Alleged SAC Insider Trader Was Expelled From Harvard Law For Grade Falsification

The Wolf of Wall Street would be proud. Mathew Martoma, the alleged SAC Capital trader at the center of the largest insider trading scheme ever, was, Dealbook reports, expelled from Harvard Law School in 1999 for a false transcript of his grades. While Mr. Martoma’s lawyer tried to keep court papers under cover, a summary on the court docketing system shows the judge ordered them unsealed. “Veritas” indeed…

 

Via Dealbook,

Mathew Martoma, the former SAC Capital Advisors trader charged with carrying out one of the largest insider trading schemes ever, was expelled from Harvard Law School in 1999 for creating a false transcript of his grades, a person briefed on the matter said on Thursday.

 

Mr. Martoma’s lawyer had sought to keep evidence of the grade tampering under wraps but the judge presiding over the former hedge fund trader’s insider trading trial on Thursday ordered court papers discussing his expulsion to be unsealed.

 

 

But a summary on the court docketing system known as a Pacer said the unsealed court papers will discuss a law school disciplinary proceeding involving Mr. Martoma. There was no mention in the summary of Mr. Martoma’s expulsion from law school or what the disciplinary matter involved.

 

The disclosure comes as a jury is being selected in Mr. Martoma’s trial.

“Veritas” indeed…



    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/1FC_TXvqeE4/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Japanese Consumer Sentiment Slumps – Biggest 6-Month Drop Since 2007

Japanese consumer sentiment tumbled once again in the last quarter of 2013. The BoJ survey – released quarterly – showed the second consecutive drop in both current conditions and the outlook. This is the largest two-quarter collapse in the outlook for the Japanese consumer since 2007 as it appears the initial exuberance of Abenomics is collapsing as fast as Abe’s approval ratings. We fear, perhaps, this loss of belief (which can surely only set back his hopes for firms to raise wages) is merely stoking his nationalist militarist persuasion – as indicated by his move last night.

 

 

This is the lowest print since Abenomics was unveiled…

Data: Bloomberg


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/tl7_NorGZbk/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Strong 30 Year Reopening Concludes Treasury Auctions For The Week

If yesterday’s 10 Year auction was a little on the weak side, stopping through the When Issued by 0.2 bps, there were no such problems for today’s last of the week 29-year 10-month reopening auction, which just priced $13 billion of the previously issued CUSIP RD2, at a high yield of 3.899%, through the 3.906% WI. The strength was not only in the pricing, but the Bid to Cover as well, which came at 2.57, above last month’s 2.35, and also above the 12 month trailing average of 2.45. Finally, the internals were strong as well, with Dealers taking down 38.1%, the lowest since October’s 35.5%, leaving 44.4% for Indirects, above the 38.6% average, if a tad below last month’s 46.0%, and Directs holding 17.5% of the final allotment, up from 12.5%, and above the 15.9% TTM average. As a result of the strong auction, the kneejerk reaction in the Ultra was a 10 tick higher move from 137.07 to 137.17, and also helped push the entire jittery complex higher.

Of note: as in yesterday’s 10 Year reopening, which had never been bid in recent POMOs, so no dealers had sold the RD2 CUSIP to the Fed on recent occasions. Now that they have $5 billion more of long-dated paper which even Bill Gross is shorting, expect this to change rather quickly.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/xGnat07iuxE/story01.htm Tyler Durden

WTI Crude Plunges To 7-Month Low (But Don’t Get Too Excited)

At $91.70, front-month WTI crude prices have dropped to a fresh 7-month-low this morning. The mainstream media is already crowing of what this means for gas prices and how that will be an implicit “tax-cut” – even though gas prices remain at or near record-high levels for this time of year. The issue with this thinking, of course, is Brent crude (which more closely correlates to US gasoline prices) remains stubbornly high at around $107 as the spread between WTI and Brent surges over $15.

