Dec
20
Wall Street Titanic
December 20, 2007 |
The Titanic sank because the Captain did not see the iceberg and he was told the
ship was unsinkable. He and many others believed the builders and went down with the ship.
The Titanic disaster reminds me of the current situation in the subprime mortgage
debacle now going on.
When the first of the bad loans surfaced the “experts” and talking heads on TV were
all of the opinion that this was a small amount of money when considered in the overall
size of the market and would have no effect on the rest of the market. They did not remember
the “iceberg effect”. Only 10% of an iceberg appears above the water. What may appear
small is enough to tear a hole in a very large ship and sink it.
Now the subprime losses are leaking over into the prime market. And it is not stopping
there. Suddenly the multibillion dollar merger and acquisition (M&A) deals are being splashed
with very cold water. Some are being withdrawn and other being “reconsidered”.
There is a hole in the boat. It hasn’t sunk, but it is listing. The crew
of the Wall Street Titanic thought they had special equipment on board that would plug any
hole that might appear. It has all kinds of strange names – CMOs, CDOs, REMICs, MBSs, XYZs
and Gosh Knows Whats - called derivatives. These were guaranteed to fix any problem.
None of the crew, in fact none of the folks at the ports, knew how many derivatives
were on board. Those on shore in the brokers offices guessed anywhere from 200 to 800
billion might be on board all the ships at sea. Now they are not sure if these safety devices
will or can keep the ships from sinking. So far so good.
The fellers (brokers) back on shore are having a problem selling or giving the
derivatives away. They are not sure who owns what even though there is a paper trail. If
only a few of the dominos fall it could sink many ships. When the LTCM (Long Term Capital
Management) went under there was much less money at stake and it almost scuttled everyone,
but that was another type of deal. This ship is floundering and is still floating
The smart sailors have been trying to sell their derivatives, but it seems there are
few, if any, buyers. One buyer, Big Ben, has taken some of the paper at face value
as he thinks it might be worth it in the long run. Other potential buyers (central banks) know he
is creating the money to buy out of thin air. They might do the same thing.
Like the iceberg that only shows a tiny portion of what is truly there those on shore
are nervously waiting to find out how much damage has been done and how big that
“berg” really is.
Ask your governor how many bridges he is willing to cross?
Al Thomas’ best selling book, “If It Doesn’t Go Up, Don’t Buy It!” has helped thousands of people make money and keep their profits with his simple 2-step method. Read the first chapter and receive his market letter at http://www.mutualfundmagic.com and discover why he’s the man that Wall Street does not want you to know. Copyright 2007 All rights reserved
Tags: 2007, analysis, invest, investment, mortgage, mutual funds, stock market, strategy, trading
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