Lehman Brothers

Real Estate + The Financial Crisis Ten Years Later

Saving for retirement while also trying to save for a house downpayment. That’s the dilemma facing Erin from Salt Lake City as we kicked off the latest radio show. Is there a happy medium? Or should she focus all her efforts on getting that downpayment in place?

Next up was Joe from Chicago with another real estate question. This one involves finding a way to keep an piece of existing property in the family.

Where has the time gone? It was ten years ago this month that the U.S. financial system was brought to its knees.

To help us retrace the events of that period, we’re joined today by Gretchen Morgenson, investigative reporter at the Wall Street Journal.

As the financial crisis was unfolding, Morgenson was working for the New York Times, and subsequently co-authored Reckless Endangerment: How Outsized Ambition, Greed, and Corruption Led to Economic Armageddon.

There’s no one more qualified to walk us down memory lane and remind us of just how bad things actually were. In case you’ve forgotten, consider this timeline:

  • 9/15/2008: Lehman Brothers files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. On the same day, Bank of America announced its intent to purchase Merrill Lynch for $50 billion.

  • 9/16/2008: The Federal Reserve Board authorized the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to lend up to $85 billion to AIG under Section 13(3) of the Federal Reserve Act.

  • 9/16/2008: The net asset value of shares in the Reserve Primary Money Fund fell below $1 per share, primarily due to losses on Lehman Brothers commercial paper and medium-term notes. When the Reserve fund “broke the buck,” it caused panic among investors who considered money market accounts nearly the equivalent of bank savings accounts.

  • 9/19/2008: To guard against a run on money market funds, the Treasury Department announced that it would insure up to $50 billion in money-market fund investments at companies that paid a fee to participate in the program. The year long initiative guaranteed that the funds' values would not fall below the $1 a share.

  • 9/20/2008: The Treasury Department submitted draft legislation to Congress for authority to purchase troubled assets (the first version of TARP).

  • 9/21/2008: The Federal Reserve Board approved applications of investment banking companies Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to become bank holding companies.

All this in just one week!! An incredible moment in the history of this country, and it was only ten years ago.

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An Inside Account of the Financial Crisis

This is our third and final installment of shows looking back on the financial crisis of ten years ago. It was such a big moment we felt we needed to devote most of September to remembering how the U.S. financial system was brought to its knees.

Today we get the inside account from Neil Barofsky, the former Inspector General of TARP (Troubled Asset Relief Program) and author of Bailout: An Inside Account of How Washington Abandoned Main Street While Rescuing Wall Street.

As you’ll hear, the discussion is basically a play-by-play of how the Treasury Department bungled the financial bailouts.

At the height of the financial crisis in 2008, Barofsky gave up his job as a prosecutor in the esteemed U.S. Attorney’s Office in New York City, where he had convicted drug kingpins, Wall Street executives, and perpetrators of mortgage fraud, to become the inspector general in charge of overseeing administration of the bailout money.

It’s fascinating to hear him talk about how from the onset, his efforts to protect against fraud and to hold big banks accountable for how they spent taxpayer money were met with outright hostility from Treasury officials in charge of the bailouts.

Barofsky offers an insider’s perspective on the mishandling of the $700 billion TARP bailout fund. There’s no holding back as he reveals the extreme lengths to which our government officials were willing to go in order to serve the interests of Wall Street firms at the expense of the broader public, and at the expense of effective financial reform.

Just like the book, this interview delivered an incredible account of Barofsky’s plunge into the political hot-seat of Washington, as well as a vital revelation of just how captured by Wall Street our political system is and why the too-big-to-fail banks have become even bigger and more dangerous in the wake of the crisis.

“Better Off” is sponsored by Betterment.

Have a money question? Email us here or call 855-411-JILL.

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The Global Impact of the Financial Crisis

When we think back to ten years ago and the events of the financial crisis, such as the fall of Lehman Brothers and the bailout of AIG, it’s easy to only recall what happened in the U.S.

But in reality, the crisis was an enormous global mess, and one that actually started in Europe.

That’s why today we’re joined by Adam Tooze, professor of history at Columbia University and author of Crashed: How a Decade of Financial Crises Changed the World.

Tooze delivers an in-depth reinterpretation of the 2008 economic crisis as a global event that directly led to the shockwaves being felt around the world today.

In September 2008 President George Bush could still describe the financial crisis as an incident local to Wall Street.

In fact it was a period of dramatic global significance that spiraled around the world, from the financial markets of the UK and Europe to the factories and dockyards of Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America, forcing a rearrangement of global governance.

In the United States and Europe, it caused a fundamental reconsideration of capitalist democracy, eventually leading to the war in the Ukraine, the chaos of Greece, Brexit, and the eventual election of Donald Trump.

