We are now witnessing a
rapid-fire 1-2-3 chain reaction of events that's leading to the greatest
government bailout of all time ...
Event #1.
In the mortgage market, where this crisis first erupted, nearly half of
all subprime loans issued in 2006 are now delinquent ... late payments on
mid-quality "Alt-A" mortgages have soared 41.5% ... and delinquencies on prime
jumbo mortgages are up a staggering 55.2% in the past 6 months.
Event #2.
At Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, responsible for over half of the nation's massive
mortgage market, losses are mounting so quickly — and so obviously — that even
their supposedly "safer" preferred shares are crashing in value:

As you can plainly see in
the charts above, since their mid-May high, Fannie Mae's preferred shares (NYSE:
FNM PH) are down a shocking 58.8%, falling almost as quickly as
the common shares, which have lost 77% of their value.
Freddie Mac's preferred
shares (NYSE: FRE PK) have plunged even more: Down 65.5%. (The
Freddie common shares, meanwhile, have suffered an 89.6% wash-out!)
And all of this has
happened just since May 15, a meager 102 days ago! All in two giant companies
that were the darlings of Wall Street, the creation of Washington and supposedly
among the most "conservative" investments in the world!
Event #3.
At financial institutions across the country, these devastating losses
in Fannie and Freddie paper are ripping through balance sheets like an F-5
tornado. That includes:
- Sovereign Bank, the
third largest savings and loan in the United States. In our "X" List video, we
listed it as a prime candidate for bankruptcy because of its D+ rating and its
big exposure to mortgages. Now, it's been revealed that Sovereign has a $632
million stake in Fannie and Freddie preferred shares — the same shares that have
lost about two-thirds of their value just since May 15.
- Hundreds of other
banks and thrifts. They were encouraged by banking regulators to buy
billions of dollars in similar Fannie and Freddie preferred shares. In fact, the
regulators thought these investments were so reliable, they let the banks use
them for capital that's required as a cushion against loan losses. They even
allowed banks to take a tax break on 70% of these securities!
- Countless U.S.
brokerage firms, life and health insurers, property and casualty insurers.
Some are in good shape. But many have loaded up with similar
investments.
- Major financial
institutions overseas.
All assumed these shares
were safe. All believed they were getting something akin to a
government-guaranteed investment. All could be severely disappointed when they
discover the truth.
Why a Federal
Bailout Is Both Inevitable and Imminent ...
But Preferred
Shareholders Could Be Very Disappointed
Last week, we heard a
feverish crescendo of denials: At Fannie and Freddie, high-ranking company
officials vehemently denied they were asking for a government bailout. At the
Treasury Department, officials vehemently denied they were providing one. And
everywhere, the more they denied, the more it was obvious that a bailout was
both inevitable and imminent.
The big dilemma:
In any federal bailout of this nature, if the government uses
taxpayer dollars to support the value of high-ranking securities (like bonds),
it simultaneously destroys the remaining value of the lowest-ranking securities
(like common and preferred shares).
Why?
Because the kind of
government bailout that's expected is, in itself, a tacit recognition that the
companies are bankrupt. And if the companies are bankrupt, it means that, by
definition, the shares in the company are worthless.
Right now, banks stuck
with Fannie and Freddie preferred shares are hoping for a miracle. Since
government regulators encouraged them to buy the Fannie and Freddie preferred
shares in the first place, they're praying they will get some
consideration.
Sure, these banks and
other preferred shareholders are one rank above common shareholders in the
pecking order of investors clamoring for a piece of whatever's left over. But
they are also two ranks below senior debt holders.
Here's why I think they
will be sorely disappointed: Just to bail out Fannie and Freddie's senior debt
holders will be such a massive undertaking for the government, it's
hard to imagine that there will be much money left over for preferred
shareholders.
Moreover, given the
magnitude of the collapse in the preferred shares that has taken place just
since May 15, even if the government throws them a bone, it will hardly be
enough to make up for all the losses they've already suffered in their Fannie
and Freddie preferred shares.
End result: A Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac bailout may give temporary relief to some investors. But it will
merely spread chaos among most others.
The Catch-22 Question:
Where Does The
Federal Government Draw The Line?
