Subprime Mortgages
Bill Gross Contemplates Sneezing
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/30/2014 06:58 -0500
Last month it was a tribute to his cat. This month, the manager of the world's largest bond fund discusses sneezing: "A sneeze is, to be candid, sort of half erotic, a release of pressure that feels oh so good either before or just after the Achoo! The air, along with 100,000 germs, comes shooting out of your nose faster than a race car at the Indy 500. It feels sooooo good that people used to sneeze on purpose." He also discusses the aftermath: "The old saying goes that when the U.S. economy sneezes, the world catches cold. That still seems to be true enough, although Chinese influenza is gaining in importance. If both sneezed at the same time then instead of “God bless you” perhaps someone would cry out “God have mercy.” We’re not there yet, although in this period of high leverage it’s important to realize that the price of money and the servicing cost of that leverage are critical for a healthy economy. " He also talks about some other things, mostly revolving around long-term rates of return assumptions and what those mean for investors.
This Is Crazy! Current Leveraged Recap Binge Is Clone Of 2007 Mania
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/27/2014 17:34 -0500- Bain
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bloomberg News
- Bond
- Borrowing Costs
- Capital Expenditures
- Collateralized Loan Obligations
- Covenants
- default
- Default Rate
- Dividend Recap
- Federal Reserve
- High Yield
- Investment Grade
- LBO
- LIBOR
- Madison Dearborn
- Main Street
- Market Crash
- Meltdown
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Private Equity
- recovery
- Subprime Mortgages
- Volvo
This eruption of late cycle bubble finance hardly needs comment. Below are highlights from a Bloomberg Story detailing the recent surge of leveraged recaps by the big LBO operators. These maneuvers amount to piling more debt on already heavily leveraged companies, but not to fund Capex or new products, technology or process improvements that might give these debt mules an outside chance of survival over time. No, the freshly borrowed cash from a leveraged recap often does not even leave the closing conference room - it just gets recycled out as a dividend to the LBO sponsors who otherwise hold a tiny sliver of equity at the bottom of the capital structure. This is financial strip-mining pure and simple - and is a by-product of the Fed’s insane repression of interest rates.
Mortgage Standards Are Plunging – It’s Muppet Fleecing Time All Over Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/22/2014 10:06 -0500
In February, we highlighted the fact that subprime loans were about to make a return: Subprime Mortgages are Back…This Time Marketed as “Second Chance Purchase Programs.” In that article, we posited that with the “all cash” private equity shops and hedge funds no longer able to make good returns through buying new homes to rent, these investors would need some sucker to sell to in order to realize a return (Blackstone’s purchases have plunged 70% recently). That sucker, as always, will be the retail muppets, and those muppets will be lured in through subprime. This is now starting to happen in earnest. "We're sorry, but on what sort of bizarro crackhead planet is putting 3% down toward an asset mean you are “buying it.” ... The Truman Show rolls on..."
The Crisis Circle Is Complete: Wells Fargo Returns To Subprime
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/14/2014 11:46 -0500
Those of our readers focused on the state of the housing market will undoubtedly remember this chart we compiled using the data from the largest mortgage originator in the US, Wells Fargo. In case there is some confusion, as a result of rising interet rates (meaning the Fed is stuck in its attempts to push rates higher), the inability of the US consumer to purchase houses at artificially investor-inflated levels (meaning housing is now merely a hot potato flipfest between institutional investors A and B), and the end of the fourth dead-cat bounce in housing (meaning, well, self-explanatory), the bank's primary business line - offering mortgages - is cratering. So what is a bank with a limited target audience for its primary product to do? Why expand the audience of course. And in a move that is very much overdue considering all the other deranged aspects of the centrally-planned New Normal, in which all the mistakes of the last credit bubble are being repeated one after another, Reuters now reports that the California bank "is tiptoeing back into subprime home loans again."
