Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Home Prices Decline at Record Rates

Courtesy of WSJOnline.com
By KATHY SHWIFF and KEVIN KINGSBURY
January 29, 2008 12:37 p.m.

A closely watched gauge of U.S. home prices shows they are falling sharply at record rates as a deepening slump in the housing market threatens to damp consumer spending.

Home prices in 10 major metropolitan areas in November were down 8.4% from a year earlier, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller home-price indexes, released Tuesday by credit-rating firm Standard & Poor's. In October, they fell 6.7%, exceeding the previous record year-to-year decline of 6.3% in April 1991, when the economy was emerging from a recession.

November was the 11th consecutive month of negative annual returns and the 24th straight month of decelerating returns.

Robert Shiller, chief economist at MacroMarkets LLC and co-developer of the index, said, "We reached another grim milestone" in November, as 13 of the 20 metro areas in the 20-city index, all of which have data dating to 1991, hit record price drops as well.

The indexes include some places most affected by the fast-growing home-price bubble during the past few years. Miami home prices were down 15% in November from a year earlier, while prices fell 13% in San Diego, Las Vegas and Detroit.

The expanded 20-city index, which dates back to 2001, fell 7.7% from a year earlier and 2.1% from October. Portland and Seattle are the only two metro areas with year-over-year increases - 1.3% and 1.8%, respectively.

The Case-Shiller Index is now one of the most closely watched measures of home prices. But some economists argue that it paints an overly bleak picture.

Columbia University economist Charles Calomiris has noted that the Case-Shiller Index does not cover the entire U.S. market, "and the omitted parts of the U.S. market seem to be doing better than the included parts."

Mr. Calomiris said an alternative measure -- compiled by the federal Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight -- doesn't show as deep a decline and that may be representative of all markets in the U.S. The Ofheo index, however, only tracks houses with mortgages under $417,000, the ceiling on loans that can be purchased or guaranteed by government-sponsored mortgage giants Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.

Ofheo said at the end of November that, for the first time in nearly 13 years, U.S. home prices fell. A seasonally adjusted index that tracks value of homes purchased and refinanced was 0.4% lower in the third quarter than in the previous quarter, though it was 1.8% above year-ago levels.

Rising home prices plus refinancing options and home-equity loans previously allowed homeowners to squeeze money out of their homes to finance their spending - an important trend because consumer spending fuels about 70% of economic growth. Economists now worry that falling home prices will prompt consumers to pull back on spending enough to slow growth or even tip the economy into recession.

Nevertheless, people who bought their homes several years ago typically are sitting on sizable gains in most of the country. Home sales began to slow in mid-2005. Prices leveled off then started declining in 2006. During the past year, mortgage defaults have soared, leading to rapid growth in foreclosures.

Write to Kathy Shwiff at kathy.shwiff@dowjones.com and Kevin Kingsbury at kevin.kingsbury@dowjones.com

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Home Resales Probably Fell in December: U.S. Economy Preview

By Courtney Schlisserman

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Sales of existing homes in the U.S. probably fell in December, capping the biggest yearly slump in almost a generation, economists said before a report this week.

Purchases fell 1 percent last month to a 4.95 million rate, the fewest since comparable records began in 1999, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey ahead of the National Association of Realtors' report due Jan. 24.

Falling property values and tougher borrowing rules will lead to more foreclosures and keep the real-estate market in recession for most of this year, economists said. A housing- related slump in consumer spending poses the biggest risk to the economic expansion in coming months.

``We're still on the way down in housing,'' said Ellen Zentner, an economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in New York. ``The first half of the year is going to be crucial to determining whether we have a recession.''

Sales of existing homes probably dropped 13 percent last year, the most since 1989, according to a forecast by the real- estate agents group.

The same day as the sales report, the Labor Department is scheduled to release its weekly figures on first-time jobless claims. Filings for unemployment benefits probably increased to 320,000 from 301,000 the prior week, according to the survey median.

An unexpected decline in the number of claims in recent weeks caused many economists to question whether the government has accurately monitored the situation. It's often difficult for the Labor Department to adjust the data during holidays, adding to volatility in the readings, economist said.

Claims May Rise

Economists are expecting to see a pickup in claims to confirm the labor market has weakened. The jobless rate jumped up to 5 percent in December.

``We've been a little puzzled by the continued strength of the overall labor market, particularly claims,'' Peter Hooper, chairman of the American Bankers Association's Economic Advisory Committee, said at a press conference on Jan. 18. ``Our sense is the labor market is likely softening.''

Hooper is chief economist at Deutsche Bank Securities Inc.

The deepening housing slump is one of the reasons the job market has deteriorated. Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., the largest U.S. underwriter of mortgage-backed bonds, said last week it will eliminate 1,300 jobs in the firm's fourth round of cuts resulting from the collapse of the mortgage market.

Lehman, the fourth-largest U.S. securities firm, cut 2,450 jobs last year by shutting its subprime-mortgage unit.

Construction Drops

Builders broke ground in December on fewer houses than forecast, making last year's decline in homebuilding the worst in almost three decades, a report from the Commerce Department last week showed. For all of 2007, starts were down 25 percent, the biggest decline since 1980.

Spending on residential construction projects will drop 21 percent this year after declining 17 percent in 2007, according to a forecast by Lehman economists.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said earlier this month that the central bank would take ``substantive'' action in response to the increasing risk of slower growth. Central bankers will cut interest rates by at least half a percentage point when they meet this month, according to futures trading.

President George W. Bush last week proposed a growth package of as much as $150 billion to counter escalating risks to the economic expansion.

``The biggest issue we have in our economy is housing,'' Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson told reporters on Jan. 18. The stimulus proposals will help the economy ``better withstand and weather effects that are coming about largely as a result of this decline in home prices and the housing slump.''



Bloomberg Survey

================================================================
Release Period Prior Median
Indicator Date Value Forecast
================================================================
Initial Claims ,000's 1/24 Jan. 20 301 320
Cont. Claims ,000's 1/24 Jan. 13 2751 2728
Exist Homes Mlns 1/24 Dec. 5.00 4.95
Exist Homes MOM% 1/24 Dec. 0.4% -1.0%
================================================================
To contact the reporter on this story: Courtney Schlisserman in Washington at cschlisserma@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: January 20, 2008 08:52 EST

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Subprime Nation

By Patrick J. Buchanan

Since it began to give credit ratings to nations in 1917, Moody's has rated the United States triple-A. U.S. Treasury bonds have been seen as the most secure investment on earth. When crises erupt, nervous money seeks out the world's great safe harbor, the United States. That reputation is now in peril.

Last week, Moody's warned that if the United States fails to rein in the soaring cost of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, the nation's credit rating will be down-graded within a decade.

Our political parties seem oblivious. Republicans, save Ron Paul, are all promising to expand the U.S. military and maintain all of our worldwide commitments to defend and subsidize scores of nations.

Democrats, with entitlement costs drowning the federal budget in red ink, are proposing a new entitlement – universal health coverage for the near 50 million who do not have it – another magnet for illegal aliens. Moody's is telling America it needs a time of austerity, while the U.S. government is behaving like the governments we used to bail out.

California has already hit the wall. With an economy as large as a G-8 nation, the Golden State is looking at a $14 billion deficit in 2009 and a $3 billion shortfall in 2008. Gov. Schwarzenegger has called for slashing prison staff by 6,000, including 2,000 guards, early release of 22,000 inmates, closing four dozen state parks and a 10 percent across-the-board cut in all state agencies. The Democratic legislature is demanding tax hikes, which would drive more taxpayers back over the mountains whence their fathers came.

Meanwhile, Washington drifts mindlessly toward the maelstrom. With the dollar sinking, oil surging to $100 a barrel, the Dow having its worst January in memory, foreclosures mounting, credit card debt going rotten, and consumers and businesses unable or unwilling to borrow, we appear headed into recession.

If so, tax revenue will fall and spending on unemployment will surge. The price of the stimulus packages both parties are preparing will further add to the deficit and further imperil the U.S. credit rating. This all comes in the year that the first of the baby boomers, born in 1946, reach early retirement and eligibility for Social Security.

To stave off recession, the Fed appears anxious to slash interest rates another half-point, if not more. That will further weaken the dollar and raise the costs of the imports to which we have become addicted. While all this is bad news for the Republicans, it is worse news for the republic. As we save nothing, we must borrow both to pay for the imported oil and foreign manufactures upon which we have become dependent.

We are thus in the position of having to borrow from Europe to defend Europe, of having to borrow from China and Japan to defend Chinese and Japanese access to Gulf oil, and of having to borrow from Arab emirs, sultans and monarchs to make Iraq safe for democracy.

We borrow from the nations we defend so that we may continue to defend them. To question this is an unpardonable heresy called "isolationism."

And the chickens of globalism are coming home to roost.

We let Europe to get away with imposing value-added taxes averaging 15 percent on our exports to them, while they rebate that value-added tax on their exports to us. Thus, the euro has almost doubled in value against the dollar in the Bush years, as NATO Europe begins to bail out on Iraq and Afghanistan.

We sat still as Japan protected her markets and dumped high quality goods into ours and China undervalued its currency to suck jobs, technology and factories out of the United States. Now, China and Japan have $2 trillion in cash reserves. The Arabs have an equal amount of petrodollars. Both are headed here to spend their depreciating dollars snapping up U.S. assets – banks, ports, highways, defense contractors.

America, to pay her bills, has begun to sell herself to the world.

Its balance sheet gutted by the subprime mortgage crisis, Citicorp got a $7.5 billion injection from Abu Dhabi and is now fishing for $1 billion from Kuwait and $9 billion from China. Beijing has put $5 billion into Morgan Stanley and bought heavily into Barclays Bank.

Merrill-Lynch, ravaged by subprime mortgage losses, sold part of itself to Singapore for $7.5 billion and is seeking another $3 billion to $4 billion from the Arabs. Swiss-based UBS, taking a near $15 billion write-down in subprime mortgages, has gotten an infusion of $10 billion from Singapore.

Bain Capital is partnering with China's Huawei Technologies in a buyout of 3Com, the U.S. company that provides the technology that protects Pentagon computers from Chinese hackers.

