• RSS Feed
  • Subscriber Login
  • Weiss Ratings
Money and Markets
Skip to content
  • Home
  • Experts
    • Martin D. Weiss, Ph.D.
    • Jack Crooks
    • John Ross Crooks, III
    • Tom Essaye
    • Mike Larson
    • Nilus Mattive
    • Ron Rowland
    • Guest Contributors ►
      • Monty Agarwal
      • Sean Brodrick
      • Amber Dakar
      • Larry Edelson
      • Kevin Kerr
      • Don Lucek
      • Rudy Martin
      • Tony Sagami
      • Peter Schiff
      • Claus Vogt
  • Blog
    • Martin D. Weiss’ Blog
    • Jack Crooks’ Blog
    • Mike Larson’s Blog
    • Nilus Mattive’s Blog
  • Resources
    • Personal Finance Corner ►
      • Hot Tips
      • Investments
      • Money & Banking
      • Consumer Loans
      • College Savings
      • Retirement
      • Credit & Debt
      • Taxes
      • Insurance
      • Life & Home
      • Investment Portfolios
    • Links
  • Services
    • Premium Membership Services  ►
      • Weiss Inner Circle
      • Money and Markets Inner Circle
      • The Weiss Elite
    • Trading Services ►
      • Global Forex Alert
      • International ETF Trader
      • LEAPS Options Alert
      • Million-Dollar Contrarian Portfolio
      • Safe Money’s Crisis Trader
      • Weiss Million-Dollar Ratings Portfolio
      • World Currency Trader
    • Investment Newsletters ►
      • Income Superstars
      • Safe Money
    • Books ►
      • The Ultimate Depression Survival Guide
      • Investing Without Fear
      • The Standard & Poor’s Guide for the New Investor
      • The Ultimate Safe Money Guide
    • Public Service
  • Media and Events
    • Press Releases
    • Money and Markets in the News
    • Upcoming Media
    • Media Archive ►
      • 2011 Media Archive
      • 2010 Media Archive
      • 2009 Media Archive
      • 2008 Media Archive
      • 2007 Media Archive
  • Issues
    • 2011 Issues
    • 2010 Archives
    • 2009 Archives
    • 2008 Archives
    • 2007 Archives
    • 2006 Archives
    • 2005 Archives
    • 2004 Archives
    • 2003 Archives
    • Special Reports
  • Videos
  • Store
  • Contact Us
    • Interview a Money and Markets Analyst
    • Reader’s Comments – Testimonials

Issues

Share Email Print

My Take on the Latest Fed Rate Cut

Mike Larson | Friday, February 1, 2008 at 7:30 am

Mike Larson

The Federal Reserve stepped up this week and gave Wall Street what it wanted — another half-percentage point cut in interest rates. That brings the federal funds rate down to 3%, the lowest level since the middle of 2005.

Today I want to take a closer look at the Fed’s action, to find out what it will — and won’t — do. Let’s start with …

How the Fed Rate Cuts
Will Impact Consumers

First, two minor positives …

Some mortgage holders will not see as large an increase in the rates and payments on their adjustable rate mortgages. That’s because funds rate reductions are now lowering the London Interbank Offered Rate, or LIBOR, that many such mortgages are tied to.

Rates on home equity lines of credit will come down as well. That’s because they’re tied to the prime rate, which essentially mirrors changes in the Fed funds rate.

Unfortunately, the rate cut also comes with a long list of major negatives …

For one thing, savers will get hit again. Rates on Certificates of Deposit and money market accounts will likely fall in the wake of the latest cut.

For another, the cuts will NOT help falling home prices. Rate resets aren’t the only threat to mortgage borrowers and loan performance right now. Falling home prices are a much bigger deal.

The more home prices fall, the further underwater borrowers become, and the more incentive borrowers have to just give up and walk away from their loans.

S&P/Case Shiller Shows House Prices Falling Further and Further!

The latest S&P/Case-Shiller report showed prices falling 7.7% from a year ago in November.

That’s the worst drop on record!

Overall, prices were down in 17 of the 20 metropolitan areas the firm tracks. And even cities that were reporting nice year-over-year gains are starting to fade.

The National Association of Realtors’ figures show the same general trend — the median price of an existing home fell 6% in December vs. the same month a year earlier.

