by MrBill » Fri 01 Feb 2008, 05:57:32
aflurry wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'y')ou are forgetting also,
I rarely forget anything, but I try to limit my posts to 10.000 words instead of 10.000 pages! ; - )
Look I hate falling back on well-worn hackney phrases, but you can use a sharp knife to slice vegetable or stab your spouse! Do we ban sharp knives just because they can be misused?
House prices reflect total demand plus some multiple of earnings. Ironically, as the central bank brought inflation under control, interest rate fell and therefore the cost of financing also dropped.
Ironically, instead of paying $500 per month for their mortgage as opposed to $1000 before, homeowners (collectively) decided that they could now not only afford the $1000 as before, but because houses were such a good bet that they could stretch to $1500.
I really do not undertand how you blame the banks for this because it is the consumer wanting to pay more for the house, and more each month, while the government is officially encouraging them to do exactly that by insuring home loans and giving interest payment tax deductions!
I do not know if you have ever personally sat down with a financial planner. But usually they go through a list of what you own, what you owe, your income and your investment horizon. The general rule of thumb is that you can spend X amount of your net income on a mortgage. It is pretty standard. If someone 'has to' pay more then they really are putting themselves at risk.
I will tell you a little story. I met a waiter the other day while having drinks with a banker friend of mine from London. We were talking about property prices and how they simply do not reflect reality anymore. So anyway, this waiter tells me about his Cypriot brother who is married to a Russian lady. They inherited some land from their family, but they then sold it to buy a new Porshce Cayenne and a new Mercedes. They now rent a house, but own no home. What should I do as a banker? Water board the guy? Slap him silly until he realizes how stupid he is? Shoot his wife?
The saddest thing is that this story is not even unique. It is being played out on a large scale here in Cyprus everyday. A generation ago Limassol was a small town and its residents rode around on donkies. Three or four years ago they were driving in pick-ups held together with duct tape. Today everyone either has a new SLK 200 convertible or some sort of luxury SUV. It is getting embarassing to drive around in my used Honda Civic. No one can take me seriously. But the difference is I have money in the bank and they are either living off credit and/or sold off their family land to project that illusion of wealth. In another 5-7 years they won't have FCK all other than a used car! Ironically, then they will probably blame the foreigners for coming to Cyprus and stealing their land!!
Well, in any case, you cannot blame securitization for lowering the cost of capital and making the system more efficient. But if it makes you feel any better there are some discussions - preliminary - that would for example make banks issue bonds and hold other bank's bonds as a part of their capital adequacy ratios (CAD). The idea being that solid banks could issue debt cheaper, and that banks would not want to hold the bonds of shakey of unstable banks due to the default risk.
But really this is not the answer. Theoretically, I can already sell the shares of an unstable bank or even short their stock, and cheap banks make good take-over targets by their better capitalized and stronger rivals. The answer to complexity is not another layer of complexity! You can bet that banks are no longer making NINJA loans, and you can bet that insurance companies are no longer blindly buying CDOs with no idea what assets are backing those securities. Fingers burned. Problem solved! ; - )
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.