This self-indulgent generation has borrowed itself into unpayable debt. Now the folks from whom we borrowed to buy all that oil and all those cars, electronics and clothes are coming to buy the country we inherited. We are prodigal sons, and the day of reckoning approaches.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Mortgage-Meltdown Upside: Lower Rates

By BRETT ARENDS
Brett Arends writes R.O.I., or Return On Investment, daily for the Online Journal, dissecting where personal finance meets current affairs, and how the latest news can make you money."

A lot of the time, that comes from going against the herd.

Brett has spent his life rifling through department store bargain bins in London, Boston and New York, and that's pretty much the same way he views markets. A good stock-market panic yields the cheapest deals. And there's only one thing better: a scandal. That's when you get a firesale. R.O.I. will be looking for bargains anywhere, and for opportunities on the spending side as well.

It isn't really true that $1,000 saved is just $1,000 earned. If you're in the top income-tax bracket, it's $1,500 earned. And salted away for 30 years in a tax-deferred account, $1,000 saved is nearly $9,000 towards your retirement. That's some return.



Mortgage-Meltdown Upside: Lower Rates
January 10, 2008 7:23 p.m.

The doom and misery enveloping Wall Street brings with it a cheerier by-product: Cheaper mortgages.

The rate on standard 30-year, fixed-rate loans has "fallen about half a percentage point in the last two weeks owing to the dour economic outlook," says Greg McBride, senior analyst at Bankrate.com.

If you are borrowing less than $417,000, the limit backed by Federal housing agencies, and you are making a down payment of 20% or more, you can get a 30-year loan mortgage for well under 6%.


Bankrate.com, which surveys lenders, says the average rate is now 5.88%. As our chart shows, that's well below levels of nearly 7% seen as recently as last summer.

And you can find better if you shop around. Some loans are as low as around 5.5%, including fees.

Of course, everybody's mortgage decision is going to involve a lot of independent variables, including the size of the loan and the down payment, and whether to get a fixed or variable rate. Interest rates are higher on "jumbo" loans of more than $417,000, and where the down payment is less than 20% of the home's value. There's no such thing as one-size-fits-all advice.

The reason mortgage rates have fallen so far isn't hard to find: Deepening fears over the economy.

Nervous investors have shifted their money from riskier assets into U.S. government bonds, bidding up the price of the bonds and thereby lowering the yield. And that brings down the cost of long-term capital for other loans, including mortgages.

Ten-year Treasurys now pay a measly 3.79%, compared to 5.3% earlier last year. The yield on the 30-year has fallen from 5.4% to 4.32%.

Given these declines in Treasury yields, mortgage rates should probably be even lower. But the lending industry's obvious crisis has gummed up the works.

Are mortgages rates going to fall further? Should you wait to refinance?

Maybe. But rates right now are very cheap by historic standards. The law of mean reversion would suggest they are more likely to rise from this point than to fall further.

Anything from a boost in economic sentiment to fears about inflation would be likely to raise long-term interest rates.

You can usually have it both ways -- sort of. You can generally pay a fee to lock in a good interest rate for a period. If rates fall still further, you surrender the fee, but you can then take advantage of the lower rate.

Overall, cutting your cost of capital is probably the easiest way to boost your net worth. On a $400,000 loan, cutting your interest rate from 6.8% to 5.5% will save you about $4,000 a year before tax -- or about $120,000 over 30 years.

Of course, to make sure switching mortgages is worthwhile you need to factor in fees, points and other costs as well as the interest rate.

Write to Brett Arends at brett.arends@wsj.com

Lennar's New Homes Fetch 60% Less as U.S. Market Slump Deepens

By Bob Ivry

Jan. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Lennar Corp.'s November sale of 11,000 properties in eight states set a price that may mark the bottom for the U.S. housing market: 40 cents on the dollar.

That's how much Morgan Stanley Real Estate paid for an 80 percent stake in the 32 communities, 60 percent less than the price at which the properties were valued just two months earlier. That's also what some investors say they would pay for distressed land, condominiums, homes and whole developments, whether it's now or later this year.

``If you're an opportunistic buyer with enough cash and credit, it will be one of the best opportunities for acquiring property in our lifetime,'' said Jack McCabe, whose McCabe Research & Consulting LLC in Deerfield Beach, Florida, advises hedge funds and other investors on real estate sales.

As the U.S. housing slump drags into its third year, sellers will start cutting prices as much as it takes to find buyers, said Marcel Arsenault, a self-described ``vulture investor.'' Properties will be available to buyers with the financial strength to ride out the slide. Now that a price has been set, all that's left is the waiting.

Arsenault, based in Broomfield, Colorado, bought real estate during the savings-and-loan collapse of the early 1990s. He said he has put together a $200 million fund he expects to expand to $800 million this year to buy distressed condos.

`Eroding by the Minute'

``We're watching Denver, Phoenix, Austin and Tucson, but South Florida is our principal focus,'' said Arsenault, 60. ``If you're a vulture, Florida has more carrion. This stuff is lying on the ground. It's lost life. Some of the stuff in Phoenix is still breathing. Perhaps not for long.''

Arsenault said he and his three partners may buy a block of about 50 new, unsold condominiums in Orlando, Florida. They have a price in mind and they're willing to wait until they get it: 40 cents on the dollar.

``There's a risk to buying too early in the downturn, but buying too expensive is our biggest pitfall,'' he said.

Companies such as Miami-based Lennar, the biggest U.S. homebuilder by revenue, need to generate cash to make up for slowing home sales, especially this time of year, said Vicki Bryan, a Friendswood, Texas-based senior high-yield debt analyst for Gimme Credit LLC.

``They sold land at 40 cents on the dollar and they're happy to get it,'' Bryan said. ``The value of land is eroding by the minute.''

$10,000 an Acre

New-home sales fell to a 12-year low in November as rising foreclosures, increased credit restrictions and a swelling inventory of unsold houses have persuaded potential buyers to wait.

More than half of all U.S. home sales occur in April, May and June, according to Frank Nothaft, chief economist at McLean, Virginia-based Freddie Mac, the No. 2 U.S. mortgage buyer.

About 150 so-called real estate opportunity funds have been formed to buy distressed properties and other assets, a 21 percent increase over the number this time last year and an all- time high, according to Real Estate Alert, a trade publication based in Hoboken, New Jersey.

Fort Worth, Texas-based D.R. Horton Inc., the biggest U.S. homebuilder by market value, sold 20,000 lots on 6,884 acres outside Phoenix to Wolff Co., a closely held real estate investment and development company based in Scottsdale, Arizona, and Langley Properties of Gilbert, Arizona, in November.

The price, $70 million, or about $10,000 an acre, was lower than the sale price for the same land that Horton had in escrow six months ago, said Wolff Co-President Tim Wolff.

Land Inventory

``We are going to wait for as long as it takes the market to recover and figure it out from there,'' Wolff said.

The sale reduced the amount of time D.R. Horton calculates it would take to sell off all its land by about six months, to five years, Chief Executive Officer Donald Tomnitz said in a November conference call with analysts.

``We're going to be looking to sell land opportunistically,'' Stacey Dwyer, the company's executive vice president and treasurer, said in the call.

Standard Pacific Corp., the worst-performing of the 15 companies in the Standard & Poor's Supercomposite Index of Homebuilders last year, sold more than 2,500 home lots, some ready for building and some raw, in the San Antonio area earlier this week.

``Standard Pacific is reviewing a number of ways to adjust our business to changing market conditions,'' the company said in an e-mailed statement. ``As a part of our plan, we sold most of our excess land in San Antonio and will continue to explore ways to optimize our business, while continuing to provide our customers with high quality homes at an excellent value.''

`Aggressive Right Now'

The buyers were Cleveland-based Forest City Enterprises Inc. and closely held Covington Capital Corp. The price wasn't disclosed.

``We're very aggressive right now because the homebuilders are in survival mode,'' said Ken Sheer, chief executive officer of Santa Monica, California-based Covington. ``Like any other business group that has some softness, everybody is scrambling to survive. The guys left standing are the guys who are going to be kings of the hill.''

Lawrence Gottesdiener, chairman of Northland Investment Corp. in Newton, Massachusetts, pounced last week when New York- based Tarragon Corp. offered five apartment complexes in Florida and another in South Carolina for $156 million.

``I could say I bought for 50 cents on the dollar of last year's price, because I did, but I think that's a little bit of hyperbole because last year's price was last year,'' Gottesdiener said.

`Portfolio Optimization'

Orleans Homebuilders Inc. of Bensalem, Pennsylvania, sold 1,400 lots to nine different buyers in December for $32 million. The book value of the properties was $86 million, the company said in a statement. Orleans also anticipates receiving about $20 million to $25 million in federal income tax refunds as a result of the sales, the statement said.

Most of the lots, which represented about 18 percent of the land the company owned, were in weaker performing communities in Florida, Illinois and Arizona, said Garry Herdler, the company's executive vice president and chief financial officer. Orleans is keeping properties in the Northeast and the Carolinas, areas where prices have held up well on a relative basis, he said.

``We call this strategy portfolio optimization,'' Herdler said in an interview. ``These sales provided cash to repay bank debt, reduced operational costs and allowed us anticipated significant federal tax refunds.''

John Levy, a real estate investment banker in Richmond, Virginia, said he's passed up opportunities in the past to join forces with homebuilding companies. Now he said he's planning a joint venture with a national builder to buy communities abandoned by bankrupt developers in the middle of construction.

``That's where you can buy at the biggest discount,'' Levy said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Bob Ivry in New York at bivry@bloomberg.net .

Last Updated: January 10, 2008 00:24 EST

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

U.S. Economy: Pending Sales of Existing Homes Fell in November

By Joe Richter

Jan. 8 (Bloomberg) -- The number of Americans signing contracts to buy previously owned homes fell more than forecast in November, signaling further deterioration in housing.

The National Association of Realtors' index of pending home sales decreased 2.6 percent to 87.6, following a 3.7 percent gain in October that was larger than previously estimated, the group said today in Washington.

The figures underscore Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's forecast that the housing recession will continue, posing the biggest risk to economic expansion. Economists said more stringent lending practices following the collapse in subprime mortgages and prospects that home prices will keep falling are deterring buyers.

``There is no evidence it is bottoming,'' Paulson said today about the housing market. He added that a plan designed to stem a wave of foreclosures may need to be expanded beyond subprime homeowners.

