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Don't take mortgage advice from Alan Greenspan

 
The Fed boss says homeowners should switch to adjustable-rate loans and
save the difference. His record is full of dangerous moments like this
when he's been way, way off.

By Bill Fleckenstein

Last week, Alan Greenspan was a study in contradiction. On Monday, he
extolled the virtues of the levered-up homeowner to a credit union
conference. The next day, in a speech to the Senate Banking Committee, he
was singing a different tune altogether. Fannie Mae (FNM, news, msgs) and
Freddie Mac (FRE, news, msgs), the giant providers of mortgage capital,
he warned, "are expanding at a pace beyond that consistent with systemic
safety," and that "preventative actions are required sooner, rather than
later." 

For a Federal Reserve chairman who has demonstrated that he couldn't
identify reckless behavior if it ran him over, it was rather surprising
to hear him chide Fannie and Freddie for their recklessness. (I should
state, however, it's an opinion I tend to share.) 

His scolding might better be directed inward. What he advocated last
Monday should send cold shivers down the spine of anyone so engaged. I
already thought that what was going on in real estate was dangerous, but
what he now cites as a good thing is not only dangerous, it will be
disastrous -- guaranteed.Your money, fast.
File your taxes online.

 


All hail, Al's paper trail 
Before quoting from the above, I would just note that Greenspan's latest
comments reminded me of a speech he gave on March 6, 2000, which I have
dubbed "An Ode to Technology." In the speech, he waxed on about the
wonders of technology and how it had brought us a new era and all that
other stuff. Folks may not remember that date, but it was four days
before the Nasdaq Composite (COMPX) hit its all-time high of 5,048.62.
Despite the recovery over the past year ago, the composite is still down
nearly 60% from the March 2000 peak. 

This is not the first time Easy Al has been way off. On March 7, 2000, I
wrote a column called �Alan Greenspan: Friend or Foe� that chronicled
some of his prior quotes, speeches and the like. It includes his Jan. 7,
1973, utterance (right before the recession that ranks as our worst, at
least until we get through the one we're in but haven't completed): "It
is very rare that you can be as unqualifiedly bullish as you can be now."


That, coupled with his ode to technology and cluelessness about bubbles
(which folks have seen real-time), is a pretty fair indictment.

And, there are other examples prior to his latest "Ode to Real Estate."
For instance, in 1984, he wrote a letter to Edwin Gray, then-chairman of
the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, advising the regulator to exempt
Charles Keating's Lincoln Savings & Loan, a Greenspan client, from harsh
federal regulations about its investments. He told Gray he should "stop
worrying so much" about such things as junk bonds, and that "deregulation
(of the savings & loan industry) was working just as planned."

Lincoln Savings failed rather spectacularly a few years later. And it's
worth noting that within four years, 15 of the 17 thrifts he mentioned in
this letter were broke, costing the old Federal Savings & Loan Insurance
Corp. some $3 billion.

What if adjustable-rates ratchet up?
Now onto his latest comments. The first was set up in a rather glowing
Wall Street Journal article by Greg Ip on Feb. 24. Called "Fed chief
questions loan choices," it begins: "In a rare evaluation of
interest-rate options that households face, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan questioned whether American homeowners are well served by
popular fixed-rate long-term mortgages."

I realize that fixed-interest-rate mortgages tend to have slightly higher
rates than adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs). Unless one either believes
rates will collapse or plans to move fairly soon, however, fixed-rate
mortgages are always the right way to go. You know what you're getting
into, so you're not gambling with your house payment. And of course, if
rates drop, you can do as everyone has done: You can refinance. 

The notion of the whole country piling into ARMs when rates are at
multi-decade lows is a truly destabilizing concept to contemplate. What
happens if rates go up (because my view is incorrect) and the economy
roars ahead?

Twisted logician makes short shrift of bankruptcy
Turning to a more objective analysis in The New York Times of Feb. 24,
titled "Greenspan says personal debt Is mitigated by housing value," I
note some even more outrageous comments. (I would call them guffaws, were
it not so serious.) 

"Bankruptcy rates are not a reliable measure of the overall health of the
household sector,� Greenspan said, �because they do not tend to forecast
general economic conditions." (The emphasis is mine.) So, the fact that
we have had record and near-record bankruptcies in the last couple years
is immaterial, since bankruptcies don't forecast the future!

Similarly, he reached into his linguistic bag of tricks to say why
homeowners' increased leverage doesn't count: "An extended period of low
interest rates and extra cash from mortgage refinancing has given
borrowers flexibility (again, my emphasis) to better manage their debt.�
So you see, this cash-out-mortgage-facilitated debt assumption is termed
"flexibility" on his part, not an increase in leverage. Rather than fun
with numbers, he has fun with definitions.

The Times article then paraphrases him thusly: "Mortgage refinancing and
the rise in home values have helped to bolster economic spending in
economic hard times, as well as better periods." That is, of course, what
has happened, as folks have groped around to get through the aftermath of
the 1990s stock market bubble. We have postponed the inevitable via this
leveraging of home values and aggressive lending tactics to keep the
housing market alive and percolating. But we are running out of steam.

'Assets are contingent; debt is forever' 
Now think back to what Easy Al had to say about Keating's Lincoln Savings
and other S&Ls. The chairman has forgotten something that everyone who
went through the period should have learned: Assets are contingent; debt
is forever. Granted, folks get around that pretty easily these days with
the bankruptcy laws but -- oops -- we don't have to talk about that
because it doesn't mean anything, because it's not a forecasting tool.

So the most irresponsible central banker in the history of the world
created the biggest bubble in the history of the world, which had
disastrous consequences for the stock market and the economy. In order to
ameliorate that, he has created bubble-like conditions and absurd
financing schemes in real estate. Meanwhile, we've seen an enormous
concentration of risk develop inside the financial system: We are down to
just a handful of big banks and government-sponsored entities that are
using his other favorite toy, derivatives, to theoretically manage away
all their risks.

Fed prudence takes a powder
The summation of these variables has only increased the risk of something
bad happening. And, of course, that risk has been heightened by the
tanking of the dollar. The dollar's decline has been promoted by
Greenspan's irresponsible policies and attempts to continually bail out
his most recent mistake. He has been doing this serially since junk bonds
and bad lending nearly took down the financial system at the end of the
1980s and wiped out the savings and loan industry in 1990-1991.

I believe we are at the end of the string, and things are in the process
of slowly deteriorating once again. The pace of that deterioration may
pick up speed over the course of the year.

Perhaps we will look back on the speech Greenspan made last week and say
that the Fed chairman in essence nailed the top of the housing market --
just as he did with technology in 2000 and the economy in 1973. And he's
probably just as wrong about what happens next.

Bill Fleckenstein is president of Fleckenstein Capital, which manages a
hedge fund based in Seattle. He also writes a daily Market Rap column on
his Fleckensteincapital.com site. His investment positions can change at
any time. Under no circumstances does the information in this column
represent a recommendation to buy, sell or hold any security. The views
and opinions expressed in Bill Fleckenstein's columns are his own and not
necessarily those of CNBC on MSN Money.

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