NewRetirement Retirement News Digest : Historic Financial Collapse Underway?
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Historic Financial Collapse Underway?

Seeking Alpha - July 20, 2008

I tend to be in hotel rooms when bubbles burst.

On January 6, 2000, I was on the 30th-something floor of the Marriott hotel across the street from the convention center in San Francisco. I was jet lagged and up working even though it was still dark outside, around 5:30 a.m. local time. Just then, Lucent Technologies announced earnings before the market opened. After beating expectations for 15 quarters in a row, Lucent missed its earnings forecast by 18¢. Much worse, it reported a $1 billion drop in revenue. You can't miss on revenues by $1 billion unless something is horribly wrong.

And something was horribly wrong. It wasn't clear until months later, but that was the morning the bull market in tech, telecom, and the Internet died. I vividly remember that morning. Believe it or not, I didn't have to look up the date or the details on the earnings miss. That morning is seared on my brain. It was the end.

I don't believe it was a coincidence I was in San Francisco that day. We financial scribblers follow the market. We cover what's hot. I visited tech capitals San Francisco, Boston, or Seattle nearly every month during the big bubble of 1998-2001. It was an incredible, exciting time. I'm glad I got to see it up close and personal.

This month, I got the same feeling I did back on January 6, 2000. It's over. And I was watching it all collapse, at the epicenter.

Recently, I was at the Four Seasons Hotel, looking down over the Las Vegas strip. Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE) have finally cracked. While the stocks haven't gone to zero yet, it's clear the market woke up to the obvious fact equity holders of these companies are holding worthless pieces of paper. From my hotel room, I could see many of the reasons why...

Las Vegas may end up being the single-largest source of mortgage defaults. Upscale home prices here have fallen nearly 40%. The $2 billion Cosmopolitan hotel development is in default. The $6 billion Las Vegas Plaza is being delayed. Even Donald Trump has put his second tower on hold. It's a bloody mess.

Meanwhile, City Center, a $9.2 billion condominium/hotel development on the strip, is still going up.

Pre-construction sales began in February of last year – just before the financial markets shut out condo developers completely. I can see six huge cranes and the enormous steel infrastructure, half wrapped in glass. I cannot embellish on how big City Center is.

Each of its six main buildings seems bigger than any existing building in Las Vegas. This is the largest privately financed development in the history of the United States. It sits in the middle of a desert, in a city whose economy is dominated by gambling. Those two facts alone would give most reasonable investors pause.

The entire complex is five-star. One-bedroom condos here sold for $700,000. And the complex includes literally thousands of them. What will they be worth in foreclosure? I'd bet less than $200,000. And who will absorb those losses? I can't help but think in another two years we will look at those buildings and wonder, "What were they thinking?"

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Published Monday, July 21, 2008 10:21 AM by tsaleen
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