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Pimco's Gross Urges Bush to Bail Out U.S. Homeowners... with taxpayer money

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  • jimmygu3
    replied
    Re: Pimco's Gross Urges Bush to Bail Out U.S. Homeowners... with taxpayer money

    Originally posted by Finster
    Home prices would have to decline by more than 20% to underwater even the maximum traditional 80% LTVer. Otherwise, he doesn't care what home prices do unless he was speculating that he'd profit by selling the home and using the money for something else. This is because even if he sells the house for less than what he paid for, so long as he buys another home with the proceeds he's paying proportionately less so that it's a complete wash.
    Originally posted by zoog View Post
    Just nitpicking, but because of the typical 6% agent commission the seller would have to pay, prices only have to fall more than 14%. If the seller does FSBO but the buyer has an agent, then maybe it's 17%.
    Actually, even excluding transaction costs, any price decline puts a seller/repurchaser in a negative position. If a person purchases a $250k house (~U.S. median) with $50k down and prices decline 10%, the house sells for $225k with $25k paid to seller at closing. He goes out to buy an equivalent house for $225k and needs a $45k down payment, so he must pay an additional $20k of cash. Of course, most sellers end up paying a 6% commission, leaving our responsible 80% LTVer $33,500 out of pocket just to move to an equivalent home and be back to 20% equity.

    It's even worse for a 95% LTVer, requiring $12,500 paid by seller at closing, $11,250 for the new down payment, the same commission as above, for a total of $37,250 cash out of pocket.

    Where does a median-income person find that kind of money (nearly a year's salary)? That's right! Cash out the retirement account. Welcome to the stock market crash.

    Jimmy
    Last edited by jimmygu3; August 27, 2007, 01:52 PM.

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  • jk
    replied
    Re: Pimco's Gross Urges Bush to Bail Out U.S. Homeowners... with taxpayer money

    Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
    jk: I doubt he was hired for his economic prescience; PIMCO probably saw value in his network. Isn't that the reason why most retired Administration officials get snapped up (many in recent years by the PE houses), no matter how abysmal their track record in office?
    yes. there's no other reason to hire him. i guess i had gross on a pedistal and thought of hiring greenspan as dirtying his hands.

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  • GRG55
    replied
    Re: Pimco's Gross Urges Bush to Bail Out U.S. Homeowners... with taxpayer money

    Originally posted by jk View Post
    not shocked that greenspan would accept employment from whomever had the bucks. shocked that gross wanted him.
    jk: I doubt he was hired for his economic prescience; PIMCO probably saw value in his network. Isn't that the reason why most retired Administration officials get snapped up (many in recent years by the PE houses), no matter how abysmal their track record in office?

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  • jk
    replied
    Re: Pimco's Gross Urges Bush to Bail Out U.S. Homeowners... with taxpayer money

    Originally posted by EJ View Post
    Why shocked? Greenspan has always been a hired gun.
    not shocked that greenspan would accept employment from whomever had the bucks. shocked that gross wanted him.

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  • zoog
    replied
    Re: Pimco's Gross Urges Bush to Bail Out U.S. Homeowners... with taxpayer money

    Originally posted by Finster View Post
    Home prices would have to decline by more than 20% to underwater even the maximum traditional 80% LTVer.
    Just nitpicking, but because of the typical 6% agent commission the seller would have to pay, prices only have to fall more than 14%. If the seller does FSBO but the buyer has an agent, then maybe it's 17%.

    Otherwise I agree with your post.;)

    Leave a comment:


  • EJ
    replied
    Re: Pimco's Gross Urges Bush to Bail Out U.S. Homeowners... with taxpayer money

    Originally posted by jk View Post
    that was a strange hire. i was shocked by the announcement.
    Why shocked? Greenspan has always been a hired gun.