 

 

Chart: Bloomberg


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/FV0tK9nuU2s/story01.htm Tyler Durden

WTI Crude Plunges To 7-Month Low (But Don't Get Too Excited)

At $91.70, front-month WTI crude prices have dropped to a fresh 7-month-low this morning. The mainstream media is already crowing of what this means for gas prices and how that will be an implicit “tax-cut” – even though gas prices remain at or near record-high levels for this time of year. The issue with this thinking, of course, is Brent crude (which more closely correlates to US gasoline prices) remains stubbornly high at around $107 as the spread between WTI and Brent surges over $15.

 

 

Chart: Bloomberg


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/FV0tK9nuU2s/story01.htm Tyler Durden

“Heartbroken” Christie “Surprised At Stupidity”; Apologizes; Fires Bunch Of Staff; “Crazy” To Think He’d Resign

Governor Christie says he is "doing a lot of soul-searching," over the "callous indifference" displayed by his former campaign manager Bill Stepien (since asked to leave) and Chief of Staff Bridget Kelly (since fired). He was "disturbed by the tone and behavior and attitude" of the emails he saw (following his workout). The "heartbroken", "not a bully", Governor accepted responsibility for his staff's actions and is embarrased and humiliated… but "it's crazy man" to think he would resign…

Via The Hill… the problem…

…emails obtained by The Hill and other publications on Wednesday raised significant questions about that explanation. They showed a top Christie aide, deputy chief of staff Bridget Ann Kelly, appearing to collude with David Wildstein, a Christie appointee at the Port Authority, to create traffic in the town.

 

“Time for some traffic problems in Fort Lee,” Kelly emailed to Wildstein after the mayor failed to back Christie.

 

“Got it,” Wildstein emailed back.

Press Briefing Post Mortem

Status and Apologies…

  • *GOV CHRISTIE APOLOGIZES TO NJ, FT. LEE, LEGISLATURE
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS HE'S EMBARRASSED, HUMILIATED
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS DOING A LOT OF SOUL-SEARCHING OVER INCIDENT
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS HE WAS 'BLIND SIDED' YESTERDAY MORNING
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS SURPRISED AT "STUPIDITY'' OF THOSE INVOLVED
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS HE WAS TOLD LANE CLOSURES WERE FOR TRAFFIC STUDY
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS HE ASKED STAFF FOR INFORMATION ON LANE CLOSURES
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS SENIOR STAFF SAID THEY HAD NO INFORMATION
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS SAW EMAILS FOR THE FIRST TIME YESTERDAY MORNING (after his workout)
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS THERE WERE POLITICAL OVERTONES IN EMAILS
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS HE AND WILDSTEIN WEREN'T FRIENDS OR ACQUAINTANCES
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS THERE IS NO JUSTIFICATION FOR BEHAVIOR
  • *CHRISTIE WILL HOLD PERSONAL INTERVIEWS WITH SENIOR STAFF
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS HE HASN'T COMPLETED STAFF INTERVIEWS YET
  • *"I AM HEARTBROKEN'' CHRISTIE SAYS, THAT TRUST BETRAYED
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS HE'S RESPONSIBLE FOR WHAT HAPPENED
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS STAFF "FELL SHORT''

 

Actions:

  • *CHRISTIE SAYS ACTION TAKEN AGAINST STEPIEN BY 7 PM YESTERDAY
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS STEPIEN WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED FOR PARTY CHAIR
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS STEPIEN WON'T BE CONSIDERED FOR NJ GOP CHAIRMAN
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS STEPIEN WITHDRAWS CONSULTANCY JOB
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS BEHAVIOR OF AIDES UNACCEPTABLE
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS BRIDGET KELLY FIRED, SAYS SHE LIED TO HIM
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS NOT INTERESTED IN BRIDGET KELLY'S EXPLANATION
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS BRIDGET KELLY FIRED BY 9 A.M. YESTERDAY

Kelly and Christie in a better mood…

Next Steps:

