More than three years before the current financial crisis, in a series Greenspan, the Wizard of Bubbleland that began on September 14, 2005, I warned: Through mortgage-backed securitization, banks now are mere loan intermediaries that assume no long-term risk on the risky loans they make, which are sold as securitized debt of unbundled levels of risk to institutional investors with varying risk appetite commensurate with their varying need for higher returns. But who are institutional investors? They are mostly pension funds that manage the money the US working public depends on for retirement. In other words, the aggregate retirement assets of the working public are exposed to the risk of the same working public defaulting on their house mortgages. When a homeowner loses his or her home through default of its mortgage, the homeowner will also lose his or her retirement nest egg invested in the securitized mortgage pool, while the banks stay technically solvent. That is the hidden network of linked financial landmines in a housing bubble financed by mortgage-backed securitization to which no one is paying attention. The bursting of the housing […]
Friday, October 31st, 2008
Black Hole Gapes for Pensions
Author: HENRY C.K. LIU
Source: Asia Times (Hong Kong)
Publication Date: 31-Oct-08
Link: Black Hole Gapes for Pensions
Source: Asia Times (Hong Kong)
Publication Date: 31-Oct-08
Link: Black Hole Gapes for Pensions
Stephan: Here is an exegetic essay on another crisis emerging from the wings. We aren't even close to being out of the woods.
Henry C K Liu is chairman of a New York-based private investment group.