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Phil De Carolis-Prudential California Realty
Phil De Carolis' Weekly Update: October 26, 2007 Press Release

Stop Sign

Click On The Stop Sign To Watch A Short Video Clip And Find Out If The Housing Market Will Impact The Entire Economy ??

Peter Schiffs' Economic Commentary
"Send in the Clowns"

Friday October 26, 2007

By Economist Peter Schiff                                                                                       

 Peter Schiff

 Four leading members of the Bush administration's economic team, including Ed Lazear, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors, Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez, Al Hubbard, director of the National Economic Council, and Jim Nussle, director of the Office of Management and Budget, convened on a CNBC panel earlier this week and confidently forecast that the economy would avoid a recession. As they uttered their platitudes, we learned that housing sales plunged again, with national inventories of unsold homes hitting a new record high, and that Merrill Lynch disclosed nearly $8 billion in losses. Set against this backdrop of deteriorating economic news, it would have been more honest, and perhaps more effective, if the Administration team came on stage in clown makeup and oversize shoes.

The group's most entertaining routine could be described as the "falling dollar hot potato". It is a testament to the professionalism of CNBC host Dylan Ratigan that he was able to suppress howls of laughter while the economists scrambled to avoid any discussion of the dollar by claiming that only the President and the Secretary of the Treasury were allowed to comment. (Of course the only thing Bush or Paulson will utter on the subject is the all too familiar mantra "a strong dollar is in our national interest.") How can the leading economic policy makers in government refuse to discuss the value of our money, which is arguably the single most important part of the economy? Why is the subject taboo? Perhaps they feel that anything they say will only inspire less confidence in the dollar? In reality, the Administration is perusing a policy of benign neglect. Today's break-outs in the prices of gold and silver show that the policy is not going over too well!

In addition to the dollar dance, the wacky economists also provided some laughs on a variety of other subjects.

Regarding the California wildfires, the panel reassured us that the resilient U.S. economy would weather the storm, much as it did with hurricane Katrina. However, as state and federal officials promise unlimited funds to rebuild thousands of burned homes, they conveniently ignore the fact that we must put the tab on our national charge card. The ability to postpone pain by borrowing from abroad is not evidence of economic resilience but vulnerability. A truly resilient economy has ample domestic savings to cover these vicissitudes itself. America has yet to pay the costs associated with a string of natural disasters, the bills for which will likely come due much sooner than anyone seems to realize.

The Administration gang also told us that the American economy will benefit once China moves to an economy based on consumption rather than savings (in other words, more like our economy) as they will finally begin buying more of our products. Although it is true to expect that the Chinese will inevitably start spending more, it is ridiculous to assume that it will benefit the United States. When the Chinese begin spending they will simply snap up their own abundant production and send fewer goods to America. As the Chinese reduce their savings to begin enjoying the fruits of their labor, American borrowers will lose access to their largest source of credit. The two-pronged effect on the American economy will be substantial increases in both consumer prices and interest rates -- hardly the benign outcome all the President's men expect.

None seemed too concerned about the cost of funding the war in Iraq (already more costly than either Korea or Vietnam in inflation adjusted terms), which on the day of this "summit" we learned is now projected to be almost two trillion dollars. Their lack of concern likely reflects their belief that Americans are not the ones picking up the tab. I'm sure there is a different reaction among our foreign creditors, as they contemplate the prospects of "loaning" us that much more money knowing that a declining dollar guarantees they will never be re-paid in full. Perhaps the thought of loaning us endless sums to cope with natural disaster at home and man-made ones abroad will shock foreigners to their collective senses, prompting them to finally cut us off.

On housing we were once again told the problems would be contained. Such upbeat pronouncements should be wearing thin in the face of mounting evidence to the contrary. When will people begin to grasp that the trillions of dollars of mortgage loans financed by Wall Street will never be repaid in full and that the losses for lenders will be staggering?

Homeowners have lenders over a barrel, and soon all will know it. Once the government exempts forgiven mortgage debt from being treated as taxable income, defaults will become a national trend. Under normal circumstances, lenders have all the power, as 20% down payments and an ample supply of qualified buyers makes foreclosure a real threat. However, under current circumstances, it's completely empty. Lenders can not foreclose as there are no buyers and no equity. If homeowners choose not to pay, lenders really have no choice but to renegotiate the loans. Once homeowners understand this no one will make a mortgage payment until their loan is reduced to an amount more consistent with the actual value of their home.

While homeowners themselves will experience mere paper losses, those of the lenders will be all too real. However, even with less mortgage debt, homeowners will finally wake up to the fact that their home equity is gone. Without it, much like the Chinese today, Americans will consumer a whole lot less and hopefully save a whole lot more.

