by Heineken » Wed 19 Sep 2007, 14:13:12
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Byron100', 'H')eineken wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he Fed is not trying to prop up the stock market, it is trying to prop up housing. The stock market is a secondary concern.
The biggest single threat to TPTB in the US right now is falling housing prices, especially right before a presidential election. TPTB will do anything it can to stop that.
I agree that the Fed made the wrong move. The US needs to take its lumps. The longer it puts that off, the worse the final "settling up" will be.
Not to be picking on you here, but why is it so important to "save" housing? Everyone knows prices are way, way out of line and need to come down 30-50% in most areas of the county to come into equilibrium with income levels. So what's the point in even trying to keep housing at such extreme price levels?? Sure, this would mean a tidal wave of foreclosures, but most of these people who entrapped themselves in toxic "time bomb" mortgages, being foreclosed upon is a blessing, not a curse. And instead of a "homedebtor" bailout, they should just implement a one-time "foreclosure amnesty" such that former homeowners with a foreclosure under their belt (NOT investors, resident homeowners only) would not have this on their credit history. This way they can go on about their lives, get an apartment, rental house, etc, and not really be worse off than before. It'd be the banks, mortgage companies and the like that would have to eat it, and who's gonna feel sorry for them??
Anyhow, this 50 bp cut isn't going to do sh*t for housing anyway (long-term rates are rising as I type)...I think BB did it just to keep the party going as long as possible...everyone wants to be loved, right?
This cut is likely to be followed by more cuts, Byron, so it shouldn't be viewed in isolation.
Falling housing prices could collapse the whole economy. It isn't just the banks and mortgage companies that are involved, it's everything from furniture outfits to the companies that sell pizzas for people to eat while lolling around on their cheesy furniture. It's plumbing fixtures, lumber, construction companies and their workers, dog-walking outfits, you name it. Also, when home prices are falling, ALL houses tend to be affected, not just those of lower-income homeowners who should never have been approved for mortgages.
We're talking jobs jobs jobs and votes votes votes. We're talking the whole goddamned ugly food chain.
The Fed will cut to zero if that's what it takes. I've said all along that it would choose rampant inflation over falling housing prices. That's the essential choice here.
They're used to printing money and they're addicted to it. They've gone way past the line, and there's no turning back now. What's the difference between the current $10 trillion debt and a $20 trillion debt? None, since neither can ever be repaid.
Sooner or later it all collapses, but naturally they aim for later.