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Breaking Down the Financial Breakdown

The stock market is gyrating like a yoyo, and with each down stroke it’s heading lower. What’s an investor to do? Let’s start by dissecting the cause – it’s not as simple as a slowdown in housing or defaults in the subprime market, and these are unrelated (for the most part) events.
 
The housing market was headed for a correction regardless of the events taking place in the subprime market. New home starts were running at twice the historical average during 2003 – 2006. Granted, some of this was fueled by a relaxation (or abandoning) of underwriting standards in the subprime market but it also was the culmination of aging baby boomers buying second homes, low interest rates, and a strong economy.   Speculators in areas such as southern Florida and easy credit just pushed it over the edge. We would be in a housing slowdown regardless of the subprime problem, although this will exacerbate it, and a weak housing market will continue at least through 2008. Investors: avoid homebuilders.
 
Mortgage lenders and financial companies in related businesses generally are leveraged and, in many cases, rely on short term debt to finance their operation. The concerns over the creditworthiness of their businesses, not the level of defaults in the subprime market, have caused much of their funding to disappear. This is the biggest risk for many finance companies. All finance companies are paying the piper for problems in the subprime market - lax underwriting standards and mortgage obligations that borrowers can’t meet.  This problem was not caused by rising interest rates. Interest rates have gone up very little over the past year. The problem was artificially low teaser rates, the ability to skip payments, interest-only payments for a period of time and other contractual mechanisms which induced (or seduced) buyers to take on a bigger mortgage than they could afford. Do your homework in this sector to determine which companies have funding problems, subprime and related mortgage exposure, and which don’t. It’s not obvious. These problems will take a good year to sort out and companies will be destroyed or seriously damaged in the process. Investors: Avoid originators, servicers, buyers/holders of paper, fixed income funds, and mortgage REITs which are highly leveraged or focus on the subprime mortgage market.
 
Banks generally hold some, but not a significant amount of, subprime mortgages relative to their total portfolio. The bigger risk for certain money center banks is their exposure to bridge loans and take-out financing guarantees for the many billions of dollars of private equity deals that are pending. The hit the banks took on the Chrysler deal is a good example. This problem will work itself out by the end of the year. Banks with private equity financing exposure could have one or two bad quarters. Banks without this exposure will do fine. Investors: Buy banks without big private equity exposure now. Wait one or two quarters to buy banks with exposure to private equity. 
 
Brokerage houses generally have subprime and private equity exposure, as discussed above. Investors: Give them one or two quarters to sort out their problems before you buy.
 
Mutual fund managers, investment advisors, and REITs that own income producing have little or no subprime exposure (again, do your homework on the specific investment to make sure). These stocks have taken a hit. Investors: Buy now.
 
Mutual fund investors: review the holdings in your funds and make the appropriate adjustments.
Posted 08/15/07 by Bill Byrnes

Comments

Bill O Sat, 18 Aug 2007 02:23:57 GMT

Hey Bill, As a regular reader of your blog I have to say that your analysis is spot-on. My wife and I carry no debt and we own our house outright but we were literally about to sign on a construction loan last week to begin building our 'dream' house. Fortumately I've been watching the market pretty carefully and frankly it gave me the willies. In order for us to truly be able to afford our new house our current home would need to sell at or above what we paid for it. After much agonizing we decided that, painful as it was, the prudent move would be to put the project on hold and see how this all plays out. We will continue to evaluate the market in the coming months/years and be grateful that we paused when we did. Thanks for your thoughtful commentary, -Bill-
Bill@MUTUALdecision Mon, 27 Aug 2007 20:44:25 GMT

Bill, Always good to hear from you! I applaud your fiscal conservatism. Fixed rate mortgages are going to regain their popularity. I was amazed a few months ago when I looked at refinancing. The mortgage broker suggested a mortgage with an attractive two year rate. I had to ask him how it adjusted after that. The adjustment was a forumla based on LIBOR and, at then current rates, would have been a 3% increase. Amazing! Yet, I had to almost pull this information out of him. I hope that every reader who has an adjustable rate mortgage understands the metric by which it adjusts and what their likley future payments are.
joelvenditti@yahoo.com Tue, 22 Jan 2008 16:12:37 GMT

Bill, I may not understand the complex world of stocks and investments etc. but I do know this. What's available to the average consumer is a lot of crap, the grocery stores are 3/4 filled with products whose main ingredients are flour, tropical oils, and sugar. Cheap easy to make, and profitable, a million ways to sell people flour, oil, and sugar. The Chinese produced electronic products are cheap and stop working within two years and end up in our landfills, the e-waste from the computer industry created gets salvaged by slum children in third world countries who get terminally sick from overexposure and contact with heavy metals. Every stockholder loves to profit, but gives little, or no thought to the impact their products have on the environment. The cars we are offered are gas guzzling, overpriced and flat out make a rude and arrogant statement in and of itself. The construction industry relentlessly continues it's push for urban sprawl encroaching and endangering valuable life and resources such as plants, and animals, when investments could be made to reclaim already settled areas. You know I could go on and on. Where is the real investment in the future ? When industry, banks, investors, and corporations realize that the only truly valuable things in life are clean water, air, untainted food, and our fellow human beings, then we won't have "recessions" which is another word for stupid people will no longer be able to buy stupid worthless crap. I say bring it on its the best thing that could ever happen to the United States. I'm glad that rich people will be getting burned (and I hope they get burned hard)for their careless and thoughtless ways of spending, and investing what is the single most influential vehicle for positive change we have..... money.
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