Arthur Cashin, director of floor operations at UBS
Foreclosure Fiasco Ferments Further â When I wrote last week about the emerging problems in foreclosures, I opined that the problem could get much bigger and more complicated. Boy, has it ever.
Wednesday morning, my good friend David Kotok, dropped by the NYSE to be interviewed, along with Rod Smyth of Riverfront Investment Group, on CNBCâs Squawk on the Street. Before they left, they dropped by to say hello. The conversation quickly turned to the foreclosure fiasco.
It was noted how quickly this had morphed from a potentially isolated processing problem at a single institution (GMAC) to an industry-wide disaster that may threaten the very concept of securitization.
That would be a major problem since at the top of the bubble, it was estimated that nearly 80% of all credit came from securitization. Thatâs a hole that no fleet of Fed helicopters can fill.
The problem is even being politicized to some degree. Speaker Pelosi and several associates called on the Justice Department and other regulators that the banks be âheld accountable for their practicesâ.
There are fears that the murky comingling of mortgage packages may take months or even years to unravel. In one case, as many as four separate entities claimed title to the same piece of property.
With foreclosures virtually frozen, a surreal new world seems to be evolving. Delinquent homeowners live in the house but make no payments. The banks/mortgage holders get no payments but are still liable for things like property taxes. Could this morph into TARP II?
Before we got each other more depressed, we exchanged greetings and went our separate ways wondering if the ânew normalâ was morphing into the ânew abnormalâ.
http://www.zerohedge.com/article/ar...ath-securitization-and-fleets-fed-helicopters
Foreclosure Fiasco Ferments Further â When I wrote last week about the emerging problems in foreclosures, I opined that the problem could get much bigger and more complicated. Boy, has it ever.
Wednesday morning, my good friend David Kotok, dropped by the NYSE to be interviewed, along with Rod Smyth of Riverfront Investment Group, on CNBCâs Squawk on the Street. Before they left, they dropped by to say hello. The conversation quickly turned to the foreclosure fiasco.
It was noted how quickly this had morphed from a potentially isolated processing problem at a single institution (GMAC) to an industry-wide disaster that may threaten the very concept of securitization.
That would be a major problem since at the top of the bubble, it was estimated that nearly 80% of all credit came from securitization. Thatâs a hole that no fleet of Fed helicopters can fill.
The problem is even being politicized to some degree. Speaker Pelosi and several associates called on the Justice Department and other regulators that the banks be âheld accountable for their practicesâ.
There are fears that the murky comingling of mortgage packages may take months or even years to unravel. In one case, as many as four separate entities claimed title to the same piece of property.
With foreclosures virtually frozen, a surreal new world seems to be evolving. Delinquent homeowners live in the house but make no payments. The banks/mortgage holders get no payments but are still liable for things like property taxes. Could this morph into TARP II?
Before we got each other more depressed, we exchanged greetings and went our separate ways wondering if the ânew normalâ was morphing into the ânew abnormalâ.
http://www.zerohedge.com/article/ar...ath-securitization-and-fleets-fed-helicopters
