Stock Watch
Bear Stearns: Tip of the Iceberg
We expect more bank meltdowns as the subprime mortgage mess continues to play out.
By Andrew Tanzer, Senior Associate Editor, Kiplinger's Personal Finance
March 14, 2008
JP Morgan's bailout for Bear Stearns became more permanent late in the day March 16, when the bank announced it was buying the ailing brokerage for $2 a share. The government quickly approved the deal to avert Bear's bankruptcy and prevent panic overseas before financial markets opened in Asia.
Bear Stearns' stock (symbol BSC) has shed 80% of its value since last summer, when the credit markets erupted.
We wish we could say that this will be an isolated case of investment-bank insolvency. True, Bear Stearns dined out on subprime mortgage-backed securities, the epicenter of the financial earthquake, and so was particularly vulnerable to the collapse of this exotic, Wall Street-created market. But we expect more bank insolvencies and severe distress in the banking system as the housing bubble deflates.
The problem begins on the asset side of the balance sheet with crumbling housing prices. Housing prices have fallen more than 10% since they peaked in mid-2006, erasing about $2.5 trillion of household wealth, says Desmond Lachman of American Enterprise Institute. He notes that the rate of decline accelerated in the fourth quarter of 2007 to an annualized rate of 20% and projects that prices will fall another 10% to 15% this year.
House prices are still hugely overvalued relative to household incomes, Lachman says. New homebuilding is in a free fall, inventories of unsold homes and home-vacancy rates remain at record highs and foreclosures are soaring. It's a nasty stew. So regardless of the Fed's interest-rate cuts and the government's fiscal stimulus, housing prices appear to be headed lower.
Now let's look on the liability and equity side of the balance sheet. A few months ago Jan Hatzius, economist at Goldman Sachs, estimated that bank losses from mortgage securities would reach $400 billion, which could precipitate a $2 trillion contraction in bank lending in the economy. Banks, after all, are heavily leveraged businesses.
Hatzius recently raised his estimate of bank losses on mortgages to $500 billion. This doesn't include growing losses on leveraged loans, high-yield securities, construction companies and other markets increasingly in distress. The losses could induce a $3 trillion contraction in credit, which would clearly harm the economy.
But that raises another problem for the banks and the housing market: They're stuck in a vicious cycle, or "adverse feedback loop," as economists like to call it. As home prices fall and losses mount on mortgage securities, the banks boost write-offs, which reduces their equity and lending ability. So they tighten lending standards and shrink their loan books -- de-leveraging -- which helps to force down housing prices.
Finally, we get to the complex derivatives, such as collateralized debt obligations, that banks hold on or off balance sheets. Bob Rodriguez of FPA Capital fund notes in his shareholder letter that vastly more debt has been created outside the banking system this decade, such as through mortgage securitizations, than through the banks.
Nominally banks are one of the most tightly regulated industries, with strict rules for capital ratios. Yet banks have strangely been permitted to value structured financial instruments in seemingly arbitrary ways.
The banks say they "mark to model" when they value these instruments for which there often is no liquid market. Rodriguez writes: "I refer to 'marking to model' as 'Imaginary Accounting.' You imagine a price and then you account for it at that price. Many of these securities values are predicated on valuation models that were created by management. This is like having the fox guard the hen house."
We don't know how or when the unraveling of the banking system will end. Until it does, the stock market will be held captive (the Dow Jones industrial average fell almost 200 points on March 14).
The recapitalization will unfortunately require more capital injections from our overseas friends in the Persian Gulf, China and elsewhere. And it's hard to imagine a solution without heavy U.S. government intervention. John Makin, an economist at American Enterprise Institute, thinks the choice will be "to monetize or nationalize" -- that is, to inflate the economy or take over the banking system. Neither choice sounds too appetizing.


Reader Comments (15)
Posted by: HR at 03/14/2008 10:55:45 PM
FDR -- said nothing to fear but fear itself ... it seems this is a self-fulfilling prophesy for the banking industry.
Posted by: david albert at 03/15/2008 11:38:51 AM
The current mortgage banking and real estate mess has been largely caused by two factors: 1)overly aggressive and greedy lenders who knowingly rode the extreme high end of the risk curve; and 2)borrowers who were either naiive, greedy(as with the flippers) and knew, or should have known, the high risk involved. Both parties deserve the negative returns that can accompany high risk and deserve to be held fully accountable without any bail out by more sensible and responsible taxpayers. The government will only make things worse and should stay out of this matter. The best solution is to leave the risk-takers with their risk and let the free market system eventually determine a point of market efficiency.
