Más sobre mercado inmobiliario: 
1) That, during the - ongoing - bust, Spanish home  prices will fall to the level they were at when the boom began (a drop of 55%),  and then stop falling right there.
2) That there is a bottom underneath prices,  determined by their "utility value", i.e. people will always need to  live somewhere.
As for 1), it immediately  makes me think of a series of 3 graphs we use in Nicole's presentations, and  which those of you who have acquired our DVD set "A World of Change"  will readily recognize:
What you see is that in  these 3 crises, the end point is (way) below the starting point, due to what  can be called the "undershoot". In each case, it makes prices fall by  well over 90% of its peak level. Now, Dave says he thinks homes are not tulips,
and so 2) the utility value of a house will make  sure prices won't fall below the point their boom started. Not only do I find  this too arbitrary an assumption (though, granted, in Dave's view he derives it  from his data), there are a few other things that I feel may well influence  this. That is, Spain built a huge amount of homes (more than Germany, France  and Britain combined for 10 years), of which many are of too poor a quality to  last for more than 20 years.
Moreover, something is  true in Spain as it is all over the west: compared with 50 or 100 years ago, we  occupy far more square meters per capita. That means there's a potential  elasticity in that if prices remain too high, people will - forcibly - move  (back) in together with family. Because we can. Demand is not what we want, but  what we can afford. Seeing that youth unemployment in Spain presently stands at  some 60%, you really need to wonder who's going to buy any homes there at all  in the near future, and hence what bottom is supposed to apply to this housing  market. It's tempting to think things must normalize at some point, but Spain  has a crisis that extends far beyond housing.
I think we too easily  overlook the potential for self-reinforcing, positive feedback across an  economy. If Spain were to recognize the full 55% price drop, that would be the  end of a large part of its banking system. And that in turn, for instance,  would drive prices further down.
If the government in  Madrid were more pro-active in restructuring the debts its banks hold, we would  at least have a more accurate picture, but Spain does as the rest of Europe  does: hide the debt behind more debt. The $25 billion loss announced by  government-owned Bankia this week is a sign of what's going on behind the  curtain, but no more than that.
Here's Dave and his  data:
Dave Fairtex:
It is relatively well  known that Spain has issues with their banking system, and that there was a  property bubble and it popped several years ago. Various estimates have been  floated as to how much it will cost to resolve the problem. But determining  cost is not the only interesting question.
We want to be able to  answer four questions:
• How much will it cost  to resolve the problem?
• How long will it take  to "return to normal"?
• How will we know when  "normal" has been reached?
• What effects might  this process have on spanish society?
The Bubble
It has been said that  during a bubble pop, pricing always returns to its place of origin. This makes  sense, as the prices one pays for something, once bubble psychology is removed  from the equation, is tied to the actual utility received from having the item.  That level is most likely the point at which prices diverged from the norm.
So, the first step in  determining the cost involves identifying the point of origin of the bubble.  Viewing a Spanish property price chart, one might argue that Spain's bubble  started in approximately 2002. The start date is a relatively arbitrary  designation - I picked a date when the trend of property price increases  started to become particularly steep.
[Instead of using  nominal prices for homes, I considered using real prices - i.e. prices deflated  by the CPI. Then I concluded that the inflation that occurred on the way up  would most likely be balanced by deflation on the way down. I am not sure this  is true, but its one of the assumptions I made.]
So where are we now?  Doing some quick math on this index provided by the Spanish Ministerio de la  Vivienda it appears that home prices are down 27% from peak. However, anecdotal  evidence from 2012 suggests property prices are closer to 35-40% below peak,  and recoveries from foreclosure sales by a Spanish bank in 2012 show a 53%  recovery rate - a 47% drop.
