30 April 2008

Today's GDP Number Will be Revised Lower. Much Lower.


There were some particularly bad data used in today's GDP number by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA).

The Chain Deflator intends to represent inflationary growth in the economy.

Unlike some price indexes, the GDP deflator is not based on a fixed basket of goods and services. The basket is allowed to change with people's consumption and investment patterns. Specifically, for GDP, the "basket" in each year is the set of all goods that were produced domestically, weighted by the market value of the total consumption of each good. Therefore, new expenditure patterns are allowed to show up in the deflator as people respond to changing prices. The advantage of this approach is that the GDP deflator reflects up to date expenditure patterns.

In practice, the difference between the deflator and a price index like the CPI is often relatively small. On the other hand, with governments in developed countries increasingly utilizing price indexes for everything from fiscal and monetary planning to payments to social program recipients, the even small differences between inflation measures can shift budget revenues and expenses by millions or billions of dollars.

Here is the formula used to calculate it.





The whole concept of the GDP Deflator is to give us a picture of the REAL growth in the economy, hence the term REAL GDP, absent the effects of monetary inflation.

Understating inflation has a significant effect on the growth of 'real GDP.'

Let's repeat that.

Using a lower than an honest approximation of inflation in the economy has a significant effect in the estimated growth of GDP.

Today's GDP Deflator came in at a lower than expected 2.6% as compared to expectations of 3%.






So, if you believe that inflation is running at a rate higher than 2.6% then we would be looking at a real GDP growth that was effectively flat to negative, depending on what number you would like to use as more reasonable.

You are not crazy. You are being lied to and deceived, systematically, by the government. They have a HUGE incentive to misrepresent inflation, because it allows them to save many billions of dollars in payments to older and disabled americans, soldiers and veterans, and even in its interest payments.

There will be more information coming out on this as the weeks go by, but we thought you would at least like to see some of the major moves behind the scenes in this government puppet show.

The US economy is in recession. Inflation is north of 3% and possibly a LOT higher, almost double digits.

Here is a little more information about the US governments deceptive use of economic statistics at John William's Shadow Government Statistics

US Dollar Long Term Chart - the Enveloping Horns of the Global Reserve Currency Crisis


The US has long enjoyed the position of controlling the world's reserve currency, which provides a very powerful financial position and natural banking advantages.

The US has abused that power significantly since the 1980's and in particular in the last 8 years of the Bush II administration.

They say that 'pride goeth before a fall.'

There is certainly little to argue with that proposition based on the situation in which we find ourselves today.




29 April 2008

"Women and Children in boats, can not last much longer"


Last signals heard from Titanic by Carpathia, "Come as quickly as possible old man: the engine-room is filling up to the boilers"


Countrywide Sees Losses Widen in Q1; Prime Borrowers Hit a Wall, Too
By PAUL JACKSON
Published: April 29, 2008

Countrywide Financial Corp. said Tuesday morning that losses continued to widen during the first quarter as homeowners faltered at a record pace.

The nation’s largest lender and servicer said that it lost $893 million, or $1.60 per share, during Q1, compared to $434 million in earnings one year earlier; the net loss during the first quarter was more than double the loss recorded during the fourth quarter.

Citing “materially higher credit-related costs,” Countrywide said it set aside more than $3 billion for credit-related losses and write-downs during the quarter as delinquencies, defaults and loss severities continued to climb higher. Roughly $1.5 billion of that amount was tied to expected credit losses — a ten-fold increase from year-ago levels — and another $456 million was set aside for expected loan buybacks, it said. Rapidly rising delinquencies on home equity loans and so-called rapid amortization on HELOCs also led to hundreds of millions of dollars in losses.

Rapid amortization charges were the source of significant concern in Countrywide’s fourth quarter results, according to rating agency Moody’s Investors Service. The lender took a $704 million charge tied to subordination of its repayment interest on HELOC advances in the fourth quarter; similar charges fell to $154 million during Q1.

Origination volume fell 38 percent during the quarter to $73 billion, off 38 percent from one year earlier, as conduit acquisitions essentially ceased and CRE (commercial real estate) fundings dropped 96 percent. Reflecting broader market movement towards FHA-insured originations, Countrywide saw government fundings rise 188 percent to $10.2 billion during Q1, while ARM and home equity funding activity both fell more than 70 percent relative to year-ago funding activity.

Despite struggles in originations, Countrywide’s substantial servicing portfolio continued to grow, posting 10 percent annual growth and finishing March at $1.48 trillion in volume.

Borrowers under duress

Delinquencies continued to increase during the first quarter, according to statistics in Countrywide’s quarterly report with the Securities and Exchange Commission. A stunning 35.9 percent of all subprime loans serviced were recorded as delinquent by the end of March; 21 percent of the total were 90 or more days in arrears, including 11.6 percent of subprime loans classified as held for investment.

Prime home equity loans also saw DQs ratchet up to 8.29 percent from 3.77 percent one year earlier — underscoring the duress now facing many prime borrowers, given that the HELs on the books at Countrywide boast an average CLTV of 84 percent and average FICO of 727.

But perhaps the most surprising delinquency statistic of all was a stark jump in prime, conventional firsts that appear to have hit a wall during the first three months of 2008. Countrywide said that 6.48 percent of more traditional borrowers were delinquent during March, with 3.19 percent 90 or more days in arrears. That’s a jump of 127 percent in conventional first-lien DQs from one year ago, and a rise of nearly 13 percent in just one quarter.

It also appears that once they get there, more prime borrowers aren’t getting out of delinquency: the number of severe delinquencies within prime firsts alone rose nearly 40 percent between December and March.


S&P cuts $41 bln of mostly higher-rated Alt-A deals
Tue Apr 29, 2008 6:15pm EDT

NEW YORK, April 29 (Reuters) - Standard & Poor's cut the ratings on about $41 billion of mostly higher-rated U.S. residential mortgage-backed securities backed by so-called Alt-A loans on Tuesday.

The rating agency's action affected 2,183 RMBS classes from 334 Alt-A deals originated during 2006. S&P cut $5.86 billion of "AAA"-rated debt, while keeping $58.16 billion under review for possible downgrade.

S&P said it will assess whether further rating actions are warranted on the "AAA" securities placed under review by analyzing available credit support to projected losses during the timeframe issues remain outstanding.

The Alt-A segment spans a spectrum of credit quality and performance, ranging from near-prime to near-subprime.

While credit scores of borrowers are generally better than subprime, certain attributes are similar, such as the inclusion of stated income loans, reduced-documentation loans and second-lien mortgages, creating a layering of risks similar to subprime securities.

The rating agency also cut $4.65 billion of "AA+" Alt-A RMBS ratings, $8.09 billion of "AA" issues, $2.72 billion of "A+"debt and $1.46 billion of "A-minus" issues.

"The downgrades and CreditWatch placements reflect our opinion that projected credit support for the affected classes is insufficient to maintain the ratings at their previous levels, given our current projected losses," said S&P in a release on Tuesday.

The rating agency said it was assuming total loan loss of 34 percent for Alt-A RMBS transactions backed by fixed-rate and long-reset hybrid collateral, which are loans with fixed-rate periods of at least five years, issued in 2006.


"Due to current market conditions, we are assuming that it will take approximately 15 months to liquidate loans in foreclosure and approximately eight months to liquidate loans categorized as real estate owned (REO)," it said.

S&P estimated a loss severity of 35 percent on deals backed by mortgage loans with a negative amortization feature while assuming a loss severity of 35 percent for transactions secured by adjustable-rate loans and short-reset hybrid loans with fixed-rate periods of less than five years.

The rating agency said it also affirmed 144 classes of Alt-A RMBS securities and removed them from CreditWatch negative.

Gold and the US Dollar Outlook


The US Dollar remains in a long term bear downtrend, and we see no evidence yet on the charts of any reversal in the primary trend. Gold remains in its long term bullish trend, along with other contra-dollar plays such as select currencies and commodities, some of which have had remarkable gains.

The fundamentals for the dollar are rather bad, and the Fed is not helping by accommodating the addition of liquidity to try and resolve the capitalization crisis in the investment banks in the securitization bubble implosion.

Until the US is put on a sound financial basis, which is something beyond the power of the Fed alone, the dollar outlook will remain long term negative, no matter the short term technical bounces and the pressure on other countries to debase their currencies in sympathy with the dollar.

Adding to the problem are the selective supply shortages being experienced in some of the commodities as the continued market intervention of the banks and governments shows the inherent weakness of command economies not allowing market forces to establish sustainable equilibrium.

The irony is that the United States 'won' the Cold War, but may lose the peace by not adhering to the very principles that make up its fundamental character embodied in the Constitution of free markets and free citizens operating not at the sufferance of the government, but rather with the government acting at the behest of the public good.

Nothing short term embodies this more for us than the policy of diverting agricultural products used to feed human beings in order to produce inefficient amounts of ethanol when other alternatives are available and more financially productive. At least they have not yet started using the people themselves to make fuel for the SUVs and limos of the wealthy.

Such are the last terms of lame duck presidents when they provide farewell favors for corporate financial supporters, including Big Oil, Big Banks, and Big Agriculture.



28 April 2008

Why the US Has Really Gone Broke


This is a difficult essay for an American of this generation to read, because we have grown up with the assumption that the security of the United States is intimately tied to massive amounts of spending for military preparedness. The first response to any essay such as this is often an emotional one: "What about the troops?"

It requires an effort to realize that the vast majority of this spending has absolutely nothing to do with what the troops want or need. The recent examples of the lack of adequate armor on vehicles carrying troops, to the abysmal conditions in the military hospital system, are more than just anomalies. The military industrial complex, of which we had been warned in the farewell address of Dwight Eisenhower, does not value the troops, the US citizen army, highly in its equations.

The United States has reached its limit. It can no longer aspire to be 'the world's policeman.' We are not able to do this and maintain a viable and healthy democracy at home. We are not protecting ourselves and our liberties; we are promoting the interests of pseudo-american global corporations around the world. As Mussolini observed, corporatism is fascism.

The global corporate complex, though nominally based in part in the US, exists for its own purposes, serves its own purposes, and consumes everything which we the American people hold most valuable: our lives, our liberties, and our pursuit of peace and happiness with justice for all.

"Some of the damage can never be rectified. There are, however, some steps that the U.S. urgently needs to take. These include reversing Bush's 2001 and 2003 tax cuts for the wealthy, beginning to liquidate our global empire of over 800 military bases, cutting from the defense budget all projects that bear no relationship to national security and ceasing to use the defense budget as a Keynesian jobs program. If we do these things we have a chance of squeaking by. If we don't, we face probable national insolvency and a long depression."


Why the U.S. Has Really Gone Broke
Chalmers Johnson
Le Monde Diplomatique
February, 2008

Global confidence in the US economy has reached zero, as was proved by last month’s stock market meltdown. But there is an enormous anomaly in the US economy above and beyond the subprime mortgage crisis, the housing bubble and the prospect of recession: 60 years of misallocation of resources, and borrowings, to the establishment and maintenance of a military-industrial complex as the basis of the nation’s economic life

The military adventurers in the Bush administration have much in common with the corporate leaders of the defunct energy company Enron. Both groups thought that they were the “smartest guys in the room” — the title of Alex Gibney’s prize-winning film on what went wrong at Enron. The neoconservatives in the White House and the Pentagon outsmarted themselves. They failed even to address the problem of how to finance their schemes of imperialist wars and global domination.

