Paper Economy - A US Real Estate Bubble Blog

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Ticking Prime Bomb!: Fannie Mae Monthly Summary June 2009

Decades from now the summer of 2008 will likely be remembered to mark the turning point where legislative blundering took an otherwise serious financial crisis and molested it into an epic financial collapse.

By fully assuming the liabilities of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two colossal and corrupt (and conduit of corruptness funneling junk Countrywide Financial loans onto the implied balance sheet of the federal government) government sponsored enterprises, the federal government, led by Treasury Secretary Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, has thrust taxpayers into an abyss of insolvency with one mighty shove.

Given the sheer size of these government sponsored companies, with loan guarantee obligations recently estimated by Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President William Poole of totaling $4.47 Trillion (That’s TRILLION with a capital T… for perspective ALL U.S. government debt held by the public totals roughly $4.87 Trillion) this legislative reversal making certain the “implied” government guarantee is reckless to say the least.

The following chart (click for larger ultra-dynamic and surf-able chart) shows what Fannie Mae terms the count of “Seriously Delinquent” loans as a percentage of all loans on their books.

It’s important to understand that Fannie Mae does NOT segregate foreclosures from delinquent loans when reporting these numbers.

Finally, the following chart (click for larger ultra-dynamic and surf-able chart) shows the relative movements of Fannie Mae’s credit and non-credit enhanced (insured and non-insured) “Seriously Delinquent” loans.

Labels: , ,

Copyright © 2011
PaperEconomy Blog - www.papereconomy.com
All Rights Reserved

Disclaimer

10 Comments:

  • why is the world is it asking me to install microsofts silverlight just to view a graph ? gimme a break.

    thanks for posting but I can't view that graphs and will not install silverlight.

    By Blogger Razors Edge, at 3:08 PM  

  • Razors,

    The silvrlight charts work on all browsers (IE - variants, FireFox (PC/MAC), Chrome, Safari.... is there technical issues or are you just against installing silverlight?

    If so are you against Flash or Java?

    In any event, if you wont install silverlight you will have to live with the static charts.

    By Blogger SoldAtTheTop, at 4:51 PM  

  • I clicked on the link to install sliverlight, and nothing happens.. it's a dud. I use IE6 and I won't upgrade.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 2:24 AM  

  • What about Firefox for linux?

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 3:02 PM  

  • Well I have yet to try it... apparently it will work but I suppose you need the C# runtime for linux.

    If it doesn't work though all is not lost... I'm working on a new webUI which will make better use of the static images as well as a Flash viewer (not the full editor for composing the visualizations... just viewing for now) and an iPhone player as well.... so I should have my bases covered in say ... 3 - 6 months!

    Sorry... stay tuned.

    By Blogger SoldAtTheTop, at 3:20 PM  

  • ... yes just checked .. Mono and Moonlight... so .Net runtime and some more stuff... here's the link:

    http://www.mono-project.com/Moonlight

    By Blogger SoldAtTheTop, at 3:22 PM  

  • well I'll be danged, installed moonlight, will see if I can get it to work..

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 3:38 PM  

  • Thanks.. I appreciate it... fingers crossed!

    By Blogger SoldAtTheTop, at 3:48 PM  

  • You seem to be under the impression it's important to make "ultra-dynamic and surf-able chart"s, so important that you're making people do an additional piece of work installing software to do it. I suspect you're wrong, and that all anyone really wants here is to click on the graph and see it at some reasonably large size that is also easy to print and save for their research. Your graphs and text are excellent by themselves, and you don't need anything beyond what a standard web browser provides to deliver your message. It boggles my mind that you're looking at spending months working though something more complicated instead.

    As for my feelings on Flash and Java, it's exactly all the awful experiences with running those technologies in a web browser that leave me completely unwilling to allow yet another piece of painful software to get a foothold on my system.

    By Blogger Greg Smith, at 11:43 PM  

  • Greg,

    Hang in there... all these technologies are getting better... particularly Silverlight...

    Also... my new Web UI will get you what you want PLUS... i'm now generating PDFs for all the data and analysis so in just a few weeks you will be all set.

    By Blogger SoldAtTheTop, at 1:10 AM  

Post a Comment

Links to this post:

Create a Link

<< Home


 
Top Real Estate Blogs Top Real Estate Blogs Blogarama - The Blog Directory Check Google Page Rank