So let's say the  preceding chart is not telling us the truth or if we're kind, we can say it  lags substantially behind realtime. Likely instead of 73, it should probably be  reading around 60. Operating under the assumption that prices will eventually  return to around 45, that says prices are going to be off around 55% from peak  when all is said and done. From a property pricing standpoint, we have another  33% left to go (60 to 45 = 33% drop from here). Perhaps the real price  correction will end somewhere in mid 2014.
Resolution Cost
In looking at a property  bubble, both the gains AND the losses are not confined simply to the homeowner  and the mortgage lender. Developers, architects, builders, laborers, and  bankers all benefit during the bubble years and suffer after the pop. Yet to examine  effects only to those directly affected understates the the multiplying effect  on income that the bubble provides. Each beneficiary buys things from other  areas of the economy using consumer credit, takes out mortgage loans, companies  takes on corporate debt to expand business, materials are extracted and shipped  - all based on the phantom income derived from mortgage-bubble created money.
In order to come up with  an amount to approximate first the gains, and then the losses due to the  bubble, I decided on a simple approach - to use the amount of outstanding bank  loans during the bubble years as a proxy for the overall impact of economic  activity from the bubble, under the theory that credit money expands as  economic activity expands.
In Ireland, where  according to my estimates about €440 billion of "bubble loan money"  was created, the government eventually spent €143 billion to rescue their banks  and buy up (and overpay for) bad loans. So that €143 billion comes to 32% of  the total bubble money created. It is entirely possible costs will rise in  Ireland, but this number gives us a starting point for the explicit costs to  the sovereign.
Totaling the bank loans  made in the private sector, Spain created about €1.44 trillion in new bank  credit during their bubble phase. [note: ECB data only goes back to 2003, so I  had to estimate the amount bubble money created in 2002 to be about €100  billion.] If we assume the ratio of costs will be similar to that of Ireland,  32% of €1.44 trillion ends up being €460 billion - half for capital injections,  and half for the Bad Bank.
To date, Spain has  allocated €32 billion to their Bad Bank [Banco Malo] and an as of yet  undetermined amount to their bank rescue/capital injection program. To put it  mildly, this doesn't seem like nearly enough.
But is €460 billion the  right amount? That's open to debate. It might be more.
A recent corruption  scandal in Spain has resulted in PM Rajoy's popularity dropping - a recent  survey had 85% of those polled having "little or no faith" in him.  His party (the PP) had a 24% support rating, the lowest on record.
Why talk about  corruption in a finance discussion? Well, corruption matters a great deal in  these affairs - the managers of a Bad Bank have a lot of money to spread  around, well-connected bankers have a whole lot of garbage assets they'd love  to get rid of for as high a price as possible (and in fact their jobs DEPEND on  them selling their garbage for as high a price as possible), and so the risk of  overpayment for bad assets increases right along with the level of corruption.  The more public money that gets dropped on the banks, the better condition the  banks will be in - for paying salaries, bonuses, dividends, and so on, and the  smaller the losses will be for bank shareholders and bondholders.
I assert that corruption  is likely to raise the cost of the bailout, since the amount of public money  that will be funneled to the bank will be maximized in a corrupt regime. I  don't think the cost will be any lower than €460 billion, and Rajoy himself  once mentioned the figure €500 billion as being required for a complete bank  rescue. I do not think that was a number idly constructed from thin air. What's  more, I believe that the folks at the Spanish Central Bank and the ECB are not  fools. They've done the same math that I have, and Rajoy's remark was simply a  political shot across the bows of the ECB in the negotiations over who pays  what; a form of "don't mess with me or else the game is up."
It reminds me of the old  saw - owe the bank 1000 dollars, the bank owns you. Owe the bank a billion  dollars, and you own the bank!
That's all just  speculation on my part, but I find it interesting that my math adds up to  approximately Rajoy's threat. It wasn't intentional, but that's what came up.
So I believe that €500  billion is a good guess.
How long to  return to normal?
The property bubble is  over from the standpoint of pricing when property prices return back to their  point of origin. (Its quite possible prices will overshoot as well, but lets  leave that out of the discussion for now). It would seem that this might  complete within the next year or two.
