The Great Housing Crash of ‘07: How low will
prices go?
By Mike Whitney
08/30/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- - This month’s figures prove that
the so-called “housing bubble” is not only real, but that its
cratering faster than anyone had realized. As the UK Guardian
reported just yesterday, “the orderly housing slowdown predicted by
the Federal Reserve will (soon) become a full-blown crash”.
All the indicators are now pointing in the wrong direction. Consumer
confidence is down, inventory is at a 10 year high, and the number
of homes sold in July was 22% lower than last year. As Paul
Ashworth, chief economist at Capital Economics said, “Things seem to
be getting worse very quickly. Freefall is a strong word, but I
think it’s the right one to use here.” (UK Guardian)
The housing bubble is a $10 trillion equity balloon that will
explode sometime in 2007 when more than $1 trillion in no-interest,
no down payment, adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) reset; setting the
stage for massive home devaluation, foreclosures and unemployment.
(“By some estimates housing activity has accounted for 40% of all
the jobs created since 2001”. Times Online) July’s plunging sales
are just the first sign of a major slowdown. The worst is yet to
come.
AAaaaaaaaaaaeeeeeeoooo!!!
The blame for this rapidly-approaching meltdown lies entirely with
the Federal Reserve, the privately-owned collection of 10 central
banks who cooked up a way to shift wealth from one class to another
through low interest rates.
Sound crazy?
Well, just as high interest rates cause the economy to slow down;
low interest rates have the exact opposite effect by stimulating the
economy through increased spending. It’s all pretty clear-cut.
When the stock market nose-dived in 2000 the Fed lowered rates 17
times to an unbelievable 1% to keep the economy sputtering-along
while the Bush administration dragged the country to war, gave away
$450 billion a year in tax cuts, and awarded zillions in no bid
contracts to their friends in big business. All tolled, the
Bush-handouts amounted to roughly $3 trillion dollars, the largest
heist in history, and it was carried out under the nose of the
snoozing American public.
At the same time, America’s debts and deficits have continued to
mushroom behind the smokescreen of low interest rates.
Rather than face the recession which should have followed stock
market crash, the Fed chose to increase the money supply (which
doubled in the last 7 years) and lower the qualifications for
getting mortgages. (I read recently that 90% of first time home
buyers not only lie on their mortgage applications, but that 50% of
them say that they earn TWICE as much as they really do. The
applications are not cross-checked with IRS statements) Now, tens of
thousands of Americans live in $400,000 and $500,000 homes without a
penny of equity in them and with loans that are timed to increase
dramatically in 2007. (Many of the monthly payments will double)
So, how can we blame the Fed for the reckless and irresponsible
behavior of the average homeowner?
Well, because they knew the effects of their “cheap money” policy
every step of the way.
First of all, the Fed knew exactly where the money was going.
Greenspan endorsed the shabby new lending-regime which put hundreds
of billions of dollars in the hands of people who never should have
qualified for mortgages. They were set up to fail just like the
victims in the stock market scam who kept dumping their life savings
in the NASDAQ when PE’s were shooting through the stratosphere.
Secondly, the Fed knew that wages had actually regressed (2.3%)
since Bush took office, so they knew that the soaring value of real
estate was entirely predicated on debt not real wealth. In other
words, home values increased because of the availability of cheap
money which inevitably creates a buying-frenzy. It had nothing to do
with real demand or growth in wages.
And, thirdly, according to the Fed’s own figures, “the total amount
of residential housing wealth in the US just about doubled between
1999 and 2006—up from $10.4 trillion to $20.4 trillion”. Times
Online.
UP $10 TRILLION IN 7 YEARS! That is the very definition of a
humongous, economy-killing equity monster. In other words, the Fed
knew the ACTUAL SIZE OF THE BUBBLE and chose to steer it towards the
nearest iceberg without warning the public.
This is what Greenspan called “a little froth”.
There is no real growth in the American economy. Figure it out. Last
year Americans saved less than 0% of their net earnings while they
borrowed a whopping $600 billion from their home equity to piss-away
on a consumer spending-spree. Once home prices begin to retreat,
that $600 billion will evaporate, real GDP will shrivel, and the
economy will begin flat-lining. (Consumer spending is 70% of GDP)
The Federal Reserve’s plan is so simple; we shouldn’t dignify it by
calling it a conspiracy. It’s merely a matter of hypnotizing the
masses with low interest rates while trillions of dollars of real
wealth is diverted to corporate big-wigs and American plutocrats.
It might not be rocket science, but it worked like a charm.
Now, the trap-door has been sprung; the country is dead-broke and
all the levers are in place for a police state. As the
housing-balloon slowly limps towards earth, the new Halliburton
detention centers are up and running, the National Guard is in
Rummy’s control, the Feds are able to listen-in on every phone call
we make.
The noose is beginning to tighten.
New Orleans was just a dress rehearsal for the new world order;
300,000 million Americans reduced to grinding poverty while the
economy explodes into sheets of flames.
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