Greenspan Warned Of Housing Bubble... In His PhD Dissertation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2014 14:30 -0500
Most are aware of Alan Greenspan’s 1966 essay - written when he was an acolyte of Ayn Rand - in which he sang the praises of the gold standard. Obviously, that early work would later prove awkward for Greenspan, as he held the reins of the fiat money engine known as the Federal Reserve. However, a reporter for Barron's unearthed a copy of Greenspan’s NYU doctoral dissertation, which he took great pains to bury, showing that when his professional ambition wasn’t involved, Greenspan could understand perfectly well (a) the virtues of a commodity money and (b) the dangers of a housing bubble. If the Austrians are right in laying the blame for the housing bubble on Greenspan’s loose monetary policy following the dot-com crash, then Greenspan can’t plead ignorance: He knew what he was doing.
Why Has Nobody Gone To Jail For The Financial Crisis? Judge Rakoff Says: "Blame The Government"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2013 21:27 -0500- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bear Stearns
- Collateralized Debt Obligations
- Counterparties
- Department of Justice
- Enron
- ETC
- Fannie Mae
- FBI
- Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission
- Freddie Mac
- Insider Trading
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- None
- ratings
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- Securities Fraud
- Subprime Mortgages
- WorldCom

Five years have passed since the onset of what is sometimes called the Great Recession. While the economy has slowly improved, there are still millions of Americans leading lives of quiet desperation: without jobs, without resources, without hope. Who was to blame?
"The government, writ large, had a hand in creating the conditions that encouraged the approval of dubious mortgages. It was the government, in the form of Congress, that repealed Glass-Steagall, thus allowing certain banks that had previously viewed mortgages as a source of interest income to become instead deeply involved in securitizing pools of mortgages in order to obtain the much greater profits available from trading. It was the government, in the form of both the executive and the legislature, that encouraged deregulation..."
- Judge Jed Rakoff
Guest Post: The Subprime Final Solution
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/10/2013 13:50 -0500
The MSM did their usual spin job on the consumer credit data released earlier this week. They reported a 5.4% increase in consumer debt outstanding to an all-time high of $3.051 trillion. In the Orwellian doublethink world we currently inhabit, the consumer taking on more debt is seen as a constructive sign. The storyline being sold by the corporate MSM propaganda machine, serving the establishment, is that consumers’ taking on debt is a sure sign of economic recovery. They must be confident about the future and rolling in dough from their new part-time jobs as Pizza Hut delivery men. Plus, they are now eligible for free healthcare, compliments of Obama, once they can log-on. Of course, buried at the bottom of the Federal Reserve press release and never mentioned on CNBC or the other dying legacy media outlets is the facts and details behind the all-time high in consumer credit. They count on the high probability the average math challenged American has no clue regarding the distinction between revolving and non-revolving credit or who controls the distribution of such credit. A shocking fact (to historically challenged government educated drones) revealed by the Federal Reserve data is that credit card debt did not exist prior to 1968. How could people live their lives without credit cards? 1968 marked a turning point for America...
Bernanke Explains It All To The IMF - Live Webcast
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/08/2013 15:30 -0500- Asset-Backed Securities
- Bank of New York
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Central Banks
- Commercial Paper
- Copper
- Creditors
- Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Federal Reserve Bank of New York
- Housing Prices
- Hyperinflation
- International Monetary Fund
- Israel
- Larry Summers
- Monetary Policy
- Moral Hazard
- New York City
- Reality
- Recession
- Repo Market
- Shadow Banking
- Subprime Mortgages
- Treasury Department
Ben Bernanke is participating in an IMF panel with Larry Summers, Ken Rogoff, and fromer Bank of Israel chief Stan Fischer... Full speech below...