However calculating when  the economy will "return to normal" is another matter entirely.  Monetary deflation from the bubble sometimes continues long after prices have  retraced. This is for several reasons, all of which have to do with the speed  at which losses are recognized, as well as the level of debt forgiveness in the  economy in question.
Hyman Minsky had a model  where he attempted to explain the anatomy of a bubble through finance. In his  model, there were three types of borrowers:
• Hedge Borrowers, whose  debt repayments (principal, interest, taxes, expenses, etc) could be covered by  the economic activity provided by the investment.
• Speculative Borrowers,  whose investments could only cover the interest payments, and relied upon  capital appreciation (bubble effects) to make up the difference.
• Ponzi Borrowers, whose  investments could not even cover interest payments, and relied entirely on  capital appreciation for the loan to make economic sense. Many of the  subprime/neg-am borrowers fell into this last category.
The first phase of a pop  involves rapid deflation, as corporations and finance organizations who were  Ponzi and Speculative borrowers and who may legally walk away from their loan  obligations do so relatively rapidly - taking perhaps 2-4 years. From the  Ireland bubble charts, it seems that corporations bail out faster than the  finance borrowers. Of course this depends on the willingness of the banking  system to recognize the losses. "Extend  and pretend" strategies drag this process out.
[Note: above chart is an  attempt to show the "bubble loans" rather than the total bank loans  for the period in question, in order to better compare the different sectors  and how much money was created (borrowed) by each one relative to the others]
Losses tend to be the  highest for these two types of borrowers; they are the least able to pay, have  no money down, and have collateral whose value is entirely based on the former  trajectory of bubble pricing. And they can legally walk away. And historically,  they do.
Bad Banks tend to buy  mostly these sorts of loans, and they have recovery rates that are much lower  than those from foreclosed homeowner properties. You can see why - dubious  assets such as unbuilt land bought with borrowed money at the top of the bubble  is unlikely to have much value once the bubble pops.
The second phase  involves hedge borrowers who can actually make the payments but do not want to  lose the overvalued asset. By law and custom, regular people are much less  willing to simply walk away from an investment gone bad. And in the case of  both Spain and Ireland, full recourse laws require a homeowner to continue to  make payments regardless of how underwater the homeowner is.
This second phase is  also intrinsically deflationary, although the pace of deflation is much slower.  In the credit model, money is created when a loan is taken out, and money is  destroyed slowly as the loan is gradually paid back or rapidly when the loan is  defaulted upon.
After a bubble pop,  underwater homeowners are stuck until they pay down enough debt to restore  their equity position. This act of slow debt paydown slowly destroys credit  money, causing steady monetary deflationary pressure throughout this second  phase. Although I have not done the research necessary to back this up, it is  my speculation this is what caused the "lost decade" (or two) in  Japan - the slow but steady monetary deflationary pressure from gradual debt  paydown.
In Ireland, it has been  estimated that underwater homeowners will need until 2020 for the bulk of them  to get out of negative equity situations - and that is for those who put 20%  down. For those who put 0% down and who by law cannot walk away, they will be  at it until 2025. This is how long mild deflationary pressures will likely last  in Ireland, assuming no changes to the law. In this, Spain is likely to follow  Ireland.
The first deflationary  phase is steep, lasting perhaps 3-4 years, while the second phase is more  shallow and lasts from 8-14 years following, depending on the size of the  bubble, as stuck homeowners and corporate hedge borrowers rebuild their equity  positions by gradually paying down debt.
Estimating  timeline for return to normalcy
We make an assumption  that in addition to prices, all the outstanding bank loans that were based on  bubble activity will also retrace back to its original starting position - back  when the debt was sustainable and justified by steady-state economic activity.  As all that unsustainable debt gets defaulted on or paid back, it will vanish.
