Thursday, May 18, 2006

Greenspan: Housing Boom Is Over

From Reuters:
Greenspan says US housing boom is over

"Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said on Thursday that the "extraordinary" boom in the U.S. housing market in recent years is over."

""This has been quite an extraordinary boom," Greenspan told a Bond Market Association dinner in New York. "The boom is over. I think we can safely say that with a strong degree of confidence.""

"Greenspan said there was a "high degree of froth in the system," and that it was clear that home equity extraction and the turnover of home sales was waning."

25 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

"Greenspan will ultimately be recorded in the history books as the worst federal reserve chairman this nation has ever seen."

Basically, his main duty was to administer "medicine" to sick US markets in the form of endless interest rate reductions. I'd like to hear him finally admit that the medicine was worse than the disease, but I'm not holding my breath.

5/18/2006 08:49:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Speculators: sell now while you still can.

5/18/2006 09:19:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

BoycottHousing.com

5/18/2006 09:21:00 PM  
Blogger grim said...

Greenspan is no longer part of the Federal Reserve. And, as a private citizen, like you and I, has the right to free speech.

It's the role of a central bank to "tinker", however I agree that the liquidity injected into the market by the Fed's near zero interest rate policy has caused havoc with the housing market.

If the Fed hadn't "tinkered", it's very possible that housing prices still would not have recovered from the crash in the early 90's.

Thus, Greenspan should be looked upon as the Patron Saint of Real Estate Investors.

What The Good Greenspan Giveth, The Good Greenspan Taketh Away.

grim

5/18/2006 09:21:00 PM  
Blogger Smart Grid blogger said...

Bernanke sees cooling housing market
But Fed chief says real estate could still turn in strong year, offers caution about new mortgage products, hope for new banking standards.
May 18, 2006: 2:18 PM EDT


CHICAGO, (Reuters) - It's "pretty clear" that the housing market is cooling off but it looks poised for a soft landing given overall strength in the economy, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Thursday.

"In combination with rising interest rates, affordability is becoming much more difficult and therefore as you would expect you are seeing some cooling in those markets," Bernanke said in a question and answer session after speaking to a Chicago Fed conference on banking regulation.

more...

5/19/2006 01:56:00 AM  
Blogger Smart Grid blogger said...

Real estate mogul Solomon Dwek arrested

Dwek's woes could have wide impact

He's a major real estate investor
Posted by the Asbury Park Press on 05/14/06
BY BOB CULLINANE
STAFF WRITER


When he was buying real estate at the Shore "with a passionate fervor," as one observer recalled, Solomon Dwek would drive around Ocean Township in his black Lexus making deals on his mobile phone.

"He was constantly buying properties," said Christopher P. Siciliano, an Ocean Township councilman and township Realtor. "(Real estate) agents were literally running to Solomon."

But in the past three weeks, the buying has ceased, the fervor has died, the agents have stopped calling and the black Lexus carrying a wheeling-and-dealing Dwek is nowhere in sight.

In its place are irate investors, embarrassed community members, angry home builders and a criminal complaint that charges Dwek, 33, with defrauding PNC Bank of $22.5 million and attempting to defraud it of $50 million.

And there is also a fear that the potential financial collapse of Dwek's multimillion-dollar real estate empire will create wide economic tremors that spread from individual homeowners to multinational banks.

5/19/2006 02:13:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Maybe if Greenspan decided not to "shut the hell up" in the year or so leading up to the tech bubble collapse then perhaps stocks wouldn't have had so far to drop. And maybe the impact would not have been so severe.

Maybe now he sees a similar situation brewing.

Remember, mr re investor, if it wasn't for AG and his loose credit policies, your paper gains wouldn't be anywhere near what they are now.

5/19/2006 06:20:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Greenspan is a @$$&^%$!

This F^%() monkey has debased our currency through his reckless monetary actions. Now he has the nerve to open his big fat trap to say the boom is over?

5/19/2006 07:33:00 AM  
Blogger grim said...

This is the death knell of the housing market.

I'm surprised it isn't getting more coverage. Perhaps it would have, if he had chosen to use the words "irrational exhuberance" instead of "extraordinary boom" or "froth".

Words aside, this statement is the equivalent. Yes, he is no longer with the Fed, however, hisword still carries much weight.

grim

5/19/2006 07:45:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Its funny as human beings we are always blaming someone for our own greed and misgivings. When the dotcom boom was in fullswing, our greed sucked us in, which was the followed by the RE boom and now the commodity boom. Greed begets greed. Thats the nature of the beast. Greenspan could have done nothing after the dotcom boom and the country would have gone into a 10 year recession. People will still blame him for not doing anything then. He tinkers with monetary policy to keep the masses in check and keep the country out of recession. When there is a boom and when you making money, you take all the credit and consider yourself as the next Bill Gates or Donald Trump. When there is a bust, lets blame Greenspan.