For a more in depth analysis of the tenuous position of the Americana economy and U.S. dollar denominated investments, read my new book "Crash Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse."
 
Click The Icon To Download And Listen To The
 
October 24th Installment Of Wall Street Unspun With Host Peter Schiff
 
Wall Street Unspun

Continued Rate Cuts Show Fed Believes Economy Is Bigger Concern Than Inflation:

" The recent deterioration in housing markets and the stock market has prompted investors to expect an additional quarter-point cut in the interest rate next week; some foresee a cut of half a point"

Oct. 25 (Wall Street Journal Online) -- Federal Reserve officials are nearing consensus on several steps to make their deliberations more transparent to the public, but are likely to defer one of Chairman Ben Bernanke's longstanding goals: an explicit inflation target. The centerpiece of their new communications steps would be the release of economic forecasts of policy makers four times a year, instead of the current two times, with additional detail and background, according to people familiar with the matter. Moreover, the horizon for those forecasts would be extended to three years from two.......
 

The U.S. Is Entering A Severe Recession Equivalent To Or Worse Than The Stagflation Of The 1970's:

 
"Americans Turn Negative on Economy, Expect Recession, Poll Says "

Oct. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Almost two-thirds of Americans say a recession is likely in the next year and a majority believes the economy is already faltering, according to a Bloomberg/Los Angeles Times survey. By 65 percent to 29 percent, Americans say they expect a recession, the poll found. Fifty-one percent say the economy is doing poorly, compared with 46 percent who say it is doing well, the gloomiest view since February 2003.....

 
 

 


Dollar Devaluation Increases As Foreign Investors Lose Confidence In The Strength Of The Dollar: 
 
"Dollar Falls to Record Low Versus Euro as Bets on Fed Cut Mount"
 
 
The Dollar Devaluation Is Causing The Rise Of Prices In Consumer Goods Making Shopping More Expensive:
 
"Corn, Soybeans Rise as Dollar's Decline Boosts Demand; Wheat Up"
 

Oct. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Corn and soybean futures in Chicago gained for the first time in three days on speculation a weaker dollar will boost demand for the U.S. crops. Wheat futures rose after declining for the past four days.

Commodities often move in the opposite direction of the dollar, which yesterday fell against most major currencies after a government report showed U.S. housing starts fell to a 14-year low in September. The dollar's decline makes U.S. products cheaper for buyers using other currencies, bolstering demand.

 
Declining Real Estate Values And Rising Foreclosures:
 
"Report: 2 million homes to foreclose"
 
Oct. 26 (ChicagoTribune.com)- Two million subprime-mortgage foreclosures are likely to occur by 2009 if home prices continue their downward spiral, a congressional report said Thursday. The report also estimated that $71 billion in housing wealth will be destroyed and states will lose $917 million in property tax revenue because of foreclosures. The report was released by Joint Economic Committee Chairman Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) and other lawmakers.......

 
As Confidence In The Dollar Sinks, Gold Historically Rises As A Hedge Against Dollar Value Declines:
 
"Gold scales 28-year peak" 
 

Oct. 26 (Business Day)- Gold climbed to a 28-year peak on Friday and platinum traded just below an all-time high, as a record low dollar and lifetime-high oil spurred buying.

Gold, often seen as a hedge against oil-led inflation and traditionally deemed a safe-haven asset, was gradually advancing towards the next big target of $800 an ounce while the dollar struggled to find a solid base.

Click On This Link To View The Entire Article


As The Dollar Value Declines, Oil Prices Rise:
 
"Oil Eases Off Record High Above $92 a Barrel"
 
 

Oct. 26 (CNBC)- Oil rallied to a fresh record high above $92 a barrel on Friday as the dollar tumbled to a record low, Washington imposed new sanctions on Iran and gunmen shut more oil production in Nigeria. Oil's bullish momentum has pulled in increasing amounts of speculative investment and waves of technical buying have been triggered as U.S. oil pierced successive lines of resistance.......

 
Futures Prices 
 
Todays Prices (October 26, 2007)
*Gold Futures $788.6/Ounce As Of 5:00pm (EST)
 
Last Weeks Prices (October 19, 2007)
*Dollar Index 77.35
*Gold Futures $769.3/Ounce 
* Crude Oil $90.07 /Barrel
Federal Funds Rate 4.75%
Federal Discount Rate 5.25%
 
Thank you for taking the time to read this e-mail and don't hesitate to contact me at (909) 910-9618 or by e-mail at
Info@PhilDeCarolis.com if you have any questions or concerns. Feel free to forward this e-mail to anyone that will find this information useful. Have a great weekend!!
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Prudential California Realty
Phil De Carolis
Realtor/Investor
Cell (909) 910-9618
Fax (909) 752-5353


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