Breaking Bad With Big Bank CEOs: How Bad Bank CEOs Use the Bystander Effect to Dupe Good People Into Working For Them
Submitted by smartknowledgeu on 09/30/2013 05:09 -0500- Bad Bank
- Capital Markets
- Central Banks
- Citigroup
- Corruption
- Drug Money
- Fail
- Fractional Reserve Banking
- Global Economy
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Herd Mentality
- Jamie Dimon
- KIM
- Larry Summers
- Lloyd Blankfein
- Quantitative Easing
- Reality
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Securities Fraud
- SmartKnowledgeU
- Subprime Mortgages
- Vikram Pandit
- Volatility
- World Bank
- World Trade
This may become the most important article I’ve ever written. But whether it becomes that article or dwells in anonymity is up to you, the reader.
A Tale Of Two Subprimes: Homes And Autos
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/20/2013 08:48 -0500
Whether we want to admit it or not, we find ourselves in pre-revolutionary times at the moment. This doesn’t mean we predict violent upheavals everywhere followed by chaos and bloodshed, it means that the current paradigm is no longer sustainable because it is not longer working. More and more people now recognize this. In case you needed anymore insight into the complete and total insanity of the “elite” Central Planners driving the U.S. economy off a cliff, we have decided to highlight a couple of articles explaining the rapid reflation of two important subprime markets: Homes and Autos. Clearly the only lesson learned from the 2008 crisis was that connected oligarchs can steal all they want with total impunity. There’s only one way this ends. With a complete and total collapse and then a massive paradigm shift. We're quite hopeful our next system can be far better than this one.
Frontrunning: September 5
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/05/2013 06:44 -0500- Apple
- B+
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Barclays
- Barrick Gold
- Bear Stearns
- BOE
- Boeing
- Bond
- China
- Chrysler
- Citigroup
- Conference Board
- Credit Suisse
- Deutsche Bank
- Fannie Mae
- Ford
- Freddie Mac
- Fund of Funds
- General Motors
- John Williams
- Jumbo Mortgages
- Morgan Stanley
- Motorola
- NASDAQ
- Natural Gas
- Obamacare
- People's Bank Of China
- President Obama
- Raymond James
- Reuters
- Romania
- Subprime Mortgages
- Trade Deficit
- Transocean
- Verizon
- Viacom
- Wall Street Journal
- Yuan
- BOE Leaves Policy Unchanged as Carney’s Guidance Assessed (BBG)
- Surprise or not, U.S. strikes can still hurt Assad (Reuters)
- Samsung Gear: A Smartwatch in Search of a Purpose (BusinessWeek)
- 'Jumbo' Mortgage Rates Fall Below Traditional Ones (WSJ)
- Capital Unease Again Bites Deutsche Bank (WSJ)
- Technical snafus confuse charges for Obamacare plans (Reuters)
- JPMorgan subject of obstruction probe in energy case (Reuters)
- U.S. Car Sales Soar to Pre-Slump Level (WSJ) - i.e., to just when the market crashed
- BoJ lifts assessment of Japan’s economic health (FT)
- Dead Dog in Reservoir Helps Drive Venezuelans to Bottled Water (BBG)
- Russia Boosts Mediterranean Force as U.S. Mulls Syria Strike (BBG)
Guest Post: Trying To Stay Sane In An Insane World - Part 2
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2013 18:35 -0500- Afghanistan
- AIG
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank Run
- Bear Stearns
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Blackrock
- Bond
- Capital Markets
- Citigroup
- Consumer Credit
- Corruption
- CPI
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Fractional Reserve Banking
- Free Money
- Gambling
- Glass Steagall
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Guest Post
- Hank Paulson
- Hank Paulson
- HFT
- Housing Bubble
- Housing Market
- Housing Prices
- Iran
- Iraq
- Japan
- John Hussman
- Krugman
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Main Street
- Mark To Market
- Market Crash
- Meltdown
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Michael Lewis
- Morgan Stanley
- National Debt
- national intelligence
- New York Stock Exchange
- Obama Administration
- Personal Income
- Purchasing Power
- Rating Agencies
- Real estate
- Real Interest Rates
- Reality
- recovery
- Robert Shiller
- Rolex
- Ron Paul
- Subprime Mortgages
- Too Big To Fail
- Unemployment
- Washington Mutual
- Wells Fargo
This insane world was created through decades of bad decisions, believing in false prophets, choosing current consumption over sustainable long-term savings based growth, electing corruptible men who promised voters entitlements that were mathematically impossible to deliver, the disintegration of a sense of civic and community obligation and a gradual degradation of the national intelligence and character. There is a common denominator in all the bubbles created over the last century – Wall Street bankers and their puppets at the Federal Reserve. Fractional reserve banking, control of a fiat currency by a privately owned central bank, and an economy dependent upon ever increasing levels of debt are nothing more than ingredients of a Ponzi scheme that will ultimately implode and destroy the worldwide financial system. Since 1913 we have been enduring the largest fraud and embezzlement scheme in world history, but the law of diminishing returns is revealing the plot and illuminating the culprits. Bernanke and his cronies have proven themselves to be highly educated one trick pony protectors of the status quo. Bernanke will eventually roll craps. When he does, the collapse will be epic and 2008 will seem like a walk in the park.