As a result, going into 2008, the United States finds itself in the anomalous position of being unable to pay for its own elevated living standards or its wasteful, overly large military establishment. Its government no longer even attempts to reduce the ruinous expenses of maintaining huge standing armies, replacing the equipment that seven years of wars have destroyed or worn out, or preparing for a war in outer space against unknown adversaries. Instead, the Bush administration puts off these costs for future generations to pay or repudiate. This fiscal irresponsibility has been disguised through many manipulative financial schemes (causing poorer countries to lend us unprecedented sums of money), but the time of reckoning is fast approaching.

There are three broad aspects to the US debt crisis.

First, in the current fiscal year (2008) we are spending insane amounts of money on “defence” projects that bear no relation to the national security of the US. We are also keeping the income tax burdens on the richest segment of the population at strikingly low levels.

Second, we continue to believe that we can compensate for the accelerating erosion of our base and our loss of jobs to foreign countries through massive military expenditures — “military Keynesianism (which I discuss in detail in my book Nemesis: The Last Days of the American Republic). By that, I mean the mistaken belief that public policies focused on frequent wars, huge expenditures on weapons and munitions, and large standing armies can indefinitely sustain a wealthy capitalist economy. The opposite is actually true.

Third, in our devotion to militarism (despite our limited resources), we are failing to invest in our social infrastructure and other requirements for the long-term health of the US. These are what economists call opportunity costs, things not done because we spent our money on something else. Our public education system has deteriorated alarmingly. We have failed to provide health care to all our citizens and neglected our responsibilities as the world’s number one polluter. Most important, we have lost our competitiveness as a manufacturer for civilian needs, an infinitely more efficient use of scarce resources than arms manufacturing.

Fiscal disaster

It is virtually impossible to overstate the profligacy of what our government spends on the military. The Department of Defense’s planned expenditures for the fiscal year 2008 are larger than all other nations’ military budgets combined. The supplementary budget to pay for the current wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, not part of the official defence budget, is itself larger than the combined military budgets of Russia and China. Defence-related spending for fiscal 2008 will exceed $1 trillion for the first time in history. The US has become the largest single seller of arms and munitions to other nations on Earth. Leaving out President Bush’s two on-going wars, defence spending has doubled since the mid-1990s. The defence budget for fiscal 2008 is the largest since the second world war.

Before we try to break down and analyse this gargantuan sum, there is one important caveat. Figures on defence spending are notoriously unreliable. The numbers released by the Congressional Reference Service and the Congressional Budget Office do not agree with each other. Robert Higgs, senior fellow for political economy at the Independent Institute, says: “A well-founded rule of thumb is to take the Pentagon’s (always well publicised) basic budget total and double it” (1). Even a cursory reading of newspaper articles about the Department of Defense will turn up major differences in statistics about its expenses. Some 30-40% of the defence budget is “black”,” meaning that these sections contain hidden expenditures for classified projects. There is no possible way to know what they include or whether their total amounts are accurate.

There are many reasons for this budgetary sleight-of-hand — including a desire for secrecy on the part of the president, the secretary of defence, and the military-industrial complex — but the chief one is that members of Congress, who profit enormously from defence jobs and pork-barrel projects in their districts, have a political interest in supporting the Department of Defense. In 1996, in an attempt to bring accounting standards within the executive branch closer to those of the civilian economy, Congress passed the Federal Financial Management Improvement Act. It required all federal agencies to hire outside auditors to review their books and release the results to the public. Neither the Department of Defense, nor the Department of Homeland Security, has ever complied. Congress has complained, but not penalised either department for ignoring the law. All numbers released by the Pentagon should be regarded as suspect.

In discussing the fiscal 2008 defence budget, as released on 7 February 2007, I have been guided by two experienced and reliable analysts: William D Hartung of the New America Foundation’s Arms and Security Initiative (2) and Fred Kaplan, defence correspondent for Slate.org (3). They agree that the Department of Defense requested $481.4bn for salaries, operations (except in Iraq and Afghanistan), and equipment. They also agree on a figure of $141.7bn for the “supplemental” budget to fight the global war on terrorism — that is, the two on-going wars that the general public may think are actually covered by the basic Pentagon budget. The Department of Defense also asked for an extra $93.4bn to pay for hitherto unmentioned war costs in the remainder of 2007 and, most creatively, an additional “allowance” (a new term in defence budget documents) of $50bn to be charged to fiscal year 2009. This makes a total spending request by the Department of Defense of $766.5bn.

But there is much more. In an attempt to disguise the true size of the US military empire, the government has long hidden major military-related expenditures in departments other than Defense. For example, $23.4bn for the Department of Energy goes towards developing and maintaining nuclear warheads; and $25.3bn in the Department of State budget is spent on foreign military assistance (primarily for Israel, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, the United Arab Republic, Egypt and Pakistan). Another $1.03bn outside the official Department of Defense budget is now needed for recruitment and re-enlistment incentives for the overstretched US military, up from a mere $174m in 2003, when the war in Iraq began. The Department of Veterans Affairs currently gets at least $75.7bn, 50% of it for the long-term care of the most seriously injured among the 28,870 soldiers so far wounded in Iraq and 1,708 in Afghanistan. The amount is universally derided as inadequate. Another $46.4bn goes to the Department of Homeland Security.

Missing from this compilation is $1.9bn to the Department of Justice for the paramilitary activities of the FBI; $38.5bn to the Department of the Treasury for the Military Retirement Fund; $7.6bn for the military-related activities of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration; and well over $200bn in interest for past debt-financed defence outlays. This brings US spending for its military establishment during the current fiscal year, conservatively calculated, to at least $1.1 trillion.

Military Keynesianism

Such expenditures are not only morally obscene, they are fiscally unsustainable. Many neo-conservatives and poorly informed patriotic Americans believe that, even though our defence budget is huge, we can afford it because we are the richest country on Earth. That statement is no longer true. The world’s richest political entity, according to the CIA’s World Factbook, is the European Union. The EU’s 2006 GDP was estimated to be slightly larger than that of the US. Moreover, China’s 2006 GDP was only slightly smaller than that of the US, and Japan was the world’s fourth richest nation.

A more telling comparison that reveals just how much worse we’re doing can be found among the current accounts of various nations. The current account measures the net trade surplus or deficit of a country plus cross-border payments of interest, royalties, dividends, capital gains, foreign aid, and other income. In order for Japan to manufacture anything, it must import all required raw materials. Even after this incredible expense is met, it still has an $88bn per year trade surplus with the US and enjoys the world’s second highest current account balance (China is number one). The US is number 163 — last on the list, worse than countries such as Australia and the UK that also have large trade deficits. Its 2006 current account deficit was $811.5bn; second worst was Spain at $106.4bn. This is unsustainable.

It’s not just that our tastes for foreign goods, including imported oil, vastly exceed our ability to pay for them. We are financing them through massive borrowing. On 7 November 2007, the US Treasury announced that the national debt had breached _$9 trillion for the first time. This was just five weeks after Congress raised the “debt ceiling” to $9.815 trillion. If you begin in 1789, at the moment the constitution became the supreme law of the land, the debt accumulated by the federal government did not top $1 trillion until 1981. When George Bush became president in January 2001, it stood at approximately $5.7 trillion. Since then, it has increased by 45%. This huge debt can be largely explained by our defence expenditures.

Our excessive military expenditures did not occur over just a few short years or simply because of the Bush administration’s policies. They have been going on for a very long time in accordance with a superficially plausible ideology, and have now become so entrenched in our democratic political system that they are starting to wreak havoc. This is military Keynesianism — the determination to maintain a permanent war economy and to treat military output as an ordinary economic product, even though it makes no contribution to either production or consumption.

This ideology goes back to the first years of the cold war. During the late 1940s, the US was haunted by economic anxieties. The great depression of the 1930s had been overcome only by the war production boom of the second world war. With peace and demobilisation, there was a pervasive fear that the depression would return. During 1949, alarmed by the Soviet Union’s detonation of an atomic bomb, the looming Communist victory in the Chinese civil war, a domestic recession, and the lowering of the Iron Curtain around the USSR’s European satellites, the US sought to draft basic strategy for the emerging cold war. The result was the militaristic National Security Council Report 68 (NSC-68) drafted under the supervision of Paul Nitze, then head of the Policy Planning Staff in the State Department. Dated 14 April 1950 and signed by President Harry S Truman on 30 September 1950, it laid out the basic public economic policies that the US pursues to the present day.

In its conclusions, NSC-68 asserted: “One of the most significant lessons of our World War II experience was that the American economy, when it operates at a level approaching full efficiency, can provide enormous resources for purposes other than civilian consumption while simultaneously providing a high standard of living” (4).

With this understanding, US strategists began to build up a massive munitions industry, both to counter the military might of the Soviet Union (which they consistently overstated) and also to maintain full employment, as well as ward off a possible return of the depression. The result was that, under Pentagon leadership, entire new industries were created to manufacture large aircraft, nuclear-powered submarines, nuclear warheads, intercontinental ballistic missiles, and surveillance and communications satellites. This led to what President Eisenhower warned against in his farewell address of 6 February 1961: “The conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience” — the military-industrial complex.

By 1990 the value of the weapons, equipment and factories devoted to the Department of Defense was 83% of the value of all plants and equipment in US manufacturing. From 1947 to 1990, the combined US military budgets amounted to $8.7 trillion. Even though the Soviet Union no longer exists, US reliance on military Keynesianism has, if anything, ratcheted up, thanks to the massive vested interests that have become entrenched around the military establishment. Over time, a commitment to both guns and butter has proven an unstable configuration. Military industries crowd out the civilian economy and lead to severe economic weaknesses. Devotion to military Keynesianism is a form of slow economic suicide.

Higher spending, fewer jobs

On 1 May 2007, the Center for Economic and Policy Research of Washington, DC, released a study prepared by the economic and political forecasting company Global Insight on the long-term economic impact of increased military spending. Guided by economist Dean Baker, this research showed that, after an initial demand stimulus, by about the sixth year the effect of increased military spending turns negative. The US economy has had to cope with growing defence spending for more than 60 years. Baker found that, after 10 years of higher defence spending, there would be 464,000 fewer jobs than in a scenario that involved lower defence spending.

Baker concluded: “It is often believed that wars and military spending increases are good for the economy. In fact, most economic models show that military spending diverts resources from productive uses, such as consumption and investment, and ultimately slows economic growth and reduces employment” (5).

These are only some of the many deleterious effects of military Keynesianism.

