally, I gave the article a lot of thought and concluded it made too much sense to be ignored – especially given the fact I am fresh off watching CNBC’s Documentary “House Of Cards“.  As with the video, I strongly recommend that you read the article, think about it, discuss it with people smarter than you and then decide your course of action.

To this end, please find enclosed a few bullet point highlights, followed by the entire article.  I would love to hear what you think.

Regards,
George

HIGHLIGHTS:

  • October will report the annual fiscal deficit of 9/30/10 of about $1.5 trillion, a figure thought impossible just 1-1/2 to 2 years ago.
  • The sale of Treasuries for the past six months was easy with a strong US dollar caused by a manufactured crisis in Greece and in the euro.
  • What the Fed has been approaching since June is a “liquidity trap.” That is when loans are offered to business and they refuse to borrow.
  • Gold has gained 15% a year for those last 7 years. This is a secular bull market and cannot be denied. Further, gold has appreciated annually against every currency.
  • All we can say is we will never understand how bright people miss the obvious. There is no logic here, only agenda.
  • the Fed will sell mortgage backed securities they paid banks $0.70 to $0.80 on the dollar for, back to them for $0.20 on the dollar. This allows the banks to carry this paper on their good books at market value and allows the taxpayer to pay the difference, and the Fed cleans up their books. They do not have to do this, but they are going to do so. The losses will be about $1.2 trillion.
  • At the same time inflation will rage. The worst of all investment worlds, except for those in gold and silver related assets. Just as an example, during the period from 1929 to 1936, gold doubled and gold and silver shares rose over 500% in a deflationary period.
  • Between 1978 and 1981, during an inflationary recession the average gold and silver share appreciated 40 times the price of gold bullion.
  • The high-end market in homes is virtually non-existent. No sales for the past two months. Only 1,000 units priced over $500,000 were sold.
  • There you have it, and it is quite a mess. Unfortunately it is going to get worse.

FULL ARTICLE:

September 1 2010:

Almost two years ago the US Treasury was selling large amounts of short-term Treasury bills to fund bailouts and stimulus. That caused a major increase in debt. Most of that paper was 2-year bills and it is coming due for rollover shortly. While that transpires, October will report the annual fiscal deficit of 9/30/10 of about $1.5 trillion, a figure thought impossible just 1-1/2 to 2 years ago. (more…)

CNBC “House Of Cards”. How Wall Street Fucked America and The World. Why They Will Do It Again

Posted by AGORACOM at 1:34 PM on Monday, September 6th, 2010

The growing criticism of CNBC amongst financial bloggers and commentators (including me) is growing and warranted.  Too much cheer leading, too much emphasis on entertaining us, too little guest analysis beyond short octobox/decabox sound bites.

Having said that, they have some great talent over there and one of those people is David Faber, who put together the 90-minute must see documentary.  I’ve embedded it below.  I don’t care how busy you are, put the family to bed and find the time to watch it.  It will not only tell you how Wall Street greed fucked the global financial system – I believe it demonstrates why Wall Street greed is in the process of doing it again.

After all, no Wall Street CEO has gone to jail or even been forced to payback the hundreds of millions of dollars in bonuses generated during Sub-Prime / CDO scam, so you count on them looking after themselves all over again during QE1 and the soon to be released sequel QE2.

Skip a movie, skip a game, skip anything that won’t arm you with the information you need to potentially protect your financial future.  Watch this video, absorb the information, never trust Wall Street again and do what you must to protect yourself.

CNBC presents the defining story of our time. Correspondent David Faber investigates the origins of the global economic crisis and the events leading to the most devastating financial collapse since the Great Depression.