  • *U.S. ATTORNEY IN NEW JERSEY PROBING CHRISTIE TRAFFIC SCANDAL
  • *CHRISTIE TRAVELING TO FT. LEE TODAY TO SEEK MEETING W/ MAYOR
  • *CHRISTIE WILL SEEK TO APOLOGIZE TO FT. LEE MAYOR, RESIDENTS
  • *CHRISTIE:NOT BEGINNING PROCESS OF CONSIDERING PRESIDENTIAL RUN

And summing it all up…


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/Zwx-bq-KVdk/story01.htm Tyler Durden

"Heartbroken" Christie "Surprised At Stupidity"; Apologizes; Fires Bunch Of Staff; "Crazy" To Think He'd Resign

Governor Christie says he is "doing a lot of soul-searching," over the "callous indifference" displayed by his former campaign manager Bill Stepien (since asked to leave) and Chief of Staff Bridget Kelly (since fired). He was "disturbed by the tone and behavior and attitude" of the emails he saw (following his workout). The "heartbroken", "not a bully", Governor accepted responsibility for his staff's actions and is embarrased and humiliated… but "it's crazy man" to think he would resign…

Via The Hill… the problem…

…emails obtained by The Hill and other publications on Wednesday raised significant questions about that explanation. They showed a top Christie aide, deputy chief of staff Bridget Ann Kelly, appearing to collude with David Wildstein, a Christie appointee at the Port Authority, to create traffic in the town.

 

“Time for some traffic problems in Fort Lee,” Kelly emailed to Wildstein after the mayor failed to back Christie.

 

“Got it,” Wildstein emailed back.

Press Briefing Post Mortem

Status and Apologies…

  • *GOV CHRISTIE APOLOGIZES TO NJ, FT. LEE, LEGISLATURE
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS HE'S EMBARRASSED, HUMILIATED
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS DOING A LOT OF SOUL-SEARCHING OVER INCIDENT
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS HE WAS 'BLIND SIDED' YESTERDAY MORNING
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS SURPRISED AT "STUPIDITY'' OF THOSE INVOLVED
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS HE WAS TOLD LANE CLOSURES WERE FOR TRAFFIC STUDY
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS HE ASKED STAFF FOR INFORMATION ON LANE CLOSURES
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS SENIOR STAFF SAID THEY HAD NO INFORMATION
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS SAW EMAILS FOR THE FIRST TIME YESTERDAY MORNING (after his workout)
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS THERE WERE POLITICAL OVERTONES IN EMAILS
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS HE AND WILDSTEIN WEREN'T FRIENDS OR ACQUAINTANCES
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS THERE IS NO JUSTIFICATION FOR BEHAVIOR
  • *CHRISTIE WILL HOLD PERSONAL INTERVIEWS WITH SENIOR STAFF
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS HE HASN'T COMPLETED STAFF INTERVIEWS YET
  • *"I AM HEARTBROKEN'' CHRISTIE SAYS, THAT TRUST BETRAYED
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS HE'S RESPONSIBLE FOR WHAT HAPPENED
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS STAFF "FELL SHORT''

 

Actions:

  • *CHRISTIE SAYS ACTION TAKEN AGAINST STEPIEN BY 7 PM YESTERDAY
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS STEPIEN WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED FOR PARTY CHAIR
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS STEPIEN WON'T BE CONSIDERED FOR NJ GOP CHAIRMAN
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS STEPIEN WITHDRAWS CONSULTANCY JOB
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS BEHAVIOR OF AIDES UNACCEPTABLE
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS BRIDGET KELLY FIRED, SAYS SHE LIED TO HIM
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS NOT INTERESTED IN BRIDGET KELLY'S EXPLANATION
  • *CHRISTIE SAYS BRIDGET KELLY FIRED BY 9 A.M. YESTERDAY

Kelly and Christie in a better mood…

Next Steps:

  • *U.S. ATTORNEY IN NEW JERSEY PROBING CHRISTIE TRAFFIC SCANDAL
  • *CHRISTIE TRAVELING TO FT. LEE TODAY TO SEEK MEETING W/ MAYOR
  • *CHRISTIE WILL SEEK TO APOLOGIZE TO FT. LEE MAYOR, RESIDENTS
  • *CHRISTIE:NOT BEGINNING PROCESS OF CONSIDERING PRESIDENTIAL RUN