It was believed that the US could afford both a massive military establishment and a high standard of living, and that it needed both to maintain full employment. But it did not work out that way. By the 1960s it was becoming apparent that turning over the nation’s largest manufacturing enterprises to the Department of Defense and producing goods without any investment or consumption value was starting to crowd out civilian economic activities. The historian Thomas E Woods Jr observes that, during the 1950s and 1960s, between one-third and two-thirds of all US research talent was siphoned off into the military sector (6). It is, of course, impossible to know what innovations never appeared as a result of this diversion of resources and brainpower into the service of the military, but it was during the 1960s that we first began to notice Japan was outpacing us in the design and quality of a range of consumer goods, including household electronics and automobiles.

Can we reverse the trend?

Nuclear weapons furnish a striking illustration of these anomalies. Between the 1940s and 1996, the US spent at least $5.8 trillion on the development, testing and construction of nuclear bombs. By 1967, the peak year of its nuclear stockpile, the US possessed some 32,500 deliverable atomic and hydrogen bombs, none of which, thankfully, was ever used. They perfectly illustrate the Keynesian principle that the government can provide make-work jobs to keep people employed. Nuclear weapons were not just America’s secret weapon, but also its secret economic weapon. As of 2006, we still had 9,960 of them. There is today no sane use for them, while the trillions spent on them could have been used to solve the problems of social security and health care, quality education and access to higher education for all, not to speak of the retention of highly-skilled jobs within the economy.

The pioneer in analysing what has been lost as a result of military Keynesianism was the late Seymour Melman (1917-2004), a professor of industrial engineering and operations research at Columbia University. His 1970 book, Pentagon Capitalism: The Political Economy of War, was a prescient analysis of the unintended consequences of the US preoccupation with its armed forces and their weaponry since the onset of the cold war. Melman wrote: “From 1946 to 1969, the United States government spent over $1,000bn on the military, more than half of this under the Kennedy and Johnson administrations — the period during which the [Pentagon-dominated] state management was established as a formal institution. This sum of staggering size (try to visualize a billion of something) does not express the cost of the military establishment to the nation as a whole. The true cost is measured by what has been foregone, by the accumulated deterioration in many facets of life, by the inability to alleviate human wretchedness of long duration.”

In an important exegesis on Melman’s relevance to the current American economic situation, Thomas Woods writes: “According to the US Department of Defense, during the four decades from 1947 through 1987 it used (in 1982 dollars) $7.62 trillion in capital resources. In 1985, the Department of Commerce estimated the value of the nation’s plant and equipment, and infrastructure, at just over _$7.29 trillion… The amount spent over that period could have doubled the American capital stock or modernized and replaced its existing stock” (7).

The fact that we did not modernise or replace our capital assets is one of the main reasons why, by the turn of the 21st century, our manufacturing base had all but evaporated. Machine tools, an industry on which Melman was an authority, are a particularly important symptom. In November 1968, a five-year inventory disclosed “that 64% of the metalworking machine tools used in US industry were 10 years old or older. The age of this industrial equipment (drills, lathes, etc.) marks the United States’ machine tool stock as the oldest among all major industrial nations, and it marks the continuation of a deterioration process that began with the end of the second world war. This deterioration at the base of the industrial system certifies to the continuous debilitating and depleting effect that the military use of capital and research and development talent has had on American industry.”

Nothing has been done since 1968 to reverse these trends and it shows today in our massive imports of equipment — from medical machines like _proton accelerators for radiological therapy (made primarily in Belgium, Germany, and Japan) to cars and trucks.

Our short tenure as the world’s lone superpower has come to an end. As Harvard economics professor Benjamin Friedman has written: “Again and again it has always been the world’s leading lending country that has been the premier country in terms of political influence, diplomatic influence and cultural influence. It’s no accident that we took over the role from the British at the same time that we took over the job of being the world’s leading lending country. Today we are no longer the world’s leading lending country. In fact we are now the world’s biggest debtor country, and we are continuing to wield influence on the basis of military prowess alone” (8).

Some of the damage can never be rectified. There are, however, some steps that the US urgently needs to take. These include reversing Bush’s 2001 and 2003 tax cuts for the wealthy, beginning to liquidate our global empire of over 800 military bases, cutting from the defence budget all projects that bear no relationship to national security and ceasing to use the defence budget as a Keynesian jobs programme.

If we do these things we have a chance of squeaking by. If we don’t, we face probable national insolvency and a long depression.


(1) Robert Higgs, “The Trillion-Dollar Defense Budget Is Already Here” , The Independent Institute, 15 March 2007, http://www.independent.org/newsroom ...
(2) William D Hartung, “Bush Military Budget Highest Since WWII”, 10 February 2007, http://www.commondreams.org/views07 ...
(3) Fred Kaplan, “It’s Time to Sharpen the Scissors”, 5 February 2007, http://www.slate.com/id/2159102/pag ...
(4) See http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1 ...
(5) Center for Economic and Policy Research, 1 May 2007, http://www.cepr.net/content/view/11 ...
(6) Thomas E Woods, “What the Warfare State Really Costs”, http://www.lewrockwell.com/woods/wo ...
(7) Thomas E Woods, Ibid.
(8) John F Ince, “Think the Nation’s Debt Doesn’t Affect You? Think Again”, 20 March 2007, http://www.alternet.org/story/49418 /



Bear Stearns Bailout 'Worst Policy Mistake in a Generation'


Here's one for the leaders of the cabal which argued that anyone who was not unreservedly in favor of the Bear Stearns (and investment banks) bailout was a Moral Hazard fundamentalist.

Apparently it's not such a no-brainer, but then again we always knew that. When an economist has a weak case to make, its the name-calling that becomes the weapon of first resort, especially in the rarefied atmosphere far from the trading pits where the unintended consequences can be most easily seen.


April 28, 2008, 3:55 pm
Wall Street Journal
Ex-Fed Official: Bear Deal ‘Worst Policy Mistake in a Generation’
By Greg Ip

The Federal Reserve’s moves to prop up Bear Stearns Cos. will come to be seen as “the worst policy mistake in a generation,” the Fed’s past head of monetary affairs said.

The action is comparable to “the great contraction” of the 1930s and “the great inflation” of the 1970s, said Vincent Reinhart, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, who retired from the Fed last fall. (That sounds like some serious stagflation - Jesse)

Mr. Reinhart’s assessment, delivered at a panel discussion at the institute Monday, is one of the harshest appraisals yet by a high-profile observer of the Fed’s decision in mid-March to lend money to Bear both as temporary funding to make a merger possible and then to finance $29 billion of Bear’s assets to make its takeover by J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. possible.

How the Ratings Agencies Enabled the Credit Crisis


April 27, 2008
The NY Times
Triple-A Failure
By ROGER LOWENSTEIN
The Ratings Game

In 1996, Thomas Friedman, the New York Times columnist, remarked on “The NewsHour With Jim Lehrer” that there were two superpowers in the world — the United States and Moody’s bond-rating service — and it was sometimes unclear which was more powerful. Moody’s was then a private company that rated corporate bonds, but it was, already, spreading its wings into the exotic business of rating securities backed by pools of residential mortgages.


Obscure and dry-seeming as it was, this business offered a certain magic. The magic consisted of turning risky mortgages into investments that would be suitable for investors who would know nothing about the underlying loans.
To get why this is impressive, you have to think about all that determines whether a mortgage is safe. Who owns the property? What is his or her income? Bundle hundreds of mortgages into a single security and the questions multiply; no investor could begin to answer them. But suppose the security had a rating. If it were rated triple-A by a firm like Moody’s, then the investor could forget about the underlying mortgages. He wouldn’t need to know what properties were in the pool, only that the pool was triple-A — it was just as safe, in theory, as other triple-A securities.

Over the last decade, Moody’s and its two principal competitors, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch, played this game to perfection — putting what amounted to gold seals on mortgage securities that investors swept up with increasing élan. For the rating agencies, this business was extremely lucrative. Their profits surged, Moody’s in particular: it went public, saw its stock increase sixfold and its earnings grow by 900 percent.

By providing the mortgage industry with an entree to Wall Street, the agencies also transformed what had been among the sleepiest corners of finance. No longer did mortgage banks have to wait 10 or 20 or 30 years to get their money back from homeowners. Now they sold their loans into securitized pools and — their capital thus replenished — wrote new loans at a much quicker pace.

Mortgage volume surged; in 2006, it topped $2.5 trillion. Also, many more mortgages were issued to risky subprime borrowers. Almost all of those subprime loans ended up in securitized pools; indeed, the reason banks were willing to issue so many risky loans is that they could fob them off on Wall Street.

But who was evaluating these securities? Who was passing judgment on the quality of the mortgages, on the equity behind them and on myriad other investment considerations? Certainly not the investors. They relied on a credit rating.

Thus the agencies became the de facto watchdog over the mortgage industry. In a practical sense, it was Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s that set the credit standards that determined which loans Wall Street could repackage and, ultimately, which borrowers would qualify. Effectively, they did the job that was expected of banks and government regulators. And today, they are a central culprit in the mortgage bust, in which the total loss has been projected at $250 billion and possibly much more.

In the wake of the housing collapse, Congress is exploring why the industry failed and whether it should be revamped (hearings in the Senate Banking Committee were expected to begin April 22). Two key questions are whether the credit agencies — which benefit from a unique series of government charters — enjoy too much official protection and whether their judgment was tainted. Presumably to forestall criticism and possible legislation, Moody’s and S.&P. have announced reforms. But they reject the notion that they should have been more vigilant. Instead, they lay the blame on the mortgage holders who turned out to be deadbeats, many of whom lied to obtain their loans.

Arthur Levitt, the former chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, charges that “the credit-rating agencies suffer from a conflict of interest — perceived and apparent — that may have distorted their judgment, especially when it came to complex structured financial products.” Frank Partnoy, a professor at the University of San Diego School of Law who has written extensively about the credit-rating industry, says that the conflict is a serious problem. Thanks to the industry’s close relationship with the banks whose securities it rates, Partnoy says, the agencies have behaved less like gatekeepers than gate openers. Last year, Moody’s had to downgrade more than 5,000 mortgage securities — a tacit acknowledgment that the mortgage bubble was abetted by its overly generous ratings. Mortgage securities rated by Standard & Poor’s and Fitch have suffered a similar wave of downgrades.

Presto! How 2,393 Subprime Loans Become a High-Grade Investment

The business of assigning a rating to a mortgage security is a complicated affair, and Moody’s recently was willing to walk me through an actual mortgage-backed security step by step. I was led down a carpeted hallway to a well-appointed conference room to meet with three specialists in mortgage-backed paper. Moody’s was fair-minded in choosing an example; the case they showed me, which they masked with the name “Subprime XYZ,” was a pool of 2,393 mortgages with a total face value of $430 million.

Subprime XYZ typified the exuberance of the age. All the mortgages in the pool were subprime — that is, they had been extended to borrowers with checkered credit histories. In an earlier era, such people would have been restricted from borrowing more than 75 percent or so of the value of their homes, but during the great bubble, no such limits applied.

Moody’s did not have access to the individual loan files, much less did it communicate with the borrowers or try to verify the information they provided in their loan applications. “We aren’t loan officers,” Claire Robinson, a 20-year veteran who is in charge of asset-backed finance for Moody’s, told me. “Our expertise is as statisticians on an aggregate basis. We want to know, of 1,000 individuals, based on historical performance, what percent will pay their loans?”

