Uncle
Sam’s Fire Sale. Minimum Investment: $1 Billion
by
Addison Wiggin
Daily Reckoning
Recently
by Addison Wiggin: Embattled
Washington: From SOPA to the Debt Ceiling
In my investment
letter, Addison Wiggins Apogee Advisory, we spend a
great deal of time, money and resources looking for new investment
ideas that our subscribers can act on independently. Sometimes what
we find instead is outrage.
For example,
the federal government is about to dump millions of the foreclosed
homes at fire-sale prices to hedge funds and private-equity firms
with government connections. If youre an individual investor
who might like to get in on the action, forget it! Youre shut
out of this deal.
Homeowners
who might be interested in buying the foreclosure property next
door? Out of luck. And retirees hoping for a return on their money
more than 1.8% on a five-year CD find another avenue closed off.
Prior to the
calamity of 2008, we might have thought the deal were profiling
today unthinkable. But now were becoming as immune to new
instances of blatant cronyism as American babies are to diphtheria.
If youve
got the hammer for it, we may as well get down to brass tacks: As
many as 10,000 properties might be unloaded in a single transaction
during the first quarter of 2012 thanks to a government program
so new it doesnt have a catchy name yet, only the working
title Enterprise/FHA REO Asset Disposition.
Roger Arnold,
chief economist for Pasadena, Calif.-based ALM Advisors, has a different
name for it the largest transfer of wealth from the
public to the private sector.
As of last
September, there were about 800,000 real estate owned
or REO homes in the United States homes repossessed and on
the market. Close to one-third of these 250,000 sit
on the books of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing
Administration. That is, 250,000 homes are owned by you and me,
the US taxpayers.
But that number
is about to explode: According to Ken Harney at the real estate
industry publication Inman News, The three agencies
face a tsunami-sized shadow inventory that is now heading their
way a combined 1.4 million delinquent loans on their books,
at least half of which, they estimate, will end up in foreclosure.
So now were
talking that 250,000 number suddenly ballooning to nearly a million.
The early-warning waves of the tsunami started lapping at the shore
in November, when foreclosure auctions reached a nine-month high.
The final numbers might end up even higher: Late-stage delinquencies
tallied by Lender Processing Services in January approach 2 million.
Thus, the hypothetical
excuse for the fire sale: Even with heroic efforts,
Harney says, Fannie, Freddie and FHA wont be able to
handle that level of REO volume using their current systems of individual
sales, directed at owner-occupants and small investors.
Thus, You
and I will not be allowed to participate, says Roger Arnold
of the newprogram. These [new] investors will come from the
private-equity and fund community, Goldman Sachs and its derivatives,
as well as foreign sovereign wealth funds that can bring a billion
dollars or more to each transaction.
The US
taxpayer will get pennies on the dollar for these homes, and then
be allowed to rent them back at market rates.
The groundwork
is being laid right now. During the first week of January, the Federal
Reserve issued a white paper on housing: A government-facilitated
REO-to-rental program, it said, has the potential to
help the housing market and improve loss recoveries on REO portfolios.
Three Fed governors put the word out in speeches the same week.
The big boys
can smell the money and they are lining up to play.
Among the players
that expect to profit big from this government-sponsored scam are
the private firms that already manage properties for the government.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development calls them management
and marketing contractors. Their principal owners and officers
tend to consist of former high-ranking officials with HUD, the Treasury,
FHA and so on.
There are 20
of these M&M firms, according to a list on HUDs
website. On the theory that perhaps you could reclaim some of your
tax dollars by investing in these firms the same theory with
which we suggested ITA, the defense and aerospace ETF we
examined whether any of them are publicly traded. None are. Sorry.
No, the only
way youll be able to make any money off these insider deals
will come long after the feast is over and youre allowed a
few crumbs. Once the privatization has occurred, one
analyst observes, and the properties are generating rental
income for the investors, the initial investors will cash out by
forming real estate investment trusts (REITs), real estate operating
companies (REOCs) or limited partnerships that will be made available
to retail investors.
Alas, by then,
the easy money will have been made
at your expense. Feels pretty
good, doesnt it?
Thats
why, increasingly we find ourselves casting our gaze overseas, longing
for returns in foreign lands in places where the governments are
somewhat less corrupt and the playing field slopes somewhat less
directly toward the pockets of crony-capitalists.
Reprinted
with permission from The Daily
Reckoning.
February
27, 2012
Addison
Wiggin [send him mail]
is the editorial director and publisher of The Daily Reckoning.
He is the author, with Bill Bonner, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving The Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and the upcoming Empire
of Debt. His
latest book is The
Demise of the Dollar...and Why It's Great for Your Investments.
Copyright
© 2012 Daily Reckoning
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