* Short-term credit markets freeze up after French bank BNP Paribas suspends three investment funds worth 2bn euros.
The bank cited problems in the US sub-prime mortgage sector.
* During the following months, US and European banks report losses totalling hundreds of billions of dollars.
* The European Central Bank pumps 95bn euros into the eurozone banking system to ease the sub-prime credit crunch.
* The US Federal Reserve and the Bank of Japan take similar steps.
So what's next?
I only know what I read in the papers but here's my guess based on everything I've seen so far...
Property in the US has - dropped a few percentage points in value. The money machine seems to have weathered the first wave of bad lending practices whereby foreclosures were made on many people simply couldn't keep up their mortgage payments.
But the next wave is just about to start... People in the USA who simply can't be bothered to make payments because it's bad business for them.
It's my view that over the next year or so Americans will simply stop paying for their houses because it's a crappy deal for them... and it's pretty easy to re-establish your credit within a few years, so why not?
If you buy a house for X amount and it's now only worth 80% of X, then paying for it month after month is simply bad economics. In an age where those same houses may take years to reclaim those losses then walking away may be the best option for home owners in the long term.
The laws were quickly changed in the last 'great depression' in the USA in the 30s to make it easy for people to default on their mortgages and people will use those same laws today to simply stop paying and wait to be turfed out.
I'm not talking about people who want to pay and have their loans restructured or people who have banks willing to refinance and reschedule payments...
...I'm talking about the millions who will simply stop all contact with lenders and just wait till they are foreclosed on.
It may have been that in the past; you would only bail out as a last resort because of pride, shame or optimism... Now it's looking more and more like a sound business decision.
The banks are going to be left with no money and lots of unsellable property and an economic outlook that no amount of money on earth can rescue.
That's when the real hurt will set in...
Like I say - I'm an armchair expert with no real knowledge of the world economy, but it's a hunch!
Is there hope for us after this latest global depression?
Home owners... On your marks... get set... GO!
The bank cited problems in the US sub-prime mortgage sector.
* During the following months, US and European banks report losses totalling hundreds of billions of dollars.
* The European Central Bank pumps 95bn euros into the eurozone banking system to ease the sub-prime credit crunch.
* The US Federal Reserve and the Bank of Japan take similar steps.
So what's next?
I only know what I read in the papers but here's my guess based on everything I've seen so far...
Property in the US has - dropped a few percentage points in value. The money machine seems to have weathered the first wave of bad lending practices whereby foreclosures were made on many people simply couldn't keep up their mortgage payments.
But the next wave is just about to start... People in the USA who simply can't be bothered to make payments because it's bad business for them.
It's my view that over the next year or so Americans will simply stop paying for their houses because it's a crappy deal for them... and it's pretty easy to re-establish your credit within a few years, so why not?
If you buy a house for X amount and it's now only worth 80% of X, then paying for it month after month is simply bad economics. In an age where those same houses may take years to reclaim those losses then walking away may be the best option for home owners in the long term.
The laws were quickly changed in the last 'great depression' in the USA in the 30s to make it easy for people to default on their mortgages and people will use those same laws today to simply stop paying and wait to be turfed out.
I'm not talking about people who want to pay and have their loans restructured or people who have banks willing to refinance and reschedule payments...
...I'm talking about the millions who will simply stop all contact with lenders and just wait till they are foreclosed on.
It may have been that in the past; you would only bail out as a last resort because of pride, shame or optimism... Now it's looking more and more like a sound business decision.
The banks are going to be left with no money and lots of unsellable property and an economic outlook that no amount of money on earth can rescue.
That's when the real hurt will set in...
Like I say - I'm an armchair expert with no real knowledge of the world economy, but it's a hunch!
Is there hope for us after this latest global depression?
Home owners... On your marks... get set... GO!
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