Top Credit Analysts Say Housing Decline Could Amount To $4 Trillion In Lost Capital

So far, credit crunch talk has revolved mainly around losses in the billions of dollars. No more. Reuters’ Walden Siew wrote today:

No one knows when the credit crisis will end.

But when it does, U.S home prices may have lost a third of their value, high-yield bond valuations will hit levels close to those seen during the last recession, and what may amount to $1 trillion of Wall Street losses may translate into almost $4 trillion of lost access to capital.

That’s the view of top credit analysts, who say a U.S. housing decline, sparked last year by subprime mortgage debt defaults, will likely last another two years as a wider group of consumers, including prime borrowers, feel the pinch from a tightening of credit.

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Siew interviewed Peter Acciavatti, a credit analyst and managing director at JP Morgan Securities Inc. The analyst informed him that:

• Wall Street write-downs and losses totaling at least $325 billion to date may ultimately mean $3.9 trillion in tighter credit conditions
• U.S. home prices may keep on falling until 2010, declining as much as 30% from their 2006 peak
• Further drops in subprime mortgage debt markets are expected
• High-yield corporate bond default rates, now at 0.75% from 0.34% at the beginning of 2008, may climb to 2.25% later this year and jump to 6.5% in 2009

Glenn Costello, a Fitch Ratings managing director, also said that there will be more defaults and delinquencies for U.S. home mortgages, with the highest default rates coming from mortgages originating in the last few years. The senior analyst warned:

There are a lot more mortgage defaults to come. We see an ongoing high level of default.

Source:

“Home price drop means $4 trillion in lost capital”
Walden Siew
Reuters, June 11, 2008

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