Archive for November 2007

Bankruptcy Reform Makes Housing Slump Worse

Even though I’m paying my bills I opposed the bankruptcy reform pushed through congress in 2005. As I wrote in March 2005,

And who are those in real need? Why the banks of course, most of which have offices in Delaware and give handsomely to both Democrat and Republican parties, including Senators Carper and Biden.

According to Consumers Union, which bitterly opposed the bill, Congress is set to protect the banks and those running them. For example, modest income debtors face harsh new barriers. Weighed down by unexpected medical bills or the loss of a job? Too bad. The banks need your house and ar more than you.

Now it appears that this supposed “reform” has made the housing slump worse less than two years after it was enacted.

But today’s growing problem in the housing market is different—foreclosures are soaring, while bankruptcies, though clearly on the upswing, are running roughly at half the 2001-2003 pace. The reason: A new bankruptcy law, approved by Congress in 2005 after years of debate, makes it much harder for households to get out from under their consumer debt. The result: More people being forced to walk away from their homes, leaving lenders holding the bag. Perversely, a law intended to help the financial industry may be damaging the housing sector, creditors and borrowers alike. “It doesn’t matter what you think of the purpose of the new bankruptcy law. The timing is bad,” says Susan M. Wachter, professor of real estate at the Wharton School of Business.

So let’s review. In order to get more money out of debtors, lenders pushed through a bankruptcy bill that in extreme cases gave them their debtors homes. Now debtors are unable to pay their credit card bills AND their mortgages, so they default on both. The banks get their debtors homes – which stand empty and depreciate on their books.

No I am not anti-banking at all. Living in Delaware I’ve worked at most of the big ones and recognize the need banks fulfill in the global economy. However being an amateur historian, I tend to remember things – like bubbles – and I even wrote the following in Sept 2005 about the current one.

The Past is real and to a great degree concrete. We lived it and know it – well, at least our faulty perception convinces us that we do. The Future, on the other hand, is as ethereal as a cloud.

Plus, we also take comfort in the Herd: “Everyone else is doing it. Can everyone else be similarly deluded?”

Well, yes they can. Buying Global Crossing at $200/share. Selling homes to buy a single Tulip bulb. History is peppered throughout with mass delusion of one type or another.

In addition, there are always Doom Sayers. “The End is Nigh”, “The bubble will collapse”, “Doom, Doom, Doom.” Most of the time these people are wrong and can be safely ignored. However when do you start listening to them?

Perhaps you never should – since broken clocks may be right twice a day but we don’t use them to tell time. More useful are predicators that have been tested by time and have worked in the past. All of these indicators point to a housing bubble – one that exists on a global scale.

Broken clocks may be right twice a day but we don’t use them to tell time... That’s a good, original line.

The banks bought the politicians and the pols gave them what they wanted. However it turns out what they wanted wasn’t good for them in the long run. Now they are bleeding cash, and the heads of banking CEOs are beginning to roll.

But I’m not feeling all that good about successfully predicting the future 2 years ago. Being an historian I remember that most recessions and even the Great Depression started with unhealthy banks.

11/08/07 UPDATE:
Bloomberg chimes in with a similar article:


``Be careful what you wish for,’’ Jay Westbrook, a professor of business law at the University of Texas Law School in Austin and a former adviser to the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank said. ``They wanted to make sure that people kept paying their credit cards, and what they’re getting is more foreclosures.’’

Cry me a river…

Families Returning Home to Baghdad

An AP via Yahoo story no less…

The 40-year-old al-Azawi, who has gone back to work managing a car service, said relatives and friends persuaded him to bring his family home.

“Six months ago, I wouldn’t dare be outside, not even to stand near the garden gate by the street. Killings had become routine. I stopped going to work, I was so afraid,” he said, chatting with friends on a street in the neighborhood.

When he and his family joined the flood of Iraqi refugees to Syria the streets were empty by early afternoon, when all shops were tightly shuttered. Now the stores stay open until 10 p.m. and the U.S. military working with the neighborhood council is handing out $2,000 grants to shop owners who had closed their business. The money goes to those who agree to reopen or first-time businessmen.

Al-Azawi said he’s trying to get one of the grants to open a poultry and egg shop that his brother would run.