And summing it all up…


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/Zwx-bq-KVdk/story01.htm Tyler Durden

JPMorgan To Exit Foodstamp, Other Prepaid Cards Business

Mess with us, we’ll mess with you. That is the message one can derive from JPMorgan’s surprise announcement that it plans to “sell or wind down its business of issuing prepaid cards for corporate payrolls and government tax refunds and benefits.” Which also includes the infamous Electronic Benefits Transfer, or foodstamps, card. According to Reuters, the product, which has been offered with cash and treasury services to companies and governments, “had become a headache of risks in operations and regulations, according to a person familiar with the matter who was not authorized to speak publicly.”

Curiously, it was just over two years ago when JPM said this about its EBT business:

“This business is a very important business to JP Morgan,” Christopher Paton, the company’s managing director of treasury services, told Bloomberg News in 2011. “It’s an important business in terms of its size and scale. We also regard it as very important in the sense that we are delivering a very useful social function. We are a key part of this benefit delivery mechanism. Right now volumes have gone through the roof in the past couple of years or so … The good news from JP Morgan’s perspective is the infrastructure that we built has been able to cope with that increase in volume.”

Guess the social function isn’t that important any more. However, along with the responsibilities, JPM is losing a substantial revenue stream:

Just how lucrative JP Morgan’s EBT state contracts are is hard to say, because total national data on EBT contracts are not reported. But thanks to a combination of public-records requests and contracts that are available online, here’s what we do know: 18 of the 24 states JP Morgan handles have been contracted to pay the bank up to $560,492,596.02 since 2004. Since 2007, Florida has been contracted to pay JP Morgan $90,351,202.22. Pennsylvania’s seven-year contract totaled $112,541,823.27. New York’s seven-year contract totaled $126,394,917.

That’s a lot of money that one doesn’t easily give up on. But that’s what JPM just did. Or in other words, JPM just told the government which has been going after it relentlessly for the past year, forcing JPM to rack up some $25 billion in litigation reserves, “you can find someone else to manage your wholesale welfare program for nearly 50 million Americans.”

There is more:

Last month JPMorgan warned some 465,000 holders of the cards that their personal data may have been accessed by computer hackers who attacked its network in July.

 

Government regulators are focusing on whether corporate payroll programs that use the cards have sufficient safeguards against burdening employees with fees.

 

For the past year the company has been moving to simplify its operations after its risk controls and guards against money laundering were found deficient by regulators.

According to JPMorgan’s statement, the bank “will explore a full range of options for its prepaid card business, including a sale.” In the meantime, it will continue to support current clients and cardholders. The decision does not affect Chase customers holding credit, debit or prepaid “Liquid” cards, the company said. Needless to add here, the last thing the precarious “recovery” needs right now are glitches with the EBT system, which as we saw last October when the EBT system briefly went “dark” nearly plunged the nation into a wholesale panic. Then again, such is quid pro quo life when the government bites one of the biggest hands that feed it.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/ybbO6t30Wuk/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Janet Yellen – The Nation’s New Chief Slumlord

Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog,

Janet Yellen's role as the nation's slumlord is masked by her apparent distance from the Fed's money spigot and the resulting institutional ownership of the nation's rental housing stock.

Please welcome the nation's new chief slumlord, Janet Yellen. The previous top slumlord, Ben Bernanke, has retired from the position of Chief Slumlord (i.e. chair of the Federal Reserve) to the accolades of those who benefited from his extraordinary transfer of wealth from the many to the few.

Why is the chairperson of the Fed the nation's top slumlord? Allow me to explain.We only need to understand two facts to understand the Fed's role as Slumlord.

1. Rental housing has long been a decentralized, locally owned industry. Over 90% of rental properties under 50 units have historically been owned by individuals or couples: the nation's landlords have historically been Mom and Pop, middle-class folks who saved capital and used those savings to buy a single-family home or small apartment building (duplex, triplex, four-plex) as an investment that they own and manage.