It was the greatest crisis to have struck Western societies since the end of the Cold War, but was it inevitable? And is it over?

Crashed is a narrative resting on three original themes:

  • The haphazard nature of economic development and the erratic path of debt around the world

  • The unseen way individual countries and regions are linked together in deeply unequal relationships through financial interdependence, investment, politics, and force

  • The ways the financial crisis interacted with the rise of social media, the crisis of middle-class America, the rise of China, and global struggles over fossil fuels

Given this history, what are the prospects for a stable and coherent world order?

“Better Off” is sponsored by Betterment.

Have a money question? Email us here or call 855-411-JILL.

We love feedback so please subscribe and leave us a rating or review in Apple Podcasts!

Connect with me at these places for all my content:

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The Financial Crisis Ten Years Later

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Where has the time gone? It was ten years ago this week that the U.S. financial system was brought to its knees.

To help us retrace the events of that period, we’re joined today by Gretchen Morgenson, investigative reporter at the Wall Street Journal.

As the financial crisis was unfolding, Morgenson was working for the New York Times, and subsequently co-authored Reckless Endangerment: How Outsized Ambition, Greed, and Corruption Led to Economic Armageddon.

There’s no one more qualified to walk us down memory lane and remind us of just how bad things actually were. In case you’ve forgotten, consider this timeline:

  • 9/15/2008: Lehman Brothers files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. On the same day, Bank of America announced its intent to purchase Merrill Lynch for $50 billion.
  • 9/16/2008: The Federal Reserve Board authorized the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to lend up to $85 billion to AIG under Section 13(3) of the Federal Reserve Act.
  • 9/16/2008: The net asset value of shares in the Reserve Primary Money Fund fell below $1 per share, primarily due to losses on Lehman Brothers commercial paper and medium-term notes. When the Reserve fund “broke the buck,” it caused panic among investors who considered money market accounts nearly the equivalent of bank savings accounts.
  • 9/19/2008: To guard against a run on money market funds, the Treasury Department announced that it would insure up to $50 billion in money-market fund investments at companies that paid a fee to participate in the program. The year long initiative guaranteed that the funds' values would not fall below the $1 a share.
  • 9/20/2008: The Treasury Department submitted draft legislation to Congress for authority to purchase troubled assets (the first version of TARP).
  • 9/21/2008: The Federal Reserve Board approved applications of investment banking companies Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to become bank holding companies.

All this in just one week!! An incredible moment in the history of this country, and it was only ten years ago.

“Better Off” is sponsored by Betterment.

Have a money question? Email us here or call 855-411-JILL.

We love feedback so please subscribe and leave us a rating or review in Apple Podcasts!

Connect with me at these places for all my content:

https://twitter.com/jillonmoney

https://www.facebook.com/JillonMoney

https://www.instagram.com/jillonmoney/

https://www.linkedin.com/in/jillonmoney/ 

http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/jill-... 

https://apple.co/2pmVi50

Financial Crisis Anniversary: What Have we Learned?

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This week marks the seventh anniversary of the financial crisis. Sometimes people forget just how close to the brink we were. Yes, the U.S. and global financial system was brought to its knees, but it did not crumble. To measure our progress, it might be helpful to remember just how intense it was in that first week.

  • 9/15/2008: Lehman Brothers Holdings filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection; Bank of America announced its intent to purchase Merrill Lynch
  • 9/16/2008: The Federal Reserve Bank of New York lent $85 billion to AIG
  • 9/16/2008: The net asset value of shares in the Reserve Primary Money Fund fell below $1. When the fund “broke the buck,” it caused panic among investors who considered money market accounts nearly the equivalent of bank savings accounts
  • 9/19/2008: The Treasury Department announced that it would insure up to $50 billion in money-market fund investments. The year long initiative guaranteed that the funds' value would not fall below the $1 a share.
  • 9/21/2008: The Federal Reserve Board approved applications of investment banking companies Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to become bank holding companies, so that they could access money from the Federal Reserve and to fund their daily operations

Many people thought that the government’s intervention was over the top. “Let them fail!” was the rallying cry, but I always believed that saving the system was paramount, even if I did not necessarily agree with the terms of the various bailout deals (I thought that taxpayers should have gotten more of the upside of the financial service companies’ recovery, rather than simply receiving a repayment of the dollars, with interest) and the government’s more than $800 billion stimulus plan (“The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009"). Still, while both of the shotgun measures could have been more effective, they likely helped the country avert what could have been a Depression, rather then the horrible recession that we endured. The so-called Great Recession, which started in December 2007 and concluded in June 2009, was the worst contraction since the Great Depression.