Economists predicted the index of signed contracts for existing homes would fall 0.7 percent following a previously reported 0.6 percent October increase, according to the median of 33 projections in a Bloomberg News survey. Estimates ranged from a drop of 3 percent to a 0.3 percent increase.

Compared with a year earlier, the index was down 19 percent.

`Further to Fall'

``We'll probably see more weakness in existing home sales given that inventories are so high,'' said James O'Sullivan, a senior economist at UBS Securities LLC in Stamford, Connecticut. ``Prices may keep dropping for a while.''

The housing slump is likely to last well into 2008, hurting economic growth and prompting Federal Reserve policy makers to lower interest rates, analysts said.

Stocks extended gains following the report and later dropped, led by a slump in financial shares. Treasury securities were little changed. The benchmark 10-year note yielded 3.85 percent at 11:54 a.m. in New York, compared with 3.83 percent late yesterday.

Today's figures showed pending resales fell in three of four regions. Purchases decreased 13 percent in the Northeast, 4.1 percent in the Midwest and 2.1 percent in the West. Sales rose 2.3 percent in the South.

KB Home Loss

KB Home, the fifth-largest U.S. homebuilder, today reported a fourth-quarter loss as tumbling demand for new homes forced the company to write down land values. Los Angeles-based KB Home operates in 13 states, including California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona.

The bigger gain in October than previously estimated suggested the market may be stabilizing, according to Lawrence Yun, the NAR's chief economist.

``Although there could be some minor slippage in the first quarter, existing home sales should hold in a narrow range before trending up,'' Yun said in a statement. ``The exact timing and the strength of a home-sales recovery is a bit uncertain.''

Paulson, speaking on CNBC television during a visit to New York, said evidence shows the housing decline ``has further to run.''

The Treasury chief indicated the outlook may prompt an expansion of the plan Bush administration officials brokered with mortgage lenders last month. The initiative was designed to make it easier to negotiate affordable loans and freeze some adjustable-rate mortgages at current rates.

``One thing we will consider is maybe expanding this beyond subprime borrowers to other borrowers,'' Paulson said.

Unsold Homes

There was a 10.3 months' supply of previously owned homes on the market in November at the current sales pace, compared with an average 6.5 months in 2006 and 4.5 months a year earlier.

That excess is one reason property values are dropping. Home prices in 20 U.S. metropolitan areas fell in October by the most in at least six years, based on the S&P/Case-Shiller home- price index. The decrease, reported last month, was the biggest since the group started keeping year-over-year records in 2001.

The Realtors association estimates 5.7 million homes will be sold in 2008, little changed from an estimated 5.65 million last year. Purchases of new homes will fall to 669,000 from 773,000.

While traders anticipate the Fed will lower its benchmark rate by at least a quarter point this month, Philadelphia Fed Bank President Charles Plosser said he hasn't made up his mind yet.

Fed's Plosser

``A substantially weaker outlook than expected, particularly if that weakness is projected to be more prolonged than anticipated, may require further adjustments to policy,'' Plosser said in a speech in Gladwyne, Pennsylvania.

Boston Fed chief Eric Rosengren, who last month dissented from the majority in voting for a larger rate cut, said in a speech today that ``The continued decline in residential investment has heightened the risk of a more significant downturn in the overall economy.''

The real-estate agents' group began reporting pending home resales in March 2005 and has supplied historical data back to February 2001. The gauge is considered a leading indicator because it tracks contract signings. The group's existing-home purchases report tracks closings, which typically occur a month or two later.

To contact the reporter on this story: Joe Richter in Washington at Jrichter1@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: January 8, 2008 11:58 EST

Friday, January 04, 2008

Owning vs. Renting: Still Not Close

By Greg Ip
From The Wall Street Journal Online

U.S. house prices "likely would have to fall considerably" to return to a normal relationship with rents, says a study by one former and two current Federal Reserve economists.

The study, which doesn't necessarily reflect the views of Fed policy makers, suggests prices would have to fall 15% over five years, assuming rents rose 4% a year. House prices would have to fall further if the adjustment took place more quickly.

The study tracks rents and home prices back to 1960 and found annual rents fluctuated at around 5% to 5.25% of home prices until 1995. At the end of that year, the average monthly rent was about $553 (or about $6,600 a year) and the average home price was about $134,000.

Related Links

Econ Blog: Houses, Rents and Bubbles

Manhattan Prices Still Surging -- but Will It Last?

But starting in 1996, home prices started to grow much more rapidly than rents. By the end of 2006, they had more than doubled to an average of $282,000, while the average rent had risen 48% to $818. That drove the annual rent/price ratio down to 3.48%.

That means the rent/price ratio is about a third below its long-term average. To return to normal would require some combination of falling prices and rising rents. The paper suggests house prices would need to fall about 3% a year, if rents grew in line with their 4% average annual growth this decade.

Of course, the link between house prices and rents can remain out of whack for years.

The U.S. study is by Morris Davis, an economist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and until 2006 a staff economist at the Fed; and Andreas Lehnert and Robert F. Martin, staff economists at the Fed.

The authors' methodology was based in part on previously published work by Fed economist Joshua Gallin. The same approach is used by many other analysts, including the Congressional Budget Office, which arrived at similar conclusions.

In an interview, Mr. Davis said lower long-term interest rates can explain only a small part of the drop in the ratio. "To justify current price levels, you need rapid growth in rents." But it's hard to imagine the scenario that would justify such rapid growth in rents, he added. Indeed, it's possible rents will grow more slowly than 4%, reflecting the overhang of unsold homes that might be rented out.

Mr. Davis said the authors postulated a five-year horizon for the rent/price ratio to return to normal by looking at previous downturns. "When a downturn begins, it will last for a while."


Email your comments to rjeditor@dowjones.com.

Tuesday, January 01, 2008

Happy 2008! Buckle-up, this is going to be one scary ride down.....

I read this article over at the Wall Street Journal Online and made a few comments, along with many others who commented as well. Everyone is trying to figure out how and when housing is going to land. I am concerned by those same issues, but I consider housing to be but one of the major economic issues we need to think about. Housing is the fuse, the question in my mind is when will the bomb blow-up and what other components of the economy will be destroyed along with the housing bubble?

http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2007/12/31/will-home-prices-hit-bottom-by-june/

My post from the WSJ Online:

"Some macro-trends that very few seem to be considering as it relates housing demand and valuations:

1. Retiring baby-boomers and their changing requirements for housing. In my opinion, likely to only further aggravate and put downward pressure on single family residences.

2. Recession? Stagflation? One or both are underway. A lot of consumer spending activity will dry up from the combination of evaporating equity in real estate in conjunction with higher costs for everything from gasoline to simple commodities and food products. Also need to factor in the prospect of severly declining employment levels as corporate earnings fall short and companies start adjusting workforce levels in an effort to prop up earnings and better align capacity with falling demand. I’m sorry, but I don’t believe that increasing exports will materially offset declining domestic demand.

For what its worth, my personal projection (primarily based on midwest perspective) is that a bottom won’t be seen until deep into 2009 at best, and that assumes no recession/stagflation/inflation impacts. If any or a combination of those occur, we could easily be looking at a scenario where real estate markets don’t begin to significantly recover until well after 2010."

I may be somewhat more of a pessimist on this than many others, but I do believe the mainstream Wall Street media has a lot invested in fooling the innocents into thinking that things are not as bad as they really are. I am simply trying to read between the lines to obtain a more balanced perspective of just how much potential trouble we are facing. I personally do not expect politicans and Wall Street professionals to be sincere and honest in their perspectives.

Let me know your thoughts.

Vito Boscaino

Monday, December 31, 2007

Recession or not, Middle America will continue to feel the pinch in 2008

From The Times
December 31, 2007

Recession or not, Middle America will continue to feel the pinch in 2008
The decline in the housing market that led to the squeeze on lending is widely expected to carry over into the new year – and it is not the only pressure on the US economy

A small 1950s bungalow in Stockton, California, is up for sale for $169,950. Sitting off a quiet road dotted with American flags, the Funston Avenue home has two bedrooms, one bathroom and a covered porch.

It was built as part of President Truman’s Fair Deal, a federal promise to guarantee economic opportunity and housing for America’s servicemen returning from the war.

Sixty years on, however, the American Dream has turned into a nightmare. The bungalow’s value has fallen by $110,000 in two years and the family who live in it have fallen so far behind with their rising mortgage repayments that they have been foreclosed by the bank.

This family’s story is a common one in the neighbourhood, which houses the bank workers and civil servants who zoom up Highway 205 to commute for two hours each day to and from the pricier city of San Francisco.

According to David Sousa, the real estate broker who is selling the house, the number of properties up for sale in the area has risen from around 1,800 two years ago to about 8,000 now. Most of those properties are in the process of being repossessed by mortgage lenders. Moreover, there is no sign that the residents of Stockton are past the worst. Their lot seems a far cry from the town’s sunny motto: “Stockton’s Great, Take a Look!”

Stockton is one of America’s foreclosure capitals – according to RealtyTrac, in November one in 99 households had entered the foreclosure process, six times the national average. “One of the biggest challenges we face is that the number of foreclosures have left the market saturated with unsold property,” Mr Sousa said. He estimated that prices were falling at “between half and 1 per cent a month” and said that that local mortgage lenders had been so overwhelmed by the number of repossessed homes on their books that they are trying to sell, that real estate brokers – estate agents to you and me – cannot get a decision from them for at least 30 days over whether they will accept an offer price.

So how bad can America’s housing market get? Robert Shiller, of Yale University, one of the world’s leading economists, thinks that the property market could continue to deteriorate “for years”, with the estimated $1 trillion-worth of losses in the market, ballooning to “three times” more. Professor Shiller, who famously predicted the top of the dot-com boom, told The Times at the weekend that the likelihood of Americans having to endure a Japan-style recession with property values declining for years is a “realistic scenario”.

“At the same time as this slowdown, the stock market is highly priced and we have high oil prices. There are a lot of negatives. We are facing a substantial possibility of a big recession,” he said.

This month, the S&P Case/Shiller house price index showed that property values had fallen in October at their fastest rate for six years, with all 20 of the cities monitored showing a decline. In some states, such as Florida, California and Arizona, property prices have fallen by 40 per cent in the past two years.