The loans in Subprime XYZ were issued in early spring 2006 — what would turn out to be the peak of the boom. They were originated by a West Coast company that Moody’s identified as a “nonbank lender.” Traditionally, people have gotten their mortgages from banks, but in recent years, new types of lenders peddling sexier products grabbed an increasing share of the market. This particular lender took the loans it made to a New York investment bank; the bank designed an investment vehicle and brought the package to Moody’s.

Moody’s assigned an analyst to evaluate the package, subject to review by a committee. The investment bank provided an enormous spreadsheet chock with data on the borrowers’ credit histories and much else that might, at very least, have given Moody’s pause. Three-quarters of the borrowers had adjustable-rate mortgages, or ARMs — “teaser” loans on which the interest rate could be raised in short order. Since subprime borrowers cannot afford higher rates, they would need to refinance soon. This is a classic sign of a bubble — lending on the belief, or the hope, that new money will bail out the old.

Moody’s learned that almost half of these borrowers — 43 percent — did not provide written verification of their incomes. The data also showed that 12 percent of the mortgages were for properties in Southern California, including a half-percent in a single ZIP code, in Riverside. That suggested a risky degree of concentration.

On the plus side, Moody’s noted, 94 percent of those borrowers with adjustable-rate loans said their mortgages were for primary residences. “That was a comfort feeling,” Robinson said. Historically, people have been slow to abandon their primary homes. When you get into a crunch, she added, “You’ll give up your ski chalet first.”

Another factor giving Moody’s comfort was that all of the ARM loans in the pool were first mortgages (as distinct from, say, home-equity loans). Nearly half of the borrowers, however, took out a simultaneous second loan. Most often, their two loans added up to all of their property’s presumed resale value, which meant the borrowers had not a cent of equity.

In the frenetic, deal-happy climate of 2006, the Moody’s analyst had only a single day to process the credit data from the bank. The analyst wasn’t evaluating the mortgages but, rather, the bonds issued by the investment vehicle created to house them. A so-called special-purpose vehicle — a ghost corporation with no people or furniture and no assets either until the deal was struck — would purchase the mortgages. Thereafter, monthly payments from the homeowners would go to the S.P.V. The S.P.V. would finance itself by selling bonds. The question for Moody’s was whether the inflow of mortgage checks would cover the outgoing payments to bondholders. From the investment bank’s point of view, the key to the deal was obtaining a triple-A rating — without which the deal wouldn’t be profitable. That a vehicle backed by subprime mortgages could borrow at triple-A rates seems like a trick of finance. “People say, ‘How can you create triple-A out of B-rated paper?’ ” notes Arturo Cifuentes, a former Moody’s credit analyst who now designs credit instruments. It may seem like a scam, but it’s not.

The secret sauce is that the S.P.V. would float 12 classes of bonds, from triple-A to a lowly Ba1. The highest-rated bonds would have first priority on the cash received from mortgage holders until they were fully paid, then the next tier of bonds, then the next and so on. The bonds at the bottom of the pile got the highest interest rate, but if homeowners defaulted, they would absorb the first losses.

It was this segregation of payments that protected the bonds at the top of the structure and enabled Moody’s to classify them as triple-A. Imagine a seaside condo beset by flooding: just as the penthouse will not get wet until the lower floors are thoroughly soaked, so the triple-A bonds would not lose a dime unless the lower credits were wiped out.

Structured finance, of which this deal is typical, is both clever and useful; in the housing industry it has greatly expanded the pool of credit. But in extreme conditions, it can fail. The old-fashioned corner banker used his instincts, as well as his pencil, to apportion credit; modern finance is formulaic. However elegant its models, forecasting the behavior of 2,393 mortgage holders is an uncertain business. “Everyone assumed the credit agencies knew what they were doing,” says Joseph Mason, a credit expert at Drexel University. “A structural engineer can predict what load a steel support will bear; in financial engineering we can’t predict as well.” (Extremistan versus Mediocristan and a nod to Taleb - Jesse)

Mortgage-backed securities like those in Subprime XYZ were not the terminus of the great mortgage machine. They were, in fact, building blocks for even more esoteric vehicles known as collateralized debt obligations, or C.D.O.’s. C.D.O.’s were financed with similar ladders of bonds, from triple-A on down, and the credit-rating agencies’ role was just as central. The difference is that XYZ was a first-order derivative — its assets included real mortgages owned by actual homeowners. C.D.O.’s were a step removed — instead of buying mortgages, they bought bonds that were backed by mortgages, like the bonds issued by Subprime XYZ. (It is painful to consider, but there were also third-order instruments, known as C.D.O.’s squared, which bought bonds issued by other C.D.O.’s.)

Miscalculations that were damaging at the level of Subprime XYZ were devastating at the C.D.O. level. Just as bad weather will cause more serious delays to travelers with multiple flights, so, if the underlying mortgage bonds were misrated, the trouble was compounded in the case of the C.D.O.’s that purchased them.

Moody’s used statistical models to assess C.D.O.’s; it relied on historical patterns of default. This assumed that the past would remain relevant in an era in which the mortgage industry was morphing into a wildly speculative business. The complexity of C.D.O.’s undermined the process as well. Jamie Dimon, the chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, which recently scooped up the mortally wounded Bear Stearns, says, “There was a large failure of common sense” by rating agencies and also by banks like his. “Very complex securities shouldn’t have been rated as if they were easy-to-value bonds.”

The Accidental Watchdog

John Moody, a Wall Street analyst and former errand runner, hit on the idea of synthesizing all kinds of credit information into a single rating in 1909, when he published the manual “Moody’s Analyses of Railroad Investments.” The idea caught on with investors, who subscribed to his service, and by the mid-’20s, Moody’s faced three competitors: Standard Statistics and Poor’s Publishing (which later merged) and Fitch.

Then as now, Moody’s graded bonds on a scale with 21 steps, from Aaa to C. (There are small differences in the agencies’ nomenclatures, just as a grande latte at Starbucks becomes a “medium” at Peet’s. At Moody’s, ratings that start with the letter “A” carry minimal to low credit risk; those starting with “B” carry moderate to high risk; and “C” ratings denote bonds in poor standing or actual default.) The ratings are meant to be an estimate of probabilities, not a buy or sell recommendation. For instance, Ba bonds default far more often than triple-As. But Moody’s, as it is wont to remind people, is not in the business of advising investors whether to buy Ba’s; it merely publishes a rating.

Until the 1970s, its business grew slowly. But several trends coalesced to speed it up. The first was the collapse of Penn Central in 1970 — a shattering event that the credit agencies failed to foresee. It so unnerved investors that they began to pay more attention to credit risk.

Government responded. The Securities and Exchange Commission, faced with the question of how to measure the capital of broker-dealers, decided to penalize brokers for holding bonds that were less than investment-grade (the term applies to Moody’s 10 top grades). This prompted a question: investment grade according to whom? The S.E.C. opted to create a new category of officially designated rating agencies, and grandfathered the big three — S.&P., Moody’s and Fitch. In effect, the government outsourced its regulatory function to three for-profit companies.

Bank regulators issued similar rules for banks. Pension funds, mutual funds, insurance regulators followed. Over the ’80s and ’90s, a latticework of such rules redefined credit markets. Many classes of investors were now forbidden to buy noninvestment-grade bonds at all.

Issuers thus were forced to seek credit ratings (or else their bonds would not be marketable). The agencies — realizing they had a hot product and, what’s more, a captive market — started charging the very organizations whose bonds they were rating. This was an efficient way to do business, but it put the agencies in a conflicted position. As Partnoy says, rather than selling opinions to investors, the rating agencies were now selling “licenses” to borrowers. Indeed, whether their opinions were accurate no longer mattered so much. Just as a police officer stopping a motorist will want to see his license but not inquire how well he did on his road test, it was the rating — not its accuracy — that mattered to Wall Street.

The case of Enron is illustrative. Throughout the summer and fall of 2001, even though its credit was rapidly deteriorating, the rating agencies kept it at investment grade. This was not unusual; the agencies typically lag behind the news. On Nov. 28, 2001, S.&P. finally dropped Enron’s bonds to subinvestment grade. Although its action merely validated the market consensus, it caused the stock to collapse. To investors, S.&P.’s action was a signal that Enron was locked out of credit markets; it had lost its “license” to borrow. Four days later it filed for bankruptcy.

Another trend that spurred the agencies’ growth was that more companies began borrowing in bond markets instead of from banks. According to Chris Mahoney, a just-retired Moody’s veteran of 22 years, “The agencies went from being obscure and unimportant players to central ones.”

A Conflict of Interest?

Nothing sent the agencies into high gear as much as the development of structured finance. As Wall Street bankers designed ever more securitized products — using mortgages, credit-card debt, car loans, corporate debt, every type of paper imaginable — the agencies became truly powerful.

In structured-credit vehicles like Subprime XYZ, the agencies played a much more pivotal role than they had with (conventional) bonds. According to Lewis Ranieri, the Salomon Brothers banker who was a pioneer in mortgage bonds, “The whole creation of mortgage securities was involved with a rating.”

What the bankers in these deals are really doing is buying a bunch of I.O.U.’s and repackaging them in a different form. Something has to make the package worth — or seem to be worth — more that the sum of its parts, otherwise there would be no point in packaging such securities, nor would there be any profits from which to pay the bankers’ fees.

That something is the rating. Credit markets are not continuous; a bond that qualifies, though only by a hair, as investment grade is worth a lot more than one that just fails. As with a would-be immigrant traveling from Mexico, there is a huge incentive to get over the line.

The challenge to investment banks is to design securities that just meet the rating agencies’ tests. Risky mortgages serve their purpose; since the interest rate on them is higher, more money comes into the pool and is available for paying bond interest. But if the mortgages are too risky, Moody’s will object. Banks are adroit at working the system, and pools like Subprime XYZ are intentionally designed to include a layer of Baa bonds, or those just over the border. “Every agency has a model available to bankers that allows them to run the numbers until they get something they like and send it in for a rating,” a former Moody’s expert in securitization says. In other words, banks were gaming the system; according to Chris Flanagan, the subprime analyst at JPMorgan, “Gaming is the whole thing.”

When a bank proposes a rating structure on a pool of debt, the rating agency will insist on a cushion of extra capital, known as an “enhancement.” The bank inevitably lobbies for a thin cushion (the thinner the capitalization, the fatter the bank’s profits). It’s up to the agency to make sure that the cushion is big enough to safeguard the bonds. The process involves extended consultations between the agency and its client. In short, obtaining a rating is a collaborative process.

The evidence on whether rating agencies bend to the bankers’ will is mixed. The agencies do not deny that a conflict exists, but they assert that they are keen to the dangers and minimize them. For instance, they do not reward analysts on the basis of whether they approve deals. No smoking gun, no conspiratorial e-mail message, has surfaced to suggest that they are lying. But in structured finance, the agencies face pressures that did not exist when John Moody was rating railroads. On the traditional side of the business, Moody’s has thousands of clients (virtually every corporation and municipality that sells bonds). No one of them has much clout. But in structured finance, a handful of banks return again and again, paying much bigger fees. A deal the size of XYZ can bring Moody’s $200,000 and more for complicated deals. And the banks pay only if Moody’s delivers the desired rating. Tom McGuire, the Jesuit theologian who ran Moody’s through the mid-’90s, says this arrangement is unhealthy. If Moody’s and a client bank don’t see eye to eye, the bank can either tweak the numbers or try its luck with a competitor like S.&P., a process known as “ratings shopping.”

