mike777, on Jan 1 2008, 03:46 AM, said:
1) What is an asset bubble...do they even exist and why should we care? He keeps talking about asset bubbles, whatever they are, but does not say what they are, dutch tulips, maybe no, and why we should care compared to all the other worries.
Asset bubbles.
Let's suppose that you decide to buy an asset you've heard good things about. Lots of other people think that the asset sounds good too, and bid against you. The price goes up. As more people get interested, the price goes higher, not because of anything about the asset, but because more people are bidding on it. Pretty soon, people are speculating not on the asset, but on the excitement about the asset...as long as people stay excited about it, the price will continue to increase. Eventually, people will lose interest and the asset's value will drop to its actual value. The difference between the actual value and the price increase caused by people bidding up the asset is the bubble.
Usually, bubble give a false impression not just of the asset, but of the economy in general. You by an asset for a dollar. I buy it for two dollars. You buy it back from me for three dollars. I buy it back from you for four dollars, and so forth.On paper, it looks like we've made enormous profits, and one of holds a very valuable asset. In reality, nothing's really changed. But it sure looks good on paper.
Take the value of land in Tokyo, which at one point if I recall correctly was greater than the value of land in all of the United States. A few square feet might be worth millions of dollars. But the only people who bought and sold these were a few Japanese banks, who inflated the price when buying and selling to each other to make the prices seem gigantic. In fact, nobody outside of these banks were willing to buy this land for thousands of dollars per square foot, let alone millions. But because the banks didn't try to sell it to the public, the "market value" wasn't corrected.
Why did they do this? Well, it made the banks look very strong, with lots of assets, and plenty of collateral to cover bad loans. It also meant they could borrow fantastic amounts of money, enough to simply buy the World Trade Center and numerous other landmarks.
Unfortunately, as usual with loans, some went bad. And when some banks couldn't repay, their assets were seized, and they were forced to sell this amazingly valuable land. Which nobody wanted to buy at these insane prices. So the "market value" of the land plunged, which meant that all of the other banks suddenly didn't have any collateral to cover their loans, which meant either that they went under or they stopped giving out more loans. Net result- the Japanese economy crashed, and took over 15 years to recover.
Should the "I'll pay $1 billion dollars for your worthless land if you'll pay $1 billion for my worthless land" bankers be punished? Did they even break the law? I don't know.
In our case, real estate agents and banks were deliberately inflating real estate prices, by assessing houses much higher than they were actually worth and giving out loans to people who couldn't possibly pay them back. I don't think the result is going to be Stock Market 1929, in part because the global stock market had crashed about 1925 so nobody could buy up the discount stocks back then, while now the Saudis and Chinese (and others) will happily gobble up the cheap stuff once the markets stabilize a little. This looks to me more like Japan 1990. Serious financial 'malaise' but not a depression for the next decade or so.