Your browser does not support CSS. If images appear below, please disregard them.
DollarDaze
Where is the dollar heading? Why are the prices of everything going up while my wages are stagnating? Do deficits matter? Is the price of gold indicative of a market mania? Why is there so much fuss over the Fed?
“Inflation is the one form of taxation that can be imposed without legislation.”
- Milton Friedman
Home | News Headlines | Article Index | Bullion Dealers | Economic Data | Market Data Feeds | Advertisers | About | Support Us | XHTML
  • If laid end to end in US$1 dollar bills this amount of money would reach what planet from the Sun?

    Click here for the answer
Global Money Supply
  • Global Money Supply Data
Daily Metal Prices
Bullion Dealers
Recommended Books
  • We entrusted the experts with our financial security and now we're reeling from the economic crisis. How do we get back on our feet...and invest wisely?

    In The Wealth Code: How the Rich Stay Rich in Good Times and Bad, financial planner and investment strategist Jason Vanclef delivers straight answers...and solutions.

    Visit the book website at www.thewealthcode.com.

  • Empire of Debt
    Bonner and Wiggin enumerate a long list of chronic ailments that imperil the American financial system--a massive trade deficit, soaring personal and government debt, a housing bubble, runaway military expenditures.
  • The Intelligent Investor
    The classic bestseller by Benjamin Graham, perhaps the greatest investment advisor of the 20th century, The Intelligent Investor has taught and inspired hundreds of thousands of people worldwide.
  • Methods of a Wall Street Master
    This book covers all the important aspects of making money and integrates them into a unifying philosophy that includes economics, Federal Reserve policy, trading methods, risk, psychology, and more.
  • What Has Government Done to Our Money
    If you ever wondered about why prices keep going up, if you ever wondered why cars don't cost $2,000 anymore, if you asked questions like this and never thought you were getting a full answer, this is the book you need to read.
  • Economics for Real People
    Economics for Real People is a clearly-written overview of "Austrian" economics, a libertarian school of economic thought founded by thinkers from Central Europe in the early 20th century.
  • Economics in One Lesson
    "Economics in One Lesson", Henry Hazlet's, book makes a powerful and persuasive argument in favor of a free market economy.
  • The Road to Serfdom
    This classic by one of the 20th century's leading libertarian thinkers has established itself beside the works of Orwell and others as a timeless meditation on the relationship between human freedom and government authority.
  • Crash Proof: How to Profit From the Coming Economic Collapse
    For those accustomed to America's economic dominance, Crash Proof is a frighteningly forthright wake-up call.
 
Printer Version E-Mail Article Discuss

Who, Me? Yes You!

Euro Pacific Capital

When, during the invasion of Iraq, the United States Government issued its famous deck of playing cards with the 52 arch villains of the Iraqi police state, Saddam Hussein's face adorned the Ace of Spades. If the Obama Administration wanted to engage in a similar public relations campaign for the real estate crisis, the top card should be reserved for Alan Greenspan.

Yet in a speech this Tuesday before the National Association of Realtors, Sir Alan "the-bubble-blower" claimed that his low interest rate policies in the early and middle years of this decade had no effect on mortgage rates or real estate prices. As a result, he claims no responsibility for the subprime mortgage crisis. But even current Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who shared interest rate policy responsibility as governor of the New York Fed during the Greenspan regime, recently admitted that overly accommodative policy helped inflate the bubble. So what does Greenspan know that everyone else doesn't?

His primary defense is that mortgage rates were a function of long-term interest rates which were simply not responding to the movement in short term rates, which he did control. While it is true that the flow of capital from foreign creditors with excess dollars did keep long rates low despite rising short rates, this "conundrum" was not the leading factor in the housing bubble. Although rates on thirty-year fixed rate mortgages are based on long-term bonds, by 2005 such loans had become an endangered species. The housing bubble was all about adjustable-rate mortgages with 1-7 year teaser rates primarily based on the Fed funds rate.

