Inman

Mark this day: The worst is over

Mark this day: The worst of this crisis has passed. However, not yet the halfway point in time: We are 13 months into this wreck, and you’ll sure as hell feel credit-market distress 13 months from now even though the greatest risk has passed.

I wrote last week that I heard "hoofbeats of cavalry on the way" — for a while this week it looked as though John Wayne had arrived to shoot the settlers and give firewater to the Apaches.

Until yesterday the nation labored under the illusion that this crisis was a financial matter: banks and markets thrashing around, remote from Main Street, something that would either solve itself or be calmed by usual means. In reality, of course, the financial matter was not remote and had been hopelessly lost by August 2007.

Now this crisis is officially public property, in the political sphere, put there by final disaster on Wednesday, formally acknowledged today by the Fed, the Treasury, the president, both houses of Congress, and both major parties and their presidential candidates.

Before post-mortem, medals and booby prizes, a brief timeout for the real world. The economy is sinking and will continue to do so, partly because it must to pass the inflation pig (no lipstick) still moving through the national python. New claims for unemployment insurance are continuously rising beyond forecast, 455,000 weekly now, and housing is not close to bottom as new builds fell to a 17-year low last month.

Mortgage rates have risen to about 6.125 percent, a wrecked credit system unable to create leverage to support higher prices for $5 trillion in mortgage-backed securities and lower rates. However, a somewhat less distracted Treasury Secretary will go to work on that problem shortly. So he said today (again). He and everybody else knows that mortgage credit must be unlocked for housing to bottom.

The authorities, including those in the White House and Congress, have obviously been working on today’s fix for months. Fed examiners have been inside securities firms since June for the first time ever, "lifting the kimono" to discover the Street’s secret losses. Thus we have an initial funding amount — not enough, but most to be recovered one day.

The authorities could not go public with planning until the market damage was so severe that a majority of both parties in Congress was willing to go along. The most difficult part of the journey ahead: helping the American people to understand, and to stay together despite contrary charlatans by the thousand.

Top honor: to Professor Bernanke. Quiet, no grandstand, the technician with the life-study knowledge of 1930 and the determination to prevent 1932.

An honorable discharge, no medal: to Hank Paulson. You hire an investment banker to look around corners for you. Relentlessly surprised, annoyed at the waste of his valuable time, "Hank" has only recently discovered that there are corners.

Medal of Honor: Tim Geithner, N.Y. Fed prez. If we are very, very lucky, this extraordinary man will stay in public service for awhile longer.

The boobs … oh my: Start with CEOs and boards of the failed firms. Name them, publicly humiliate them, and then shun them. Forbid them ever again to participate in a public company. That’s authentic "moral hazard."

The "liquidationists": Find the hottest corner in Hades for those who thought (and still think) that mass bankruptcy and liquidation will bring proper punishment, future caution and recovery. The Lehman butchery led directly to the AIG bloodbath and total system meltdown. Andrew Mellon, Herbert Hoover’s Treasury Secretary in 1931: "Liquidate labor, liquidate stocks, liquidate the farmers, liquidate real estate … and recovery will follow in a few months."

Another high honor goes to the irrepressible American spirit under pressure. On Tuesday, news crackled over Lehman’s in-house squawk box that Barclay’s Bank would buy half the wreckage, and perhaps 10,000 people, many of whom lost their life savings, would still have jobs. Then the box played "God Save The Queen" to cheers.

Lou Barnes is a mortgage broker and nationally syndicated columnist based in Boulder, Colo. He can be reached at lbarnes@boulderwest.com.

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