And it seems to have helped the banks get better ratings. Mason, of Drexel University, compared default rates for corporate bonds rated Baa with those of similarly rated collateralized debt obligations until 2005 (before the bubble burst). Mason found that the C.D.O.’s defaulted eight times as often. One interpretation of the data is that Moody’s was far less discerning when the client was a Wall Street securitizer.

After Enron blew up, Congress ordered the S.E.C. to look at the rating industry and possibly reform it. The S.E.C. ducked. Congress looked again in 2006 and enacted a law making it easier for competing agencies to gain official recognition, but didn’t change the industry’s business model. By then, the mortgage boom was in high gear. From 2002 to 2006, Moody’s profits nearly tripled, mostly thanks to the high margins the agencies charged in structured finance. In 2006, Moody’s reported net income of $750 million. Raymond W. McDaniel Jr., its chief executive, gloated in the annual report for that year, “I firmly believe that Moody’s business stands on the ‘right side of history’ in terms of the alignment of our role and function with advancements in global capital markets.”

Using Weather in Antarctica To Forecast Conditions in Hawaii

Even as McDaniel was crowing, it was clear in some corners of Wall Street that the mortgage market was headed for trouble. The housing industry was cooling off fast. James Kragenbring, a money manager with Advantus Capital Management, complained to the agencies as early as 2005 that their ratings were too generous. A report from the hedge fund of John Paulson proclaimed astonishment at “the mispricing of these securities.” He started betting that mortgage debt would crash.

Even Mark Zandi, the very visible economist at Moody’s forecasting division (which is separate from the ratings side), was worried about the chilling crosswinds blowing in credit markets. In a report published in May 2006, he noted that consumer borrowing had soared, household debt was at a record and a fifth of such debt was classified as subprime. At the same time, loan officers were loosening underwriting standards and easing rates to offer still more loans. Zandi fretted about the “razor-thin” level of homeowners’ equity, the avalanche of teaser mortgages and the $750 billion of mortgages he judged to be at risk. Zandi concluded, “The environment feels increasingly ripe for some type of financial event.”

A month after Zandi’s report, Moody’s rated Subprime XYZ. The analyst on the deal also had concerns. Moody’s was aware that mortgage standards had been deteriorating, and it had been demanding more of a cushion in such pools. Nonetheless, its credit-rating model continued to envision rising home values. Largely for that reason, the analyst forecast losses for XYZ at only 4.9 percent of the underlying mortgage pool. Since even the lowest-rated bonds in XYZ would be covered up to a loss level of 7.25 percent, the bonds seemed safe.

XYZ now became the responsibility of a Moody’s team that monitors securities and changes the ratings if need be (the analyst moved on to rate a new deal). Almost immediately, the team noticed a problem. Usually, people who finance a home stay current on their payments for at least a while. But a sliver of folks in XYZ fell behind within 90 days of signing their papers. After six months, an alarming 6 percent of the mortgages were seriously delinquent. (Historically, it is rare for more than 1 percent of mortgages at that stage to be delinquent.)

Moody’s monitors began to make inquiries with the lender and were shocked by what they heard. Some properties lacked sod or landscaping, and keys remained in the mailbox; the buyers had never moved in. The implication was that people had bought homes on spec: as the housing market turned, the buyers walked.

By the spring of 2007, 13 percent of Subprime XYZ was delinquent — and it was worsening by the month. XYZ was hardly atypical; the entire class of 2006 was performing terribly. (The class of 2007 would turn out to be even worse.)

In April 2007, Moody’s announced it was revising the model it used to evaluate subprime mortgages. It noted that the model “was first introduced in 2002. Since then, the mortgage market has evolved considerably.” This was a rather stunning admission; its model had been based on a world that no longer existed.

Poring over the data, Moody’s discovered that the size of people’s first mortgages was no longer a good predictor of whether they would default; rather, it was the size of their first and second loans — that is, their total debt — combined. This was rather intuitive; Moody’s simply hadn’t reckoned on it. Similarly, credit scores, long a mainstay of its analyses, had not proved to be a “strong predictor” of defaults this time. Translation: even people with good credit scores were defaulting. Amy Tobey, leader of the team that monitored XYZ, told me, “It seems there was a shift in mentality; people are treating homes as investment assets.” Indeed. And homeowners without equity were making what economists call a rational choice; they were abandoning properties rather than make payments on them. Homeowners’ equity had never been as high as believed because appraisals had been inflated.

Over the summer and fall of 2007, Moody’s and the other agencies repeatedly tightened their methodology for rating mortgage securities, but it was too late. They had to downgrade tens of billions of dollars of securities. By early this year, when I met with Moody’s, an astonishing 27 percent of the mortgage holders in Subprime XYZ were delinquent. Losses on the pool were now estimated at 14 percent to 16 percent — three times the original estimate. Seemingly high-quality bonds rated A3 by Moody’s had been downgraded five notches to Ba2, as had the other bonds in the pool aside from its triple-A’s.

The pain didn’t stop there. Many of the lower-rated bonds issued by XYZ, and by mortgage pools like it, were purchased by C.D.O.’s, the second-order mortgage vehicles, which were eager to buy lower-rated mortgage paper because it paid a higher yield. As the agencies endowed C.D.O. securities with triple-A ratings, demand for them was red hot. Much of it was from global investors who knew nothing about the U.S. mortgage market. In 2006 and 2007, the banks created more than $200 billion of C.D.O.’s backed by lower-rated mortgage paper. Moody’s assigned a different team to rate C.D.O.’s. This team knew far less about the underlying mortgages than did the committee that evaluated Subprime XYZ. In fact, Moody’s rated C.D.O.’s without knowing which bonds the pool would buy.

A C.D.O. operates like a mutual fund; it can buy or sell mortgage bonds and frequently does so. Thus, the agencies rate pools with assets that are perpetually shifting. They base their ratings on an extensive set of guidelines or covenants that limit the C.D.O. manager’s discretion.

Late in 2006, Moody’s rated a C.D.O. with $750 million worth of securities. The covenants, which act as a template, restricted the C.D.O. to, at most, an 80 percent exposure to subprime assets, and many other such conditions. “We’re structure experts,” Yuri Yoshizawa, the head of Moody’s’ derivative group, explained. “We’re not underlying-asset experts.” They were checking the math, not the mortgages. But no C.D.O. can be better than its collateral.

Moody’s rated three-quarters of this C.D.O.’s bonds triple-A. The ratings were derived using a mathematical construct known as a Monte Carlo simulation — as if each of the underlying bonds would perform like cards drawn at random from a deck of mortgage bonds in the past. There were two problems with this approach. First, the bonds weren’t like those in the past; the mortgage market had changed. As Mark Adelson, a former managing director in Moody’s structured-finance division, remarks, it was “like observing 100 years of weather in Antarctica to forecast the weather in Hawaii.” And second, the bonds weren’t random. Moody’s had underestimated the extent to which underwriting standards had weakened everywhere. When one mortgage bond failed, the odds were that others would, too.

Moody’s estimated that this C.D.O. could potentially incur losses of 2 percent. It has since revised its estimate to 27 percent. The bonds it rated have been decimated, their market value having plunged by half or more. A triple-A layer of bonds has been downgraded 16 notches, all the way to B. Hundreds of C.D.O.’s have suffered similar fates (most of Wall Street’s losses have been on C.D.O.’s). For Moody’s and the other rating agencies, it has been an extraordinary rout.

Whom Can We Rely On?

The agencies have blamed the large incidence of fraud, but then they could have demanded verification of the mortgage data or refused to rate securities where the data were not provided. That was, after all, their mandate. This is what they pledge for the future. Moody’s, S.&P. and Fitch say that they are tightening procedures — they will demand more data and more verification and will subject their analysts to more outside checks. None of this, however, will remove the conflict of interest in the issuer-pays model. Though some have proposed requiring that agencies with official recognition charge investors, rather than issuers, a more practical reform may be for the government to stop certifying agencies altogether.

Then, if the Fed or other regulators wanted to restrict what sorts of bonds could be owned by banks, or by pension funds or by anyone else in need of protection, they would have to do it themselves — not farm the job out to Moody’s. The ratings agencies would still exist, but stripped of their official imprimatur, their ratings would lose a little of their aura, and investors might trust in them a bit less. Moody’s itself favors doing away with the official designation, and it, like S.&P., embraces the idea that investors should not “rely” on ratings for buy-and-sell decisions.

This leaves an awkward question, with respect to insanely complex structured securities: What can they rely on? The agencies seem utterly too involved to serve as a neutral arbiter, and the banks are sure to invent new and equally hard-to-assess vehicles in the future. Vickie Tillman, the executive vice president of S.&P., told Congress last fall that in addition to the housing slump, “ahistorical behavorial modes” by homeowners were to blame for the wave of downgrades. She cited S.&P.’s data going back to the 1970s, as if consumers were at fault for not living up to the past. The real problem is that the agencies’ mathematical formulas look backward while life is lived forward. That is unlikely to change.

Roger Lowenstein, a contributing writer, last wrote for the magazine about the Federal Reserve chief, Ben Bernanke. His new book, “While America Aged,” will be published next month.

WWBD: What Will Bernanke Do on Wednesday 30 April?


It would be hard to say that the Wall Street banks are expecting the Fed to hold rates steady given the results of today's Treasury auction. Although they could hold the headline rate steady, and just continue to ignore their target and price debt well below that in their myriad interest rate welfare programs for the hedge funds aka Wall Street banks.

And just why didn't Treasury take any of those higher bids? Repugnant collateral offered? Stuff even Timmy at the Fed wouldn't touch as well? LOL.

This looks more like a capitalization problem, as in the lack thereof of quality capital and a surfeit of off the books rubbish, than a liquidity problem. A basic insolvency scenario.

Homeowners may be sitting on overpriced houses, but the banks are sitting on a mountain over overpriced and overrated debt instruments that they will not confess to or write off more aggressively.

All that cutting rates from here will accomplish will be to try and bury the problem under a carpet of inflated paper, hoping that the stench of rotten debt does not permeate the markets.

Remember all those snide comments that US economists made about Japanese banks and their unwillingness to write down bad debts in the 1990s?

27 April 2008

Prelude to a Financial Market Crash: Part 1 - Alternative Universe


You likely have no idea of how bad this is going to get before its over. That's probably a good thing in its own way. As is said, ignorance is bliss.

At some point we will probably have to either repudiate the dollar Ponzi scheme or surrender ourselves to a regional autocracy. Either way, it will be painful, and a lot of innocent people will be badly hurt.

The warnings will not come from the insiders or your elected representatives, the media or the Administration. No one will want to tell you the truth because frankly you do not want to hear it. And they are afraid.

