Re: Housing Bubble Correction Update: Here comes the jobs crash (Part I)
Paul,
The nationalization of Fannie and Freddie will mark a turning point in the writeoff of previously accumulated crap mortgages, but it does not fix the other major problem: The entire securitization process is broken.
Unless another method is developed to provide cheap and easy credit, the housing markets are still going to be crippled by the lack of credit - its lifeblood.
While it may be hyperbole to say so, I do think it is quite possible that nominal housing prices may return to pre-securitization level - i.e. 1999 before the 'bottom' is reached.
The only reason I'm not more certain is that we have the inflation variable. One very possible result is a price which bottoms out at 2003, but a purchasing power equivalent which goes back much further.
The ironic situation now is that the so called dollar strengthening will only hurt the entire nationalization process: the US as a debtor nation doesn't need a stronger currency.
Paul,
The nationalization of Fannie and Freddie will mark a turning point in the writeoff of previously accumulated crap mortgages, but it does not fix the other major problem: The entire securitization process is broken.
Unless another method is developed to provide cheap and easy credit, the housing markets are still going to be crippled by the lack of credit - its lifeblood.
While it may be hyperbole to say so, I do think it is quite possible that nominal housing prices may return to pre-securitization level - i.e. 1999 before the 'bottom' is reached.
The only reason I'm not more certain is that we have the inflation variable. One very possible result is a price which bottoms out at 2003, but a purchasing power equivalent which goes back much further.
The ironic situation now is that the so called dollar strengthening will only hurt the entire nationalization process: the US as a debtor nation doesn't need a stronger currency.
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