Posted by: Bill at 03/15/2008 12:18:19 PM
The foreign companies(national governments) are buying the United States @ less than wholesale prices, if it doesn't stop or slow soon, there is no end and the US will no longer exist..
Posted by: Eric at 03/15/2008 04:21:16 PM
Bill...So what if a foreign X buys assets in the US? US money has done that for YEARS, and now when these other entities have cash, it's a big deal? C'mon man...David's right---these folks were greedy, took a chance, and now need to take their medicine. Let the market normalize itself---it always does. I would also point out that foreign $ in our companies is a great thing---it provides the cross-linking of ownership that leads to transparency, shared goals and strategies. Globalization is here to stay, and this is yet another facet of our growing inter-connectedness....Do you realize that about 4M workers in the US are employed by European firms?---no one freaks out about that...
Posted by: Lily at 03/16/2008 03:25:56 AM
How much longer do you believe that just printing more money is going to be a solution for the US's irresponsible spending habits?
Posted by: Rick Albrecht at 03/16/2008 09:41:32 PM
It would be great if the Feds would reign in the +300% rate on fast loan establishments -- too bad the free money comes without stipulations. My advice, buy stock in whatever company the Treasury Dept is using to print the money.
Posted by: Kim Harlow at 03/17/2008 12:12:03 PM
The entire debacle is hubris on the part of the government; naivete on the part of the people and capitalism gone amok. As for globalization and transparency, try reading The Great Illusion -- 1910 by Norman Angell -- or just go to Gretchen Morgenson, NYT; Sunday March 16, 2008. And remember while you read that the people responsible for this chaos are walking away with millions of dollars, Euros and yen...
Posted by: thrno at 03/17/2008 01:37:10 PM
(Hedge fund manager and columnist) Bill Fleckenstein was right about everything. He has been predicting this ..The only thing he could not know is the extent of govt intervention...
Posted by: KB at 03/17/2008 05:01:29 PM
So if I understand correctly...a non-governmental entity (The Fed) is going to use our money (tax-paying citizens) to bailout the vultures that set the snare for unsuspecting homebuyers in the first place. Meanwhile our government will not set a payment moratorium or provide assistance to sub-prime mortgage holders...using their tax-money. What's wrong with this picture? KB
Posted by: ben franklin at 03/17/2008 05:20:08 PM
I do business all over the Middle East. If anyone is thinking that the SWFs (Sovereign Wealth Funds) are going to add capital to our financial system, I have bad news for you. They are not that stupid. They know that management or investment banking representations can not be trusted. This was told to my face only last week. Sorry folks but we are on our own on this. We made the mess and it is up to us to figure out how to clean it up...Shareholders must be made to pay the price. If shareholder representatives are asleep at the wheel or the regulatory apparatus is asleep at the wheel - they must all pay the price..We have nothing to worry about from Islamic terrorists. We have a lot to worry about from the white guys with MBAs and law degrees...
Posted by: Lee at 03/17/2008 07:48:42 PM
I guess Ron Paul doesn't look so "crazy" now.
Posted by: H Roghers at 03/17/2008 10:55:25 PM
This all goes back to corporate greed! Millions were earned off poor peoples's backs who in all reality couldnt' afford to buy a home, but were convinced that they could. Creditcards are offered with teaser rates and then raised the same way. We are bombarded with these offers every day, but when we default on those loans the blanket is pulled out from under us and there is no possible path for recovery...
Posted by: BigAl at 03/17/2008 11:58:31 PM
The collusion cycle between lenders, real estate brokers and appraisers creates an upward spiral of made-to-order real estate valuations, then the paper gets sold before the ink is dry, and then repackaged as "collateral" and stapled to some other high risk moneymaking fantasy...The People have to pay again for the privilege of refueling The System. Meanwhile, our real assets are being transferred overseas where more exploitable labor is readily available, and The People are supposed to fund these white collar games on a service sector paycheck. Reality check, please!
Posted by: be at 03/18/2008 03:41:36 PM
...and brought to you by the guys who think privatizing Social Security is the way to go...It's all a house of cards!
Posted by: Brian in Mass at 03/24/2008 05:31:10 PM
These bubble bursting banking styles seem fine on the way up and they're all for free enterprise, but are oddly lined up at the discount window to get the new money the Fed prints while our hard earned ones get inflated. That level of inconsistency is insulting and has created an economy no one really understands enough to get it to work right again.