They will wait until it blows up, and then claim ignorance and amazement, and then try and control the 'solutions' in order to absolve their cronies and punish the innocent further.

The only way to protect yourself is to put as much distance between the US dollar financial scheme and gain as much self-sufficiency for yourself and your community as is possible. And at the right time you will have to have the courage to say "No."


Hello, Alternative Universe
Junk and chumps, pump and dump, barbarians and brokers, smoke and mirrors and other assets of our risk-positive fiscal mess
By John Sakowicz
4.23.08


This is the first of a multipart series on the state of the economy and how we got here.

There is no glory on Wall Street. There is only greed. There are no good guys or bad guys. There are only winners and losers. In fact, there are only guys like Steve Schwarzman and Pete Peterson.

In 1984, Schwarzman and Peterson got crushed like a couple of grapes under the very chubby feet of a guy named Lew Glucksman. (Everything about Lew was chubby, not just his feet.) This happened at a place called Lehman Brothers, at that time a venerable Wall Street partnership. It was a classic power struggle, but no biggie in the whole scheme of things.

Schwarzman and Peterson bounced back quickly. In 1985, they started a new firm with a shared secretary and $400,000. Their new company was called the Blackstone Group, and it is the stuff of legend to say that fortune smiled on them. Schwarzman and Peterson are now two of the richest men in the world. Since 1985, they've done over $400 billion in deals. They are arguably the leading global alternative-asset managers in the world. What's more, they invented an entirely new financial world while they did it.

Problem is, we have to live in it.

Problem Swallowing

Problem is, there are lots of problems on Wall Street. For starters, we've seen the consolidation of power and the concentration of both capital and revenue in fewer and fewer hands. The few institutions left on Wall Street—and there about 10—are now like superstores or warehouses. And the story of how they came to dominate Wall Street is very much like the story of how Costco or Sam's Club came to push mom and pop retailers off the map.

I would know. I started my career at Alex Brown & Sons, the oldest investment bank in the country, established in 1800. A guy named A. B. "Buzzy" Krongard hired me. (Buzzy later turned out to be the No. 3 guy in the CIA.) Alas, in the decade of the 1990s, the proud people at Alex Brown got swallowed up by Bankers Trust, which in turn got swallowed up by Deutsche Bank. I also worked for Colonial Management Associates, which got swallowed up by Columbia Management Group, which got swallowed up by FleetBoston, which got swallowed up by Bank of America.

I worked on the floor of the NYSE for Spear, Leeds & Kellogg, which was swallowed up by Goldman Sachs. I worked for Dean Witter, which got swallowed up by Morgan Stanley. None of the firms I worked for were small companies, what we on Wall Street quaintly call "boutiques." I worked for big companies. Yet they've all been swallowed. All of them.

Now, the 10 or so institutions that dominate Wall Street are monopolies. We've also seen the reinvention of these very same companies on Wall Street. There is now no difference between a commercial bank and an investment bank, no difference between a lender and an adviser. There is now only the monolithic Merrill Lynch or the monolithic Citigroup. Capital is concentrated in these few firms. Naturally, so are revenues. But risk, too, is concentrated. This is a big problem. Because if every deal has got to be bigger and bigger to earn fatter and fatter rewards, then these few institutions must assume greater and greater risk. And risk management is what making money is all about.

Prime Junk Chumps

The Glass-Steagall Act, enacted during the Great Depression to prevent another stock market crash by separating commercial banking from investment banking, was repealed in 1999. In today's lineup of traders, deal makers, underwriters, lenders, advisers, market makers, portfolio managers, brokers and others, it is impossible to point to the chief suspect in the defrauding of America that is now being commonly called the "subprime crisis."

The traditional institutions of commercial banks and investment banks have given way to a new set called hedge funds, private equity funds, and other alternative asset managers. Emphasis on "alternative." Schwarzman and Peterson saw the trend; this was their genius. But there is little to no regulation of alternative-asset managers.

Which brings us to the next problem: There is little to no regulation of the alternative assets that these alternative-asset managers dream up and manage.

A lot of this stuff is debt—debt that is diced, spliced, altered, reheated, topped off with nuts, whipped cream and a cherry and then packaged and repackaged to the American investor. This debt is sold not directly to the little guy, the retail investor—you and me—but to the institutional investor who is presumably acting on our behalf through pension funds, insurance companies, mutual funds, endowments and others.



In the parlance of Wall Street, this debt is "securitized." Call this debt by any name, but don't call it secure. The popular names for this debt are collateralized mortgage obligations (CMOs) and collateralized debt obligations (CDOs), first widely heard last summer when the subprime market was blowing up. These CMOs and CDOs are spread across the spectrum of risk. Some are senior debt. Some are subordinated debt. Some are OK. The rest are junk. Junk as in subprime junk.

Guess who owns that debt now? You do. Through your pension plans, insurance policies, mutual funds, university and hospital endowments—you do, we do, I do.

And ever since the Federal Reserve Bank bailed out Bear Stearns, you now also own this debt as an American taxpayer. Yeah, chump, you. The losses—er, liabilities—were shifted to you.


There's more. The Fed now lends money—our taxpayer money—to all of Wall Street. The Fed lends not just to its member banks, like before the subprime mess, but it now also lends to all those reckless broker dealers out there, firms like Bear Stearns. The Fed lends your money to them through something that is called the "discount window."

And, man, is that money discounted! The Fed is giving it away. As of this writing, borrowing from the discount window hit something like $36.2 billion a day. A day.

Impossible Things

In Alice in Wonderland, the Queen says, "I believe in as many as six impossible things before breakfast."

Within the last decade, a thousand impossible things are dreamed up before dawn. Not only is there the packaging of new forms of debt, but the minting of new forms of money. Literally, new forms of money: they're called swaps and derivatives.

Swaps and derivatives trade like stocks and bonds, but most of them aren't registered securities like stocks or bonds. But swaps and derivatives aren't exactly Monopoly money, either. What are they? Ridiculously complex and esoteric. For the last decade, risk managers on Wall Street pulled their hair out, lost sleep and finally gave up trying to quantify the risk inherent in them. Yeah, they've given up. When it came to swaps and derivatives, even auditors couldn't find their ass with both hands.

And yet trillions of dollars in swaps and derivatives trade every single day in markets that didn't even exist a decade ago. For the most part, the biggest volume of swaps and derivatives don't even trade in a physical marketplace like the exchanges in New York or Chicago. The transactions are opaque because they are largely undertaken by private parties in electronic markets, most of them offshore.

Swaps and derivatives trade in a virtual market, a shadow market. A market that in the United States alone is estimated to be a $45.5 trillion market.

Here's the perspective: The size of the worldwide bond market is estimated at $45 trillion. The size of the worldwide stock market is estimated at $51 trillion. And the size of the worldwide swaps and derivatives market is estimated at $480 trillion in nominal or "face" value. That's 30 times the size of the entire U.S. economy and 12 times the size of the entire world economy.

Brokers & Barbarians

How is this possible? Advanced technologies make this market possible. Welcome to money's alternative universe. Alternative trading systems. Electronic communications networks. Central banks. Private banks. Brass plate banks. Russian Mafia banks in Cyprus. The Vatican's bank in the Cayman Islands. The Bush and bin Laden families holding hands and tip-toeing through the tulips in financial cyberspace. Digital barrels of oil in virtual supertankers in the Persian Gulf. Digital ounces of gold in virtual vaults in Switzerland. Digital bushels of corn in virtual silos in Iowa. Eurex. Euronext. The World Federation of Exchanges. A transnational community of anonymous traders who have never met and never will.

Merrill Lynch trading swaps and derivatives with Iran. Mullahs on the mainframe. Citigroup trading swaps and derivatives with Venezuela. Chavez on the craps table. UBS trading swaps and derivatives with almost anyone out there in the ethers—Christ, the anti-Christ—it doesn't matter to UBS. What matters is that traders keep liquidity coming out the yin-yang.

We've seen the emergence of a new master race on Wall Street who work hand in hand with the traders. They created this market of swaps and derivatives, and help traders manipulate this market through their own brand of highly sophisticated pump-and-dump schemes and do their damned best to keep this market secret and off the books. These are the prime brokers.

Not in keeping with their other brethren on Wall Street, either short-term traders or long-term bankers, prime brokers are the new barbarians at the gate. They augment the activities of the hedge-fund guys and private-equity guys—and then take the game to a whole other level.

Believe me when I say their interests are not aligned with your interests.

At press time, oil nears a record $117 a barrel. The dollar continues to fall. Our credit woes continue to worsen. The United States is deep in debt and still digging. We're all paying for the nation's debt addiction through both direct and indirect taxes. Our leaders, such as they are, are tracking the storm of inflation and the threat of the most serious recession since the Great Depression. Still think this doesn't have anything to do with you?

Steve Schwarzman and Pete Peterson are betting on it.

Next: Where has that Black Swan been hiding?

John Sakowicz is a Sonoma County investor who was a cofounder of a multibillion-dollar offshore hedge fund, Battle Mountain Research Group. He was assisted in research by Arianna Carisella.

Part 1: Alternative Universe



Investors Pull Out of Mutual Funds


If this trend continues, and US corporations continue to scale back on their stock buybacks, look for another slump in US stock prices this quarter. Right now the stock market is likely being sustained by hedge fund buying from resurgence in the carry trade. Once that let's up, the thinness in the equity market will be set up for an event driven plunge.

Investors pull out of mutual funds
By Deborah Brewster in New York
Financial Times
Published: April 27 2008 22:26

All but one of the 25 largest US mutual fund managers saw their long-term assets fall in the first quarter, as returns dived and investors pulled out of funds.

In the worst start to a year for more than a decade, most money managers had retail outflows, and even stalwarts such as American Funds and Vanguard suffered a drop in assets, of 6.6 per cent and 4.3 per cent respectively.

Pimco, the bond manager, was the only one to show a rise in retail assets, according to Financial Research Corporation and industry estimates. Pimco’s Total Return fund had an inflow of $9bn in the three months to March.

The trend is likely to worry economists, because it suggests the credit turmoil is hurting the confidence of mainstream investors. That, in turn, could dampen activity among consumers in the months ahead, since falling investment sentiment is often associated with muted household spending levels.

However, the fall also marks a fresh blow for the financial industry, because mutual fund managers typically make money by charging a percentage of assets – meaning that profits in the industry fall when assets decline.


Last week, a group of publicly traded asset managers announced bleak quarterly results. Affiliated Managers Group, which holds stakes in 26 mutual and hedge fund companies, reported a quarterly profit fall for the first time in five years, with outflows of $8.4bn in the quarter.

Big institutional fund groups – such as AllianceBernstein, a unit of French insurance group Axa – likewise showed asset falls.

One senior industry executive said: “This is the worst I have seen for a long time, the industry-wide outflows, and unfortunately I don’t think it is a short-term situation. The days of domestic [US] equity funds driving profits for us, that could be gone.”

Retail and institutional investors pulled $100bn from US, European and Japanese equity funds during the quarter, according to Strategic Insight.