Graphically, we can  track where things are by looking at the outstanding amount of bank loans. In  Spain, it is at €1.89 trillion, down from €2.26 trillion at the peak, but it  needs to return to about €800 billion before the deflation has run its course.  In Spain, it would appear that the first corporate deflationary impulse is in  the process of happening now, although it would appear that the Spanish banks  have been slow to acknowledge the losses. Based on the Irish experience, it probably  has another 2 years to run, assuming the banks are actually required to take  their losses.
In some sense this is a  moral tale. Corporations get (debt) forgiveness, but in Spain and Ireland  regular people don't. This lack of (debt) forgiveness is why the second phase  of a deflationary bubble pop will last a long time: it takes people a long time  to pay down all that debt. So forgiveness, in addition to it being a Christian  virtue, allows things to return to normal more rapidly.
So where are we in Spain?  It is just starting to happen seriously, 5 years after the peak in prices. And  without changes in the law, it's going to last a very long time.
By Raul Ilargi Meijer
Abrazos,
PD1: ¿Cuál es el valor real de los  inmuebles? No se sabe, todo está subsidiado, todo está estimulado con QE…,  pero no se puede mantener en el tiempo estos paquetes de estímulo económico…:
"Los precios de los bonos, acciones, oro e inmuebles están  subsidiados"
Druckenmiller detalla que  a finales de 2004, o principios de 2005 descubrió que la estructura demográfica  norteamericana de la población era una auténtica "tormenta que se avecinaba".  Incluso explica cómo se reunió con varios congresistas para convencerles de que  debían afrontarla en los siguientes años, pero no le hicieron caso. Según él,  estamos en la primera fase de la burbuja demográfica que amenaza seriamente a  los Estados Unidos. Solo recordaros que la  estructura demográfica europea y japonesa son mucho peores que la  norteamericana. En el continente europeo los mayores riesgos están en  Alemania, Grecia, España y, especialmente, Portugal (ver el post del impacto demográfico en el precio  futura de la vivienda). Ya lo alertó también McCoy en 2010 para los países europeos.
En los últimos 10 años, Druckenmiller relata que los gastos en los  sistemas públicos de sanidad en USA, como el Medicare y el Medicaid, así como  los gastos de la Seguridad Social han crecido a un ritmo imparable, y no por el  efecto demográfico, que aún está por venir, sino por la presión social. Según  él, los jubilados actuales están robando a los jubilados futuros.
En relación a la actuación de los bancos centrales, Druckenmiller  critica a Greenspanpor  provocar la gran burbuja inmobiliaria tras las inyecciones artificiales después  de la crisis de las empresas tecnológicas a principios del 2000. En lugar de  aceptar una recesión lógica, Greenspan decidió alterar artificialmente la  economía con tipos de interés muy bajos en un entorno de crecimiento económico.  También cree que "Bernanke no parará esta política de la Fed. Los bancos centrales continuarán  imprimiendo más tiempo del que pensamos".
Según Stanley, "Excepto Brasil, todo el resto de bancos centrales  aplican las mismas políticas extremadamente expansivas a la vez".
"Cuando leo que muchos opinan que las acciones están mas baratas  que los bonos, pienso que si que es cierto, pero en realidad todos los activos  están mas baratos que los bonos. Todos  los activos están subsidiados, no solo los bonos, también las acciones, el oro  y los inmuebles".
Y hablando sobre Draghi, explica cómo ha creado un "gran paraguas  protector en los activos en euros".
Sobre su opinión acerca de la bolsa actual, Druckenmiller afirma  que la bolsa parece barata a los precios actuales, pero si normalizas los beneficios  empresariales y la demanda de la economía norteamericana, ya que hoy tiene un  déficit público del 9%, la bolsa no está tan barata como parece.
Finalmente, alerta de que toda esta fiesta "acabará sin duda y,  además, acabará mal, aunque no se si será el próximo mes, el próximo año, en  cinco o incluso en 10 años".
