Meredith Whitney: Home Prices Could Fall By Another 25%
Sep 10, 2009 at 6:37 PM
DailyBail in banks, cnbc video, cnbc video, credit, economy, goldman sachs, meredith whitney, meredith whitney, recession, unemployment

Ten-minute clip and quotes from Whitney's appearance on Squawk this morning.  Goldman Sachs gets some love now that their chief competitor Lehman is in ashes, but the bodacious bear sees a correction ahead for stocks.

Watch  (below)

 

 

 

 


From CNBC:

Home prices in the US could fall by another 25 percent because of high unemployment and another leg down will come for stocks, banking analyst Meredith Whitney told CNBC Thursday.

"No bank underwrote a loan with 10 percent unemployment on the horizon," Whitney said. "I think there is no doubt that home prices will go down dramatically from here, it's just a question of when."

Local governments and states are chronically under-funded and "most states are under water," adding to the problem of low private consumption, she said.

"If you look at the drivers for unemployment I don't see that reversing very soon," Whitney said.

If consumers were to decide to spend, "that would be a game-changer," but it would be an unnatural thing to do in a recession, she said.

"A lot of themes are constant, which is the US consumer and the small business doesn't have any credit, credit is still contracting," Whitney said.

Consumer debt and consumer credit have dropped according to the latest figures which also show that people have been spending more from their debit cards than from their credit cards.

"Obviously that doesn't bode well for spending," Whitney said.

"Goldman is taking a lot of the place that Lehman left," she said.

 

But banks are not going to see their earnings rise too much from now on, she warned.

"Banks are taking advantage of what the government is doing by artificially inflating asset prices so they can ride a steep yield curve and they're going to have a third quarter that reflects that," Whitney said.

Their shares are unlikely to be uplifted by these results as it happened in mid-July, because then they were under-valued, she added.

 

 

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