“In Khadra, about 15 families have returned from Syria. I’ve called friends and family still there and told them it’s safe to come home,” he said.

This matches what StrategyPage has been saying for awhile, most recently here, in a story about the recent cave whining attributed to OBL and broadcast by al-Jazeera – which is now in hot water with jihadis for broadcasting the tape..

Bin Laden doesn’t discuss how the Americans defeated him. It was done with data. Years of collecting data on the bad guys paid off. Month by month, the picture of the enemy became clearer. This was literally the case, with some of the intelligence software that created visual representations of what was known of the enemy, and how reliable it was. The picture was clear enough to maneuver key enemy factions into positions that make them easier to run down.

One of the greatest strengths of the American military has been its relatively flat command structure, and a professional NCO corps that is able to function autonomously. This has given it the ability to change tactics quickly and learn from mistakes. What works makes it way quickly through the organization, while a culture that tolerates a level of failure allows risk taking for sergeants to experiment. If it sounds like the entrepreneurial culture found in large, well-run companies – it should because in essence that’s exactly what it is.

This is probably the single biggest change between the US military of 2007 versus that of 1967 and especially that in World War 2.

Al-Qaeda, on the other hand, can’t fail – and can’t lose because God is on it’s side, and failure is about as tolerated as well within that organization as the mob. No wonder OBL, or more likely, someone channeling OBL from beyond the grave is sitting in a cave pouring out his heart into a tape recorder.

The Power of the Pocketbook

Looks like the U of D has backed down with their Orwellian experiment in student housing:

Upon the recommendation of Vice President for Student Life Michael Gilbert and Director of Residence Life Kathleen Kerr, I have directed that the program be stopped immediately. No further activities under the current framework will be conducted.

It’s pretty sad when alumni – who often are parents – have to keep an eye on their alma mater to make sure it’s behaving itself.

November 2, 2007 UPDATE:
The local newspaper FINALLY picked the story up today.

University of Delaware President Patrick Harker pulled the plug on the school’s residence life educational program Thursday after the program was blasted publicly by students, parents and a civil liberties group that questioned the purpose of the program and the methods it used.

Nothing like hearing about local issues in the national news first. Nice job, guys.

Foreign Service Wimps – An Open Letter to Sec. Condoleeza Rice

In 1996 I took and passed the written Foreign Service Exam. The following spring I washed out of the process during the interview phase. One of my high school friends did the same thing, except he reapplied the following year and was chosen. I didn’t because I decided to forgo my dream in order for the Wife to pursue hers.

Now she’s achieved her dream, so maybe it’s time to achieve mine.

Dear Madame Secretary Rice:
After learning that members of the foreign service are refusing to be posted to Iraq, using theatrics that get headlines in the liberal mainstream press like Jack Croddy, a senior foreign service officer who didn’t let the fact that no foreign service officer has been killed in Iraq stop him from referring to the posting there as a “potential death sentence,” I hereby offer my services as a replacement to Mr. Croddy and in return will volunteer for an Iraqi posting. I offer my services on the condition that I receive the same pay, benefits and position as Mr. Croddy and that Mr. Croddy be summarily dismissed to the private sector where I have worked since washing out of the Foreign Service process in 1997.

It’s time Mr. Croddy knows what it is like to take orders, to do things one doesn’t like to do in order to remain employed. Mr. Croddy and the members of the Foreign Service who cheered him have clearly forgotten how easily those of us in the private sector can be dismissed – often for no fault of our own, and certainly for standing up and criticizing a company policy and its head in public – as Mr. Croddy has done. The jobs that these people enjoyed are a privilege granted to only a few, yet they have clearly disrespected their offices by acting in so childish a manner.

I guarantee that should you accept my offer, I will not bring shame to you, your department, or the nation that it serves as Mr. Croddy and his cohorts have done. In addition I would look forward to helping a nation that has suffered under the heel of oppression for generations to rise up and achieve the peace and freedom it deserves, an opportunity that Mr. Croddy and his ilk selfishly refuse.

Sincerely,
Scott Kirwin

I doubt my phone will ring anytime soon; I’m too old, opinionated and conservative to make a good diplomat (“So you’re the new Cheese-Eating-Surrender-Monkey – I mean ‘French’ – attache…”). But if it did… well, it would be life changing that’s for sure.