PD2: Las previsiones son que se  está claudicando en materia de precio. Quien quiere vender, tiene prisa por  vender. Tiene esa sensación de que esto sigue bajando y que las visitas son de  fisgue y sólo se cruzan operaciones con grandes descuentos. Y el que compra  sólo lo hace si tiene cash, no hay crédito hipotecario, y sólo compra si el  vendedor acepta una nueva rebaja o quita…
La caída de la vivienda se acelerará en los próximos meses,  según idealista.com
    El jefe de estudios de  idealista.com, Fernando Encinar, ha asegurado que la tendencia bajista de los  precios de la venta de inmuebles se acelerará en los próximos meses empujada  por la contracción del crédito y la incertidumbre del mercado laboral.
En un  comunicado, idealista.com recomienda a los propietarios que tengan una  "oferta en firme" que  la acepten, ya que la bajada "histórica" de los precios en 2012  (13,7%) demuestra que sólo los propietarios que realizaron bajadas  "agresivas" consiguieron vender sus inmuebles.
De hecho,  asegura que aquellos que se resistieron a aplicar descuentos en sus viviendas no lograron cerrar  las operaciones y ahora se van a ver obligados a rebajar aún más sus  expectativas.
PD3: En Madrid todo el mundo quiere  vender su plaza  de parking y los precios de los garajes caen… No hay dinero para  nada, ni para pagar donde guardar el coche. Se deja en la calle y si hay que  dar vueltas se dan, o se va en transporte público…
PD4: Parece ser que se han cabreado…  Now Oligarchs and just "Russians" will transfer  their funds out of Cyprus, Spain & Latvia (pls  no high expectations here) into Switzerland!
Si salen del euro, como amenazan, el  BCE podría quebrar!!! Y ser la espoleta de una ruptura del euro, por su efecto  dominó…
Cyprus's  Four Options to Avoid Banking Collapse
Las consecuencias están aquí:  las elecciones de Alemania. ¡Ay!: Germany - Forsa  poll: CDU/CSU 40%, SPD 24%, Greens 15%, Left 7%, FDP 6%, Pirates 3%
PD5: NYC: La unión de miles y miles  de fotos de altísima calidad, imposible de lograr con las cámaras de vídeo.  Impresionante. ¿Quieres  pasar un día en Nueva York?
PD6: ¿Y si España aplica también  una tasa a los depósitos para rescatar autonomías? Tiene guasa que Montoro  anuncie un impuesto sobre los depósitos el día que Chipre rechaza su particular  tasa. Vaya Gobierno que tenemos... Cuando nos van arañando poquito a poquito  parece otra cosa…
- Resulta que ZP ya me robó un 5 %  del sueldo.
- Rajoy me chorizó una paga extra.
- El gobierno autonómico me quita  ahora otro 5 %.
- Me han subido el IVA y el IRPF.
- El banco me mantiene el suelo a  la hipoteca, y me cobra comisiones que rayan la usura.
- Y menos mal que no me han pillado  en una preferente…
Lo mejor que me podía haber pasado  es que me hubieran quitado un 6.75% de mis depósitos!!!!
PD7: Me entra la risa floja: De  Guindos: "En España y la UE son sagrados los depósitos inferiores a  100.000 euros". Estoy convencido de que el entuerto europeo se soluciona  con más gasto publico financiado con más deuda bancaria…
Dice Bloomberg que el tipo medio  que pagan los bancos de Chipre por sus depósitos es el 4.5% y lo compara con el  1.5% que pagan en Alemania. Lo de siempre, duros a cuatro pesetas que al  final provoca que se pierde la pasta… (preferentes, Bankia, Rumasa…)
Dedicado a tanto europeo que ve  "imposible" cerrar/quebrar de bancos. Lista de bancos  cerrados USA, más de 300 desde 2008!!!