Seven years later, what have we learned? Because the financial crisis stemmed from too much easy borrowing and lending in the housing market, one of the best lessons was the concept that borrowing can be dangerous. Just because some bank is willing to lend you a lot of money to buy a house or will extend to you a giant credit card limit, does not mean that you should take it. For most people, putting down a 20 percent down payment for a house is prudent. Even if FHA will allow borrowers to put down less than 10 percent to qualify for a mortgage, there is a good reason that the 20 percent down rule of thumb exists: just in case the housing market collapses, you have more equity in the house. Similarly, even if you have the ability to buy a lot of fun stuff on your credit card, you should only be charging what you can pay off on a monthly basis.

A corollary of the loan warning is to read the fine print on all documents. There were too many instances when borrowers really did not understand the terms of the loans that they were assuming. Although many regulations now require more transparency and disclosure on everything from mortgages to credit card statements, after the financial crisis we still must be vigilant in reviewing documents to protect ourselves.

The crisis taught us that an adequate emergency reserve fund (6 to 12 months of expenses for those who were employed and 12 to 24 months for those who were retired) could prevent us from selling assets at the wrong time and/or from invading retirement accounts. And of course for investors, we learned that a diversified asset allocation plan, that takes into consideration your risk tolerance and when you need to access your funds can prevent a lot of sleepless nights. Nobody wants to test these lessons any time soon, but let’s heed them.

Week ahead: Financial Crisis Anniversary: Where We Stand

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Over the course of one week five years ago, the U.S. financial system was brought to its knees. As a reminder of just how bad that week was, consider this timeline:

  • 9/15/2008: Lehman Brothers Holdings filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. On the same day, Bank of America announced its intent to purchase Merrill Lynch for $50 billion.
  • 9/16/2008: The Federal Reserve Board authorized the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to lend up to $85 billion to AIG under Section 13(3) of the Federal Reserve Act.
  • 9/16/2008: The net asset value of shares in the Reserve Primary Money Fund fell below $1 per share, primarily due to losses on Lehman Brothers commercial paper and medium-term notes. When the Reserve fund “broke the buck,” it caused panic among investors who considered money market accounts nearly the equivalent of bank savings accounts.
  • 9/19/2008: To guard against a run on money market funds, the Treasury Department announced that it would insure up to $50 billion in money-market fund investments at companies that paid a fee to participate in the program. The year long initiative guaranteed that the funds' values would not fall below the $1 a share.
  • 9/20/2008: The Treasury Department submitted draft legislation to Congress for authority to purchase troubled assets (the first version of TARP).
  • 9/21/2008: The Federal Reserve Board approved applications of investment banking companies Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to become bank holding companies.

Over the course of one week, four investment banks were gone (one absorbed, one went broke and two were forced to become bank holding companies); a global insurance company was bailed out; the money market fund industry was rocked; and the Treasury Department introduced the first version of TARP, which granted authority to purchase $700 billion of mortgage-related assets for two years.

Where do we stand five years after this momentous week?

Jobs: In September 2008, the unemployment rate was 6.1 percent, on its way up to 10 percent in October 2009. The rate now stands at 7.3 percent. Despite progress during the recovery, the economy still has 1.9 million fewer jobs than it did before the recession. At the recent pace of job growth it will take just under 11 months to reach the previous peak.

Income: For those lucky enough to have jobs, the financial crisis and recession put a dent in median household income. According to Sentier Research, July 2013 median household income ($52,113), adjusted for inflation, was 6.2 percent lower than December 2007 ($55,569), the first month of the recession. Incomes are 5 percent lower than in September 2008. It may be cold comfort to consider that the recession exacerbated a trend that was already occurring: July 2013 median was 7.3 percent lower than the median in January 2000 ($56,233), the beginning of the statistical series.

Economic growth: In the fourth quarter of 2008, when the impact of the financial crisis was cascading through the system, Gross Domestic Product dropped by 8.3 percent. For all of 2008, GDP slid 0.3 percent, followed by a 2.8 percent drop in 2009. The official end of the recession (as determined by the Dating Committee of the National Bureau of Economic Research) occurred in June 2009. While the total size of the US economy today ($15,681T) is larger than it was in Q3 2008 ($14.895T), the pace of the recovery has lagged the annual average post World War II growth rate of 3-3.5 percent.

Stocks: At the end of trading that first fateful week of the financial crisis, the damage wasn’t so bad, if you didn't have to live through the day-to-day swings. By Friday September 19, 2008 the Dow had dropped just 33 points to 11,388; the S&P 500 edged up 4 points to 1,255; and the NASDAQ was up 12 points to 2,273. Stocks bottomed out in March 2009 and then skyrocketed by nearly 150 percent to today’s near-record levels.