A world away from the Ivy League office of Professor Shiller, Max Spann, a property auctioneer in New Jersey, told the same story. The bulk of assets that went under Mr Spann’s hammer three years ago used to be agricultural land or government buildings in New York State, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Now, most of his business is from builders trying to get rid of unsold new homes and banks desperate to remove repossessed homes from their books.

“The situation has really got worse,” Mr Spann said. “We are getting calls from the banks. The last thing lenders want to do is take back real estate. All the time that property is on its books, it is accumulating tax demands and is potentially a declining asset. They are using auctions to get out of that position.” Mr Spann’s business has doubled each year in revenues for the past three years, and he is expecting sales to triple in 2008.

“I think the real estate market will continue to slide at this rate in 2008 and 2009. And that’s all provided that there isn’t a recession. If that happens, all bets are off,” he said.

Yet the housing slowdown is not the only risk to America’s economy. One of the biggest threats is neatly expressed in marketing material welcoming visitors to Stockton, “California’s Sunrise Seaport – twinned with Foshan, Guangdong”. The closeness between the American town and one of China’s fastest-growing cities underlines America’s growing dependence on an economy that is expected to apply the brakes in 2008.

Carl Weinberg, chief economist at High Frequency Economics, believes that China poses one of the greatest threats to the health of the US economy and could force America to slow next year. “The American and Chinese economies are now inextricably linked,” he said. “The US imports a quarter of a trillion dollars-worth of goods a year from China. There is now a new leader on China’s state council and we are expecting them to impose harsh measures next year to slow their economy. They could well introduce fiscal measures with real teeth, like blocking exports of mobile phones, for example. A slowdown in China would have big repercussions for us. The risks could be awful.”

Mr Weinberg is still sanguine about America’s prospects next year and insists that its economy is far from facing a catastrophe. “The odds of a recession are still slim,” he said, explaining that while growth looks to have slowed sharply since the third quarter of 2007, from 4.9 per cent to about 1 per cent in the fourth quarter, the US Federal Reserve is likely to stave off a sharper slowdown by cutting rates by another 1 per cent to about 3.25 per cent next autumn. He forecasts that even though unemployment will rise next year, he is expecting the percentage of the workforce unable to find a job to rise from 5.1 per cent to about 5.3 per cent in 2008.

While the forecasts of some of Wall Street’s top number-crunchers suggest that America may avoid a nasty recession, it is unlikely to feel that way for many families across the United States. Americans, who for the past two years have spent more than they took home for the first time since 1933, are arguably at their most financially vulnerable for generations. The risk that Americans may be forced to tighten their belts, dampening consumer demand, is a real one, now that they are confronted with a decreasing value of their homes, rising fuel prices and uncomfortably high food costs.

The milk price has doubled this year, to keep pace with the soaring cost of maintaining a dairy herd. Corn prices used to feed dairy cattle have doubled because of the rising demand for corn to ferment to make ethanol, the biofuel.

Amy Green, the proprietor of the Ivanna Cone Ice-cream Emporium in Lincoln, Nebraska, has raised her ice cream prices by 37 per cent in the past 18 months. “Everything has gone up. All the raw materials that I need to run my business have risen – the butterfat, the milk, the sugar and the fuel. I had to pass on the rising costs,” she said.

Ms Green, who at the height of summer makes 600 gallons of ice cream a week, said that the fuel price was so prohibitive that her suppliers would not deliver her goods for an order of less than $500: “We’re a small firm. I have to be really creative at finding ways to get my orders up to $500. I’m only ordering small items like spoons and ice cream cones.”

One of her neighbours, Mike Biggs, a third-generation cattle farmer just west of Lincoln, told The Times that business had been very difficult this year. Mr Biggs, who feeds up his 10,000 cows from about 500lb to as much as 1,400lb, explained that the volatility in corn prices and the rising fuel price meant that it had become very challenging to manage the farm’s costs. “The increase in the corn price was not anticipated. The rises meant that a lot of us got caught in the middle,” he said.

Rising food and fuel costs, increasing health insurance and declining property values have made economists jumpy about whether America’s consumers will continue to drive the economy.

The plight of the swath of struggling Americans has not gone unnoticed.

According to research compiled over the past three years by Harvard University, Middle America is experiencing the most severe financial hardship for more than five decades, and Edward Wolff, Professor of Economics at New York University, predicts that the squeeze on the middle classes would get tighter as banks are expected to tighten their lending criteria in the wake of this summer’s credit crisis.

Professor Wolff said: “These families are just not going to be able to take out additional debt. Credit-card companies and auto-loan groups are just going to start saying no.” He said that Americans had not been profligate in their spending – “they’re not expanding consumption, they are just trying to tread water”. He said that median household income has nose-dived by 7 per cent between 2000 and 2004, increasing only 6 per cent between 1983 and 2004.

Americans are being delivered a grim New Year warning, Professor Shiller said: “People aren’t scared yet – but once all this unwinds, they will be.”

Perils for US

Key risks to America's economy in 2008

— Rising energy prices

— Middle East unrest

— Rising food prices

— Worsening financial markets

— Slowdown in China

Source: Carl Weinberg, High Frequency Economics

Wall Street braces itself for more sub-prime misery

From The Times December 31, 2007
Tom Bawden in New York

New year celebrations may not always usher in a better year. As Wall Street reflects on the misery of the past six months – the credit crisis, sub-prime losses, executive sackings and share-price slides – many say that the worst is yet to come.

As Goldman Sachs pointed out last week, Citigroup still has an estimated $25 billion (£12.5 billion) of collateralised debt obligations (CDOs) on its books, the bundled packages of sub-prime loans that are now perceived as so risky they are effectively worthless.

Merrill Lynch, which is expected to admit to writedowns of almost $12 billion in the fourth quarter alone, has about $8 billion of CDOs in its portfolio. According to Goldman estimates, JPMorgan is exposed to around $5 billion of the securities.

Even though American banks have collectively written off at least $60 billion in combined sub-prime-related securities, James Owers, Professor of Finance at Georgia State University, says that “the worst credit crunch in modern history still has some way to go yet . . . The repercussions will eventually be more widespread than the savings and loan crisis.” (This occurred in the 1980s and led to the closure of 1,000 American building societies, with the loss of $150 billion).

The bank also thinks that its rivals are unlikely to be able to hope that they can offset the misery of their sub-prime investments with revenues from investment banking and M&A, both of which it expects to stagnate in 2008.

Yet while few Americans are likely to feel sympathy with Wall Street bankers, they may worry that banks’ reluctance to take on more risk and extend credit lines to American businesses could push the country into recession. Moody’s Investors Service pointed out to clients last week: “The continued uncertainty of what land-mines remain on bank balance sheets has the potential to spill over into restricted lending to industrial firms.”

The fallout from the sub-prime mortgage meltdown has hit all lending. Private equity firms have been hit particularly hard because, typically, they finance about two thirds of each leveraged buyout with debt in high-risk deals that, in this climate, are causing the banks to balk.

The impact on private equity deals has been enormous. Some deals that were agreed before the credit crunch took hold, such as the takeover of Home Depot’s building supplies unit by a consortium including Carlyle, saw their prices cut dramatically – in that case, by $2 billion. Other deals collapsed as the private equity firms were unable to secure financing or were not prepared to complete the transaction. In October, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and Goldman Sachs walked away from their $8 billion takeover of Harman International, the audio speaker maker. JC Flowers’s bid to buy Sallie Mae, the student lender, for $26 billion, fell through.

Risk on Wall Street

— Citigroup Tipped to cut dividend by 40 per cent and to write off $18.7bn in Q4. Expected to raise up to $10bn of new capital. Sitting in $25bn of CDO investments

— Merrill Lynch Expected to write off $11.5bn in Q4; still exposed to $8bn in CDOs

— JPMorgan Expected to write off $3.4bn in Q4; still exposed to $5bn of CDOs

Source: Goldman Sachs Note December 26 2007

Top economist says America could plunge into recession

From The TimesDecember 31, 2007
Suzy Jagger in New York

Losses arising from America’s housing recession could triple over the next few years and they represent the greatest threat to growth in the United States, one of the world’s leading economists has told The Times.

Robert Shiller, Professor of Economics at Yale University, predicted that there was a very real possibility that the US would be plunged into a Japan-style slump, with house prices declining for years.

Professor Shiller, co-founder of the respected S&P Case/Shiller house-price index, said: “American real estate values have already lost around $1 trillion [£503 billion]. That could easily increase threefold over the next few years. This is a much bigger issue than sub-prime. We are talking trillions of dollars’ worth of losses.”

He said that US futures markets had priced in further declines in house prices in the short term, with contracts on the S&P Shiller index pointing to decreases of up to 14 per cent.

“Over the next five years, the futures contracts are pointing to losses of around 35 per cent in some areas, such as Florida, California and Las Vegas. There is a good chance that this housing recession will go on for years,” he said.

Professor Shiller, author of Irrational Exuberance, a phrase later used by Alan Greenspan, the former Federal Reserve chairman, said: “This is a classic bubble scenario. A few years ago house prices got very high, pushed up because of investor expectations. Americans have fuelled the myth that prices would never fall, that values could only go up. People believed the story. Now there is a very real chance of a big recession.”

He pointed out that signs at the beginning of 2007 that had indicated that some states were beginning to experience a recovery in house prices had proved to be false: “States such as Massachusetts had seen some increases at the beginning of the year. Denver also looked like it had a different path. Now all states are falling.”

Until two years ago, each of America’s 50 states had experienced a prolonged housing boom, with properties in some – such as Florida, California, Arizona and Nevada – doubling in price, fuelled by cheap credit and lax lending practices to borrowers who ordinarily would not have been able to secure a mortgage. Two years ago, the northeastern states of America became the first to slide into a recession after 17 successive interest-rate rises between June 2004 and August 2006 hit the property market.

Last week, new numbers from the S&P/Case Shiller index showed that house prices had declined in October at their fastest rate for more than six years, with homes in Miami losing 12 per cent of their value.

Existing-Home Sales Edged Up In November, but Still Weak

By JEFF BATER
December 31, 2007 10:21 a.m.

