Wednesday, August 25, 2010

The "End Game" Approaches

"This has been one of the most interesting days in finance ever," said Andrew Roberts, head of credit at RBS. "We are right at the tipping point. Yields are about to collapse even further, equities are about to turn over. The end game approaches, probably in next few weeks."

In the US, the 27pc collapse in existing homes sales in July leaves no doubt that America's property market cannot stand on its own feet without the prop of homebuyer tax credits. "Home sales are in free-fall. These are truly dismal numbers," said Teunis Brosens from ING.

The article from which this quote came may be read in full from here. Readers of this blog will be unsurprised that the western world has reached this point, just as we warned at the start of this summer when JC Trichet pompously departed on his holiday in St Malo claiming that all was incredibly well, indeed with all our warnings down the years, that corrupt self-serving politicians would inevitably land the world in the mess in which we now find ourselves, bankrupt and with no economic weapons left to mitigate the consequences. Sound money or means of trusted international exchange will be required before recovery can begin. Restoring value to the property market, will be a priority alongside finding as yet unidentified honest and decent leaders. In September 2008 I put forward one idea to achieve the former objective, do Clegg and/or Cameron now have the courage to take on such an approach, and perhaps simultaneously convert to decency? A quote from that old posting: Mortgages have always assumed the equity provided by the mortgagee is the first at risk. In this crisis that has to be changed. I suggest that for houses purchased since Gordon Brown, in the words of incoming BoE Governor King, to paraphrase 'moved the Goal Posts and excluded house prices from the CPI' any loss of value on the resale of such houses be directly proportioned between the first mortgage holder and the mortgagee. This is potentially expensive, but less so if it halts further slides in house prices. As the country is effectively bankrupt such a move will need financing and as a further step to somewhat also put the cost of the greed at the door where it lies I would further suggest the exemption of the first home from capital gains tax be withdrawn.

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Decency for Clegg and Cameron could be guaged as a distant possibility by an immediate large cut to UK contributions to the EU pending a halt to their ongoing and grandoise plans for ever more vainglorious enterprises and aggrandisement.

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