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Countrywide CEO says housing slump has a year to go

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  • Countrywide CEO says housing slump has a year to go

    Countrywide CEO says housing slump has a year to go
    November 14, 2006 (Reuters)

    The slowdown of the U.S. housing market will last through 2007 as inventories are pared enough to prompt a change in consumer psychology, the chief executive officer of the nation's biggest mortgage lender said on Tuesday.

    Mortgage lending has slowed as rising inventories in the housing market led to a "hard landing" for the industry after a decade of strong growth, Countrywide Financial Corp. (CFC.N: Quote, Profile, Research) CEO Angelo Mozilo said at a Merrill Lynch & Co. conference in New York.

    "We have another year of adjustment, or transition" in the industry until consumers believe home prices won't decline, Mozilo said. "Various events will make the change take place and one of them is" a decline in available homes, he said.

    Mozilo said he expects the industry will see lending volume grow progressively from 2008 to 2010 because of a build-up of demand. Until then, the industry will continue to consolidate and eliminate excess capacities.

    AntiSpin: What a bunch of crap. Thankfully we have the iTulip WayBack Machine to instruct us on where we are in the denial cycle.

    Let us return briefly to August 2002:
    iTulip.com has consistently contradicted the consensus opinion of mainstream economists, who certainly spend too much time reading each other's nonsense and unanimously agreed:
    • In 1999 that no financial market and economic bubble existed. Technology had created a high growth, high productivity, low inflation New Economy.
    • In late 2000 that there was a financial market bubble, in fact the largest in history, but that no economic recession will follow its collapse.
    • In early 2001 that the economy was maybe suffering a mild recession, perhaps related to a negative wealth effect following the collapse of the bubble. The mild recession would end and the economy was due to recover in the second half of the year.
    • In early 2002 that the recession in the previous year had lasted only one quarter and the economy was due to recover strongly in the second half of 2002.
    • Last week that the 2001 recession had in fact lasted for, well, three quarters rather than one as predicted in 2000 and reported up until last week. GDP growth in Q2 2002 was actually only 1.1% versus the 5% consensus estimate, so maybe the economy won't recover much in 2002. But not to worry, the pace of recovery will accelerate smartly in 2003.
    Prosperity is just around the corner. Why anyone listens to these guys anymore is a mystery to us. iTulip.com gave a few of blue sky prognosticators the coveted iTulip.com Flying Pig Award.

    The cheerful academic revisionist history of the 1930s post bubble period offered up by Schwartz and Friedman states that if only the Fed had done more or the government more that The Great Depression could have been avoided. But as Alan Greenspan himself said back in 1959, "Once stock prices reach the point at which it is hard to value them by any logical methodology, stocks will be bought as they were in the late 1920s–not for investment, but to be unloaded at a still higher price. The ensuing break could be disastrous because panic psychology cannot be summarily altered or reversed by easy-money policies." Collapsing asset bubbles always leave economic devastation in their wake. Witness the condition of the high technology industry, the center of this most recent asset bubble, now approaching a state of economic dysfunction, with rising unemployment and next to no job creation. Wishful thinking and ignorance of the dynamics of economic contraction set in motion by the collapse of asset bubbles dominates during the collapse phase, as the articles from 1929 attest.

    iTulip QuickComment August 9, 2002
    I'll also repeat the following advice from that Quick Comment:
    If you bothered to read the Wall Street Journal article noted above, hoping to glean how the government is going to fix the stock market and improve your stock portfolio, locate the nearest white board and write 100 times, Bart Simpson style:

    The government does not control the markets or the economy
    The government does not control the markets or the economy
    The government does not control the markets or the economy
    The government does not control the markets or the economy
    The government does not control the markets or the economy
    I congratulate Countrywide Financial Corp. CEO Angelo Mozilo...



    ...for winning with his prediction the coveted iTulip Flying Pig award–the first, but not the last–since before the 2001 recession!






    Congrats, Angelo!
    Last edited by FRED; November 14, 2006, 11:40 PM.

  • #2
    Re: Countrywide CEO says housing slump has a year to go

    Lesson: do not fool with trained attack animals.

    Sic 'em, EJ, good boy!
    Jim 69 y/o

    "...Texans...the lowest form of white man there is." Robert Duvall, as Al Sieber, in "Geronimo." (see "Location" for examples.)

    Dedicated to the idea that all people deserve a chance for a healthy productive life. B&M Gates Fdn.

    Good judgement comes from experience; experience comes from bad judgement. Unknown.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Countrywide CEO- National Bank vs Federal Bank Charter

      Are there any Banking experts in the crowd.

      CountryWide Financial Bank deposits were surging in September-

      Meanwhile their Mortgage business is off by 24% - CountryWide is collecting all this money - committing to paying depositers the one of the Highest CD rates in the county - and they can't put the money to work.

      Now, they are changing their Charter from a National Bank to a Federal Savings Bank? - For the good of Stock holders I-m sure..
      I think Federal Savings Bank status allows CountryWide to deduct from their Income contributions to BAD DEBT reserves.

      Perhaps related to the KB Home Loan Business that Country Wide purchased?

      Interestingly, Mr MOZILO has increased the size of the block of Shares he sells each month - by 50% as of November 2006.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Countrywide CEO says housing slump has a year to go

        Surely David Lereah ought to have won the coveted flying pig award sometime within the last two years...or are jackasses ineligible?

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Countrywide CEO says housing slump has a year to go

          Originally posted by JamesP
          Surely David Lereah ought to have won the coveted flying pig award sometime within the last two years...or are jackasses ineligible?
          There aren't enough pigs.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Countrywide CEO says housing slump has a year to go

            I am now quite convinced that the '01 recession in fact never ended; and has continued since. This makes sense, when you realize that the "anti-wealth effect" from the bubble collapse never reversed, and the economy failed to create "real" (read: non-bubble and non-illegal immigrant) jobs in the intervening period. The reliability of metrics like GDP and BLS employment are highly questionable, as they are extremely "goosed".

            This chart shows how consumer sentiment never recovered from '01. Yet compared to past recessions, there is plenty more downside.

            Here is a chart on various aspects of compensation, showing how it has stagnated and fallen. Here's one that makes a "CPI lies" adjustment to significant effect.

            And of course who could forget growing revolving consumer debt and the negative savings rate.

            The consumer finance fundamentals have been recession-scale for half a decade now. What is about to change is that we are running to the end of the ability to keep the macroeconomy going by creating more debt. The folly of counting debt as money, wealth, and productivity (led by the example of the GDP) is about to become clear.

            The recession is already here; it's just about to get worse.

            Comment

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