Very few amass a huge portfolio of properties, as few have the income or assets (i.e. the collateral) to leverage the purchase of dozens of rental properties.

Buildings up to four units qualify for conventional mortgages; small rental properties are not considered commercial properties like strip malls or large apartment complexes.

This diverse, local ownership provided a wide spectrum of residential rentals. The wider the variety of rentals and owners, the greater the diversity of prices, locales and requirements. This is the essence of free enterprise: sellers (landlords) and buyers (renters) agree to price and conditions in a dynamic, open and adaptive marketplace.

2. No Mom and Pop real estate investor can compete with financial institutions who can borrow unlimited sums of money from the Federal Reserve at near-zero rates of interest.

Let's start by asking what happens to the price of real estate when mortgages fall from 8% interest to 4%: prices basically double, because buyers can "afford" to pay more at low rates of interest.

When conventional mortgage rates are 8%, a rental that costs $200,000 requires a 30% down payment in cash (because the buyers are not owner-occupants) or $60,000. The simple interest on a $140,000 mortgage is about $11,200 annually. (Let's use simple annual interest for simplicity's sake.)

At 4%, the price can double to $400,000, with a 30% down of $120,000 and a mortgage of $280,000, and the mortgage accrues the same $11,200 in annual interest.

Declining interest rates push real estate prices higher.

At first glance, this doubling in price doesn't seem to affect the cost of ownership. But that is deceptive; consider how many households can scrape up $120,000 in cash compared to the number who can scrape up $60,000. The higher the price, the bigger the down payment required. The higher the down payment, the fewer the number of households who can accumulate that much cash.

To households that live paycheck-to-paycheck, both sums are out of reach. But a significant number of middle class households could accumulate $60,000: such a sum could come from a family house that was sold and divided amongst the offspring, for example, or a Solo 401K that allows the retirement fund to own real estate, or from saving $5,000 a year for 12 years.

The Federal Reserve's Zero Interest Rate Policy (ZIRP) was designed to push real estate prices higher. The Fed's public justification was "the wealth effect": the idea was that as the family home increased in value, homeowners would begin to borrow and spend more money due to their increased home equity.

The second Fed goal was to increase home sales by lowering mortgage rates, theoretically enabling more marginal buyers to buy a home. But since prices rise as mortgage rates drop, this goal is mooted unless marginal buyers are also given a free ride on down payments and qualifying income, i.e. offered near-zero down payments and no-document mortgage qualification processes.

But zero interest rates and unlimited liquidity don't just push real estate prices higher–they give institutions with access to the Fed's nearly-free money an unbeatable advantage over Mom and Pop real estate investors.

Imagine being able to borrow $400,000 at 1% with zero collateral. You can now buy the rental property for cash, and pay only $4,000 in simple annual interest. And you didn't have to put up a dollar of actual collateral to buy the property.

Consider the huge advantages you now have over the competing Mom and Pop bidders. Sellers typically prefer cash offers, so your cash offer (of Fed money) is more attractive than Mom and Pop's loan-based bid.

If the price jumps to $500,000, Mom and Pop are blown out of the water: they don't have the additional $30,000 cash required as collateral.

Thanks to the Fed, you don't need any collateral. You can borrow $500,000 as easily as $400,000, and the increase in annual interest is trivial: a mere $1,000.

Now consider the operating costs: you have a $7,000 annual advantage because you have access to the Fed's nearly-free money. Mom and Pop have to pay $11,200 in simple annual interest, while you pay only $4,000. A property that is break-even to Mom and Pop reaps you a $7,000 annual profit, just because you can borrow money from the Fed for next to nothing.

Now multiply the $400,000 and the $7,000 by 1,000. Now you can buy $400,000,000 of rental properties and skim $7,000,000 in annual profits, just from the advantage of having access to the Fed's quantitative easing (QE) nearly-free money.

