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Gold - Protection against the Real Estate
Mania
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By Barry Downs and Bill Matlack
October 28, 2004
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Research Comment-Precious Metals |
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Anyone who has become re-educated in the real world
of monetary economics has concluded that the more than seventy
year experiment in a "managed economy", using Keynesian
and monetarist doctrines, has proven ruinous to world economic
stability. However, while the Federal Reserve with its inflationary
policy has debased the currency since its inception and caused
booms and busts, the system to date has muddled through.
The sharp downturn in the stock market in 2000, coupled with the
economic and psychological shock of 9/11, looked like it could
have been the double whammy bringing an irreparable blow to the
economy, but the Federal Reserve massively re-liquefied the system.
The economy turned around again but only with enormous debt creation.
In the past, when government money messes have been created, the
piper has always gotten paid and what a price it should be this
time when the present money/credit system unravels.
We suspect that there is an "economic blockbuster"
out there looming, which will likely be the event to cause an
economic downturn, ushering in a depression with all the misery
and suffering that comes with it. Moreover, the economic blow
could come at the end of one of the many manias that society seems
always prone to create. The one that comes to mind, in terms of
magnitude, is the nationwide real estate mania, which had its
beginnings in the early 1980s under Reagan, grew in intensity
under Clinton, and has became supercharged with the manipulated
collapse of interest rates under the G. W. Bush administration.
For two thirds of Americans, residential real estate is their
absolute financial Rock of Gibraltar where they live, raise their
families, and feel a sense of achievement and peace away from
the hubbub of life. Moreover, Americans have seen their wealth
grow year after year on paper through residential real estate,
and as home prices have become inflated, Americans have grown
very daring with their finances.
A significant foreclosure on residential real estate would be
like foreclosing on the American dream, which psychologically
alone could plunge the economy into economic depression. Furthermore,
we don't know of any conventional wisdom derivative to protect
the multi-trillion dollar residential real estate market from
a virtual collapse and turning the economy down with a vengeance.
A brief look at a few of history's famous manias produces a better
understanding of how past human hysterias, though isolated instances,
have ended. One can then consider how a knife in the heart of
America's residential real estate market, which has become the
mother of all modern manias, could usher in perhaps a major economic
upheaval and even repudiate the managed economic approach.
Since the beginning of recorded history, human beings have periodically
engaged in mass manias, where conjured up excessive excitement
or enthusiasm has created a pathological state of mind. Euphoria
consumes people during maniacal behavior, creating impaired judgment
and sometimes psychotic symptoms of delusions or hallucinations,
indicating impaired contact with reality.
Mankind's periodically occurring maniacal behavior was the subject
of the book Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the
Madness of Crowds by Charles Mackay, published in 1841. Mackay's
piece was a rather humorous collection of popular delusions ranging
from Alchemy to Mesmerism and covers a wide range of scams, manias,
deception, and even includes witch burnings and the Great Crusades.
Perhaps the most ruinous of history's manias to consume mankind
have been those spurred on by the drive to get rich.
One of the most famous financial manias in the 18th century was
John Law's Mississippi bubble which culminated in 1720. Law had
designed a financial system and monetary theory in 1705, which
would print paper currency to permanently expand commerce. Through
John Law's activities a significant portion of French government
debt was exchanged for shares in a company which had a monopoly
on trade with French Louisiana begun in 1719. The company's share
in livre (French money of account until 1794) was around 500 in
1719, and in a huge speculative run hit 10,000 livres in February,
1720 only to drop back to 500 livres in September, 1721, leaving
participants in the mania completely broke.
Another mania or bubble occurred between 1711 and 1720, known
as the South Sea Bubble. The South Sea Company was another trading
company in England granted exclusive trading rights in Spanish
South America. In 1719 the company proposed a scheme by which
it would take on the entire remaining national debt of Britain
offering its own stock. From 128 pounds sterling in January 1720,
the stock price through speculation finally reached 1000 pounds
in early August before it started to fall. By the end of September
the stock had fallen to 150 pounds, creating widespread bankruptcies
among those who bought on credit, and failures even extended to
banks and goldsmiths as they could not collect loans made on stock.
Of course, one of the world's greatest and most widely known
manias of yesteryear was the great Tulip Mania, which began in
1634. Tulip bulbs originally brought to Holland from Constantinople
in 1559 had become such a wealth symbol that market exchanges
were formed and trading in bulbs began. Middle-class Dutch society
became involved, and by 1635 a single tulip bulb went for the
equivalent of $35,000. In 1636 a single bulb fetched the equivalent
of $76,000 in today's dollar terms before the downturn began.
Slowly the selling began, first gapping down 90%, and at the end
prices dropped to the equivalent of less than $1.00 producing
widespread bankruptcies and failures.
The essence of Mackay's treatise is that human beings are borne
with the herd instinct, and. when they go mad they do so in herds.
When people come to their senses it has proven usually to be a
slow process and occurs one by one and in the wake of the usual
financial ruin.
