There’s always something to howl about.

The Countrywide Federal Bailout Act of 2008

Have you ever felt your stomach drop?

I received an e-mail, from reader Robert Kerr today, asking if I had seen Merrill Lynch’s downgrade of Countrywide Financial. Merrill Lynch believes that Countrywide might face bankruptcy. Make no mistake about it, a collapse of Countrywide Financial will give everybody in the real estate and mortgage industry a case of the “awshits”.

The Secret be damned! I said this was plausible back on April 1, 2007:

Here are some warning signs the painfullly paranoid (like me) might feed upon:

1- Countrywide Announces Change in Board Of Directors

2- Fitch Ratings Agency Downgrades 33% of Countrywide Loan Pools; particularly their “expanded criteria” guidelines which include Pay Option ARMs

3- Methinks he doth protesteth too much; Chairman and Founder Angelo Mozilo sold $140 million worth of stock last year while literally screaming that Countrywide should not be penalized by stock traders because of the subprime meltdown.

Negative amortization loans are an excellent financial planning tool. Countrywide has long been a favorite of originators because of their adaptability and innovative lending products. This time, I think they may have overreached. I’m raising our readiness condition to DefCon-4.

I’ve been getting a lot of traffic on my home weblog. The reason is simple; I’ve been writing a lot about Countrwide lately. If you Google, “Countrywide In Trouble”, I’m close to the top. This is not a pat on the back for my SEO technique, it’s a realization of how severe the reach of a Countrywide collapse may be.

Two weeks ago, I questioned why Angelo Mozilo wasn’t owning up to the severity of the problem and getting the bad loans off of the books so we could move on with our lives. More traffic on the weblog. That’s a bad sign. I followed up and wrote a little joke about a federal bailout of Countrywide by President Fred Thompson in 2009 and likened Countrywide to Chrysler. I played with fuzzy numbers and determined that Countrywide’s net worth could conceivably drop some 70% from defaulted loans. Huge traffic on the weblog! Google finance and Yahoo finance picked it up. I think I struck a nerve.

This is not a joke. If Countrywide is allowed to fail, the ripple effect will be staggering. Now, the bubble bloggers and libertarians among us will scoff at the idea of a federal bailout of Countrywide Financial but I will vehemently disagree with them. Removing that amount of liquidity from the markets will be disasterous. The jobs lost will be monumental.

The vertical integration they practiced this decade was certainly the reason for their woes. They established a securities firm to securitize the whole loans and peddle the product. They own a property and casualty insurance firm to sell ancillary products to their servicing portfolio. They even own a federal bank so that they can portfolio the high LTV second mortgages accompanying their first mortgage products.

Mozilo’s never ending quest for market domination (they were planning to control 30% of the originations by 2009) caused them to overreach. He negligently expanded when he should have been tending to his knitting. That doesn’t matter today.

Countrywide Financial can not be allowed to fail. A Chrysler-like bailout will be necessary. Coutrywide will emerge a much smaller player, focused on mortgage banking. There will be no securities firm, bank, nor insurance company. Just a mortgage banking firm with innovative product developers and marketing muscle. After the bailout, Countrywide will probably merge with someone who wants their strong Mid-American franchise- just like Chrysler did.

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