5/19/2006 09:02:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Greenspan is mai nly to blame for this train wreck.

He lowered rates to ridiculous levels , looked the other way while lenders lent money to anyone that had a pulse and he recommended that home buyers use an ARM loan when rates were at the bottom.

Yes sir he has made a mess and deserves the blame. if he only backed away from his GOD like attitude of abolishing economic cycles and let markets correct the excesses we would be far better off today. Now we have a housing mess about to unwind and consumers up to their eyeballs in debt. A recipe for disaster.

5/19/2006 09:19:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

"He lowered rates to ridiculous levels , looked the other way while lenders lent money to anyone that had a pulse and he recommended that home buyers use an ARM loan when rates were at the bottom."

He lowered rates so that money is supplied into the system after a capital bust. This money can be used for capital creation and innovation. He has no control over lenders and banks as this is not his reponsibility. Blame Congress and President Bush for not enforcing Fannie and Freddie for tight standards. Greenspan has long being complaining about the debt levels of Fannie and Freddie and what has congress done about it. It is all politics. Hold your representative responsible.

5/19/2006 09:41:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

prices are dropping big in queens area, whitestone,bayside,astoria.
saw one house in whitestone orig lp 698k now asking 505k 20% drop and its still sitting there. cant wait until aug/sept to see where prices are
dont buy yet, hold on !!

5/19/2006 09:50:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

oh, ok... Greenie "tinkered" with the money supply? Wrong! He needlessly drove interest rates down to 1%... because he panicked about deflation... then... to make matters worse... as he began to increase interest rates in february 2004, he encouraged both consumers with fixed rate mortgage to refi into ARMs and lenders to get more creative... which was a clear signal to the lending industry to give money to anyone who can fog a mirror... this made no sense whatsoever from a risk management view... ARMs are used when interest rates are at a peak... it saves you the refi expense when they drop. This was a gift to the lending industry... this poor management of risk is what really drove this real estate mania for another 1-2 years... in my opinion, it's the reason why Ben B. and other fed governors have recently made statements about new lending guidlines.

5/19/2006 09:53:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I am so tired of people insisting that housing prices are not going to drop not in our area (NJ shore towns). They honestly believe prices will continue to rise and tell me I should buy now. I haven't been looking at many homes recently, but the ones I see in advertised are still sky high.

5/19/2006 10:02:00 AM  
Blogger chicagofinance said...

Please stop with the Greenspan bashing. It is so convenient to do, and in reality extremely misplaced.

I only blame him for one thing - lack of circumspection in making ONE comment about borrowing at short-term rates. His comment was correct in that it was retrospective, not prospective. However, he should have known better and not made such a statement, because opportunists were going to spin it for profit.

Otherwise, he has been masterful. If his competence and evenhanded is not clearly apparent to you, then in my opinion, you do not recognize the scope of the Fed Chair's job or how well he excelled at it.

chicago

5/19/2006 11:24:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

chicago,

read "The Penniless Billionaires" by Shapiro and maybe you will understand why greenspan has been a complete failure.

Look at when greenspan took over as fed chief what the value of the dollar was worth vs other currencies aginst today. He has failed.

5/19/2006 11:49:00 AM  
Blogger chicagofinance said...

Anon:

Let's agree to disagree.

Thank you for the rebuttal.

chicago

5/19/2006 12:20:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Greenspan is not the issue with American currency. He really did do well and controlling the economy and preventing an all out crash and market panic. We have not seen bad economic conditions in 15 years. The real truth is that if any mistake he made it was not raising the rates sooner. But alas it all comes down to the root of the problem. We have underlying economic issues.

Given the reckless economic policies of the Bush administration, and market manipulation from China it is easy to see our prediciment. It all comes down to one question where does the Money come from? Bush has spent so much money and has been borrowing this devalues our currency and the US economy. We really don't produce anything anymore, this puts us a a tight spot because we mostly produce IP. The nations doing the production do not respect IP and thus we have the big trade gulf. This also hurts the dollar. Our economy is only worth the value we produce, right now we are comming up short fueling our growth on borrowed money.

THe biggest issue with what greenspan did is the yahoo who runs the country right now. I say this because when you try to manuever your way out of economic crisis the last thing we needed was a high spending fiscally irresponsible government. Now we will get a sustained period of economic trauma as a result.

5/19/2006 01:22:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

"Greenspan is not the issue with American currency. He really did do well and controlling the economy and preventing an all out crash and market panic. We have not seen bad economic conditions in 15 years. The real truth is that if any mistake he made it was not raising the rates sooner. But alas it all comes down to the root of the problem. We have underlying economic issues."

I disagree. We haven't corrected the excess of past excesses. It's bee paper overed....but there is a price to pay for this reckless monetary behavior. You cannot print and leverage your way to prosperity using paper currency forever.