What about new homes? More bad news. The National Association of Realtors’ figures show prices fell 10.9%, the sharpest decline in any month since 1970.

So, as you can see, many consumers are likely to remain strapped despite lower interest rates. And at the same time …

The Fed Rate Cut Won’t Magically Solve
The Financial Industry’s Problems Either

The fashionable thinking on Wall Street is that these Fed cuts will restore bank profitability and allow major institutions to put the financial crisis behind them.

I’ll grant that these cuts will help firms pick up some extra interest income. That’s because long-term interest rates will move higher relative to short-term rates.

But unlike past financial crises, and their Fed-fueled recoveries, we’re dealing with a different animal here. It’s not just one category of loans — like, say, commercial real estate — causing all the problems. Nor is this just an isolated hedge fund blow up like we had in 1998 with Long-Term Capital Management.

Instead, we’re seeing delinquencies rise in many categories of loans:

Arrow Mortgage defaults and foreclosures have been soaring for a while. In fact, foreclosure filings surged 97% year-over-year in December.

Arrow The delinquency rate on fixed-term home equity loans is the highest since late 2005.

Arrow The delinquency rate on revolving home equity lines of credit is the highest since late 1997.

Arrow The delinquency rate on prime credit auto loans is higher than it was in 2001, when the economy was last in recession.

Plus, write-downs are coming from everywhere and the value of complex debt securities that banks are holding on their books is slumping fast.

Standard & Poor’s just put out a report suggesting losses from subprime-related mortgage securities could top $265 billion — with a “B” — at regional banks, credit unions and other financial firms.

S&P also either cut ratings or put its ratings on review for a whopping $534 billion worth of mortgage bonds and so-called collateralized debt obligations (CDOs).

IMPORTANT: That’s roughly half of ALL the subprime bonds S&P rated in 2006 and early 2007!

Many banks and brokers are also stuck holding tens of billions of dollars of leveraged loans — financing used to fuel the recent corporate takeover boom. Those loans are also losing value.

Bloomberg recently reported that banks are stuck with a $230 billion pile of high-yield, high-risk debt. That includes $160 billion of leveraged loans and $70 billion of junk bonds.

Meanwhile, a basket of loans that S&P monitors recently traded down to about 91 cents on the dollar. If this continues, we’re going to see yet ANOTHER batch of write-downs among the major financial companies.

If That’s Not Bad Enough,
The Bond Insurance Debacle
Is Getting Even WORSE!

Bond insurers are firms that take on credit risk tied to municipal bonds and complex debt securities. If too many bonds default, they have to pay out big bucks to the companies that bought insurance from them.

Now, many of the more complicated securities they’ve backed in recent years are blowing up. That means future loss estimates are rising higher and higher.

Moreover, the bond insurers are seeing their own portfolios lose value.

MBIA, the world’s biggest bond insurer, just said it lost $2.3 billion in the fourth quarter.

That’s a GIGANTIC $18.61 per share — the biggest ever quarterly hit!

A key reason: It took $3.4 billion in losses related to markdowns on residential and commercial mortgages and CDOs.

Fitch Ratings already downgraded two bond insurers ...
Fitch Ratings has already downgraded two bond insurers …

Fitch Ratings is already starting to downgrade the bond insurers. It just cut Financial Guaranty Insurance Co., or FGIC, to AA from AAA, and it recently cut its rating on another company, Ambac Financial, to AA from AAA.

The larger credit ratings agencies, S&P and Moody’s, could follow suit. And that could result in billions MORE in write downs for financial firms.

In fact, Oppenheimer & Co. said bond insurer downgrades could force banks to take $70 billion in fresh write-downs.

And Barclays Capital said banks could be forced to go hat in hand — again — to investors in order to raise ANOTHER $143 billion in capital to shore up their balance sheets.

So, Despite the Rate Cuts, I Continue to
Suggest Staying Away from Most Financials

Right now, you have a choice:

Drink the “All our problems are going away! Yippee!” Kool-Aid and buy everything in sight.

OR …

Think about the magnitude of the problems we’re facing and ask yourself whether you really believe they can all be solved by Ben Bernanke’s magic interest rate wand.

By now, you know which side of this debate I come down on!

I think the process by which we purge all the excesses of the credit boom will take a long time to play out. And that means most financials are still not worth touching.

