Friday, December 26, 2008

"Detailed below we see that more has actually been lost ($7.7 Trillion) if we to look at asset investments over that same time frame"

An interest post on EconomPic Data:

"Asset Price Declines, Wealth Destruction, and Federal Borrowing / Bailouts

The Federal Government's Flow of Accounts (hat tip Mish) shows a ton of detail related to just how much wealth has been lost in the past 12 months through the third quarter. Per Mish:


$7.08 Trillion in wealth has vaporized in the past year. Figure 2008 Q4 to be as
bad as Q3. If so, roughly $10 Trillion in household wealth will be vaporized in
little over a year. And looking ahead, there is no reason( THERE ARE SOME ) to believe the stock
market, the housing market, or the economy will show signs of recovery anytime
soon.
Detailed below we see that more has actually been lost ($7.7 Trillion) if we to look at asset investments over that same time frame (R.100 Page 113).



Going back to 2004, we see just how large a drop off this was. Note that we have seen losses across all the tracked asset classes.


Why have all these asset classes affected? Deleveraging of the system is why. Without cheap financing( INTEREST RATES ARE LOW NOW ) flowing in the system to prop up asset prices above sustainable levels( WHAT ARE THESE LEVELS?)... asset prices fall. Just think about it... home prices have fallen as individuals find it much harder to get a mortgage (if they even want one). A homebuyer found it much easier to pay $500,000 for a home with no money down, than with the traditional 20% down (if they could have even afforded it). Now they can't even get a 20% down loan( SOME CAN ).

This is exactly what has happened as investors, banks, and funds all delever due to among many things, a lack of financing for borrowing. Credit has all, but frozen up with the HUGE exception being the Federal Government ( TRUE )(data from F.1 page 17).

Expect the Fed to continue to borrow, borrow, borrow AND spend, spend, spend as the public sectors balance sheet attempts to replace the private balance sheet." ( TRUE )


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