Greenspan did screwup. He is the cause of the huge trade deficit. Why? Because is reckless policies produced a housing bubble and the housing ATM maching went into service. Fools were able to cash out equity out of their homes to finance a more extravagent lifestyle one that they probably couldn't afford if restrained to their incomes. The housing bubble, the consumer indebtness, the trade deficit and the weakening dollar are all a result of this reckless monetary policy.

5/19/2006 01:45:00 PM  
Blogger chicagofinance said...

"Hindsight is 20-20"

5/19/2006 02:46:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

"Given the reckless economic policies of the Bush administration..."

People who make such comments conveniently have zero recollection of the US economy of October 2001 -- while 140+ acres of the nation's financial district lay in ruin, the stock market was shut down for the first time in history, thousands of lives and trillions of dollars were lost, and it was less than a year after the dot-com implosion.



"Bush has spent so much money and has been borrowing this devalues our currency and the US economy..."

How much would a 'Nuclear 9-11' cost? Do you complain that FDR spent money during World War II?



"We really don't produce anything anymore, this puts us a a tight spot because we mostly produce IP. The nations doing the production do not respect IP and thus we have the big trade gulf."

Well, guess who renewed China's "Most Favored Nation" trade status? Not boogeyman Bush:

http://cnn.com/ALLPOLITICS/1998/06/03/china.trade


Let's have more facts and objectivity, and less partisan nonsense.

5/19/2006 03:35:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

First lets establish something, Greenspan exacerbated the problem. He used cheap money to keep the economy afloat. I will contend the money was too cheap for too long. Eventually we will pay the price for fueling our economy with borrowed money. But on the other hand what would have happened had the Greenspan fairy not have come? Higher unemployment? Recession? What were the options? Realistically besides crazy housing and the begining of some inflation. Things are pretty good right now, not unemployed, making money. Now thats not to say we will not pay the price in the future, now with the economy heating and inflation looking to be a concern, we will have to tighten our belts and take the hit. It has happened before it will happen again. The point I was making is that as of now we really have little to complain about and Greenspan's policies have generally been alright. I am not crazy about dropping dollars from the sky to stave off sustained recession, it didn't work in the 70's won't work now either.

Unrealtor, it is not partisan. I am just going to ask one question would you run a company with the Bush economic policy. It is my firm belief that large sustained debts from our government will bring recession and inflation especially when exacerbated by low interest rates. I understand the economic impact of 9/11, it was huge but think of it like a one time expense, in real economic terms it was a pinprick not a knife to the heart. The economy in NYC with slight intervention would have repaired itself. Also I decry Bush, I don't say anyone else is any better, but he really needs to pressure the Chinese more, it was the same garbage when Japan, and other east asian nations were playing games. The FDR situation is slightly different we were attacked, Germany was an aggressive nation with a highly developed military and a plan for world domination. Hussein, not a terrorist, kind of crazy, pretty evil, a bad person, despot....yes to all of the above. But a threat....ha make me laugh, the main couldn't attack a municipal police force with his weak army and he had no WMDs. I have no issues with spending money to hunt terrorists, just do it efficiently. Also don't cut taxes when there is a lot of spending to be done, let the fed control the money supply. Additionally tighten efficiency in government, we need smarter government less spending, smarter spending. When the federal budget shrinks 5% than give me my damn tax cut. You cannot have your cake and eat it too.

5/19/2006 05:19:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

We don't need an enemy with "a highly developed military" to pose a threat, we need an enemy with ONE nuke in a shipping container sailing up the Hudson River.

People were warning about Saddam's nukes and WMD long before Bush took office:

http://freedomagenda.com/iraq/wmd_quotes.html

And 9-11 was NOT a "a one time expense" it was a window into what will happen next, when these lunatics get their hands on a nuke. As I asked earlier, how much would a 'Nuclear 9-11' cost?

At least during the Cold War, the Soviets were held at bay with the prospect of retaliation; today we don't have that luxury.

And in 1963 JFK warned the Soviets:

"It shall be the policy of this nation to regard any nuclear missile launched from Cuba against any nation in the Western Hemisphere as an attack by the Soviet Union on the United States, requiring a full retaliatory response upon the Soviet Union."

http://fordham.edu/halsall/mod/1962kennedy-cuba.html

Why would JFK threaten the Soviets with annihilation if Cuba attacked "any nation in the Western Hemisphere"?

Why did FDR invade Africa when the Japanese attacked America?

I'm amazed that many people cannot think strategically, and also base their 'reality' on either a selective memory, or a lack of factual information.

The stakes are much higher today, and 9-11 was not a one-off event that we need to forget about. These lunatics are planning the next one, and the second they get a nuke, they'll use it.

5/19/2006 07:30:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

As for govt waste, that's been happening in the US since day one.

I don't see many politicians calling for spending cuts, so if there's blame to go around, it's certianly not on a single person.

5/19/2006 07:32:00 PM  

Post a Comment

<< Home