Vital Statistics:
| Last | Change | Percent | |
| S&P Futures | 1448.5 | -3.0 | -0.21% |
| Eurostoxx Index | 2548.0 | -26.2 | -1.02% |
| Oil (WTI) | 92.29 | 0.2 | 0.21% |
| LIBOR | 0.317 | -0.002 | -0.47% |
| US Dollar Index (DXY) | 79.52 | 0.151 | 0.19% |
| 10 Year Govt Bond Yield | 1.81% | -0.02% | |
| RPX Composite Real Estate Index | 193.8 | 0.1 |
Markets are weaker this morning after earnings misses from bellwethers Google, Microsoft, McDonalds, and GE. Euro sovereign yields continue to decrease. Bonds and MBS are up about 1/4 of a point.
The CFPB is starting to put some more meat on the bones with respect to a qualifying mortgage. Lenders would be protected from penalties if the borrower is given a prime rate and the back-end debt ratio doesn’t exceed 43%. The NAR has already weighed in saying that “any partial safe harbor would need to go much further to avoid harm to the mortgage market.”
The Mortgage Bankers Association has sent a letter regarding proposed Basel III rules. They correctly note that the penalties on mortgage servicing rights are going to create a problem. Add the proposed new servicing standards out of the CFPB, and you may in fact turn mortgage servicing into a business nobody wants to perform.
While institutional investors are raising money to get into the REO-to-rental businesses, one of the pioneers, hedge fund Och Ziff, is looking to cash out. Turns out that renting properties on such a vast scale isn’t as profitable as it initially appears.
Today is the 25th anniversary of the Crash of 87. I think in some ways, we can trace the origins of the financial crisis to this event. During the crash, newly appointed Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan pledged the Federal Reserve would provide liquidity to anyone who needed it. At the time, it was probably the right thing to do, as it prevented the stock market crash from ballooning into something bigger. I think the Chairman recognized its success and used it every time the financial markets had a hiccup – from the Mexican Peso Crisis, to Long Term Capital, to the Asian Crisis. This behavior became affectionately known as the “Greenspan Put,” which means that even if you screw up, the Fed will come to the rescue. This created a underpricing of risk, which laid the groundwork for the real estate bubble. Real estate prices became unmoored from their traditional relationship with incomes around the year 2000, just as the stock market bubble was going critical, and continued to inflate as the Fed flooded the system with liquidity in the aftermath. And since the Fed is still doing the same thing in response to the burst real estate bubble, this time on steroids, the game continues..
Filed under: Morning Report |
It appears that Paul Krugman inadvertently validates Milton Friedman’s explanation of the Great Depression, namely that it was caused by bad monetary policy from the Federal Reserve and that contrary to his earlier claims we are not in a “depression” now.
What evidence can I present? One piece of evidence would be the old Friedman-Schwartz data on money supply, which was allowed to collapse in 1929-33 but not this time around.
Advertent.
It’s only inadvertent when he rails at his colleague Bernanke for being a Friedmanite when massive amounts of fiscal spending were called for by PK.
Bernanke initially got that right and it averted collapse and he credited Friedman.
Then he got into the rebubbling of real estate. God help us.
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Also Brent, I believe your analysis of the Greenspan Put is dead on. In every successful policy
isare the seeds of it’s own destruction.LikeLike
Yes, government is the problem:
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ugly stock market today
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the state has decided to crack down on free education
I’d be interested to know how they plan on enforcing this law. Perhaps the state of Minnesota will partner with the NSA to monitor the internet usage of all Minnesotans.
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Looks like the CIA isn’t going to go along with the administration’s cover story about “best information available at the time” on Libya.
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Then he got into the rebubbling of real estate. God help us.
And ended up bubbling Treasuries instead..
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@jnc4p: “Honorable mentions go to New York City’s Taxi and Limousine Commission for driving out Uber’s online taxi-hailing service and to automobile dealers’ groups in four states for trying to have Tesla dealerships declared illegal. But the grand prize in this week’s unexpectedly heated competition for most creative use of government to stifle innovation has to go to Minnesota.
The Chronicle of Higher Education reports that the state has decided to crack down on free education, notifying California-based startup Coursera that it is not allowed to offer its online courses to the state’s residents. Coursera, founded by Stanford computer science professors Daphne Koller and Andrew Ng, partners with top-tier universities around the world to offer certain classes online for free to anyone who wants to take them. You know, unless they happen to be from Minnesota.”
There ya go. Goes back to my assertion that, for the most part, only the government creates monopolies. As long as property rights and contract law is enforced, monopolies tend to require government collusion to exist. Otherwise, the free market does it’s thing, and if someone builds a better or cheaper mouse trap, people will buy it.
If the government makes it illegal for people to use or buy a competitors product, then, viola! We have a monopoly.
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@Mike: “I’d be interested to know how they plan on enforcing this law. Perhaps the state of Minnesota will partner with the NSA to monitor the internet usage of all Minnesotans.”
They can require the company to detect location and refuse to display in Minnesota (easily defeated by using proxy servers). They can require ISPs in the area to block certain IPs used by the organization, or block DNS resolution (again, easily defeated with proxys or using alternative DNS). It will just make it a little harder to access is all.
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He must be thinking of a different President Obama than the one who decided in 2009 against doing exactly that. Presumably if Obama fails to heed this advice, it reveals that he too is “not on the side of average Americans.”
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KW:
It will just make it a little harder to access is all.
I guess that was my point — it is relatively easy to get around the restrictions through proxy servers, so you’d have to go through something more extreme to keep the courses out. I wonder what kinds of penalties they can/will levy? I’d be interested to see this litigated …
And why would Coursera pay to register their courses when they are providing them for free?
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You have to love certain headlines:
“Banana Boat maker recalls sunscreen brands after handful of reports of users catching on fire
By Associated Press,
Updated: Friday, October 19, 4:04 PM”
http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/banana-boat-maker-recalls-sunscreen-brands-after-handful-of-reports-of-users-catching-on-fire/2012/10/19/7318c8e2-1a1b-11e2-ad4a-e5a958b60a1e_story.html?hpid=z3
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Senator Chuck Schumer makes the anti-tax reform argument:
“Chuck Schumer: Democrats have tax reform all wrong
Posted by Ezra Klein on October 20, 2012 at 12:58 pm”
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/ezra-klein/wp/2012/10/20/chuck-schumer-democrats-have-tax-reform-all-wrong/?hpid=z2
It’s a good interview (as all of Ezra’s are). He makes the case straight up for keeping the current system:
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Steve Pearlstein: “The Glass is Half Full”
http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/steven-pearlstein-why-the-economy-may-be-better-than-you-think/2012/10/19/f47dfdda-1881-11e2-8bfd-12e2ee90dcf2_story.html
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