WASHINGTON -- Existing-home sales managed a small climb during November, the first increase in nine months, but that didn't change the overall bleak picture for the ailing housing industry.

Home resales rose to a 5.00 million annual rate, a 0.4% increase from October's revised 4.98 million annual pace, the National Association of Realtors said Monday. October's rate was originally estimated at 4.97 million.

The median price of a previously owned home was $210,200 in November, down 3.3% from $217,300 in November 2006. The median price in October this year was $206,900.

The NAR said disruptions in mortgage availability and pricing peaked in August, which caused sales to slow in subsequent months. The November resales increase was the first since February 2007; the sales level of 5.00 million was in line with Wall Street expectations.

"Near term, existing-home sales should continue to hover in a narrow range, just as they have since September, and that's good news because it'll be a further sign that the housing market is stabilizing," NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun said.

The housing slump has been a drag on the economy for nearly two years. In the third quarter, the economy roared despite the burden. But in the fourth quarter, which ends with the year, the economy is seen much weaker, restrained by the dead weight of housing. New-home sales retreated to a 12-year low in November, the government reported last week; that is, sales of single-family homes decreased by 9.0% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 647,000, the lowest since 621,000 in April 1995.

Get alerts for breaking news -- such as Fed moves, major world events and big mergers -- delivered straight to your desktop. Alerts will appear in a small window on your screen, much like an instant-messaging window. See a sample and get more information.Also receding are prices for new homes. Falling prices can chill consumer spending, which makes up 70% of U.S. economic activity as measured by GDP. When consumers watch the value of their homes shrink, they tend to feel less wealthy, a mood that can act as a damper on spending plans and, in turn, slow economic growth.

But on a bright note, data from Freddie Mac show the average 30-year mortgage rate was 6.21% in November, down from 6.38% in October.

"Mortgage interest rates are near historic lows and the most current data shows decelerating price declines, along with a modest reduction in the number of homes on the market," Mr. Yun said.

Inventories of homes fell 3.6% at the end of November to 4.27 million available for sale, which represented a 10.3-month supply at the current sales pace. There was a 10.7-month supply at the end of October, revised from a previously estimated 10.8 months.

Regionally, existing-home sales were mixed in November. Sales rose 10.3% in the West and were unchanged in the Midwest. Demand fell 2% in the South and 3.3% in the Northeast.

Write to Jeff Bater at jeff.bater@dowjones.com

Sunday, December 30, 2007

Shiller: Fed to Cut Rates Below 3 Percent

Courtesy of MoneyNews.com

The housing crisis will likely continue for another five years before hitting bottom.

As a result, the Federal Reserve will cut rates regularly this year, predicts Yale economics professor Robert Shiller.

Shiller, who was spot-on in forecasting the bursting of bubbles in the stock market in 2000 and then the housing market this year, sees the Fed slicing the federal funds rate below 3 percent from 4.25 percent currently.

"We’re continuing to see a weakening of the housing market,” Shiller says in an interview with Bloomberg News.

"What’s new is the record territory for the rate of decline. It’s faster than the worst part of the last cycle in the early 1990s.”

As for the housing crunch’s impact on the economy, Shiller foresees a softening, but not a meltdown. "Despite the disaster in the housing market and high oil prices, people are still spending.”

Personal spending soared 1.1 percent in November, the biggest rise in more than two years.

Still, Shiller thinks the housing crunch will drag the economy down enough to make the Fed cut the fed funds rate on overnight interbank loans to less than 3 percent next year. This year, the Fed lowered the rate one percentage point to 4.25 percent.

"I’m at odds with the fed funds rate futures market and most people, but I see a sequence of rates cuts in 2008,” Shiller says.

The S&P/Case-Shiller index for October showed the average price of homes in 20 major metropolitan markets plunged 6.1 percent in from a year earlier, the biggest drop since the index began in 2001.

"That momentum will continue in 2008, because in the real estate market, historically you see accelerations in the rate of decline,” Shiller says.

"That’s different from the stock market, which is largely a random walk.”

What we’re now witnessing is the unraveling of the biggest housing boom in U.S. history, indeed in the history of the entire world, Shiller says. From March 1997 to February 2007, home prices in the 20 metro markets jumped at an annual rate of 10.93 percent.

"The psychology finally unraveled,” Shiller says. "But it’s not just psychology. There was a lot of construction. Now there’s a huge inventory of unsold homes. It’s hard to see how market will pick up with this overhang.”

The amount of homes up for sale in October represented an 8.5-month supply, up a whopping 20 percent from 7.1 months a year earlier.

"I don’t expect any sudden change in the trend, because we’re not talking about professional Wall Street investors,” Shiller says.

"Most of us don’t make decisions fast, so the market doesn’t turn on a dime. Prices might not bottom out for another five years.”

The five-year forecast makes him an outlier, Shiller acknowledges. "The Chicago futures market predicts an increase for housing prices starting in 2009.”

"That’s typical of what others think. But I’m a historian and don’t see any reason for a bottom in 2009.”

The current credit market crisis represents a natural outgrowth of the housing bubble’s burst, Shiller says.

"Loans were made very freely in the early 2000s. Now with prices falling, people are starting to default, so we’re getting a seizing up of credit markets.”

Unemployment May Rise, Factories Slow: U.S. Economy Preview

By Bob Willis

Dec. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Employers in the U.S. hired fewer workers in December and the unemployment rate rose, signaling one of the few remaining bright spots in the economy dimmed heading into 2008, economists said before reports this week.

Payrolls rose by 70,000 after increasing 94,000 in November, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists before a Jan. 4 government report. The jobless rate probably rose to 4.8 percent, the highest level in more than a year.

The figures may raise concern that wage gains, which have kept American consumers afloat, will weaken in coming months. Other reports this week are likely to show existing-home sales matched a record low in November and manufacturing almost stalled this month, suggesting the housing recession was spreading throughout the economy heading into the new year.

``In a slow-motion fashion, we're beginning to see more spillover,'' from the real-estate slump, said Edward McKelvey, senior U.S. economist at Goldman, Sachs & Co. in New York. ``It will be the dominant issue of '08.''

The December gain would put the total payroll increase for 2007 at 1.4 million, the fewest in four years. The jobless rate stood at 4.5 percent at the end of 2006.

The hiring slowdown became more pronounced as the year progressed and the housing slump deepened. An average 147,000 jobs a month were created from January through May, compared with 94,000 in the six months to November.

Housing's Influence

Residential construction has fallen for seven consecutive quarters, weakening job growth as builders, mortgage companies and manufacturers reduce staff.

The collapse of the subprime mortgage market in August hastened firings at financial companies. Seattle-based Washington Mutual Inc., the largest U.S. savings and loan, said earlier this month it will eliminate 3,150 jobs as mortgage losses increased.

Manufacturers are also cutting back as sales of building materials, appliances and furniture weaken, reflecting the slump in home sales.

Factory payrolls shrank by 15,000 workers this month, economists said the jobs report may show. That would cap an almost 200,000 drop in manufacturing employment for the year.

The Institute for Supply Management's factory index fell to 50.5 this month, an 11-month low, from 50.8 in November, the Tempe, Arizona-based group may report Jan. 2, according to economists surveyed. A reading of 50 is the dividing line between expansion and contraction.

Services to Slow

ISM's index of service industries that make up the nearly 90 percent of the economy may have dropped to the lowest level since March. The non-manufacturing gauge fell to 53.5 in December from 54.1 the prior month, according to a Bloomberg survey. The report is due Jan. 4.

The world's largest economy will grow at a 1 percent pace in the fourth quarter after expanding at a 4.9 percent rate the previous three months that was the strongest since 2003, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed earlier this month. Growth for all 2008 is projected at 2.3 percent.

A report tomorrow from the National Association of Realtors may show existing home sales in November were unchanged at an annual rate of 4.97 million units for a second month, according to the survey median. That's the lowest since the Realtors began keeping records in 1999 and 31 percent down from a September 2005 peak.

Risk to Spending

The weaker housing market is forecast to undermine consumer spending, which makes up two thirds of the economy, as falling property values leave owners feeling less wealthy and with less equity to tap for extra cash.

Retailers have placed fewer orders with Black & Decker Corp. this quarter because consumers are buying fewer tools for home remodeling projects as the housing slump enters its third year.

``We are seeing the U.S. economy slowing,'' said Alexander M. Cutler, chief executive officer at Eaton Corp., the world's second-largest maker of hydraulic equipment, in a Dec. 21 interview.

So far, income gains have helped prevent a collapse in consumer spending. The Labor Department is forecast to report hourly wages grew 0.3 percent on average in December after rising 0.5 percent the prior month. Year-over-year, average hourly wages probably rose 3.6 percent after a 3.8 percent gain in the prior 12-month period, economists said.

Investors project the Federal Reserve will lower its benchmark rate a quarter point at the end of January, its fourth consecutive rate decline since September, as it seeks to head off recession.

Minutes of the Fed's Dec. 11 meeting, when policy makers lowered the target rate to 4.25 percent, will be issued on Jan. 2. At the time, some investors were disappointed the central bank didn't drop the rate even more.



Bloomberg Survey

===========================================================
Release Period Prior Median
Indicator Date Value Forecast
===========================================================
Exist Home Sales Million 12/31 Nov. 4.97 4.97
ISM Manu Index 1/2 Dec. 50.8 50.5
Construct Spending MOM% 1/2 Nov. -0.8% -0.4%
Initial Claims ,000's 1/3 Dec. 30 349 345
Factory Orders MOM% 1/3 Nov. 0.5% 0.5%
Nonfarm Payrolls ,000's 1/4 Dec. 94 70
Unemploy Rate % 1/4 Dec. 4.7% 4.8%
Manu Payrolls ,000's 1/4 Dec. -11 -15
Hourly Earnings MOM% 1/4 Dec. 0.5% 0.3%
Hourly Earnings YOY% 1/4 Dec. 3.8% 3.6%
ISM NonManu Index 1/4 Dec. 54.1 53.5
==========================================================
To contact the reporter on this story: Bob Willis in Washington at bwillis@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: December 30, 2007 09:39 EST

Saturday, December 29, 2007

Wizardry Amplified The Credit Crisis

By Carrick Mollenkamp and Serena Ng
From The Wall Street Journal Online

In recent years, as home prices and mortgage lending boomed, bankers found ever-more-clever ways to repackage trillions of dollars in loans, selling them off in slivers to investors around the world. Financiers and regulators figured all the activity would disperse risk, and maybe even make markets safer and stronger.

