[Fun_4_Amdavadi_Gujarati] Global Financial Crisis -Very Informative

 
Dear  All ,

This is a nice data collection and could be of use to understand much talked about global financial crisis and crashing of stock market etc.


Being graphical, one can just see and understand than reading numerical data.
 
RISING COMMODITY PRICES

commodities graph

GLOBAL BANK LOSSES
Banks and other financial institutions could lose $1 trillion from the credit crisis as mortgage-backed assets have lost most of their value.

graphs shows bank losses

Banks have already written off nearly $500bn worth of assets but the IMF points out that they have only been able to raise new capital to cover about two-thirds of those losses, so the likelihood is that they will have to restrict their lending further than they already have done in the last year (See Frozen Credit Markets chart below).
FROZEN CREDIT MARKETS

bar chart shows frozen credit markets

COLLAPSING HOUSING MARKETS
Underlying the financial market wobbles is a real decline in US house prices nationwide for the first time since the 1930s.

graphs shows house price trends

JITTERY STOCK MARKETS
Stock markets around the world - from Shanghai to London - have plunged, while in the US the Dow Jones industrial average has made big losses this year.

line graph shows stock market rise and fall

 
THE TIGHTENING SQUEEZE

Rises in petrol and food costs and fall in house values in past year


Figures show change in prices June 2007 to June 2008 for petrol and food, July 2007 to July 2008 for housing
 
THE FUEL SQUEEZE

Petrol prices over past 10 years and past year

THE FOOD SQUEEZE

Food prices over past 10 years and past year

Picture showing how cost of key food items has increased

THE PROPERTY SQUEEZE

House prices over past 10 years and past year

INFLATION AND JOBLESS ON THE UP

Inflation over past 10 years and past year


Government inflation target up to Dec 2003 was RPIX 2.5%, since then CPI 2%
 

Unemployment rate, three monthly change

SPENDING MONEY SLOWDOWN

Annual growth in disposable income, 2002-2007

Changes in real income of rich and poor

The US sub-prime mortgage crisis has led to plunging property prices, a slowdown in the US economy, and billions in losses by banks. It stems from a fundamental change in the way mortgages are funded.
THE NEW MODEL OF MORTGAGE LENDING
[ ] How it went wrong

two

flow chart

Traditionally, banks have financed their mortgage lending through the deposits they receive from their customers. This has limited the amount of mortgage lending they could do.
In recent years, banks have moved to a new model where they sell on the mortgages to the bond markets. This has made it much easier to fund additional borrowing,
But it has also led to abuses as banks no longer have the incentive to check carefully the mortgages they issue.
THE RISE OF THE MORTGAGE BOND MARKET

Growth in mortgage bond market

In the past five years, the private sector has dramatically expanded its role in the mortgage bond market, which had previously been dominated by government-sponsored agencies like Freddie Mac.
They specialised in new types of mortgages, such as sub-prime lending to borrowers with poor credit histories and weak documentation of income, who were shunned by the "prime" lenders like Freddie Mac.

size of the mortgage bond market

They also included "jumbo" mortgages for properties over Freddie Mac's $417,000 (?202,000) mortgage limit.
The business proved extremely profitable for the banks, which earned a fee for each mortgage they sold on. They urged mortgage brokers to sell more and more of these mortgages.
Now the mortgage bond market is worth $6 trillion, and is the largest single part of the whole $27 trillion US bond market, bigger even than Treasury bonds.
HOW SUB-PRIME LENDING AFFECTED ONE CITY
THE SUB-PRIME CRISIS IN CLEVELAND
(X)
 
Sub-prime lending
( )
 
Black areas
( )
 
Foreclosures (repossessions)
( )
 
Deutsche Bank properties
 
 
 
 
 

For many years, Cleveland was the sub-prime capital of America.
It was a poor, working class city, hit hard by the decline of manufacturing and sharply divided along racial lines.
Mortgage brokers focused their efforts by selling sub-prime mortgages in working class black areas where many people had achieved home ownership.
They told them that they could get cash by refinancing their homes, but often neglected to properly explain that the new sub-prime mortgages would "reset" after 2 years at double the interest rate.
The result was a wave of repossessions that blighted neighbourhoods across the city and the inner suburbs.
By late 2007, one in ten homes in Cleveland had been repossessed and Deutsche Bank Trust, acting on behalf of bondholders, was the largest property owner in the city.
THE CRISIS GOES NATIONWIDE
Growth of sub-prime lending
Sub-prime lending had spread from inner-city areas right across America by 2005.
By then, one in five mortgages were sub-prime, and they were particularly popular among recent immigrants trying to buy a home for the first time in the "hot" housing markets of Southern California, Arizona, Nevada, and the suburbs of Washington, DC and New York City.
House prices were high, and it was difficult to become an owner-occupier without moving to the very edge of the metropolitan area.
Rise in foreclosures
But these mortgages had a much higher rate of repossession than conventional mortgages because they were adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs).
The payments were fixed for two years, and then became both higher and dependent on the level of Fed intereset rates, which also rose substantially.
Consequently, a wave of repossessions is sweeping America as many of these mortgages reset to higher rates in the next two years.
And it is likely that as many as two million families will be evicted from their homes as their cases make their way through the courts.
The Bush administration is pushing the industry to renegotiate rather than repossess where possible, but mortgage companies are being overwhelmed by a tidal wave of cases.
THE HOUSING PRICE CRASH