If the government bails
out Fannie and Freddie, will it strictly provide temporary loans of Treasury
securities like it has done with the big brokers? Or will it use taxpayer money
to inject the permanent capital these companies now require for their long-term
survival?
The temporary cash loans
require little or no political debate. The Fed acts. The money comes. But the
long-term capital investment opens up a pandora's box of objections from
Congressional Republicans and Democrats fearful of a mass taxpayer rebellion
right on the eve of a major election. Under enough pressure and duress, some
money is bound to be forthcoming. But it's bound to have strings attached,
including caps, time limits and other restrictions.
No matter what, any
bailout will unleash a series of new questions with no answers:
What about Ford, GM
and Chrysler?
Think a government bailout
for Detroit is far-fetched? The auto executives certainly don't. In fact, just
this past Friday, the Wall Street Journal reported that lobbyists for Detroit's
Big Three were crowding into the offices of White House officials, U.S. Rep.
John Dingell and other Michigan Democrats, giving them a heads up on a bailout
proposal to be unveiled after Labor Day.
They want $25 billion in
loans. They want to get the money for a cut-rate interest of just 4.5%,
one-third what they're now paying. They even want the option to defer any and
all payments for up to five years.
With their fortunes
sinking fast, and with the nation's major brokers and mortgage lenders already
needing handouts, Ford, GM and Chrysler have apparently decided to stake out
their place on Uncle Sam's bread line before it gets too much longer.
What about the
nation's airlines seeking to make an emergency crash landing?
What about the
thousands of local governments that could soon be forced to cut essential
services like waste collection or even homeland security?
What about brokers
like Lehman Brothers, now scrambling for a foreign white knight to come to its
rescue?
What about the big
banks we told you about in The "X" List?
Like Fannie and Freddie,
each and every one will make the argument that they're critical to the health of
the economy and even national defense. All will want cash, loan guarantees, or
direct capital injections.
Where will the government
draw the line? How will it justify bailouts for some "absolutely essential"
private companies but not others?
The answer, my friend,
will surprise you.
Even with a
Government Rescue, Fannie and Freddie Bond Investors Are
STILL in Grave Jeopardy Because ...
1. The quantities of Fannie and Freddie bonds outstanding and
needing government support are so massive. According to the
Federal
Reserve's recently released Flow of Funds (pdf page 96), agency-
and GSE-backed securities — mostly issued by Fannie and Freddie — total a
whopping $7.6 trillion, or $2.4 trillion MORE than the entire amount of Treasury
securities outstanding.
2. These agency- and GSE-backed debts are held so widely around
the world, no one in government can control who dumps what, how much, or
when. U.S. Commercial banks hold $1
trillion.Insurance companies own another $518 billion. Broker and
dealers own $268 billion. Foreign investors hold a whopping $1.5
trillion!
All it takes is for these
investors to liquidate 10% of their holdings and the avalanche of supplies on
the market would sink their value regardless of the government's efforts to
shore up confidence in Fannie and Freddie.
3. Federal bailouts will sink the wobbly market for U.S. Treasury
bonds. When private companies are failing, investors rush
to the safety of the U.S. Treasury securities. But when the Treasury throws
their money into failing companies, investors rush the other way.
Result: To the degree that
the government bails out Fannie, Freddie, Detroit, Wall Street, or anyone else,
investors in Treasury securities will rebel, dump their own holdings and drive
the value of Treasury bonds into a tailspin like none other in
history.
And here again, the
quantities outstanding are massive ($5.3 trillion) ... the ownership worldwide
is far-flung (including nearly half overseas) ... and the ability of the
government to control the market, virtually nil.
So, yes, right now, the
U.S. Treasury may come to the rescue of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac debt holders,
and these investors will rejoice.
But ultimately, in order
to avoid a collapse in U.S. Treasury bonds themselves, the U.S. government will
have to
- Draw a line in the sand
beyond which no more government rescues will be possible.
- Let some of America's
largest banks, brokers and other companies fail, liquidate their assets, and
fade into history ...
- Even abandon prior rescue
efforts for the sake of saving the one institution it must keep solvent and
liquid at all costs: The United States Government itself.