Then along came Norma.

Norma CDO I Ltd., as its full name goes, is one of a new breed of mortgage investments created in the waning days of the U.S. housing boom. Instead of spreading the risk of a global home-finance boom, the instruments have magnified and concentrated the effects of the subprime-mortgage bust. They are now behind tens of billions of dollars of write-downs at some of the world's largest banks, including the $9.4 billion announced last week by Morgan Stanley.

Norma illustrates how investors and Wall Street, in their efforts to keep a lucrative market going, took a good idea too far. Created at the behest of an Illinois hedge fund looking for a tailor-made bet on subprime mortgages, the vehicle was brought into existence by Merrill Lynch & Co. and a posse of little-known partners.

In its use of newfangled derivatives, Norma contributed to a speculative market that dwarfed the value of the subprime mortgages on which it was based. It was also part of a chain of mortgage-linked investments that took stakes in one another. The practice generated fees for a handful of big banks. But, say critics, it created little value for investors or the broader economy.

"Everyone was passing the risk to the next deal and keeping it within a closed system," says Ann Rutledge, a principal of R&R Consulting, a New York structured-finance consultancy. "If you hold my risk and I hold yours, we can say whatever we think it's worth and generate fees from that. It's like...creating artificial value."

Only nine months after selling $1.5 billion in securities to investors, Norma is worth a fraction of its original value. Credit-rating firms, which once signed off approvingly on the deal, have slashed its ratings to junk.

The concept behind Norma, known as a collateralized debt obligation, has been in use since the 1980s. A CDO, most broadly, is a device that repackages the income from a pool of bonds, derivatives or other investments. A mortgage CDO might own pieces of a hundred or more bonds, each of which contains thousands of individual mortgages. Ideally, this diversification makes investors in the CDO less vulnerable to the problems of a single borrower or security.

The CDO issues a new set of securities, each bearing a different degree of risk. The highest-risk pieces of a CDO pay their investors higher returns. Pieces with lower risk, and higher credit ratings, pay less. Investors in the lower-risk pieces are first in line to receive income from the CDO's investments; investors in the higher-risk pieces are first to take losses.

But Norma and similar CDOs added potentially fatal new twists to the model. Rather than diversifying their investments, they bet heavily on securities that had one thing in common: They were among the most vulnerable to a rise in defaults on so-called subprime mortgage loans, typically made to borrowers with poor or patchy credit histories. While this boosted returns, it also increased the chances that losses would hit investors severely.

Also, these CDOs invested in more than simply subprime-backed securities. The CDOs held chunks of each other, as well as derivative contracts that allowed them to bet on mortgage-backed bonds they didn't own. This magnified risk. Wall Street banks took big pieces of Norma and similar CDOs on their own balance sheets, concentrating the losses rather than spreading them among far-flung investors.

"It is a tangled hairball of risk," Janet Tavakoli, a Chicago consultant who specializes in CDOs, says of Norma. "In March of 2007, any savvy investor would have thrown this...in the trash bin."

Penny Stocks

Norma was nurtured in a small office building on a busy road in Roslyn, on the north shore of New York's Long Island. There, a stocky, 37-year-old money manager named Corey Ribotsky runs a company called N.I.R. Group LLC. Mr. Ribotsky came not from the world of mortgage securities, but from the arena of penny stocks, shares that trade cheaply and often become targets of speculation or manipulation.

N.I.R. and its affiliates have taken stakes in 300 companies, some little-known, including a brewer called Bootie Beer Corp., lighting firm Cyberlux Corp. and water-purification company R.G. Global Lifestyles. Mr. Ribotsky's firms are in litigation in New York federal court with all three companies, which claim N.I.R. manipulated their share prices. Through its lawyer, N.I.R. denies wrongdoing and has accused the companies of failing to repay loans.

Mr. Ribotsky's firm attracted the attention of Merrill Lynch in 2005. The top underwriter of CDOs from 2004 to mid-2007, Merrill had generated hundreds of millions of dollars in profits from assembling and then helping to distribute CDOs backed by mortgage securities. For each CDO Merrill underwrote, the investment bank earned fees of 1% to 1.50% of the deal's total size, or as much as $15 million for a typical $1 billion CDO.

To keep underwriting fees coming, Merrill recruited outside firms, called CDO managers. Merrill helped them raise funds, procure the assets for their CDOs and find investors. The managers, for their part, choose assets and later monitor the CDO's collateral, although many of the structures don't require much active management. It was an attractive proposition for many start-up firms, which could earn lucrative annual management fees.

Mr. Ribotsky's entry into the world of CDO managers began at Engineers Country Club on Long Island. There, in 2005, he met Mitchell Elman, a New York criminal-defense lawyer who specializes in drunk-driving and drug cases. Mr. Elman introduced Mr. Ribotsky to Kenneth Margolis, then a high-profile CDO salesman at Merrill, according to people familiar with the situation. Mr. Elman declined to comment.

'It Sounded Interesting'

Mr. Margolis, who in February 2006 became co-head of Merrill's CDO banking business, played a key role in seeking out start-up firms to manage CDOs. He put Mr. Ribotsky in contact with a few people who had experience in the mortgage debt market. They included two former Wachovia Corp. bankers, Scott Shannon and Joseph Parish III, who left Wachovia and established their own CDO management firm.

Mr. Ribotsky decided to team up with Messrs. Shannon and Parish. "It sounded interesting and that's how we ventured into it," Mr. Ribotsky says. Messrs. Parish and Shannon declined to discuss specifics of Norma.

Together the trio set up a company called N.I.R. Capital Management, which over the next year or so took on the management of three CDOs underwritten by Merrill.

In 2006, Mr. Ribotsky says Merrill came to N.I.R. with a new proposition: One of the investment bank's clients, a hedge fund, wanted to invest in the riskiest piece of a certain type of CDO. Merrill worked out a general structure for the vehicle. It asked N.I.R. to manage it.

"It was already set up when it was presented to us," Mr. Ribotsky says. "They interviewed a bunch of managers and selected our team."

The CDO would be called Norma, after a small constellation in the southern hemisphere. According to people familiar to the matter, the hedge fund was Evanston, Ill.-based Magnetar, a fund that shared its name with a powerful neutron star. Magnetar declined to comment.

On Dec. 7, 2006, Norma was established as a company domiciled in the Cayman Islands. N.I.R., as its manager, would earn fees of some 0.1%, or about $1.5 million a year.

Norma belonged to a class of instruments known as "mezzanine" CDOs, because they invested in securities with middling credit ratings, averaging triple-B. Despite their risks, mezzanine CDOs boomed in the late stages of the credit cycle as investors reached for the higher returns they offered. In the first half of 2007, issuers put out $68 billion in mortgage CDOs containing securities with an average rating of triple-B or the equivalent -- the lowest investment-grade rating -- or lower, according to research from Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. That was more than double the level for the same period a year earlier.

Buying Protection

For Norma, N.I.R. assembled $1.5 billion in investments. Most were not actual securities, but derivatives linked to triple-B-rated mortgage securities. Called credit default swaps, these derivatives worked like insurance policies on subprime residential mortgage-backed securities or on the CDOs that held them. Norma, acting as the insurer, would receive a regular premium payment, which it would pass on to its investors. The buyer of protection, which was initially Merrill Lynch, would receive payouts from Norma if the insured securities were hurt by losses. It is unclear whether Merrill retained the insurance, or resold it to other investors who were hedging their subprime exposure or betting on a meltdown.

Many investment banks favored CDOs that contained these credit-default swaps, because they didn't require the purchase of securities, a process that typically took months. With credit-default swaps, a billion-dollar CDO could be assembled in weeks.

Multiplying Risk

In principle, credit-default swaps help banks and other investors pass along risks they don't want to keep. But in the case of subprime mortgages, the derivatives have magnified the effect of losses, because they allowed bankers to create an unlimited number of CDOs linked to the same mortgage-backed bonds. UBS Investment Research, a unit of Swiss bank UBS AG, estimates that CDOs sold credit protection on around three times the actual face value of triple-B-rated subprime bonds.

The use of derivatives "multiplied the risk," says Greg Medcraft, chairman of the American Securitization Forum, an industry association. "The subprime-mortgage crisis is far greater in terms of potential losses than anyone expected because it's not just physical loans that are defaulting."

Norma, for its part, bought only about $90 million of mortgage-backed securities, or 6% of its overall holdings. Of that, some were pieces of other CDOs mostly underwritten by Merrill, according to documents reviewed by The Wall Street Journal. These CDOs included Scorpius CDO Ltd., managed by a unit of Cohen & Co., a company run by former Merrill CDO chief Christopher Ricciardi. Later, Norma itself would be among the holdings of Glacier Funding CDO V Ltd., managed by an arm of New York mortgage firm Winter Group.

A Winter Group official said the company declined to comment, as did Cohen & Co.

Such cross-selling benefited banks, because it helped support the flow of new CDOs and underwriting fees. In fact, the bulk of the middle-rated pieces of CDOs underwritten by Merrill were purchased by other CDOs that the investment bank arranged, according to people familiar with the matter. Each CDO sold some of its riskier slices to the next CDO, which then sold its own slices to the next deal, and so on.

Propping Up Prices

Critics say the cross-selling reached such proportions that it artificially propped up the prices of CDOs. Rather than widely dispersing exposure to these mortgages, the practice circulated the same risk among a relatively small number of players.

By early 2007, Norma was ready to face the ratings firms. Different slices of CDOs get different ratings because some protect the others from losses to defaults. A "junior" slice might take the first $30 million in losses on a $1 billion CDO, while a triple-A "senior" slice would not be affected until losses reached $200 million or more.

But the system works only if the securities in the CDO are uncorrelated -- that is, if they are unlikely to go bad all at once. Corporate bonds, for example, tend to have low correlation because the companies that issue them operate in different industries, which typically don't get into trouble simultaneously.

