Great entertainment value. Jim Cramer loses it. http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthread.php?t=1726
8/5/2007 11:30:50 PM
"Oh no, my millionaire buddies are losing some money. Won't the government help them out???"
8/5/2007 11:32:54 PM
That video is funny--but it's also wrong on so many levels.
8/5/2007 11:40:13 PM
By the way, for the uninitiated, if you're wondering what had Cramer so worked up, some of the mortgage (and hence credit) companies are dying because they made too many bad loans to regular people that could not afford them, and a lot of hedge funds and banks and investment firms bought those companies' mortgage-backed securities and are paying the price. Cramer was reacting to a comment from Bear Stearns' CFO where he said "this is the worst market in the fixed income market he's seen in his 22 years". Bear Stearns last month stated they lost $3.2 billion in investors' money in two hedge funds with Alt-A mortgages, one level above subprime. They're now in lawsuits with investors such as Merrill Lynch. Cramer is asking for the Fed to do what they did with Long Term Capital Management in 1998 and just pay off everyone in major financial difficulty so there's no financial disruption.New York Times:
8/6/2007 12:28:58 AM
It sounds to me like the trading system has not frozen up. Government standard mortgages are trading freely, if hesitant. If it is only the risky mortgages that are having trouble finding buyers, and even then just at a 1% premium, then I don't see an addressable failure here: liquiditiy is forthcoming, just at slightly unfavorable rates. I think the fed should hold pat, not changing rates. That is, unless it appears the crunch is altering expectations in other markets, at which point they have no choice but to start inflating (even if they only cut a percent or two).
8/6/2007 8:38:02 AM
8/6/2007 8:51:36 AM
What really frustrates me, and I really do hate to admit this because I'm not a huge Cramer fan, is that he's right. There's a serious information asymmetry between the action of the government as well as the rating agencies, and the reality of the market. How do these bonds get into hedge funds that are supposed to be low-risk? Who's doing the derivative math that makes these actions in the secondary market look like AAA when they're barely above junk? And why isn't there greater action from those in power to break down this information asymmetry that's made a LOT of money evaporate to nothing?
8/7/2007 2:38:57 AM
oh noes rich people loosing money!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
8/7/2007 8:08:47 AM
ok..... one thing that I'm still confused about the subprime crash is why these mortgage companies were giving loans to these people in the first place? The whole point of giving somebody a loan is calculating the cost/benefit and only giving them the loan if the expected payoff is high enough. With subprime borrowers, I know they jack the interest rates up (or do interest only, or 2/1 ARMs, whatever) to make sure they get an influx of cash at some point, but didn't these companies know that the borrowers would default? Wouldn't a high risk of default seriously skew the expected return on the loan? Were the lenders hoping all along that a bigger company or the government would bail them out when their shitty borrowers couldn't pay them back?
8/7/2007 8:27:39 AM
8/7/2007 9:37:58 AM
^^ Here's an explanation from MoneyWeek:http://www.moneyweek.com/file/31699/subprime-mortgage-collapse-why-bear-stearns-is-just-the-start.html
8/7/2007 9:47:08 AM
I think one of the reason why these loans were issued was because people were nearly guaranteed to make money during the most torrent parts of the housing boom. Thus, even with an interest only loan, you were making money on your property. Just buy and flip and boom, you had cash.This sort of risk was rather stupid of course given that everyone knew the housing market was going to slow down or collapse sooner or later. C'est la vie.
8/7/2007 9:52:27 AM
8/7/2007 9:58:06 AM
A 1% interest rate jump can work wonders. These investors are trying to get a higher return than 5%, which they can get for no effort. They expected defaults to be higher, but thanks to the majority that did not default, the higher interest payments from the majority were supposed to compensate for the losses among the minority. What went wrong, however, was that the minority turned out to be larger than anyone imagined and the losses on each individual were higher than expected (the banks could not get out of the houses what the buyers put into them). They expected only to lose the costs of re-selling the property, not sell them at a loss.
8/7/2007 10:14:40 AM
8/7/2007 10:19:13 AM
The humorous part is that the same shit happens every real estate bust. People just convince themselves that "oh no, we have this new financial instrument XXXX, so it can't happen again!!!"
8/7/2007 9:59:04 PM
And you know what's the best thing if you have money in a hedge fund?If they go belly up, you probably won't get your investment back because it'll be liquidated in the Cayman Islands, where 3 out of every 4 hedge funds are set up.http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aX9aWxCf9y3o&refer=home
8/8/2007 1:22:26 PM