
Subprime Delivers One-Two Punch Just Like Hurricane Katrina Did
By Susan C. Walker, Elliott
Wave International
November 29, 2007
The world is awash in bad news about the subprime mortgage meltdown,
just the same way that New Orleans was awash in floodwaters from Hurricane
Katrina two summers ago. A few examples:
* The median price for new home drops 13% since last year, the most
in 37 years, according to a Census Bureau report on November 29. This
due in large part to buyers not being able to get financing now that lenders
have tightened their lending standards in response to the subprime debacle.
* Major Wall Street banks write off billions of dollars in subprime-backed
securities.
* Dire forecasts estimate that the credit crunch caused by the mortgage
problems will cause between $250 billion to $500 billion of losses at
banks and brokerages before it's done.
If you want to see how this kind of news looks on a price chart, consider
the chart that we published in the latest Elliott Wave Financial Forecast.
It shows how confidence in the mortgage market has simply fallen off a
cliff. "The ABX Mortgage Indexes are akin to the eerie music that
starts to play right before the goriest scenes in a horror movie,"
write our analysts Steve Hochberg and Pete Kendall. Even prime-rated mortgages
(the top line on the chart) seem to have been tainted by the cliff-diving
exploits of the subprime and Alt-A mortgage indexes.

Editor's note: Elliott Wave International invites you to read more about
this Mortgage Mutiny chart in a special three-page excerpt from the November
2007 Elliott Wave Financial Forecast, called "Transition
to a Fear of Risk."
The continuing repercussions of the subprime meltdown since two Bear Stearns'
hedge funds imploded in August remind me how closely this situation imitates
the delayed punch of Hurricane Katrina in the summer of 2005. In fact, I
wrote a column for Fox News on that very topic a few months ago, some of
which is worth repeating.
* * * * *
[Excerpted from "Subprime Storm Mimics Katrina," originally
published July 30, 2007]
Wall Street may have reason to worry about a financial hurricane poised
to do the same kind of damage Hurricane Katrina did — in terms of
money and assets lost — in New Orleans in 2005. Given the latest
storm warnings about subprime mortgages and the Dow’s dive last
week, it looks like "Subprime Katrina" might become the financial
storm of the decade.
Wall Street investment bankers who remember the devastation in New Orleans
might want to start battening down the hatches. In fact, some of them
seem to understand their pending doom as they try to cajole the rest of
the world into thinking that the subprime (otherwise known as low-quality)
mortgage contagion is contained. 'Sure, sure, Bear Stearns got hit when
its subprime hedge funds lost their value, but everyone else is O.K.,'
they say. 'Let's all heave one collective sigh of relief that we dodged
that bullet.'
Does that attitude sound familiar? It's exactly how the people of New
Orleans felt for the 8-10 hours after Hurricane Katrina whipped up the
Gulf Coast and dumped its rain. It was over; they had dodged the bullet.
Their beautiful city that is built below sea level and surrounded by sea
walls and levees was safe. That's where Wall Street is right now –
hoping the levees will hold as investment bankers try to sandbag the rest
of us with lots of placating talk. Well, it turns out that New Orleans
was about as safe as the subprime bonds that are now below their own "C"
level.
Although Wall Street bankers have been doing one heckuva job, I think
it's too soon to breathe easy, just as it was too soon for those in the
Big Easy to breathe easy. Here's why: Wall Street was warned about the
coming hurricane-force fall-out from subprime mortgages, and it ignored
the warnings, buying up all the securities backed by subprime mortgages
that it could. Now, Wall Street is having trouble selling more debt. It
sounds like it may be too late for many Wall Street denizens to get out
of town – and their positions – before the floodwaters start
rising.
Remember, too, the finger-pointing and blaming that started as soon as
the rest of the nation realized that the U.S. government was not doing
enough to help New Orleans? The editors of The Elliott Wave Financial
Forecast recognize a similar change in attitudes toward Wall Street:
| |
"The unwinding process will be sped along by a
flood of revelations about illicit hedge fund and
investment banking activities. Just as Enron, Tyco and a host of other
primary beneficiaries of the late 1990s bull market run became the
focus of scandals, hedge funds and the banks that enabled them are
starting to become a focal point for scrutiny." (The Elliott
Wave Financial Forecast, July 2007) |
|
Then will come the final installment. Just as the U.S. government was
slow to come to grips with the disaster in New Orleans so that people
were left to fend for themselves, so too will investment bankers and investors
have to fend for themselves. They may find themselves clutching their
worthless paper and wishing someone would bail them out from the rooftops
of their now-worthless homes
******
Now, here we are at the end of November, and the situation for investors
and investment banks has played out almost exactly as I outlined. Hardly
anyone is coming out smelling like a rose. If anything it's the opposite,
as the stench from quarterly financial filings rises as banks reveal how
many billions in dollars they must write off for their mortgage investments
gone bad. Sadly, the conclusion to my Subprime Katrina column still holds
true: "Heckuva Job Brownie – now known as Helicopter Ben Bernanke
and his Federal Reserve team – won't have any more luck picking
up the pieces on Wall Street than FEMA did in New Orleans."
Susan C. Walker writes for Elliott
Wave International, a market forecasting and technical analysis company.
She has been an associate editor with Inc. magazine, a newspaper writer
and editor, an investor relations executive and a speechwriter for the
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. Her columns also appear regularly on
FoxNews.com.
Posted December 5, 2007.
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