With as many as 2 million sub-prime mortgages,
scheduled to reset to much higher levels by the end
of 2008 many market watchers began to get worried in
the last few months, which drove the stock market
down.
A sub-prime mortgage is a loan offered to
borrowers with spotty credit histories and with
interest rates rising, those resets could push the payment on
a typical mortgage up $300 or $400 per month. This
could push those borrowers into foreclosure.
The FED is worried that those foreclosures could
snowball if liquidity is tight and send the country
into recession. So this week FED chairman Ben Bernanke unveiled a
two pronged attack.
The first prong was a 1/4% reduction in the FED
funds rate which should put some downward pressure
on the interest rates these borrowers will have to
pay once their rates reset.
The stock markets reaction to that move was
almost non-existent. Meaning those in the know
figured this move wouldn't help much.
Less than 18 hours later Ben broke out the big
guns and literally created $64 Billion out of thin
air. Interestingly, there is said to be $50
Billion in sub-prime resets in October alone.
The markets rejoiced and
rallied sharply. Because that meant that the banks
would have lots of money to lend and the party could
go on a bit longer.
With more money the banks can extend credit at
below market rates to the sub-prime borrowers and
prevent the snowball ride to recession.
Unfortunately, that means that someone has to pay
for it. Bernanke says it won't hurt anyone and
everyone will benefit. But one of the basic laws of
the universe is "there ain't no free lunch"
and that applies to Ben too.
So who will pay?
You will pay, as the purchasing power of your
dollars erode. Remember the cause of price
inflation (increasing prices) is monetary inflation
(increasing the money supply). So by definition your
dollar will buy less next year because of
Uncle Ben's actions this week.
Will this help the sub-prime borrower? Well
increased liquidity in the markets should make
getting a loan easier and when supply increases and
demand stays the same, prices should go down.
In other words, increased liquidity in the
lending market should lower interest rates and make
it easier to refinance. This combined with the
downward move in the FED funds rate should help
sub-prime borrowers more than the President's highly
publicized sub-prime bailout.
The rate of resets will increase over the next
few months and peak in March 2008 so at that point
competition for loans will also peak.
For those whose loan is going to reset in 2008
this might be a good opportunity to lock in rates...
while all this money is flowing and before all the
competition sops up all the liquidity.