US house prices

The wave of repossessions is having a dramatic effect on house prices, reversing the housing boom of the last few years and causing the first national decline in house prices since the 1930s.
There is a glut of four million unsold homes that is depressing prices, as builders have also been forced to lower prices to get rid of unsold properties.
And house prices, which are currently declining at an annual rate of 4.5%, are expected to fall by at least 10% by next year - and more in areas like California and Florida which had the biggest boom.
HOUSING AND THE ECONOMY

US residential housing construction forecast

The property crash is also affecting the broader economy, with the building industry expected to cut its output by half, with the loss of between one and two million jobs.
Many smaller builders will go out of business, and the larger firms are all suffering huge losses.
The building industry makes up 15% of the US economy, but a slowdown in the property market also hits many other industries, for instance makers of durable goods, such as washing machines, and DIY stores, such as Home Depot.
US economic growth
Economists expect the US economy to slow in the last three months of 2007 to an annual rate of 1% to 1.5%, compared with growth of 3.9% now.
But no one is sure how long the slowdown will last. Many US consumers have spent beyond their current income by borrowing on credit, and the fall in the value of their homes may make them reluctant to continue this pattern in the future.
CREDIT CRUNCH
credit crunch
One reason the economic slowdown could get worse is that banks and other lenders are cutting back on how much credit they will make available.
They are rejecting more people who apply for credit cards, insisting on bigger deposits for house purchase, and looking more closely at applications for personal loans.
The mortgage market has been particularly badly affected, with individuals finding it very difficult to get non-traditional mortgages, both sub-prime and "jumbo" (over the limit guaranteed by government-sponsored agencies).
The banks have been forced to do this by the drying up of the wholesale bond markets and by the effect of the crisis on their own balance sheets.
BANK LOSSES

bank liabilities in commercial paper market

The banking industry is facing huge losses as a result of the sub-prime crisis.
Already banks have announced $60bn worth of losses as many of the mortgage bonds backed by sub-prime mortgages have fallen in value.
The losses could be much greater, as many banks have concealed their holdings of sub-prime mortgages in exotic, off-balance sheet instruments such as "structured investment vehicles" or SIVs.
Although the banks say they do not own these SIVs, and therefore are not liable for their losses, they may be forced to cover any bad debts that they accrue.
BOND MARKET COLLAPSE

Value of mortgage-backed bonds

Also suffering huge losses are the bondholders, such as pension funds, who bought sub-prime mortgage bonds.
These have fallen sharply in value in the last few months, and are now worth between 20% and 40% of their original value for most asset classes, even those considered safe by the ratings agencies.
If the banks are forced to reveal their losses based on current prices, they will be even bigger.
It is estimated that ultimately losses suffered by financial institutions could be between $220bn and $450bn, as the $1 trillion in sub-prime mortgage bonds is revalued
   

Share price graph

Facts and figures: 1,000,000 savers, 800,000 mortgage holders, 180,000 shareholders, 6,000 staff

Market share and liabilities

 

__._,_.___
**************************************************************************

Click here to join Fun_4_Amdavadi_Gujarati Yahoo! Group
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Fun_4_Amdavadi_Gujarati/join

**************************************************************************
Welcome to World's Biggest Gujarati Group
Pure Gujju Group with Young Gujju Members
Most happening & the only active Gujarati Group in the Universe
Meet Our New Generation & Make New Friends
This is the only biggest Gujarati Fun group, where you can meet NRI, Local Gujarati Guys & Gals with real fun, no junk at all.

This group is for LOCAL & NRI AMDAVADI GUJARATI PEOPLES, but any one can join, you will get lots of funny & great emails everyday. Please join with big mail box like Gmail or Yahoo or create new account to receive our emails. This group support all types of attachments

Regards,

Moderator, Fun_4_Amdavadi_Gujarati
***************************************************************************
Recent Activity
Visit Your Group
New web site?

Drive traffic now.

Get your business

on Yahoo! search.

Y! Messenger

Want a quick chat?

Chat over IM with

group members.

Group Charity

Be the Change

A citizen movement

to change the world

.

__,_._,___

No comments:

Groups.yahoo.com (Yahoo Groups) Shutting Down

...