La banca aún necesita 224.200  millones para alcanzar la solvencia que requerirá Basilea III: http://www.expansion.com/2013/03/19/empresas/banca/1363688586.html  
PD8: ¿Por qué no baja la bolsa?  Porque no hay muchas alternativas rentables. La gente huye de los depósitos  bancarios y los bonos están en rentabilidades muy bajas. No hay más cáscaras  que quien quiera rendimiento se la tiene que jugar. Igual que se la juegan con  su banco sin saber si en unos fines de semana nos tocará lo mismo que Chipre o  no, se la juegan con la bolsa ya que es donde más expectativas hay…:
¿Qué es lo que está sosteniendo a la bolsa?
    Más que la mejora de los  fundamentales macroeconómicos, J.P.Morgan AM cree que lo que está impulsando a  la renta variable es su potencial de rentabilidad adicional en comparación con  los mercados de renta fija 'core' y de liquidez.
    El favorable comportamiento  mostrado por la bolsa está sorprendiendo a algunos inversores. ¿Qué factores  estarían potenciando el buen comportamiento de las acciones? SegúnJ.P.Morgan Asset Management, "más que la mejora de los  fundamentales macroeconómicos, lo que está sosteniendo a la renta variable es  su potencial de rentabilidad adicional en comparación con los mercados de renta  fija core y de liquidez. Dadas  las fuertes ganancias de la renta variable en los últimos meses y teniendo en  cuenta las perspectivas de bajo crecimiento de los beneficios corporativos en  la mayoría de mercados desarrollados, se debería perdonar a los inversores por  poner en duda la continuidad del reciente rally en los mercados de valores".
Esto no significa que la Bolsa esté  en una fase en la que solo pueda subir. Según explica la firma estadounidense  en su último informe Market Insights, "no  podemos descartar ver a  corto plazo cierto movimiento de toma de beneficios. Sin embargo, la rentabilidad real negativa  ofrecida por los activos de renta fija gubernamental core y por cuentas  corrientes limitan el atractivo de los activos tradicionales libres de riesgo  en comparación con la renta variable, y salvo por algún shock macroeconómico  o político, vemos pocos argumentos por los que los inversores debieran salirse  de renta variable; sobre todo dado el atractivo de las valoraciones de renta  variable global", afirman desde la entidad.
PD9: Fariseos…
Los fariseos eran  esos que cumplían todo a la perfección, pero sin meter amor en sus rezos/actos…  Se engañaban. Ojalá nunca seamos fariseos nosotros, que todo lo que hagamos sea  siempre por amor, no por impresionar, no por aparentar, no por cumplir.  Recuerdo las confirmaciones de mis numerosos hijos cuando el Obispo nos hablaba  del cumplimiento, es decir, del "cumplo y miento", cumplir los preceptos, pero  engañarnos a nosotros mismos. ¿A quién podríamos engañar, a Dios que todo lo  sabe? No hombre por favor, nunca seamos fariseos. Si quieres ir a Misa vas; si  no, no vas. Pero si vas es porque quieres ir, porque quieres ir a dar gracias a  Dios, a pedirle algo, porque sabes que es tu obligación dominical, por lo que  sea… Pero no se aceptan +mentiras. Dios nos dio toda la libertad del mundo para  que, en materia religiosa, pudiéramos elegir, pudiéramos optar por un camino u  otro. No engañamos a nadie, el Señor todo lo sabe, sabe de nuestras debilidades  y perezas, de nuestros pecados, de nuestras miserias. No le podemos engañar  nunca. Y eso lo sabemos todos. ¿Qué tal ha ido la Cuaresma? ¿Hiciste buenos  propósitos que luego se quedaron en agua de borrajas? Mucho ánimo. En estos  temas siempre es empezar y recomenzar…, volverlo a intentar, pedirle ayuda…,  cada día es uno nuevo y se puede volver a intentar. Nadie nos castiga si no lo  logramos, nadie nos lo echa en cara…, ánimo!









 
 


















