Suddenly, It's a Bleak Midwinter for Housing and Lending
By Susan C. Walker,
Elliott Wave International
January 7, 2008
In the bleak midwinter, Frosty wind made moan,
Earth stood hard as iron,
Water like a stone…
(From "A Christmas Carol" by Christina Rossetti)
Shawn Colvin sings a beautiful song based on this poem by
Christina Rossetti, reminding us of the bleakness of midwinter. That is
exactly where the housing market seems to be now – facing its very own bleak
midwinter of falling prices, rising mortgage rates and growing inventories.
The latest report of the S&P/Case-Shiller home price index
shows that the price of houses fell 6.7% in October, year over year. That is
the largest year-to-year decline drop since April 1991. Think of it – if you
had bought a home for $300,000 in October 2006, it is now worth about
$280,000. And suppose you just got a new job and need to move? You are going
to have trouble selling it at that price, too, thanks to so many foreclosed
homes on the market. One realtor in Phoenix explained to a Wall Street
Journal reporter that local residents are now competing with foreclosed
homes selling for $50,000 to $100,000 less than other houses on the market.
"The sellers now are having to reduce their prices by 20% to 30% to
compete," she says. (Wall Street Journal, "Pace of Decline in Home Prices
Sets a Record," 12/27/07)
At a meeting of the New York Society of Security Analysts on
January 7, U.S. Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson said this about the U.S.
economy: "We will likely have further indications of slower growth in the
weeks and months ahead.''
Paulson and central bankers at the U.S. Federal Reserve
recognize that they, too, face their own bleak financial midwinter. It's not
just the mayhem brought on by the subprime mortgage debacle, the implosion
of the housing market and the ensuing credit crunch; nor is it that the U.S.
economy lurches toward a recession and hard times.
No, it is something bigger than that. Public opinion or
social mood, as we call it here at Elliott Wave International, has shifted
from positive to negative. When that happens, financial heroes find
themselves falling from their pedestals onto frozen earth hard as iron.
Exhibit A - The headline of a recent article on Bloomberg:
"Paulson Gets Diminishing Return with Bush, Like Powell, O'Neill" and the
lead: "Henry Paulson escaped the Nixon White House with his reputation
enhanced. He won't be so lucky this time around."
Exhibit B - The lead from a recent column by David Ignatius
in the Washington Post:
"When airport rescue crews are worried that a damaged plane
may have a crash landing, they sometimes spread the runway with foam to
reduce the probability of fire on impact. That's what the Federal Reserve
and other central banks are doing in pumping liquidity into severely damaged
financial markets. Make no mistake: The central bankers' announcement
Wednesday of a new coordinated effort to pump cash into the global financial
system is a sign of their nervousness…."
Nervousness is in the air now. Investors are anxious about
the markets; everyone is worried about the housing market. Our Elliott Wave
Financial Forecast December issue explains how housing starts (and stops)
are intimately tied to recessions: "One key indicator of success in
pre-dating economic downturns is housing starts, which are approaching the
1-million-a-month level that has preceded all recessions of the last 40
years."
And the Fed is nervous, too. So much so that it announced a credit
giveaway with four other major central banks (the Bank of Canada, the Bank
of England, the European Central Bank and the Swiss National Bank) in
mid-December to try to bolster the financial system and the banks that
keep it humming. The Fed reports that banks have been stepping up to its
auction window each week to purchase $20 billion. Unfortunately for the
banks, most of this "liquidity" isn't that liquid. It has to be paid back
within 30 days, with interest of about 4.65%.
Editor's note: Elliott Wave International
has agreed to make available to our readers a 2-1/2-page excerpt from Bob
Prechter's
Elliott Wave Theorist in which he describes exactly how the Fed's
latest effort to shore up banks' balance sheets has become "High Noon for
the Fed's Credibility."
Click here to read the Theorist excerpt.
Just how bleak is the future for central bankers if this recently
implemented plan doesn't work? Bob Prechter explains in his just-published
Theorist:
"Nevertheless, this is probably the single most important
central-bank pronouncement yet. But it is not significant for the
reasons people think. By far most people take such pronouncements at
face value, presume that what the authorities promise will happen and
reason from there. But the tremendous significance of this seismic
engagement of the monetary jawbone is that if this announcement fails to
restore confidence, central bankers' credibility will evaporate."
"At least that's the way historians will play it. But of course, the
true causality, as elucidated by socionomics, is that an evaporation of
confidence will make the central bankers' plans fail. The outcome is
predicated on psychology."
The "socionomics"
Prechter refers to is a new social science he has introduced that studies
how humans behave in groups within contexts of uncertainty – where
fluctuations in social mood motivate social actions. It explains that
rather than an event happening that affects social mood (for example,
falling home prices make people feel bad), what really happens is that
social mood changes first from positive to negative and then lousy things
happen (for example, unhappy people make home prices fall). If you can
adopt this point of view, then you can see that, in poetic terms, we are
fast approaching a bleak midwinter for the economy and the financial
markets.
Susan C. Walker writes for
Elliott Wave International, a market forecasting and technical
analysis company. She has been an associate editor with Inc. magazine, a
newspaper writer and editor, an investor relations executive and a
speechwriter for the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. Her columns also
appear regularly on FoxNews.com.