Mortgage securities, by contrast, have turned out to be very similar to one another. They're all linked to thousands of loans across the U.S. Anything big enough to trigger defaults on a large portion of those loans -- like falling home prices across the country -- is likely to affect the bonds in a CDO as well. That's particularly true for the kinds of securities on which mezzanine CDOs made their bets. Triple-B-rated bonds would typically stand to suffer if losses to defaults on the underlying pools of loans reached about 10%.

Easy Credit

When rating companies analyzed Norma, though, they were looking backward to a time when rising house prices and easy credit had kept defaults on subprime mortgages low. Norma's marketing documents noted plenty of risks for investors but also said that CDO securities had a high degree of ratings stability.

Beyond that, rating firms say they had reason to believe that the securities wouldn't all go bad at once as the housing market soured. For one, each security contained mortgages from a different mix of lenders, so lending standards might differ from security to security. Also, each security had its own unique team of companies collecting the payments. Yuri Yoshizawa, group managing director at Moody's Investors Service, says the firm figured some of these mortgage servicers would be better than others at handling problematic loans.

In March, Moody's, Standard & Poor's and Fitch Ratings gave Norma their seal of approval. In its report, Fitch cited growing concern about the subprime mortgage business and the high number of borrowers who obtained loans without proof of income. Still, all three rating companies gave slices comprising 75% of the CDO's total value their highest, triple-A rating -- implying they had as little risk as Treasury bonds of the U.S. government.

Merrill and N.I.R. took Norma to investors. Together, they produced a 78-page pitchbook that bore Merrill's trademark bull. Inside were nine pages of risk factors that included standard warnings about CDOs. The pitchbook also extolled mortgage securities, which it noted "have historically exhibited lower default rates, higher recovery upon default and better rating stability than comparably rated corporate bonds."

Most importantly, though, Norma offered high returns: On a riskier triple-B slice, Norma said it would pay investors 5.5 percentage points above the interest rate at which banks lend to each other, known as the London interbank offered rate, or Libor. At the time, that translated into a yield of over 10% on the security -- compared with roughly 6% on triple-B corporate bonds.

Network of Contacts

Mr. Ribotsky says the selling required little effort, as Merrill drummed up interest from its network of contacts. "That's what they get their fees for," he says.

Norma sold some $525 million in CDO slices -- largely the lower-rated ones with higher returns -- to investors. Merrill declined to say whether it kept Norma's triple-A rated, $975 million super-senior tranche or sold it to another financial institution.

Many investment banks with CDO businesses -- Citigroup Inc., Morgan Stanley and UBS -- frequently kept or bought these super-senior pieces, whose lower returns interested few investors. In doing so, they bet that the top CDO slices, which typically comprised as much as 60% of the whole CDO, were insulated from losses.

By September, Norma was in trouble. Amid a steep decline in house prices and rising defaults on mortgage loans, the value of subprime-backed securities went into a free fall. As increasingly worrisome delinquency data rolled in, analysts upped their estimates of total losses on subprime-backed securities issued in 2006 to 20% or more, a level that would wipe out most triple-B-rated securities.

Within weeks, ratings firms began to change their views. In October, Moody's downgraded $33.4 billion worth of mortgage-backed securities, including those which Norma had insured. Those downgrades set the stage for a review of CDOs backed by those securities -- and then further downgrades.

Mezzanine CDOs such as Norma were the hardest hit. On Nov. 2, Moody's slashed the ratings on seven of Norma's nine rated slices, three all the way from investment-grade to junk. Fitch downgraded all nine slices to junk, including two that it had rated triple-A.

Worse Performances

Other mezzanine CDOs, including some underwritten by other investment banks, have had worse performances. Around 30 are now in default, according to S&P. Norma is still paying interest on its securities. It is not known whether it has had to make payouts under the credit default swap agreements.

Ratings companies say their March opinions represented their best read at the time, and called the subprime deterioration unprecedented and unexpectedly rapid. "It's one of the worst performances that we've seen," says Kevin Kendra, a managing director at Fitch. "The world has changed quite drastically -- and our view of the world has changed quite drastically."

By mid-December, $153.5 billion in CDO slices had been downgraded, according to Deutsche Bank. Because banks owned the lion's share of the mezzanine CDOs, they bore the brunt of the losses. In all, banks' write-downs on mortgage investments announced so far add up to more than $70 billion.

For larger banks, holdings of mezzanine CDOs could account for one-third to three-quarters of the total losses. In addition to the $9.4 billion fourth-quarter write-down Morgan Stanley just announced it would take, Citigroup has projected its fourth-quarter write-down could reach $11 billion. UBS said this month it would take a $10 billion write-down after taking a $4.4 billion third-quarter loss.

Merrill, for its part, took a $7.9 billion write-down on mortgage-related holdings in the third quarter. Analysts expect it to write down a similar amount in the current quarter, which would represent the largest losses of any bank. News of the losses have led to the ouster of CEO Stan O'Neal and Osman Semerci, the bank's global head of fixed income. Mr. Margolis left this summer.

Mr. Ribotsky says he doesn't have plans to do any more CDOs at the current time. "Obviously, we're not happy about the occurrences in the marketplace," he says.



Email your comments to rjeditor@dowjones.com.

Equity capital markets poised for boost

By Rachel Morarjee

Published: December 28 2007 18:52 | Last updated: December 28 2007 18:52

Equity capital markets will get a boost next year from financial institutions seeking to shore up their tattered balance sheets and from private equity firms looking for an exit from earlier investments, bankers said.

“What looks very likely for 2008 is a wave of capital increases by financial institutions in the EMEA region [Europe, the Middle East and Africa] looking to repair their stretched balance sheets,” said Viswas Raghavan, head of international capital markets at JPMorgan.

With the share prices of some of the biggest investment banks down by as much as a third from their summer highs, troubled financial institutions will be reluctant to issue straight equity that would dilute their share prices further.

Instead, like Citigroup, many are likely to look at convertible bonds which can be changed into equity at a later date, allowing existing shareholders to cash in on any upside and giving the issuer the benefit of a tax deduction on the coupon.

“There will much more activity in the Tier 1 space next year,” said David Lyon, a managing director in the financial institutions group at Barclays Capital. “In order to bolster their capital ratios, banks will continue to issue a variety of flavours of Tier 1 securities, including fixed interest, preference shares and convertible instruments.

“Issuing equity is the most expensive option,” he said.

Given the current tumult in the wider credit world and the cautious sentiment in the equity markets, convertible bonds are likely to become a speedy, cost-effective and liquid financing alternative.

“2007 has been a great year for global convertible volumes and we expect more of the same in 2008,” said Mr Raghavan.

With liquidity in credit markets at a low ebb, private equity firms may increasingly look to initial public offerings as the swiftest exit route from investments made over the last three or four years.

John Crompton, head of EMEA equity capital markets at Merrill Lynch, said that IPO activity could be increasingly driven by private equity in the coming year.

Public equity markets are the least damaged of all of the major pools of capital. With private equity-driven takeovers hit by weakness in the credit market, corporates which were previously priced out of the market could become bidders again, using their equity as currency.

“This will see a wave of acquisition financing, providing a boost to equity capital markets activity,” Mr Raghavan said.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2007

Friday, December 28, 2007

It may pay to keep on eye on overseas residential markets

Homes away from home
By Thomas Kostigen, MarketWatch
Last update: 7:28 p.m. EST Dec. 26, 2007

SANTA MONICA, Calif. (MarketWatch) -- Some investment analysts such as Bill Gross of Pimco say we're in a recession here in the United States. But overseas it looks like times are booming. And that means foreigners are looking at opportunities here, which in turn poses opportunity for U.S. investors.

Two large foreign investors are bailing out financial institutions here from their exposure to losses in the domestic subprime mortgage market. Asia and Middle Eastern companies and countries seem to be putting capital to work in every corner of the world. And the global superrich are redefining what it means to be super rich. (In London it means a million-dollar salary just to lead an average affluent lifestyle, a recent survey shows.)

Sort of all makes us look poor in the grand scheme of things.

But where we are "poor" also means we have opportunity, particularly in the real estate sector. Here's why: trepidation.

Sales and values of real estate on the whole in the U.S. may have sunk. But it's largely not because of lack of demand; it's largely because of hesitation of demand.

There's a big difference between the two. It means there is a lingering lag in the market, not an outright stall. At the first blush of renewed energy, the real estate market will bounce back.

Wealthy investors are still putting their dollars to work in the market, which means allocations to real estate as an investment class haven't gone away altogether.

Instead, sales of high-end homes have soared. Like with any investment class, it's best to take a look at global supply and demand not just domestic variance.

If equities were on the outs with investors, that would spill around the world and the asset class itself would be out of favor, meaning fewer people would be buying and selling stocks. Same thing with bonds, or commodities ...or real estate.

But that isn't happening. Prices of homes in certain high-end sections of London, for example, have risen between 25% and 35% this year, according to the Financial Times. There is an Indian, Asian, and Middle Eastern boom of development too.

Strong price increases in London are "giving the elite the confidence to invest heavily in the properties," the FT says.

Confidence-building is what any market is about. There is enough capital to push about and increase prices in virtually every capital market. What makes some markets soar and others dribble is confidence.

To be sure, confidence in U.S. properties has waned. But for how long? When wealthy investors from abroad look to invest in the agents of markets -- the Merrills, UBSs and the like -- how long before they then take it to the next level of the game and invest directly?

With the value of the U.S. dollar low and real estate prices dropping, it isn't hard to imagine foreigners taking bigger positions in properties here as part of their overall portfolios. Meanwhile, they wait...wait...wait...Then they'll buy large when prices get low enough.

Prices are quickly getting low enough

I'm betting that Miami and southern Florida will kick-start the trend. There, prices and sales volumes are down 25% or more in hot areas. What happens when values fall 50%? That should catch some foreign investors' attention.

With the largest segment of the population retiring and likely headed South, too, there is long-term viability to the bet.

It's worth following the buying patterns of wealthy individuals and foreign institutions when it comes to their investments in real estate. Confidence will build again. This time maybe just more slowly, but it will come back.

Investment resolutions for 2008 should be to spot bottoms -- and then buy. Those with capital have already begun.

Home sales plunge, feed recession fears

By JEANNINE AVERSA, AP Economics Writer

WASHINGTON - The housing market plunged deeper into despair last month, with sales of new homes plummeting to their lowest level in more than 12 years.