    Leave a comment:


  • GRG55
    replied
    Re: Pimco's Gross Urges Bush to Bail Out U.S. Homeowners... with taxpayer money

    Originally posted by Finster View Post
    ...Just for starters, his logic goes something like this: Because millions of Americans have erroneously assumed their houses were a safe "savings nest egg", the rest of us are now obliged to make it come true. Where the heck does an idea like this come from? It used to be you put your savings in the bank. Yet this even pales in comparison to the blunder embedded in his original assumption. If people were only using their homes as a "savings nest egg", they wouldn't be in trouble in the first place. What they did was engage in a risky speculation of shorting dollars and going long housing - that their homes would appreciate faster than the rate they paid on their mortage debt - and in many cases that they'd be able to either pay the escalating mortgage payment or flip before it escalated. Calling buying a house with money you don't even have yet an act of "savings" is preposterous, and a man as smart as Gross either knows it or has been in hanging around in the high finance set too long.

    There is not now and there never was a "housing" problem - it's a credit-gone-wild problem fomented by too low interest rates and too easy money from the Fed and aggressive lending practices designed to profit from it. And if a lot people suffered from a misconception about what a home is for and learned that it was wrong, then the rest of the people would be doing them a disservice in "unlearning" them right back to their original state of error...
    Bingo. What Finster is astutely pointing out here is that a whole lotta people in the good ol' U.S of eh decided to run their own personal little hedge fund. Use little to none of their own money, secure an asset (house), lever it to the limit, and hope that a "greater fool" arrived on the doorstep to restore their liquidity at a handsome profit. They've just discovered they are no more "hedged" (by constantly rising price) than many of the (formerly) high rolling masters of the universe in Greenwich and Mayfair. That these two cohorts, at completely opposite ends of the personal income spectrum, are siamesed by mortgage backed credit derivatives is ironic. Globalization works in some truly interesting ways.
    Last edited by GRG55; August 27, 2007, 08:58 AM.

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  • jimmygu3
    replied
    Re: Pimco's Gross Urges Bush to Bail Out U.S. Homeowners... with taxpayer money

    Originally posted by DemonD View Post
    This public letter reads to me more like the ramblings of a man who just found his wife in bed with his best friend, his best friend's brother, a midget, and a gallon of jello, all at the same time, and now she is going to divorce him and take 50% of his money and property.
    Just when I thought I was getting a handle on all this monetary and financial stuff, I feel totally lost again. What were they doing with the jello?

    Leave a comment:


  • jk
    replied
    Re: Pimco's Gross Urges Bush to Bail Out U.S. Homeowners... with taxpayer money

    Originally posted by Finster View Post
    Hmmm ... maybe now that Gross is Greenspan's boss, he can straighten him out on that ... :eek:
    that was a strange hire. i was shocked by the announcement.

    Leave a comment:


  • Finster
    replied
    Re: Pimco's Gross Urges Bush to Bail Out U.S. Homeowners... with taxpayer money

    Originally posted by jk View Post
    for a long time [years] he's been saying that the system is nuts, that stocks and everything else were way overvalued and that leverage had gone amuck. i have a hunch he's worried about the depth of the recession around the corner.
    Hmmm ... maybe now that Gross is Greenspan's boss, he can straighten him out on that ... :eek:

    Leave a comment:


  • jk
    replied
    Re: Pimco's Gross Urges Bush to Bail Out U.S. Homeowners... with taxpayer money

    Originally posted by finster
    And if market overshoot is cause for concern, then shouldn't it work both ways? What was he advocating when the overshoot was to the upside?
    for a long time [years] he's been saying that the system is nuts, that stocks and everything else were way overvalued and that leverage had gone amuck. i have a hunch he's worried about the depth of the recession around the corner.

    Leave a comment:


  • Finster
    replied
    Re: Pimco's Gross Urges Bush to Bail Out U.S. Homeowners... with taxpayer money

    Originally posted by jk View Post
    markets overshoot on the upside, then overshoot on the downside. it may be my projection, but my guess is that gross is worried that the overshoot on the downside will take down the economy and with it a lot of homeowners who really weren't speculating or overleveraging [compared to practices in more normal times].
    I see. On the other hand, what harm does a homeowner suffer if he was not speculating or overleveraging? Home prices would have to decline by more than 20% to underwater even the maximum traditional 80% LTVer. Otherwise, he doesn't care what home prices do unless he was speculating that he'd profit by selling the home and using the money for something else. This is because even if he sells the house for less than what he paid for, so long as he buys another home with the proceeds he's paying proportionately less so that it's a complete wash. This tendency to omit the buyer's perspective and consider only the seller's is common, but it's completely fallacious since there is never a sale without a purchase. Hence the bias is to uncritically assume that when it comes to prices, higher is better and lower is worse. I have never heard anyone making such an assumption even attempt to justify it, but Gross sure needs to if he wants to make a case that higher house prices ought to be public policy.