Housing: While stock markets bottomed out about six months after the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy, it took the epicenter of the crisis, the housing market, far longer. House prices peaked in 2006, then reached bottom in early 2012. National house prices are up nearly 16 percent from the post-bubble low, but still remain down over 23 percent from the peak. Currently, 14.5 percent of residential properties with a mortgage are still underwater (amount owed on mortgage is more than the home’s value), according to CoreLogic. The rate was down from the peak of 26 percent in the fourth quarter of 2009.

Bailouts: The government used extraordinary measures to save the financial system, including directly bailing out the financial and automobile industries. Of course, there were plenty of other measures that indirectly helped, liked providing financing through the Federal Reserve’s discount window for US banks, European banks and even for industrial conglomerates like General Electric. Here’s the accounting for some bailouts of note:

  • Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac: $188B bailout, of which the companies are expected to return $146B in dividends by Sep 2013.
  • GM and Chrysler: Of $80B committed, $51B repaid
  • TARP: Of $700B, most has been repaid with interest. CBO puts eventual taxpayer tab at $21B.
  • AIG: Fed and Treasury committed $182B, with taxpayers estimated to be fully repaid, plus $23B.

Regulatory: The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act was enacted in July 2010, but lawmakers left a lot of the hard work to regulators. According to law firm Davis Polk, as of September 3, 2013, a total of 280 Dodd-Frank rulemaking requirement deadlines have passed. Of these 280 passed deadlines, 172 (61.4 percent) have been missed and 108 (38.6 percent) have been met with finalized rules. In addition, 160 (40.2 percent) of the 398 total required rulemakings have been finalized, while 126 (31.7 percent) rulemaking requirements have not yet been proposed.

Too Big To Fail: There may be fewer banks, but they are even bigger than they were at the beginning of 2007. The combined assets of the “Big Six,” which include JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, have increased by 28 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The good news is that they have much more capital on hand. The bad news is that they are still leveraged, complicated and interconnected institutions, which makes them prone to inflict damage on the overall financial system.

Who paid what? There have been billions of dollars worth of penalties, which were levied as a result of the financial crisis. Among the biggies, the SEC has collected $2.73B and the national mortgage settlement will rake in $25B from the nation’s five largest mortgage servicers.

Who went to jail? Nobody. Jail is for federal crimes and there have been no federal convictions that have arisen from the financial crisis. (Fraudsters like Bernie Madoff and Alan Stanford didn’t have a direct connection with the financial crisis.) On the civil side, the SEC has filed civil charges against 138 firms and individuals for alleged misconduct just before or during the crisis, according to The Wall Street Journal. The biggest fish the regulators tried to land was former Countrywide CEO Angelo Mozillo, who ultimately settled with the SEC to the tune of $67.5 million in fines and a lifetime ban from serving as an officer of a public company. Former Goldman Sachs employee Fabrice “Fabulous Fab” Tourre was found guilty of misleading investors in mortgage securities issued by his firm.

Bottom Line: Just in time for the five-year anniversary, the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas released a bleak assessment of the cost of the crisis. “Our bottom-line estimate of, assuming output eventually returns to its pre-crisis trend path, is an output loss of $6 trillion to $14 trillion. This amounts to $50,000 to $120,000 for every U.S. household…This seemingly wide range of estimates is due in part to the uncertainty of how long it might take to return to the pre-crisis growth trend.”

But, wait it gets worse. The Fed economists note that the U.S. may never return to trend, which would put the cost ABOVE $14 trillion. HAPPY ANNIVERSARY!

MARKETS:

  • DJIA: 15,376 up 3% on week, up 17.3% on year (2nd best week of the year)
  • S&P 500: 1688, up 2% on week, up 18.4% on year (within 1.3% of its Aug. 2 all-time nominal high)
  • NASDAQ: 3722, up 1.7% on week, up 23.3% on year
  • 10-Year Treasury yield: 2.89% (from 2.94% a week ago)
  • Oct Crude Oil: $108.21, down 2% on week
  • Dec Gold: $1308.60, down 5.6% on week
  • AAA Nat'l average price for gallon of regular Gas: $3.54

THE WEEK AHEAD: Here comes the Fed…the central bank will conduct a two-day confab, where most economists expect an announcement of a small pull back in monthly bond purchases (from $85B to $75B). Let the taper begin!

Mon 9/16:

8:30 Empire State Manufacturing

9:15 Industrial Production

Tues 9/17:

FOMC Begins

8:30 CPI

10:00 Housing Market Index

Weds 9/18:

2:00 FOMC Announcement/FOMC Forecasts

2:30 Bernanke Press Conference

Thurs 9/19:

8:30 Weekly Jobless Claims

10:00 Existing Home Sales

10:00 Philadelphia Fed

Fri 9/20:

Quadruple Witching: The expiration of stock index futures, stock index options, stock options and single stock futures…can lead to increased volatility.

New iPhones in stores