The slump worsened even more than most analysts expected, heightening fears that the country might be thrust into a recession.

New-home sales tumbled 9 percent in November from October to a seasonally adjusted annual sales pace of 647,000, the Commerce Department reported Friday. That was the worst sales pace since April 1995.

"It was ugly," declared Richard Yamarone, economist at Argus Research. "It is the one sector of the economy that doesn't show any signs of life. It doesn't look like there is any resuscitation in store for housing over the next year," he said.

The housing picture turned out to be more grim than most anticipated. Many economists were predicting sales to decline by 1.8 percent to a pace of 715,000.

By region, sales fell in all parts of the country, except for the West.

In the Midwest, new-home sales plunged 27.6 percent in November from October. Sales dropped 19.3 percent in the Northeast and fell 6.4 percent in the South. In the West, however, sales rose 4 percent.

Over the last 12 months, new-home sales nationwide have tumbled by 34.4 percent, the biggest annual slide since early 1991, and stark evidence of the painful collapse in the once high-flying housing market.

"I think you can classify what we are seeing in the housing market as a crash," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com. "Sales and home prices are in a free fall. The downturn is intensifying."

The median sales price of a new home dipped to $239,100 in November. That is 0.4 percent lower than a year ago. The median price is where half sell for more and half for less.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrials, after an erratic session, managed to squeeze out a small gain even as the grim home sales report added to some investors' angst. The Dow closed up 6.26 points at 13,365.87.

Would-be home buyers have found it more difficult to secure financing, especially for "jumbo" mortgages — those exceeding $417,000. The tighter credit situation is deepening the housing slump. Unsold homes have piled up, which will force builders to cut back even more on construction and look for ways to sweeten the pot to lure prospective buyers.

"A lot of borrowers are being disqualified for loans. If you can't qualify for a mortgage the game is over. For those who do qualify, it takes longer to get loans," said Brian Bethune, economist at Global Insight.

The housing market has been suffering through a severe slump following five years of record-breaking activity from 2001 through 2005. Sales turned weak as did home prices. The boom-to-bust situation has increased dangers to the economy as a whole and has been especially hard on some homeowners.

Foreclosures have soared to record highs and probably will keep rising. A drop in home prices left some people stuck with balances on their home mortgages that eclipsed the worth of their home. Other home buyers were clobbered as low introductory rates on their mortgages jumped to much higher rates, which they couldn't afford.

Problems in housing are expected to persist well into 2008 — a major election year.

The housing and mortgage meltdowns have raised the odds that the country will fall into a recession. And, the situation has given Democrat and Republican politicians_ including those who want to be the next president — plenty of opportunities to spread blame around.

The economy's growth is expected to have slowed sharply to a pace of just 1.5 percent or less in the final three months of this year. Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan recently warned that the economy is "getting close to stall speed." The big worry is that the housing and credit troubles will force individuals to cut back on spending and businesses to cut back on hiring and capital investment, throwing the economy into a tailspin.

To help bolster the economy, the Federal Reserve has sliced a key interest rate three times this year. Its latest rate cut, on Dec. 11, dropped the Fed's key rate to 4.25 percent, a two-year low. Many economists are predicting the Fed will lower rates again when they meet in late January.

"The risks are as high as they've ever been during this expansion that started in late 2001 that the economy will fall into a recession," said Bethune. "The odds are now nudging up close to the 50 percent mark."
___

On the Net:

New-home sales report: https://www.esa.doc.gov/ei.cfm

Greenspan: Global Economy Going into ‘Reverse’

Breaking News from MoneyNews.com

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan repeated his argument this week that the world’s central banks have lost control over long rates – but suggested that global economies would slow, a factor which should eventually support higher rates.

Interest rates now are set by the supply of investment money worldwide, a force much larger than the concerted efforts of central banks, including the Fed, Greenspan said in an interview with National Public Radio.

"We and all other central banks lost control of the forces directing higher prices in homes,” Greenspan said.

Nevertheless, he implied, long rates could rise going forward as economies slow and less money is sloshing around looking for a home.

"What I point out is that we’re in a turning phase and that the extraordinary improvements that have occurred in the world economy in the last 15 years are transitory, and they’re about to change,” Greenspan said.

"So, I think this whole process will begin to reverse,” he said.

Global economic growth has brought "hundreds of millions” of people out of abject poverty, particularly in Asia, the former Fed chief pointed out, and that has been the result of market forces at work.

"The most extraordinary example is China. China is moving towards capitalism. It doesn’t say that, obviously, it can’t. But that’s precisely what it’s doing,” Greenspan said.

Nevertheless, Greenspan argued, rising inequality of income is creating new problems, and declining U.S. education standards, especially in math and science, are doing harm to the historic "balancing” of income levels.

Greenspan also took on critics who have pointed out his own poor record at predicting recession, despite sitting at the helm of the U.S. monetary authority for nearly two decades.

"The record of forecasting not only of myself and of companies I have developed – but of the profession as a whole – is not particularly spectacular,” Greenspan said. "I’ve been forecasting since the early 1950s. I was as bad then as I am now.”

Yet he cautioned again that the elements for a downturn are in place, and reiterated his warning that a recession is more likely than not.

The key is human psychology, which cannot yet be measured well enough to predict without that prediction affecting the outcome by giving markets time to adjust and avoid recession, Greenspan said.

"What I have to forecast is that something will happen which is unexpected, which will knock us down,” Greenspan said. "The odds of that happening, I think, are rising, because we are getting in vulnerable areas.”

U.S. Economy: Sales of New Homes Tumble 9% to 12-Year Low

By Bob Willis

Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) -- Sales of new homes in the U.S. fell to a 12-year low in November, pointing to bigger declines in construction that will hinder economic growth in 2008.

Purchases dropped 9 percent to an annual pace of 647,000 and October sales were revised lower, the Commerce Department said today in Washington. Last month's sales were weaker than the lowest forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of economists.

Treasury notes extended their rally and traders added to bets that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates again in January to prevent a recession. New-home sales are down 25.4 percent so far this year, heading for the biggest annual decline since at least 1963.

``This gives a dire picture of the U.S. housing market,'' said Dana Saporta, an economist at Dresdner Kleinwort in New York. ``The weakness of the housing industry does raise the risk of recession.''

A separate report showed the National Association of Purchasing Management-Chicago's index of American business activity rose this month as new orders increased. The group's index climbed to 56.6, from 52.9 the previous month.

The deepest housing recession in 16 years will worsen as discounts fail to lure buyers and mounting foreclosures swell the glut of unsold properties, economists said. Falling property values may cause consumer spending to cool, increasing the odds the expansion will falter in 2008.

``The most important implication of this is it's going to drive down construction outlays and that's a direct effect on GDP,'' said Neal Soss, chief economist at Credit Suisse Group in New York.

Yields Retreat

The yield on the benchmark 10-year note fell 9 basis points to 4.11 percent at 10:21 a.m. in New York. The dollar weakened against the euro and stocks pared their advance. The Standard & Poor's Supercomposite Homebuilding Index, which includes KB Home, Pulte Homes Inc. and D.R. Horton Inc., declined 2.8 percent to 306.44.

A Bloomberg survey of 68 economists forecast sales would fall to an annual pace of 717,000 from a previously reported 728,000 rate in October, according to the median estimate. Economists' forecasts ranged from a low of 685,000 to a high of 750,000. Government records only go back to 1963.

Sales of new homes were down 34 percent from the same time last year, the biggest 12-month drop since January 1991. The median price fell 0.4 percent from November 2006 to $239,100.

The number of homes for sale at the end of November decreased 1.8 percent to 505,000, the fewest in two years. Still, because sales dropped even more, the inventory of unsold homes at the current sales pace jumped to 9.3 months from 8.8 months in October.

Regional Picture

Purchases fell in three of four regions, led by a 28 percent plunge in the Midwest. Sales dropped 19 percent in the Northeast and 6.4 percent in the South. They rose 4 percent in the West.

The housing recession has deepened since the August turmoil in subprime mortgages led to a worldwide credit shortage. Stricter borrowing standards and a freeze on lending to borrowers with poor credit put mortgages out of reach for more potential buyers. That's driving home prices lower, weakening sales as people hold out for even bigger reductions.

Sales of new houses will probably tumble 8.9 percent in 2008 after a 25 percent drop this year, according to a Dec. 13 forecast from Fannie Mae, the largest mortgage buyer. Sales of new homes in November were 53 percent down from their July 2005 peak.

Prices Decline

Home prices in 20 metropolitan areas fell 6.1 percent in the 12 months to October, the most in at least six years, according to a report this week by S&P/Case-Shiller. The decline raises the risk that more Americans will walk away from properties that are worth less than they owe, economists said.

Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. is forecasting prices will fall at least 15 percent from peak to trough. By that measure, the S&P/Case-Shiller index is down 6.6 percent so far.

With sales and prices falling, foreclosures rose 68 percent in November from a year earlier. They may continue surging in 2008 as mortgages for some subprime borrowers with adjustable rates reset.

As foreclosures throw more homes onto the market, homebuilders such as Hovnanian Enterprises Inc., New Jersey's largest, are scaling back.

Hovnanian plans to ``pare down our inventories in virtually all our markets,'' Chief Executive Officer Ara Hovnanian said on a conference call Dec. 19. ``It will be a difficult year.''

Construction

Housing starts are near a 14-year low and have fallen 48 percent since their January 2006 peak. Declining home construction has subtracted from economic growth for the last seven quarters, and economists are expecting the drag to continue in 2008.

The weaker housing market is also forecast to undermine consumer spending, which makes up two thirds of the economy, as falling property values leave owners feeling less wealthy and with less equity to tap for extra cash.

The odds of recession have increased since the credit markets froze as a result of the subprime crisis. The economy will expand at a 1 percent annual pace in the fourth quarter after growing at a 4.9 percent rate from July through September, according to the median forecast of economists surveyed this month by Bloomberg News.

`The probability of recession is 50 percent for next year at some point,'' Martin Feldstein, head of the National Bureau of Economic Research, which determines when contractions start and end, said in a Dec. 14 interview. ``We could see a downturn starting sometime in the spring or the second quarter of next year.''

To contact the reporter on this story: Bob Willis in Washington at bwillis@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: December 28, 2007 11:15 EST