The rock bottom teaser rates, permitted by the 1% Fed funds rate, were the primary reason that many home buyers were able to qualify for mortgages they couldn't otherwise afford, and in turn, to bid up home prices to bubble levels. By pushing down the cost of short-term money, the Fed enabled homebuyers to make big bets on rising real estate prices. Without the Fed's help, few borrowers would have "qualified" for these risky mortgages and real estate prices never would have been bid up so high.

Greenspan expresses exasperation now, as he did then, that his careful nudging of interest rates higher by quarter point increments did not translate into corresponding increases in long-term rates. Unfortunately, according to Greenspan, the markets would not cooperate with his wise guidance, and to his dismay, mortgage rates fell despite his best efforts. As they say in Texas, this dog will just not hunt. If the "measured pace" of his quarter point hikes were too slow to produce the desired effect, why didn't Greenspan jack up the pressure? With interest rates far below the official inflation rate for many years during the bubble, he certainly had plenty of room to maneuver. The claim that he was unhappy results of his rate hikes, despite his having done nothing to adjust that policy, is ridiculous.

In addition to his colossal errors on interest rate policy there were many other ways Greenspan blew air into the real estate bubble. One example was what the market called the "Greenspan put." By creating the perception in word and deed (since proven accurate) that the Fed would backstop any major market or economic declines, lenders became more comfortable making risky loans. In an often quoted 2004 speech, Greenspan went so far as to actively encourage the use of adjustable-rate mortgages and praised home equity extractions for their role in contributing to economic growth. In fact, rather than criticizing homeowners for treating their houses like ATM machines, he often praised the innovative ways in which such homeowners were "managing" their personal balance sheets. Greenspan was as much a proponent of leverage for homeowners on Main Street as he was for bankers on Wall Street.

The bottom line is that Greenspan fathered the housing bubble and now he refuses to acknowledge kinship of his wayward child. His denial of responsibility is an act of stunning bravado, and is a testament to his ability to turn even the simplest of situations into an impenetrable tangle of theories and statistics. The private sector jokers who now hold top dishonors in our pack of economic villains are easily trumped by the Maestro. The fact that Greenspan still has any credibility shows just how little understanding the general public, including Wall Street and the media, actually have about this crisis. Share/Save/Bookmark

_____

© 2009 Peter Schiff

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Peter Schiff Peter Schiff began his investment career as a financial consultant with Shearson Lehman Brothers, after having earned a degree in finance and accounting from U.C. Berkley in 1987. A financial professional for seventeen years he joined Euro Pacific Capital in 1996 and has served as its President since January 2000. An expert on money, economic theory, and international investing, he is a highly recommended broker by many of the nation's financial newsletters and advisory services.
Disclaimer: The opinions expressed above are not intended to be taken as investment advice. It is to be taken as opinion only and I encourage you to complete your own due diligence when making an investment decision.

This article has been favorited 3 times on DollarDaze.org | Make this your favorite article

Posted in Monetary Commentary, Guest Commentary, Peter Schiff

Leave a Comment on this Article
Who, Me? Yes You! by Peter Schiff

Your Name

Create Password This password is used to make future edits to your comments.

Enter $3572 Enter the green text exactly as it appears.

Comments

1036513
 
Search DollarDaze
  • Add to Technorati Favorites
Your Purchasing Power
  • Click to see full-sized charts
Web Media
  • Aaron Russo Interviews Congressman Ron Paul
  • Excellent video explaining the US Federal Reserve
  • Money As Debt
  • I.O.U.S.A.
  • Chris Martenson - The Crash Course
  • Money - A Brief History of the American Dollar
Sponsored Ads
London Metal Exchange
  • Click to see full-sized charts
Sponsored Ads
Donations Accepted


  • Help support the development of DollarDaze.org by donating today.

    Click here to learn about other ways you can help us.