Any advantages you can accrue from economies of scale from owning tens of thousands of rental properties are also yours to keep, courtesy of the Fed.

Now you understand why Janet Yellen is the nation's new top slumlord. Her policies of unlimited liquidity, QE and zero interest rates directly enable financial Elites to beat out Mom and Pop rental housing investors and buy tens of thousands of rental properties at will.

Access to free money and near-zero interest rates gives institutional buyers a built-in advantage over Mom and Pop rental property owners: no collateral and free profits from super-low rates available to those closest to the Fed's QE money spigot.

Institutional ownership turns the rental housing stock into a Fed-enabled financial monoculture. Individual Mom and Pop owners may not require a credit check, or they might not raise the rents very often; the odds that you will be treated as a human being are higher because the scale of the operation is small and local.

To Fed-enabled Institutional landlords, you are an income stream to be skimmed.You will be processed and managed remotely, and variations are not allowed, as they mess up the profit machine.

Fed-enabled Institutional landlords may or may not hire competent, responsive managerial firms to manage their thousands of properties: from the point of view of Fed-enabled Institutional landlords, the lower the costs, the larger the profits. One way to lower costs is to not respond to tenant complaints or requests for service. Another is to hire the lowest-cost (and likely understaffed) management firm.

Janet Yellen's role as the nation's slumlord is masked by her apparent distance from the Fed's money spigot and the resulting institutional ownership of the nation's rental housing stock. But guess what, Chairperson Yellen: we're not fooled. Your phony facade of "progressivism" doesn't mask your real role as the nation's top slumlord. 
 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/9I-wHniAiZw/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Janet Yellen – The Nation's New Chief Slumlord

Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog,

Janet Yellen's role as the nation's slumlord is masked by her apparent distance from the Fed's money spigot and the resulting institutional ownership of the nation's rental housing stock.

Please welcome the nation's new chief slumlord, Janet Yellen. The previous top slumlord, Ben Bernanke, has retired from the position of Chief Slumlord (i.e. chair of the Federal Reserve) to the accolades of those who benefited from his extraordinary transfer of wealth from the many to the few.

Why is the chairperson of the Fed the nation's top slumlord? Allow me to explain.We only need to understand two facts to understand the Fed's role as Slumlord.

1. Rental housing has long been a decentralized, locally owned industry. Over 90% of rental properties under 50 units have historically been owned by individuals or couples: the nation's landlords have historically been Mom and Pop, middle-class folks who saved capital and used those savings to buy a single-family home or small apartment building (duplex, triplex, four-plex) as an investment that they own and manage.

Very few amass a huge portfolio of properties, as few have the income or assets (i.e. the collateral) to leverage the purchase of dozens of rental properties.

Buildings up to four units qualify for conventional mortgages; small rental properties are not considered commercial properties like strip malls or large apartment complexes.

This diverse, local ownership provided a wide spectrum of residential rentals. The wider the variety of rentals and owners, the greater the diversity of prices, locales and requirements. This is the essence of free enterprise: sellers (landlords) and buyers (renters) agree to price and conditions in a dynamic, open and adaptive marketplace.

2. No Mom and Pop real estate investor can compete with financial institutions who can borrow unlimited sums of money from the Federal Reserve at near-zero rates of interest.

Let's start by asking what happens to the price of real estate when mortgages fall from 8% interest to 4%: prices basically double, because buyers can "afford" to pay more at low rates of interest.

When conventional mortgage rates are 8%, a rental that costs $200,000 requires a 30% down payment in cash (because the buyers are not owner-occupants) or $60,000. The simple interest on a $140,000 mortgage is about $11,200 annually. (Let's use simple annual interest for simplicity's sake.)

At 4%, the price can double to $400,000, with a 30% down of $120,000 and a mortgage of $280,000, and the mortgage accrues the same $11,200 in annual interest.

Declining interest rates push real estate prices higher.

At first glance, this doubling in price doesn't seem to affect the cost of ownership. But that is deceptive; consider how many households can scrape up $120,000 in cash compared to the number who can scrape up $60,000. The higher the price, the bigger the down payment required. The higher the down payment, the fewer the number of households who can accumulate that much cash.

