|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Mortgage lending crisis sparks Wall Street plunge
By Patrick Martin
27 July 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
A three-day sell-off on Wall Street has slashed nearly 540
points from the Dow-Jones Industrial Average and wiped out hundreds
of billions in stock market value. The sharp decline, following
so closely the breaking of the 14,000 mark by the Dow last week,
underscores the increasing instability of the US and world financial
system.
The mood during Thursday's trading was widely described as
one of panic and fear, as stock traders
reacted to a torrent of bad economic news: sharp declines in the
sales of new and existing homes, a further spike in oil prices,
a poor showing for US durable goods orders, and financial difficulties
for two high-profile corporate takeovers.
The Dow-Jones was down nearly 450 points by mid-afternoon Thursday,
only to recover somewhat in the final hours of trading. Overall,
declining stock issues led advancing ones by a 14 to 1 margin,
and the trading was extremely heavy, with a record volume on the
New York Stock Exchange of 2.78 billion shares.
Thursday's slide in New York was felt around the world, with
European markets plunging during their final hours of trading
Thursday as a result of the downdraft on Wall Street. The London
Stock Exchange suffered its biggest loss in four years, with the
FTSE 100 index falling 3.15 percent, and there were similar declines
in Germany and France.
Triggering the initial selloff Tuesday, the top US mortgage
lender, California-based Countrywide, announced it was compelled
to take a write-off for losses due to late payments or defaults
by borrowers. The company said that divorce and the loss of a
job were the two leading reasons for borrowers failing to make
payments, and that more borrowers with good credit were falling
behind on their home equity loans, not just those with lower incomes
and poorer credit who have taken out so-called subprime mortgages.
The proportion of good-credit customers at least 30 days delinquent
was 1.8 percent a year ago, and has nearly tripled to 4.6 percent
now.
In a conference call with analysts, Angelo Mozilo, Countrywide's
chairman and chief executive, said home prices were falling almost
like never before, with the exception of the Great Depression.
Then came a report Wednesday by the National Association of
Realtors that sales of existing homes fell by 3.8 percent in June
to the slowest pace in more than four years. The following day,
the Commerce Department reported that sales of new homes fell
6.6 percent in June, three times the drop expected and the largest
in percentage terms since January.
The median sale price of a new home fell to $237,900still
nearly five times the annual income of the median family, but
down 2.2 percent from a year ago. New home sales rose slightly
in the South, but plunged 27.1 percent in the Northeast, 22.5
percent in the West and 17.1 percent in the Midwest. Sales of
existing homes fell in all four regions, by amounts ranging from
1.7 percent to 7.3 percent.
There were other numbers contributing to the negative mood
in the markets. The Commerce Department reported a 1.4 percent
increase in durable goods orders, but if a huge one-time order
for new aircraft is discounted, there was actually a drop in orders.
Oil prices reached as high as $77 a barrel Thursday before dropping,
and the US dollar fell by 1 percent against the yen, a large drop
for a single day's trading. But it was the quantitative and qualitative
evidence of a collapse in the housing market that did the most
damage.
Pulte Homes, of Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, the second largest
US home builder, reported a second quarter loss of $507 million,
as opposed to a profit of $243 million last year, including a
special charge for plummeting land values.
D.R. Horton Inc., the largest builder, reported a similar swing,
from a $293 million profit in the second quarter last year to
a loss of $824 million this year, including substantial write-offs
for the declining value of houses and land. During a conference
call with investors and financial reporters, Horton CEO Donald
Tomnitz said that the crisis in subprime mortgage lending was
having a direct impact on his company. In some of our instances
across the country we are trying to qualify the same buyer two
and three times based upon the changing conditions in the mortgage
industry, he said. Were not predicting when
theres going to be a recovery because we dont see
one on the horizon.
In the largest and most expensive housing market, California,
foreclosures rocketed a staggering 799 percent for the three months
ended June 30, compared to the same period a year ago. Some 17,408
homes were foreclosed during the quarter. Default notices were
up 158 percent statewide during the same period.
Stock investors and the financial press have paid increasing
attention to the crisis in subprime lending, because the exploitation
of poor and vulnerable borrowers has become one of the most lucrative
enterprises for mortgage originators and the various financial
middlemen, from mortgage bankers to hedge funds, who collect their
slice of profit from this high interest debt.
More than $1.2 trillion in subprime mortgages were originated
in 2005 and 2006, the bulk of them sold to big mortgage brokers
and repackaged as complex financial instruments bought and sold
by hedge funds, private equity firms and other Wall Street high
rollers, in a process known as securitization. The
two largest credit rating agencies, Moodys and Standard
& Poor, have only recently begun to review and downgrade these
securities, known as collateralized debt obligations or CDOs,
to reflect the increasing number of defaults in mortgage payments.
The total amount of securitized subprime mortgages now tops
$1.8 trillion, according to recent estimates by the financial
press. Leading Wall Street figures have sought to stanch the growing
concern that CDOs are a financial house of cards that will come
crashing down as mortgage borrowers default. Federal Reserve Chairman
Ben Bernanke told Congress last week that losses for big lenders
on subprime mortgages could be as high as $50 to $100 billion,
but he claimed that the wider impact would be limited.
Some analysts, however, have pointed to far-reaching dangers
in the subprime meltdown. William Gross of Pimco Bonds warned
July 24, in his monthly commentary, of a sudden liquidity
crisis in the high-yield debt markets. The chain-reaction
effect would be to undermine the availability of easy credit to
finance leveraged buyouts, stock buybacks and mergers and acquisitions,
the main forces driving up the price of stocks. He concluded,
No longer will stocks be supported so effortlessly by the
double-barreled impact of LBOs and company buybacks.
The practical effect of this process was visible already on
Wednesday, as DaimlerChrysler was compelled to postpone the financing
for the sell-off of its Chrysler division to the private equity
firm Cerberus, which encountered difficulties in obtaining bank
loans. The same day, bankers for another private equity giant,
Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, withdrew $10 billion in loans meant to
finance the buyout of Alliance Boots, a British drugstore chain.
All told, some 20 such debt offerings have been postponed or revised
because of growing pressure in the credit markets, including a
plan by General Motors to sell its Allison Transmission unit to
the Carlyle Group, another huge private equity firm.
A front page article in the Washington Post Thursday
noted the common thread among events like the collapse of share
prices for the Internet travel company Expedia, the mortgage lending
crisis, and plunging value of shares in Blackstone, the private
equity firm that went public last month.
At the root of those seemingly unrelated events is a
single new reality, one that could portend trouble for the broader
US economy: The era of cheap money appears to be ending,
the newspaper observed. For years, easy credit had fueled a seemingly
effortless rise in financial markets, but now, the investors
who a few months ago were willing to lend money to Wall Street
at low interest rates, on loose terms, are balking as they worry
about having to pay the price for lax lending standards.
The trouble started in one of the shakiest sectors of
finance, home mortgages for people with bad credit, but it is
spreading. As easy credit dries up, some huge corporate deals
are being delayed and could unravel. The question now is how far
will the pain spread, and how many people will get hurt as it
does.
See Also:
Doha Round trade talks collapse
amid recriminations
[26 June 2007]
The Blackstone IPO: $4 billion
payday for private equity bosses
[25 June 2007]
Bear Stearns funds collapse
hits subprime securities market
[21 June 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |