THE FALSE BOTTOMED BOAT
Welcome to the Policy Think Site: http://www.jaygaskill.com
As Posted On
→The Out-Lawyer’s Blog: http://www.jaygaskill.com/blog1
→The Human Conspiracy Blog: http://www.jaygaskill.com/blog3
Also check out the “OutLawyerGaskill” channel on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/OutLawyerGaskill ...
All contents, unless otherwise indicated are --
Copyright © 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 & 2009 by Jay B. Gaskill
Permission to publish, distribute or print all or part of this article - except for personal use - is needed. Forwarded links welcomed.
Contact Jay B. Gaskill, attorney at law, via e mail at law@jaygaskill.com
Link to printable version:
http://jaygaskill.com/FalseBottomedBoat.htm
The False Bottomed Boat
THE BOTTOM FEEDING PANIC
Even normally restrained sources have succumbed to the panic atmosphere. For example, this report:
The Dow Jones Industrial Average was recently off about 214 points at 6848. The benchmark slid under 7000 on an intraday basis for the first time since Oct. 28, 1997. The Dow last closed below 7000 on May 1, 1997.
... Industrial giants like Alcoa and Caterpillar also fell, as did shares of General Electric which dropped nearly 8% to slide below $8 a share.
... Friday, the Dow industrials fell nearly 120 points, leaving the benchmark down 11.7% for February - its worst performance for the month since 1933, when it fell 15.6%.
“It's like an unending nightmare,” said Kent Engelke, managing director at Capitol Securities Management in Glen Allen, VA.
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/US-Stocks-Losses-Mount-DJIA/story.aspx?guid={BA2F0D30-92A8-426C-BD1F-26D0C0B84E4C}
Many pundits are studying the Japanese experience, as we all should. In the New York Times piece quoted below, Japan’s experience, an 18 year slump, presents an appalling prospect....
Japan’s Slump Tests Faith in the Resilience of Stocks
By HIROKO TABUCHI
THE SOLID FUNDAMENTALS
There are plenty of healthy banks and lending institutions to fund a robust recovery as long as the private enterprises that will do the heavy lifting can see a clear path to profitability.
JBG
As Posted On
→The Out-Lawyer’s Blog: http://www.jaygaskill.com/blog1
→The Human Conspiracy Blog: http://www.jaygaskill.com/blog3
Also check out the “OutLawyerGaskill” channel on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/OutLawyerGaskill ...
All contents, unless otherwise indicated are --
Copyright © 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 & 2009 by Jay B. Gaskill
Permission to publish, distribute or print all or part of this article - except for personal use - is needed. Forwarded links welcomed.
Contact Jay B. Gaskill, attorney at law, via e mail at law@jaygaskill.com
Link to printable version:
http://jaygaskill.com/FalseBottomedBoat.htm
The False Bottomed Boat
During a fire sale, most prices are well below their natural market levels. The credit meltdown crisis of 2008-9 is a fire sale on a biblical scale, but the principle still holds. Fire sale prices are below the bottom. I’m not qualified to make “buy recommendations” but it doesn’t take a genius to notice that GE stocks are so low and the company is so well positioned for an eventual robust recovery that its current stock price is well below the bottom. The price is a panic-driven number and most shareholders know it. They ain’t selling.
But there is one sector where the bottom has not yet been reached: There is no bottom yet in sight for real estate prices in overheated markets like those California, the Las Vegas area of Nevada and, truth be told, most of the upper reaches of the urban-suburban realm...everywhere that the bidding wars in home prices have driven out the teachers and cops from all the desirable neighborhoods.
As I said in an earlier post: It’s the incomes stupid!
The entire sub-prime, toxic-finance mess grew out of the misguided attempt to marry overpriced homes with people whose incomes could never support any reasonable payback arrangement, based on the pie-in-the-sky notion that, in a rising market, they could refinance forever and ever.
All of the efforts to shore up real estate prices are futile and ultimately harmful. We may well have a housing surplus. That means that prices must fall to unmanipulated market levels so that the properties can be resold to willing and able buyers. In parts of California, that means another 20% on average, more than 35% in many cases and more than 45% in many others. Why? “It’s the incomes, stupid!”
Now here is the dirty little secret that everybody knows, but won’t fully acknowledge. We would already be on the way to recovery if the damage had been confined to the banks and borrowers who went over the cliff (or should have been allowed to). This notion is called the compartmentalization of risk -- apparently a novel idea for the current masters of finance and their political handlers. [Or is it? I suspect we’re talking about the masters of politics and their corrupt financial handlers.] In any case, the compartment has leaked all over the place.
Not all financial institutions were seriously compromised, but enough major players were badly damaged that two administrations in succession have panicked. The exiting Bush and entering Obama administrations were so freaked by the condition of several well-placed major financial players that they were willing to hide the extent of leakage. Their finance teams were and are apparently willing to bail out the incoming flood, endlessly it seems, so that we-the-people won’t lose confidence in our boat’s seaworthiness.
Here’s the other dirty little secret. The boat will not actually sink. Many financial institutions are quite sound. The Canadian banks, thanks to their traditionally conservative lending practices, are doing fine at the moment. And I know of local banks that are equally untainted by toxic lending.
A friend, a lawyer with an MBA who has made a number of astute real estate purchases over the years and is still doing quite well, thank you, recently wrote me in response to my last post, “Finding the Bottom.”
“The bottom in the real-estate market will be - When the rents, from a property, will cover the interest on the money invested in the property, plus the yearly Property Taxes, Plus the cost of maintaining the property. With interest rates dropping in the 4 to 5 % range and other costs dropping there is still room to go down. The other factor is the general lack of confidence in the government’s intrusion into the credit market, as when Obama also says, ‘I inherited this problem, things will get worse before they get better.’ No wonder investors take a wait-and-see attitude. With the President’s cover-my ass comment he has prophesized things to come. This can be a self-fulfilling prophesy, bringing on the ‘D’ word.”