Until next time,

Mike



About Money and Markets

For more information and archived issues, visit http://www.moneyandmarkets.com

Money and Markets (MaM) is published by Weiss Research, Inc. and written by Martin D. Weiss along with Sean Brodrick, Larry Edelson, Michael Larson, Nilus Mattive, Tony Sagami, and Jack Crooks. To avoid conflicts of interest, Weiss Research and its staff do not hold positions in companies recommended in MaM, nor do we accept any compensation for such recommendations. The comments, graphs, forecasts, and indices published in MaM are based upon data whose accuracy is deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Performance returns cited are derived from our best estimates but must be considered hypothetical in as much as we do not track the actual prices investors pay or receive. Regular contributors and staff include John Burke, Amber Dakar, Adam Shafer, Andrea Baumwald, Kristen Adams, Maryellen Murphy, Red Morgan, Jennifer Newman-Amos, Julie Trudeau, and Dinesh Kalera.

Attention editors and publishers! Money and Markets issues can be republished. Republished issues MUST include attribution of the author(s) and the following short paragraph:

This investment news is brought to you by Money and Markets. Money and Markets is a free daily investment newsletter from Martin D. Weiss and Weiss Research analysts offering the latest investing news and financial insights for the stock market, including tips and advice on investing in gold, energy and oil. Dr. Weiss is a leader in the fields of investing, interest rates, financial safety and economic forecasting. To view archives or subscribe, visit http://www.moneyandmarkets.com.

From time to time, Money and Markets may have information from select third-party advertisers known as “external sponsorships.” We cannot guarantee the accuracy of these ads. In addition, these ads do not necessarily express the viewpoints of Money and Markets or its editors. For more information, see our terms and conditions.

© 2008 by Weiss Research, Inc. All rights reserved.

15430 Endeavour Drive, Jupiter, FL 33478

Share Email
Tweet

Previous post: One Heck of a Buying Opportunity!

Next post: Bernanke Declares War on the Dollar!

  • Sign Up FREE

    To receive your Money and Markets FREE investment newsletter subscription, type in your e-mail address. We respect your privacy

  • Advertising

  • Take advantage of our strong track record for safety to guard your wealth in these trying times with our free daily updates delivered to your inbox every morning.
  • Advertising

  • Market Update

    Click an index for a graph of its recent activity:

    U.S.

    Thu 2/09/12, 3:35pm
    Index Last Change
    DOW
    NASDAQ 2,928 +12.3
    NASDAQ
    S&P 500 1,353 +2.7
    S&P 500

    Europe

    Thu 2/09/12, 11:59am
    Index Last Change
    FTSE 100 5,895 +19.5
    FTSE 100
    CAC 40 3,425 +14.7
    CAC 40
    DAX 6,789 +40.0
    DAX

    Asia

    Thu 2/09/12, 1:28am
    Index Last Change
    HANG SENG 21,010 -8.5
    HANG SENG
    NIKKEI 225 9,002 +0.0
    NIKKEI 225
    CSI 300 2,529 +1.0
    CSI 300
  • Advertising

  • Weiss Group Press Releases

    Weiss Ratings: Southwestern Banks Show Signs of Turnaround January 24, 2012
    Weiss Ratings: Sluggish Demand Triggers Downgrades of China, Canada, Saudi Arabia December 19, 2011
    Weiss Ratings: Eurozone Crisis Prompts Debt Downgrades December 9, 2011
    Weiss Ratings: High-End Medigap Plans Available at Basic-Plan Prices December 2, 2011
    Weiss Ratings: Connecticut Seniors Pay Highest Premiums for Medigap Plans October 24, 2011
  • Find us on Facebook

  • Follow us on Twitter

    • Money and Markets on Twitter
    • Money and Markets on Twitter
    • Dr Martin D. Weiss on Twitter
    • Nilus Mattive on Twitter
    • Ron Rowland on Twitter
    • Mike Larson on Twitter
    • Jack Crooks on Twitter
  • Weiss Ratings - Top-Rated Banks, Credit-Unions, Insurers

  • Weiss Research Affiliate

  • About Us
  • FAQ
  • Legal
  • Privacy
  • Whitelist
  • Advertising
  • ©2012 Money and Markets. All Rights Reserved.
Weiss Research, Inc., founded in 1971, has a long history of providing research and analysis designed to empower investors with information and tools to make more informed, independent decisions along with an equally long history of public service. [More »]