To households that live paycheck-to-paycheck, both sums are out of reach. But a significant number of middle class households could accumulate $60,000: such a sum could come from a family house that was sold and divided amongst the offspring, for example, or a Solo 401K that allows the retirement fund to own real estate, or from saving $5,000 a year for 12 years.

The Federal Reserve's Zero Interest Rate Policy (ZIRP) was designed to push real estate prices higher. The Fed's public justification was "the wealth effect": the idea was that as the family home increased in value, homeowners would begin to borrow and spend more money due to their increased home equity.

The second Fed goal was to increase home sales by lowering mortgage rates, theoretically enabling more marginal buyers to buy a home. But since prices rise as mortgage rates drop, this goal is mooted unless marginal buyers are also given a free ride on down payments and qualifying income, i.e. offered near-zero down payments and no-document mortgage qualification processes.

But zero interest rates and unlimited liquidity don't just push real estate prices higher–they give institutions with access to the Fed's nearly-free money an unbeatable advantage over Mom and Pop real estate investors.

Imagine being able to borrow $400,000 at 1% with zero collateral. You can now buy the rental property for cash, and pay only $4,000 in simple annual interest. And you didn't have to put up a dollar of actual collateral to buy the property.

Consider the huge advantages you now have over the competing Mom and Pop bidders. Sellers typically prefer cash offers, so your cash offer (of Fed money) is more attractive than Mom and Pop's loan-based bid.

If the price jumps to $500,000, Mom and Pop are blown out of the water: they don't have the additional $30,000 cash required as collateral.

Thanks to the Fed, you don't need any collateral. You can borrow $500,000 as easily as $400,000, and the increase in annual interest is trivial: a mere $1,000.

Now consider the operating costs: you have a $7,000 annual advantage because you have access to the Fed's nearly-free money. Mom and Pop have to pay $11,200 in simple annual interest, while you pay only $4,000. A property that is break-even to Mom and Pop reaps you a $7,000 annual profit, just because you can borrow money from the Fed for next to nothing.

Now multiply the $400,000 and the $7,000 by 1,000. Now you can buy $400,000,000 of rental properties and skim $7,000,000 in annual profits, just from the advantage of having access to the Fed's quantitative easing (QE) nearly-free money.

Any advantages you can accrue from economies of scale from owning tens of thousands of rental properties are also yours to keep, courtesy of the Fed.

Now you understand why Janet Yellen is the nation's new top slumlord. Her policies of unl
imited liquidity, QE and zero interest rates directly enable financial Elites to beat out Mom and Pop rental housing investors and buy tens of thousands of rental properties at will.

Access to free money and near-zero interest rates gives institutional buyers a built-in advantage over Mom and Pop rental property owners: no collateral and free profits from super-low rates available to those closest to the Fed's QE money spigot.

Institutional ownership turns the rental housing stock into a Fed-enabled financial monoculture. Individual Mom and Pop owners may not require a credit check, or they might not raise the rents very often; the odds that you will be treated as a human being are higher because the scale of the operation is small and local.

To Fed-enabled Institutional landlords, you are an income stream to be skimmed.You will be processed and managed remotely, and variations are not allowed, as they mess up the profit machine.

Fed-enabled Institutional landlords may or may not hire competent, responsive managerial firms to manage their thousands of properties: from the point of view of Fed-enabled Institutional landlords, the lower the costs, the larger the profits. One way to lower costs is to not respond to tenant complaints or requests for service. Another is to hire the lowest-cost (and likely understaffed) management firm.

Janet Yellen's role as the nation's slumlord is masked by her apparent distance from the Fed's money spigot and the resulting institutional ownership of the nation's rental housing stock. But guess what, Chairperson Yellen: we're not fooled. Your phony facade of "progressivism" doesn't mask your real role as the nation's top slumlord. 
 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/9I-wHniAiZw/story01.htm Tyler Durden