Covered Bonds
- Issue $5m more bonds
- Issue $5m in covered bonds, pledging $5m of the home loans as collateral
- Securitising $5m of the home loans.
If you thought the bank bailout was bad, wait until the mortgage defaults hit home:
WHEN I wrote in The Irish Times last May showing how the bank guarantee would lead to national insolvency, I did not expect the financial collapse to be anywhere near as swift or as deep as has now occurred. During September, the Irish Republic quietly ceased to exist as an autonomous fiscal entity, and became a ward of the European Central Bank.
(Click on the link above to read more).
Last night @randomphrase asked on Twitter about a long term chart of the spread of bank mortgage rates against the RBA cash rate. Fortunately, the RBA publishes quite a bit of interest rate data, including mortgage rates and their own cash rate the 90 day bank bill rate.
So here is a chart:

Of course, every bank offers slightly different rates, not to mention a slew of discounted and fixed rate options. So, to be clear what we're looking at, here is
‘Housing loan’ rates are those quoted for loans to owner-occupiers; in most cases, the same rates also apply to investment housing. Rates for ‘Banks’ and ‘Mortgage managers’ are the average rates of large lenders in each group. ‘Standard’ rates apply to housing loans with facilities such as the option to redraw or make early repayments.
The mortgage rate I have used is the ‘Standard’ rate for ‘Banks’, so it should just be a simple average (i.e. not market share-weighted or anything) of the rates from the big four.
It’s probably also worth noting that this spread does not necessarily give a great indication of the banks' profit margins on mortgages because (i) the cash rate is a very visible rate, but longer-term rates (say 30 day to 90 day bill rates) are a better indication of the primary component of bank funding costs and (ii) on their long-dated wholesale borrowing, both domestically and offshore, they also pay a margin which is higher today than it was five years ago.
I recently discovered these instructions for accessing identi.ca using the Tweetie 2 iPhone app. Since the Mule Stable is built on the same software as indenti.ca, the technique works just as well as a way of checking and posting messages on the Mule Stable.
Warning! Make sure you read the caveat below: be very careful about using the same username as you have on Twitter!
Here's how (the steps match the sceenshots):1. Go your Accounts page on Tweetie 2 (press whatever button you see on the top left until you get there!) and press the + button in the top right.There are a few caveats:
UPDATE
The Mule Stable has moved to http://mulestable.net. It also now has SSL (secure connections), so the instructions in the text have been modified, but the screenshots reflect the original domain name,
I just started reading National Debt for Beginners by Simon Johnson and James Kwak (of Baseline Scenario). I haven't got very far, but I suspect it is going to irritate me as it has not started well. Early on they introduce the simplistic monetarist argument:
Another way to close a budget gap is for the Federal Reserve to "print" another $100 billion or so, but that can lead to inflation. Imagine there were the same amount of stuff in the world, but suddenly everyone had twice as much money: The price of everything would simply double, and no one would be any better off.
This is, of course, an unrealistic scenario that which provides no real insight into macro-economics. There can never be "the same amount of stuff in the world" under different government spending scenarios, since "stuff" includes all economic activity generated in exchange for money: goods and services. Since the level of economic activity varies with, among other things, changes in government fiscal activity, it is simply not meaningful to say that if the government had spent less there would have been the same amount of "stuff" but less money in the system, therefore less inflation. In situation such as the one the US currently faces, with government inaction there would be a lot less stuff too, and it should be pretty clear that inflation is the least of the US's worries at the moment.
Anyway, I will keep reading and see if the article improves.
This clip from Econ Stories has been doing the rounds and is worth a watch: they even manage to get a thumbnail sketch of the two men's views across.
In this post on the excellent PTS blog, Jon Peltier takes some well-deserved pot-shots at a Microsoft "professional" charting tutorial. One of the charts he skewers is a column chart with the vertical axis starting at 100 rather than zero:
This is a a major chart fail. The value axis on a column or bar chart should always include zero. Always. If you want to expand the scale to help resolve the values, then a column chart is not the right chart type.
I have always had a similar view, but recently I have been reading William S. Cleveland's book "The Elements of Graphing Data" and Cleveland offers an alternative view: "Do not insist that zero always be included on a scale showing magnitude". Admittedly Cleveland is not talking about column charts here as his focus is on scientific charts which are usually scatterplots or line charts. Nevertheless, the example he gives is interesting. He points to an example in Darrell Huff's 1954 book "How to Lie with Statistics" in which Huff argues that the left hand chart (pictured above) is highly misleading. Cleveland counters that the right hand chart shows "very little quantitative information", while the left hand chart is more useful. He goes on to argue that "For graphical information in science and technology assume the viewer will look at the tick mark labels and understand them".
I have put some of this in a comment on Jon's post, and will be following the responses with interest.In today's Sydney Morning Herald Richard Ackland had a piece about asylum seekers with a reference to the Stubborn Mule. I may be a new media aficionado, but it was still a very pleasant surprise.