From Jim Willy:
http://www.kitco.com/ind/willie/jan242008.html
On top of this, add somewhere between 50% (2004), 250% (2006), and 400% (2007) in equivalent dollar value credit default swaps - and you get a whole heaping of pain.
It is safe to say that losses will wind up running in the $5T to $10T range, perhaps as high as $15T.
Compare to the internet losses: total market capitalization lost between March 2000 to October 2002 was about $9T.
But the 'credit crunch' losses are to cash as opposed to market capitalization...
Note also this does NOT count losses due to falling house prices. That is likely to be in the $5T to $10T range.
As for the next bubble - it would need to generate at least the amount of money lost in the real estate/'credit crunch' bubble to operate correctly.
Food for thought.
http://www.kitco.com/ind/willie/jan242008.html
The total of all US$-based mortgage bonds is $10.4 trillion. A conservative estimate of the prime mortgages within this giant mass is $7 trillion. We all know it is more, so bear with my lowball for argument sake. The prime mortgage bond index measures an aggregate of prime rated bonds scattered across the beleaguered fifty states, varying over loan size from large to medium to small. The ‘AAA’ mortgage bond index has lost a whopping 30%, a fact that continuously eludes the big bankers and their legion of obsequious monitoring mavens. Simple math, within the grasp of a 9-year old kid, results in prime mortgage losses amount to at least $2.1 trillion.
The size of the subprime mortgages in the United States is estimated at $1.4 trillion. The ‘BBB’ mortgage bond index has lost 80% of its value. It too measures an aggregate of such mortgage bonds across the US, of various size loans. So subprime mortgage bonds have lost over $1.1 trillion.
Add the two numbers from subprime and prime together to reach a $3.2 trillion in their bond losses.
It is safe to say that losses will wind up running in the $5T to $10T range, perhaps as high as $15T.
Compare to the internet losses: total market capitalization lost between March 2000 to October 2002 was about $9T.
But the 'credit crunch' losses are to cash as opposed to market capitalization...
Note also this does NOT count losses due to falling house prices. That is likely to be in the $5T to $10T range.
As for the next bubble - it would need to generate at least the amount of money lost in the real estate/'credit crunch' bubble to operate correctly.
Food for thought.
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