Your best course of action
...
Step 1.
Get your savings out of danger and to
safety immediately!
We showed you exactly how
in our "X" List video.
If you missed it, turn up
your computer speakers and click here to watch it
now.
Several banks and one
brokerage firm on our list are already failing. Others are likely to
follow.
Step 2.
Clean out your portfolio of financial
stocks!
Over three years ago, in
April of 2005, we told our Safe Money subscribers to avoid financial stocks like
the plague. We even published a list of stocks to get the heck out of
immediately. (See the exact reprint of the list at left.)
Nor were we just panning
some fly-by-night upstarts. We were telling investors to sell the nation's
biggest mortgage lenders like Countrywide Financial, New Century Financial and
Washington Mutual ... the largest builders like Beazer Homes, D.R. Horton, and
Toll Brothers ... even Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
The pundits said we were
nuts. But the results prove otherwise:
|
Stock |
Price in April 2005 When we said
"SELL" |
Latest Price* |
% Change |
|
Aames
Investment Corp |
8.00 |
3.52 |
-56.0% |
|
Accredited Home Lenders |
36.17 |
11.76 |
-67.5% |
|
Beazer
Homes USA Inc |
50.39 |
6.56 |
-87.0% |
|
Countrywide Financial Corp |
31.80 |
4.25 |
-86.6% |
|
D.R.
Horton Inc |
30.14 |
10.73 |
-64.4% |
|
Fannie
Mae |
53.24 |
4.40 |
-91.7% |
|
Fidelity
National |
26.00 |
13.13 |
-49.5% |
|
Freddie
Mac |
60.85 |
3.25 |
-94.7% |
|
Fremont
General Corp |
22.04 |
0.22 |
-99.0% |
|
General
Motors Corp |
29.38 |
10.16 |
-65.4% |
|
Golden
West Financial Corp |
60.14 |
77.25 |
+28.5% |
|
H&R
Block Inc |
25.18 |
24.93 |
-1.0% |
|
KB
Home |
59.50 |
17.41 |
-70.7% |
|
MDC
Holdings Inc |
71.11 |
39.64 |
-44.3% |
|
MGIC
Investment Corp |
61.03 |
6.82 |
-88.8% |
|
New
Century Financial Corp |
46.54 |
0.01 |
-100.0% |
|
Novastar
Financial Inc |
36.33 |
1.10 |
-97.0% |
|
PHH
Corp |
21.70 |
16.63 |
-23.4% |
|
PMI
Group Inc |
37.81 |
3.22 |
-91.5% |
|
Pulte
Homes Inc |
37.13 |
12.77 |
-65.6% |
|
Radian
Group Inc |
47.30 |
3.31 |
-93.0% |
|
Ryland
Group Inc |
62.93 |
19.70 |
-68.7% |
|
Toll
Brothers Inc |
40.12 |
21.76 |
-45.8% |
|
Washington Mutual Inc |
39.34 |
4.10 |
-89.6% |
|
Wells
Fargo & Company |
29.72 |
28.92 |
-2.7% |
|
* For
companies still trading, reflects closing price of 8/20/08. If companies that
failed or were taken over, reflects last price at that
time. |
Since that time, almost
all of the stocks we panned have crashed and burned:
- Countrywide Financial has
fallen 86.6% ...
- New Century Financial
shareholders have been 100% wiped out, and ...
- Washington Mutual
investors have seen 89.6% of their money go down the drain.
- What about Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, now at the core of the crisis? They were also on our April 2005
list of financial stocks to dump. And since that date, their common shares have
fallen 91.7% and 94.7%, respectively.
With these huge declines,
you may think it's now too late to sell your remaining financial stocks. But the
fact is, many are still trading at absurdly high price levels. And even those
that have been beaten to a pulp could fall another 80% or 90% in
value.
Step 3. If you have other assets at risk —
stocks, real estate or business properties — hedge against possibly devastating
losses ahead with instruments like inverse ETFs or put options. Better yet, if
you've cleaned out all of your vulnerable assets, consider using those same
instruments to turn this dramatic situation into an equally dramatic profit
opportunity.
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.