The trend is accelerating a shift in the money management industry, as investors move away from equity funds, which have been the industry’s profit mainstay, towards either low-margin options such as short-term cash and indexed funds, or high- margin alternative investments such as hedge funds, private equity and hard assets.

Long-term assets do not include money market funds, which have seen big inflows. Several money managers, such as Fidelity, have large money market funds which are offsetting their outflows, although money market funds are low-margin products and do not provide long-term investor loyalty. Fidelity had a drop of long-term assets of close to 10 per cent for the quarter, as investors continued to pull funds from the former market leader despite a lift in performance in its funds.

How the SEC Enabled the Wall Street Credit Crisis


The bailout of Bear Stearns by the Fed was a travesty of the public trust. To say that no public money was put at risk is a misstatement of the facts.

The investment bank should have been allowed to fail in a managed liquidation, and the Fed should have opened the discount window for the commercial banks to keep them solvent on an arranged borrowing plan that minimized their profits and cut the bonuses and dividends severely. The so-called purchase of Bear by JPM is a farce.

That these banks are still paying dividends and bonuses is a crime against the public trust. Unless we reform the banking system, reinstate Glass-Steagall, and tighten capital requirements on commercial banks the looting of the US Dollar by the banks will continue.


April 27, 2008
Everybody’s Business
Wall Street, Run Amok
By BEN STEIN

YOU may well be asking yourself, as I have asked myself, how on earth did the credit crisis on Wall Street become such a catastrophe?

How did all of the mechanisms operated by the mind-bogglingly well-paid men and women of the Street go so wrong that we saw a major investment bank, Bear Stearns, essentially disappear? How did Wall Street firms of ancient lineage take such immense losses that they made banks clam up on lending — at great risk to the economy?

Weren’t fail-safe devices in place to guard against risk? Weren’t government watchdogs there to make sure that catastrophes could not happen? Weren’t ratings agencies on the job to police what was going on in the canyons of Lower Manhattan?

To paraphrase Dr. Evil in the “Austin Powers” movies: “How about ‘no,’ Scott?”

Anyone who cares about this disaster would be extremely well advised — and I’d underline “extremely” as often as possible — to read a speech on the matter that was given on April 8 by a genius investor named David Einhorn at a Grant’s Interest Rate Observer event.

Mr. Einhorn runs Greenlight Capital, a successful hedge fund. He also isn’t an infallible observer of human lapses and regulatory failures — he invested in and briefly served on the board of New Century, a subprime mortgage lender that later went bust amid accounting problems. (When I sought his response, Mr. Einhorn said he did not want to comment on New Century or on his essay.)

Yet his speech so well explains what went wrong in the financial debacle that it’s frightening. Here is my CliffsNotes version of it.

First, Maestro Einhorn points out that the fellows who run big investment banks have a strong incentive to maximize their assets and leverage themselves into deep trouble because their pay is a function of how much debt they can pile on. If they can use relatively low-interest debt to generate slightly higher returns, the firm earns more revenue and executive pay increases. Often, an astonishing 50 percent of total revenue goes to employee compensation at Wall Street firms.

NOW, you may ask, what kind of assets were they acquiring with that debt? Well, sometimes, as with Bear Stearns, the leveraged assets are mostly government agency debt, which used to be regarded as fairly safe.

Sometimes, as Mr. Einhorn notes, those portfolios also hold stocks, bonds, loans awaiting securitization, and pieces of structured finance deals. They also hold heavy exposure to derivatives that have stunning risk profiles and can produce astounding losses in bad circumstances. They might also contain real estate assets and have exposure to private equity deals.

In other words, they can hold some scary “assets.” What do they hold as capital against such risks? You would think it would be cash or Treasury bonds, wouldn’t you? But no.

Under an interesting set of rules promulgated by the Securities and Exchange Commission in 2004, called “Alternative Net Capital Requirements for Broker-Dealers That Are Part of Consolidated Supervised Entities,” the amount of capital that had to underlie assets was reduced substantially. (Mr. Einhorn rightly says that this set of rules should have been called the “Bear Stearns Future Insolvency Act of 2004.”)

Through the act, the S.E.C. — acting as one of Wall Street’s chief regulators, mind you — also allowed such things as “hybrid capital instruments” (much riskier than cash or Treasuries), subordinated debt (ditto) and even deferred return of taxes, to be counted as capital. The S.E.C. even allowed the banks to hold securities “for which there is no ready market” as capital.

“These adjustments reduced the amount of required capital to engage in increasingly risky activities,” Mr. Einhorn says.

In response to Mr. Einhorn’s critique, an S.E.C. spokesman told me that these changes could theoretically lower capital, but that the agency has seen no evidence that that has, in fact, occurred.

But Mr. Einhorn has even more troubling observations. He says the S.E.C. also allowed broker-dealers to set their own valuations on assets and liabilities that were hard to value. And broker-dealers could assign their own creditworthiness ratings to counterparties in complex derivatives transactions when those counterparties were otherwise unrated.

In a word, Mr. Einhorn says, the S.E.C. told Wall Street to police itself to save on regulatory costs, while not bothering to “discuss the cost to society of increasing the probability that a large broker-dealer could go bust.”

A result of all this, he says, was as follows:

“The owners, employees and creditors of these institutions are rewarded when they succeed, but it is all of us, the taxpayers, who are left on the hook if they fail. This is called private profits and socialized risk. Heads, I win. Tails you lose. It is a reverse-Robin Hood system.”

And when it all went kaput during the Bear Stearns debacle, the likable chairman of the S.E.C., Christopher Cox, said that the system was fine and needed no immediate repairs. Of course, Henry M. Paulson Jr., the Treasury secretary, is calling for merging the S.E.C. with the easygoing Commodity Futures Trading Commission, in the financial equivalent of setting off a Doomsday Device.

The S.E.C. told me that all of its actions were helpful to investors and that no one could have prevented the Bear Stearns collapse because it was caused by liquidity issues, not capital issues. My respectful response is that if Bear were thoroughly well capitalized, why would liquidity issues come up at all?

There is much more in Mr. Einhorn’s speech about how dramatically understaffed the ratings agencies are in assessing risk on Wall Street and how even the biggest ratings agencies largely allowed the Street to rate itself.

The big ratings firms, according to Mr. Einhorn, do not even bother to assess the major investment banks’ portfolios because they change so often.

It looks to me as if the inmates are running the asylum. One truth, that deregulation is sometimes a good thing, has been followed down so long and winding a road that it has led to an immense lie: that deregulation carried to an extreme will not lead to calamity.

To think that people of this mind-set are in charge of the finances of the nation that is the cornerstone of world freedom is terrifying. Mr. Einhorn may well have done us a service of great value.

Ben Stein is a lawyer, writer, actor and economist. E-mail: ebiz@nytimes.com.

Wave of Coming Bankruptcies Likely to Devastate Corporate Bondholders


Bondholders Lucky to Get 10 Cents in Looming Defaults
By Caroline Salas

April 23 (Bloomberg) -- The looming wave of bankruptcies is unlikely to be kind to bondholders. And they have only themselves to blame.

Rather than receiving the historical average recovery of 42 cents on the dollar in a default, owners of a third of high- yield, high-risk bonds rated B+ or lower may get no more than 10 cents, according to New York-based Fitch Ratings. About 22 percent are likely to get 11 cents to 30 cents.

Bond investors from Pacific Investment Management Co. to Capital Research & Management Co. may pay the price for allowing themselves to be subordinated by junk-rated companies that borrowed a record $2.2 trillion of bank loans in the past three years. Unsecured creditors of Fedders Corp. and Buffets Inc. have lost almost all their money as lenders lay claim to the companies' assets. Standard & Poor's says Burlington Coat Factory Warehouse Corp. and Univision Communications Inc. bondholders may meet a similar fate in a default.

''There've been some disappointments,'' Paul Scanlon, team leader for U.S. high yield and bank debt at Putnam Investments, said in a telephone interview from his Boston office. Putnam manages $66 billion in fixed-income, including bonds of Univision. ''As people look back over the last 24 months, there are many transactions in portfolios that people have hoped the outcome might have proceeded differently than it has.''

More Crucial

Bondholder recovery rates are becoming more crucial as the U.S. economy slows. Chapter 11 business bankruptcies rose 16 percent in the first quarter, according to court records compiled by Jupiter eSources LLC, and Moody's Investors Service said last week that the number of companies at risk of running out of cash is the highest since at least October 2002.

''When leverage was so ample, private equity firms were able to buy companies at multiples that didn't make sense,'' said James Keenan, who oversees $20 billion of high-yield debt as co- head of leveraged finance at BlackRock Inc. in New York. ''Most people use the assumption senior unsecured bonds are going to recover 40 percent. I don't think you're going to see that.''

The amount of debt in Merrill Lynch & Co.'s U.S. High Yield Distressed Index has swelled to $206 billion from $4.8 billion a year ago. The index contains non-defaulted bonds with yields of 10 percentage points or more above Treasuries.

Defaults to Rise

Moody's anticipates defaults will quadruple to 5.9 percent in 12 months. That assumes a ''mild'' recession. Judging by the amount of distressed debt, investors expect an 8 percent default rate, said Martin Fridson, head of high-yield research firm FridsonVision LLC in New York.

''I'm inclined to take the market at its word,'' said Fridson, who previously led a research group at Merrill that won first place for high-yield strategy in Institutional Investor's survey nine years in a row.

Junk bonds lost 3 percent in the first quarter, the worst start to a year on record, according to Merrill's U.S. High Yield Master II Index. The extra yield, or spread, investors demand to own the debt instead of Treasuries has risen to 7.07 percentage points from 5.92 percentage points at year-end, Merrill data show. High-yield, or junk, debt is rated below Baa3 by Moody's and lower than BBB- by S&P and Fitch.

Of about 100 issuers rated B+ and lower by Fitch, 24 percent may recover 51 cents on the dollar or more. B+ is the fourth- highest of 12 junk bond levels. Asset-rich companies such as Dallas-based Energy Future Holdings Corp., the former TXU Corp., which is the largest electricity producer in Texas, may be among those that would generate above-average recoveries, Keenan said.

Covenant-Lite

Along with the surge in bank loans came covenant-lite loans, which typically don't limit the amount of debt a company can have relative to earnings. A record $141 billion of covenant-lite loans was made last year, according to S&P.

The value of companies with those loans is likely to be 25 percent less when they ultimately default than if they'd been forced to restructure earlier, Fitch estimates.

Univision, the largest U.S. Spanish-language broadcaster, received $7.45 billion of covenant-lite loans last year to finance the New York-based company's $12.3 billion takeover by a buyout group including Chicago-based Madison Dearborn Partners LLC and billionaire Haim Saban.

S&P, which cut Univision's credit rating to B- in March and may downgrade it further, predicts investors in its first-lien bank loans will get from 70 percent to 90 percent of their money back in a default while owners of Univision's $1.5 billion of 9.75 percent notes due in 2015 may get nothing.

Capital Research owns the Univision notes, which have lost about 31 percent in the past year, filings and data compiled by Bloomberg show. Abner Goldstine, fund manager at Los Angeles- based Capital Research, didn't return calls seeking comment.