Manias, especially stock market manias, were prevalent in the
20th century, with one of the standouts being the great stock
market speculation in the 1920s and the crash in 1929. The roaring
20s bred excessive greed, which culminated in the 1929 blow off
of the Dow Jones Industrial Average at 381. Over the next three
years the DJIA had fell to 41. Almost forty years later stock
prices rallied again in the late 1960s on what was called a "new
synergy", only to crater once again, and by late 1974 stock
prices had evaporated in value to depression levels.
The summa cum laude of stock market manias, however, occurred
in the 1982 to 2000 period through the technology mania, which
then morphed again into the dot com mania, and the whole world
participated. As a prelude to what was ahead for general stocks
and technology stocks in particular, the dot coms collapsed at
the beginning of the new millennium. The general stock market
soon followed suit. From its low of 871 in January, 1982, the
DJIA ran up to 11,908 in January of 2000, then declined 36% by
September 2002. The NASDAQ rose a phenomenal 2000% between 1984
and March 2000, but then fell 77% by September 2002. By late 2002,
some $7 trillion in market cap had evaporated around the world.
The Federal Reserve's massive monetary stimulus over the past
three years, though effective, has produced a dichotomy with regard
to the stock market. Money has flowed into the big Dow stocks,
pushing the DJIA back above the 10,000 level until just recently.
The NASDAQ, however, has not been able to recover even 50% of
its losses from the 2000 top, while the S&P 500 has recovered
32% of its losses from the 841 bottom in February 2003.
Government intervention over the past three years has kept the
stock market maniacal attitude alive. NYSE and NASDAQ volumes
have each remained at levels well over one billion shares a day,
the financial cable news programs are still talking up the market,
hedge funds have sprung up in record numbers, and Wall Street
still believes we are in a bull market.
So far, the intervention has kept the stock market bullish mindset
alive, and it would probably take a slide to at least the 1991
DJIA level of 3100 to demoralize Wall Street to the point where
the maniacal attitude has been wiped out. At the bottom of the
primary bear market in common stocks, investors will be depressed
and a lot of money will have been lost, but life from day to day
will likely go on with people just feeling a lot less wealthy,
and pulling in their financial horns.
Our look at manias has led us to an area which, for Americans,
has become both spectacular and now dangerous: residential real
estate. For twenty-five years, residential real estate has appreciated
at an annualized rate of about 10%. In some areas of the country,
20% plus increases have occurred in recent years. Federal Reserve
stimulatory efforts over the past three years, in the form of
rate cuts, have forced interest rates to levels not seen in 47
years. Mortgage rates tumbled, and many Americans, who were the
big rollers in the eighteen-year bull market in stocks, were quick
to jump on the new game in town, the illiquid residential real
estate market. With money so cheap, the real estate market, which
was strong in the 1990's due to relatively cheap interest rates,
shifted into overdrive after 2000 when money became ridiculously
cheap. In many areas of the country such as San Diego, a real
estate market mania sprung up where the medium price of a home
has risen to $480,000, and, for that price, one obtains what is
described as a one-bedroom shack. San Francisco's medium price
is now $640,000, and what one gets for that price is reportedly
even less impressive.
Banks are originating mortgages in a widely inflated real estate
market with no down payment, and in some hot areas, 110% mortgages
are extended. Federal Reserve Chairman Greenspan is claiming that
¾ all mortgages have been made with 20% down payments,
but the data we have found indicates that down payments are closer
to 3% or 5%. New subdivisions in areas like Phoenix and Las Vegas
have prospective home buyers camping out in long lines to obtain
one of the proposed new homes, and home builders and real estate
agents, grouping themselves among the ranks of the world's financial
tycoons, exhibit symptoms of maniacal behavior themselves. Real
estate agents routinely knock on doors in hot real estate areas,
trying to entice homeowners to sell and re-buy elsewhere.
Based on the data available, the various types of American residential
real estate constitute just about $30 trillion in market value,
and in the minds of millions of Americans, real estate values
can only rise from here on. Already highly leveraged, Americans
have borrowed extensively against inflated real estate values
via home equity loans. Of the $9.4 trillion in household debt,
$7 trillion constitutes mortgage debt. When the bubble breaks,
declines of between 11% and 22% on average are expected in real
estate prices by many experts, particularly in areas of the country
like California, where real estate inflation has been rampant.
It is thought that declines of 40% to 50% could occur when the
time comes.
The real estate situation is, unfortunately, altogether different
because large numbers of Americans have redirected money from
the securities markets, which are for the most part liquid, to
the real estate market, which is illiquid and inflated in price
all as a result of the flood of cheap money created by Federal
Reserve policy. Real estate is not sold with a quick phone call
like stocks, where the transaction settles in three business days!
Countless numbers of Americans have joined the "bull run"
in residential housing in recent years, and are now sitting with
expensive homes they really can't afford with big mortgages, record
household debts, and gigantic monthly payments.
