Analyst: Second loan driven crash coming

Written by Joe O'Donnell on July 3, 2009 – 8:38 pm -

-Doug Hornig makes the great point in this article that subprime mortgages were only one type of unwise loans that banks made. As explained in the book ‘Meltdown’, the banks were pressured into making these bad loans by government policy and money printing. The subprime loan collapse is what pushed most of the bad banks over the edge in 2008, but another larger set of significantly questionable loans will come due in 2010.

from escapefromamerica.com:

All of this wreaked havoc in the derivatives market. Sellers of these exotic packages could no longer establish what they were worth. Buyers couldn’t determine a fair price and so stopped buying. As the ripples spread through the world financial system, trust disappeared and liquidity dried up.

Now consider that the base cause for all that dislocation was the subprime sector. And how big is that? Not very. Subprime mortgages account for only about 15% of all home loans. Their influence has been way out of proportion to their numbers, because of derivatives. Here’s the good news: the subprime meltdown has about run its course. These loans were resetting en masse in 2007 and the first eight months of ’08. Now they’re pretty much done.

And the bad news? No one in the mainstream media seems to be asking what should be a pretty obvious question: What about loans other than subprime? Truth is, the banks didn’t just trick up their subprime loans. ARMs were the order of the day – across the board.

It’s not until May of 2010 that the next wave really hits. From there to October of 2011, the resets will be coming fast and furious. That’s 18 months of further turmoil in the housing market, and the beginning is still nearly a year away! (Although the months in between are likely to be no picnic, either.)

Article by Doug Hornig


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