Guest Post: 10 Reasons Why Obamacare Is Going To Ruin Your Medical Care... And Your Life
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/01/2013 19:32 -0500
The bottom line is that Americans are losing more and more of their medical freedom. By 2015, so many workers will be trapped in the government-run health insurance exchanges that there will be no going back to the private plans we have today. At this rate, single-payer proponents will drive private insurance companies out of business, which has been their intention all along. Obamacare is a hodgepodge of new regulations, requirements, and penalties. Here are the ten most important points that doctors should tell their patients.
Frontrunning: June 3
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2013 06:23 -0500- AIG
- Apple
- Bank Failures
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Barclays
- BBY
- Best Buy
- BIS
- BLS
- BOE
- China
- Citigroup
- Copper
- Crack Cocaine
- Credit Suisse
- Crimson
- Deutsche Bank
- Ford
- France
- Glencore
- GOOG
- India
- Ireland
- ISI Group
- Italy
- Japan
- Keefe
- LatAm
- Merrill
- Mervyn King
- Morgan Stanley
- MSNBC
- Natural Gas
- New York State
- ratings
- Raymond James
- Reality
- REITs
- Renminbi
- Reuters
- SAC
- Subprime Mortgages
- Switzerland
- Unemployment
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- World Trade
- BIS lays out "simple" plan for how to handle bank failures (Reuters) - Are we still holding our breath on Basel III?
- Deficit Deal Even Less Likely - Improving U.S. Fiscal Health Eases Pressure for a 'Grand Bargain' Amid Gridlock (WSJ)
- IRS Faulted on Conference Spending (WSJ)
- Deadly MERS-CoV virus spreads to Italy (CNN)
- Turkish PM Erdogan calls for calm after days of protests (Reuters)
- Financial system ‘waiting for next crisis’ (FT)
- Russia to send nuclear submarines to southern seas (Reuters)
- China Nuclear Stockpile Grows as India Matches Pakistan Rise (BBG)
"Markets Under The Spell Of Monetary Easing" Bank Of International Settlements Finds... Same As "Then"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/02/2013 20:17 -0500- Bank of International Settlements
- Bear Stearns
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- BIS
- Bond
- Carry Trade
- Central Banks
- Commercial Paper
- Equity Markets
- Fannie Mae
- Federal Reserve
- FOIA
- Freddie Mac
- House Financial Services Committee
- Housing Market
- Joint Economic Committee
- Market Sentiment
- Monetary Policy
- New York Times
- Recession
- Regional Banks
- Subprime Mortgages
- TARP
- Testimony
- Volatility
- Washington D.C.
"... equity markets were quick to shrug off the uncertainty and extended their gains as investors expected poor fundamentals to be followed by further policy easing."



