Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

The wealth of the world’s high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) declined by nearly one fifth last year to $33 trillion, according to the 2009 World Wealth Report from Merrill Lynch and Capgemini. A HNWI has at least $1 million of assets besides a primary residence, its contents and collectible items. In 2008, the number of HNWIs fell to 8.6 million, or slightly more than 0.1 percent of the world’s population.
Their wealth declined by more than 20 percent in North America, Europe and Asia, and by a bit less in Africa and the Middle East. Latin America’s rich were the least affected: they lost just six percent of their wealth, and the number of HNWIs there fell by less than one percent. In North America, which had a large proportion of people just above the $1 million threshold, the ranks slimmed by 19 percent.
An interesting aside: That $33 trillion is almost half of the $70 trillion that constitutes the subset of global savings known as fixed-income securities - or, all the money in the world.
Tags: Africa, Europe, fixed-income securities, global savings, Latin America, Merrill Lynch, Middle East, money, North America, wealth
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Thursday, May 21st, 2009
$70 trillion dollars. That’s all the money in the world, or to get technical, the subset of global
savings known as fixed-income securities. And it almost doubled from $36 trillion in just six years. How did this happen?
The Federal Reserve presided over the creation of what we have learned (the hard way) is a monster of unregulated investment vehicles run amok, resulting in the global credit crisis.
In the words of National Public Radio’s international business reporter Adam Davidson, “What he (former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan) is saying is he’s going to keep the Fed Funds rate at the absurdly low level of one percent. It tells every investor in the world: you are not going to make any money at all on U.S. treasury bonds for a very long time. Go somewhere else. We can’t help you. And so the global pool of money looked around for some low-risk, high-return investment. And among the many things they put their money into, there was one thing they fell in love with.”
Investment companies fell in love with securitizing mortgages, bundling them into enormous pools - in some cases, pools of as many as 16 million loans — and selling them in shares to investors. To make the pool of mortgages even larger, they created vehicles like adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs), subprime mortgages and no-income, no-asset loans that allowed people to buy homes or take out home equity loans that they simply could not afford. Last
September, this house of cards came crashing down, setting off the global credit crisis and making an ongoing recession the worst in a generation.
Click here to listen to the full “The Giant Pool of Money” podcast from “This American Life” to learn exactly what happened and why. I know of no better description of how the recession happened.
Tags: adjustable-rate mortgages, Alan Greenspan, CDOs, Ceyla Pazarbasioglu, CMBS, credit default swap, Fed Funds rate, Federal Reserve, Federal Reserve Chairman, fixed-income securities, foreclosures, global credit crisis, global financial system, global pool of money, global savings, home equity loans, homes, International Monetary Fund, Ira Glass, loans, National Public Radio, Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America, no-income no-asset loans, NPR, recession, securitizing mortgages, subprime mortgages, This American Life, US treasury bonds, WBEZ Chicago
Posted in Economics, Financing, General, Industrial, Office, Residential | No Comments »