    And if market overshoot is cause for concern, then shouldn't it work both ways? What was he advocating when the overshoot was to the upside? This apparent asymmetry is what prompted my original question "Only deflation is destructive? Inflation is not?" This is no trifling matter, because the deflation he frets about is the natural result of the inflation that preceded it.

    Leave a comment:


  • jk
    replied
    Re: Pimco's Gross Urges Bush to Bail Out U.S. Homeowners... with taxpayer money

    Originally posted by Finster View Post
    There is not now and there never was a "housing" problem - it's a credit-gone-wild problem fomented by too low interest rates and too easy money from the Fed and aggressive lending practices designed to profit from it.
    markets overshoot on the upside, then overshoot on the downside. it may be my projection, but my guess is that gross is worried that the overshoot on the downside will take down the economy and with it a lot of homeowners who really weren't speculating or overleveraging [compared to practices in more normal times].

    Leave a comment:


  • Finster
    replied
    Re: Pimco's Gross Urges Bush to Bail Out U.S. Homeowners... with taxpayer money

    Originally posted by jk View Post
    i have a lot of respect for gross and have read his commentaries every month for years. it's surprising to me that he has as many mbs in his portfolio as he does, given things he's written in the past, but i would bet they aren't subprime stuff. my guess is that he fears a real meltdown in the housing market, and is realizing that contagion puts prime paper in doubt along with the garbage. but nothing he says is inconsistent with his prior writings. i'd suggest you read his actual piece, in full, instead of relying on the bloomberg report on it, before you decide on its merits. it's not that long, and can be found at:

    http://www.pimco.com/LeftNav/Feature...ember+2007.htm
    It did nothing to improve on the Bloomberg piece!

    It's riddled with bad reasoning. Just for starters, his logic goes something like this: Because millions of Americans have erroneously assumed their houses were a safe "savings nest egg", the rest of us are now obliged to make it come true. Where the heck does an idea like this come from? It used to be you put your savings in the bank. Yet this even pales in comparison to the blunder embedded in his original assumption. If people were only using their homes as a "savings nest egg", they wouldn't be in trouble in the first place. What they did was engage in a risky speculation of shorting dollars and going long housing - that their homes would appreciate faster than the rate they paid on their mortage debt - and in many cases that they'd be able to either pay the escalating mortgage payment or flip before it escalated. Calling buying a house with money you don't even have yet an act of "savings" is preposterous, and a man as smart as Gross either knows it or has been in hanging around in the high finance set too long.

    There is not now and there never was a "housing" problem - it's a credit-gone-wild problem fomented by too low interest rates and too easy money from the Fed and aggressive lending practices designed to profit from it. And if a lot people suffered from a misconception about what a home is for and learned that it was wrong, then the rest of the people would be doing them a disservice in "unlearning" them right back to their original state of error.

    Again, this is not about denying remedy to people who were victims of fast-talking lenders and last-minute-closing-table disclosures. But to use taxpayer funds to try and perpetuate the false impression that the price of any asset can only move in one direction is grossly inappropriate and destined to cause yet more trouble ahead.

    Leave a comment:


  • unlucky
    replied
    Re: Pimco's Gross Urges Bush to Bail Out U.S. Homeowners... with taxpayer money

    Seems to me that transferring the unpayable debts of US consumers to
    the US govt (or any of its agencies) will not solve much, as the US govt already has a few unpayable debt problems of its own.

    The debt has to be defaulted, since it cannot be paid. Consumers do this overtly and get foreclosed. The US govt. does it covertly via inflation. So, transferring the debt to the govt. will force higher inflation long run.

    Better to leave it with the consumers and make it less painful for them to default.

    Leave a comment:

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