Banks have failed while others were taken over for peanuts. What that means is that many are out of work and soon many more will be. Of those who survived, the mergers are likely going to be followed by massive rounds of layoffs. People out of work will result in more foreclosures, and more losses. To say nothing about reduced spending. Remember, 2/3's of our economy is based on consumer spending. And much of that spending is on credit. Up to half of it comes during the holiday season. A season that is now upon us.
If the holiday spending is much reduced, and it will be significantly reduced, many retailers will go under. That too won't happen for another six to nine months. Apart from hitting pocket books, it will hit commercial real-estate. Other highly-leveraged businesses will fail soon too. Many in California got a bit of extra "help" here from the delayed budget. That budget has also pushed some cities over the brink. Vallejo went bankrupt, Oakland is considering 120 layoffs, San Francisco has problems.
Even in the mortgage arena there is more to come. The majority of the so-called option-ARMs have yet to reset. Sixty percent of these ultra-toxic loans are in California. Many have been negatively amortized for their entire life-span. So not only will people now have to pay the full price, which they were never able to, their loan balance is now higher than it was before they started.
Unfortunately, that is not the only problem. A key problem is that the recession will be world-wide. What that means is that exports will get hit and exports are -for now-the only bright spot left.
It has been said that we are a long ways from Great Depression II. As of today, there is no doubt. However, experts have been surprised before about how quickly and how profoundly things can unravel. The wizards from the Treasury, the Fed, and the Administration have all gone on record months before the current crisis, stating how solid the economy was, and how resilient the markets were.
I think it is time to buy some gold.
No comments:
Post a Comment