Complicating the real estate picture and economic fallout ahead
even more is the existence of the government sponsored giants,
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which carry $1 trillion and $1.4 trillion
in mortgages, respectively, on their books. Moreover, both institutions
have received very negative press recently, and investigations
into Fannie Mae may uncover serious wrongdoing.
Fannie Mae has been one of the big engines of growth behind the
housing mania, and has been fundamental to holding the mortgage
market together. Government sponsored Fannie Mae does not make
mortgage loans outright, but rather buys mortgages from lenders,
holding on to some while packaging others in the form of debt
securities for sale to investors. Fannie Mae has evolved as the
second largest debt issuer in the nation after the Federal government,
and Fannie Mae debt is everywhere. Foreign investors hold Fannie
May debt, as do mutual funds, banks, and various other institutions.
In fact, American banks can make unlimited investments in Fannie
Mae debt because of the implicit government guarantee behind the
institution; six out of ten of the nation's banks have more than
half of their equity capital invested in Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac debt.
Fannie Mae is embroiled in an accounting and managerial scandal,
which if not resolved, could weaken the company. The fallout could
produce a weak dollar should foreigners decide to sell their holdings
in Fannie Mae debt. That's for starters! If the real estate market
indeed succumbs to the pressure anticipated, taxpayer bailouts
of Fanny Mae and Freddie Mac down the line are inevitable. The
real impact on America and American homeowners, however, will
arrive when real estate prices stop rising and begin to fall because
Fannie Mae's relaxed mortgage underwriting standards have enabled
home ownership for people who historically would not have had
the financial ability or credit to qualify for a mortgage loan.
If Americans' incomes don't rise, when real estate prices stop
rising, and interest rates rise considerably, there will be a
significant number of people under water with their mortgages
and facing foreclosure of their homes.
It is one thing for the stock market to go down
taking 401Ks with it and causing the population to feel poorer.
But it is quite another matter when society's Rock of Gibraltar,
thought to be a fountain of wealth, drops precipitously, leaving
the mortgagors unable to make payments and facing foreclosure
and eviction. That real estate scenario alone could overwhelm
Americans economically and psychologically, leaving all the stimulation
by the Federal Reserve ineffective, and if there were ever a reason
for the world to stage a real run on the dollar, that would be
the time.
There is an excellent chance that history will bear out our contention
that the Achilles heel of the American economy is the highly leveraged
and grossly overvalued residential real estate market. Perhaps
there will someday be an addendum to Mackay's book to include
America's real estate phenomenon.
Possibly the only natural protection against a real estate debacle
is the world's oldest known derivative money, which has never
defaulted, namely gold.
Research CommentPrecious Metals
Barry Downs** (775) 852-3875
bdowns@aegiscap.com
Bill Matlack** (201) 217-5680
bmatlack@aegiscap.com
*****
**Barry Downs and Bill Matlack are stockbrokers
specializing in gold and mining equities with Aegis Capital
Corporation, a registered broker/dealer, in New York, New York.
Company Risk Disclosure
In addition to the risks involved in investing in commodities
generally, we also highlight the following risks that pertain
to this commodity. Gold is highly levered to the relative strength
of the U.S. dollar, the U.S. balance of trade, and inflation
generally, as well as to political and economic stability worldwide.
Analyst’s Certification
We, Barry Downs and William Matlack, hereby certify that the
views expressed in this report accurately reflect our personal
views about the subject commodity. We also certify that we have
not, are not, and will not receive, directly or indirectly,
compensation for expressing the specific recommendations or
views in this report.
General Disclosure
The research analysts (or their household members) who prepared
this research beneficially own gold securities and physical
gold. Aegis Capital Corporation (“Aegis”) or an
affiliate expects to receive and intends to seek compensation
for investment banking services from gold equity issuers within
the next 3 months. The analysts who prepared this research report
may be compensated based upon (among other factors) investment
banking services.
The opinions, estimates and projections contained
herein are those of Aegis as of the date hereof and are subject
to change without notice. Aegis makes every effort to ensure
that the contents have been compiled or derived from sources
believed reliable and contain information and opinions, which
are accurate and complete. However, Aegis makes no representation
or warranty, express or implied, in respect thereof, takes no
responsibility for any errors and omissions which may be contained
herein and accepts no liability whatsoever for any loss arising
from any use of or reliance on this report or its contents.
Information may be available to Aegis or its affiliates, which
is not reflected herein. This report is not to be construed
as an offer to sell, or solicitation for, or an offer to buy,
any securities. Aegis, its affiliates and/or their respective
officers, directors or employees may from time to time acquire,
hold or sell securities mentioned herein as principal or agent.
Aegis may act as financial advisor and/or underwriter for certain
of the corporations mentioned herein and may receive remuneration
for same. TO U.K. RESIDENTS: The contents hereof are intended
solely for the use of, and may only be issued or passed onto,
persons described in Part VI of the Financial Services and Markets
Act 2000 (Financial Promotion) Order 2001.
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