Hawaiian, Burlington

As of Dec. 31, Goldstine's $12.2 billion American High- Income Trust also owns bonds of Burlington, New Jersey-based retailer Burlington Coat Factory, phone company Hawaiian Telcom Communications Inc. of Honolulu and mobile-phone chipmaker Freescale Semiconductor Inc. notes, based in Austin, Texas.

Pimco, the manager of the world's biggest bond fund, owns Hawaiian Telcom and Freescale. Putnam owns Freescale.

Bonds of all those companies are trading at distressed yields and noteholders will get no more than 10 cents on the dollar back in defaults, S&P predicts.

Mark Porterfield, spokesman for Pimco in Newport Beach, California, declined to comment. Putnam's Scanlon declined to comment on specific companies.

''Over the past few years you had a large growth of aggressive deals coming to market,'' said William May, senior director in credit market research at Fitch. ''The unsecured creditors are the ones who are most at risk.''

Limited Recoveries

Bondholders already face limited recoveries from companies that filed for bankruptcy.

Unsecured creditors of Liberty Corner, New Jersey-based air conditioner maker Fedders are suing lenders including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Highland Capital Management LP in addition to executives and directors. A $90 million loan taken out by the company in March 2007 wiped out the value of the stakes of creditors, they allege. Fedders filed for bankruptcy in August.

''They were saddling the company with secured debt that could never be repaid and the end game for them was prolongation of job security for upper management and putting off the inevitable,'' Jeremy Coffey, partner at Brown Rudnick Berlack Israels LLP in Boston, who represents unsecured creditors, said.

Goldman spokesman Michael Duvally declined to comment. Jack Yang, a partner at Highland, declined to comment.

Fedders Prelude

The Fedders fight may be a prelude to more battles between loan and bond investors as defaults rise. Typically, those spats have been reserved for subordinated bondholders, who rank behind bank lenders and the owners of senior notes.

''Whereas in the last recession it was more common perhaps to see the inter-creditor fights between subordinated unsecured creditors and the senior unsecured creditors, it may very well be that in this cycle that will have moved up a level in the priority chain,'' Andrew Rahl, a partner in commercial restructuring and bankruptcy at Reed Smith LLP in New York, said.

Stiglitz: Greenspan and Bush to Blame for the US Crisis


Its difficult to react to an excerpt from an unpublished interview.

Although we strongly agree with what he has said here, we are dumbfounded that there is no mention of the big US banks and Wall Street, who were engaging in serial fraud and corruption of the system going back to Enron and beyond, encouraging accounting fraud and reckless speculation. Greenspan and Bush were obvious figureheads and enablers, having accomplished little or nothing in their private lives before their moment on the stage.

Are we at the point we predicted when the real perpetrators start looking for scapegoats and patsies to toss over the back of the sled to hold off the oncoming pack of wolves?

If so, Greenspan and Bush make a likely pair of shallow boobs to take the fall. But it won't fix anything. And where were all the professors and pundits during the period in which this was all happening? Playing dumb for the most part, or putting out weighty sounding defenses of these offenses for a few pieces of silver.

The scapegoat phase is predictable but fruitless overall. The system must be reformed; the banks must be restrained again. The theft of the public good will continue until this occurs. They will distort every program, pollute every dollar of aid, to their continuing looting of the public trust.

There is a growing call in the US to pull one's money out of the big Wall Street banks. We're not sure about the effective of this, since it keeps the stock and bond markets intact, but its a start. Petitions for redress have been ignored. We've elected the Democrats and they have done far too little, waiting for the safety of a likely Democratic president. So now the time for boycotts has begun it appears.

The system must be reformed. Glass-Steagall must be reinstated. The Wall Street Banks must be restrained from using the public money to finance their private speculations. We must stop privatizing gains and socializing their losses.

Greenspan, Bush to blame for U.S. crisis: Stiglitz
Reuters
Sun Apr 27, 6:48 AM ET

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and the government of President George W. Bush were to blame for the U.S. financial crisis, Nobel laureate economist Joseph Stiglitz said in a magazine interview.

"This man (Greenspan) has unfortunately made a lot of mistakes," said former World Bank chief economist Stiglitz, according to a preview of the interview to be published on Monday in profil magazine.

"His first one was to support all the tax cuts which were introduced under Bush -- they didn't stimulate the economy very much ... This task was then transferred more towards monetary policy, though then (Greenspan) created a flood of credits with low interest rates," Stiglitz was quoted as saying.

Earlier in April, Greenspan said in an interview with CNBC television that the U.S. economy was in recession and defended his chairmanship of the U.S. central bank against charges that his policy missteps had laid the groundwork for the crisis.

He said decisions during his charge had been rationally constructed based on evidence at the time.

Stiglitz said Bush's government was also to blame.

"I reproach them, that the economy was not as resilient as it could have been due to the ongoing tax cuts and the huge costs incurred by the war in Iraq," he was quoted as saying.

He said it was a myth that Europe could decouple itself from the United States.

"Especially the weak dollar will continue to hit the European economy hard, because it will make it much harder to export," he said.

(Reporting by Karin Strohecker; Editing by David Holmes)

25 April 2008

Greenspan, Bernanke, and Volcker: A Study in Contrasts


Here is an excerpt of an essay from Jeremy Grantham on the last three Fed chairmen that is worth reading.

The information about Alan Greenspan is entirely consistent with information we had received in a long correspondence with Pierre Rinfret before he passed away. Pierre was an economist who knew alan Greenspan from his time at NYU to their positions as colleagues in the Nixon Administration and afterwards.

The complete eight page essay requires a free registration here and can be downloaded here.

Immoral Hazard
Jeremy Grantham

Greenspan, Bernanke, and Volcker: A Study in Contrasts

It’s not that the former Fed boss Greenspan was incompetent
that is remarkable. Incompetence is common enough after
all, even in important jobs. What’s remarkable is that so
many people don’t seem, even now, to get it.
Do people
just believe high-quality self-justifying blarney? Or is
it just that they apparently want to believe that critical
jobs in a great country attract great talent by divine right.

Sometimes, of course, they do, but sometimes the most
important jobs – even that of a presidency or a Fed boss
– end up with mediocrities. Let us pause here to regret
the absence of Mr. Volcker and wonder what a parallel
Volcker universe would have been like. Just as we can
wonder how much a few votes in Florida or a vote in the
Supreme Court would have changed our world from what
it is today.

Paul Volcker inherited about as big a mess as we have
today. He worked out what he had to do and did it with
unusual lack of concern about what Congress thought of
the necessary pain involved and the number of enemies
he might make. He paid the price for forthright behavior
by being replaced, despite a record for correct and tough
behavior that makes for the most invidious comparison
today. When Volcker was replaced, by the way, he did not
moan and groan but like an old soldier quietly disappeared.
There were no high-profi le announcements about the
economy or any $300,000-an-evening appearances paid
for by financial firms.

Greenspan came onto my radar screen in the late sixties as
a seller of economic and fi nancial advice to the investment
industry. To be brutally honest, he was considered run of
the mill by anyone I knew then or have met later who
knew his service then.


His high point in most memories,
certainly mine, was a famous call in January 1973 that, “it
is rare that you can be as unqualifiedly bullish as you now
can,” a few days before a market decline of over 60% in
real terms, second only to the Great Crash in a century,
accompanied also by a bitter recession.

This was one of the first of a long line of terrible prognostications for
which he has remarkably not been remembered, except
by a handful of us amateur historians.
Then in the mid
seventies he disappeared into some government job, of
which I was barely aware, until he re-emerged with a bang
in 1987, without as far as I can find having done anything
documentably very well. And we can agree that at least
occasionally people can indeed prove their effectiveness
beyond doubt. This was obviously not the first or last
time such appointments were made where a job crying
for proof of character and achievement under pressure is
awarded more for what you might call political skills.

This has indeed not been our finest hour in the U.S. Times
are bad enough, in fact, to make us mourn the American
leadership skills of WWII and the generosity and foresight
of the Marshall Plan. We can all wonder at the incredible
vision, drive, organizational skill, and willingness to
sacrifi ce resources that were required by the Manhattan
Project and compare it to the rudderless or even deliberate
avoidance of leadership of the greatest issues today:
climate change and energy security. We can only wonder
what a Manhattan Project aimed at alternative energy
might have accomplished by now, had it been started 15
years ago.

What we have had in lieu of vision, leadership,
and backbone is a series of easy paths taken.


At the time that Paul Volcker broke the back of inflation in
the early 1980s, the recognition that risk and leverage had
consequences was baked into the pie: if you were to take
excessive risk you had better win the bet. If you missed
the target, the expected result would be more or less total
failure, and that seemed then and for decades earlier a
reasonable law of nature.

Now in contrast we get ready to celebrate the 20th
anniversary of the era of the Great Moral Hazard.
Slowly at first, but with steadily growing
traction, the idea was planted that asset bubbles would
be tolerated, but consequences of their bursting would be
moderated or avoided entirely...



Stiglitz: US Recession May Echo the 1930s


Nobel Winner Stiglitz: U.S. Facing Long Recession
By CNBC.com
25 Apr 2008 02:17 PM ET

The U.S. economy is already in recession -- and may echo the 1930s, Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz said Friday.

"The big question is: how will the government respond?" said Stiglitz, in an interview with CNBC. Stiglitz, a Columbia University professor and 2001 winner of the Nobel prize, detailed his bleak outlook for the American economy.

"This is going to be one of the worst economic downturns since the Great Depression," said Stiglitz.

He explained that main cause of the current situation is historically unique—and thus is befuddling those charged with creating solutions.

Other downturns were primarily caused by excesses in inventories or inflation; but this slowdown is due to the condition of "badly impaired" banks and financial entities, which are unwilling and/or unable to lend capital -- stymieing the very borrowers who usually drive the country back to vitality, Stiglitz said. And the Federal Reserve may have used up its ammunition -- and the faith investors and planners have put in it.

"[The Fed] will be between a rock and hard place. And we're not over-worrying about credit. But [simultaneously], we need to start worrying about the real sector," he said.

And if inflation wasn't the prime recession cause, it's still a menace. The professor points to the two-pronged danger of high oil prices joined by climbing food prices, harming businesses and scaring consumers.

"Oil is particularly bad," as it means that more U.S. dollars "will be going abroad," he said.

The housing downturn is an even worse economic factor than casual observers realized, Stiglitz said. He explained that during the real estate boom, Americans were able to withdraw billions of dollars from their home equity.

"[But] with housing prices coming down, it's going to be difficult to do that anymore," he said -- drying up a spending source. And within that problem, still another complication: people typically spent the money they drew off their home equity on consumption, rather than investment -- garnering no return on the spending.

"The savings rate as we go into the recession is zero. Which means [savings] will go up, " he said—decreasing consumer spending and weakening retail further.

What about the government stimulus package?

"The Bush Administration's response is too little, too late -- and very badly designed," he declared. The amount ostensibly being infused into the economy by tax rebate checks will be a "drop in the bucket" compared to the money being held back and siphoned out by the factors he mentioned.

"If you really wanted to stimulate the economy, increase unemployment insurance," he suggested. (That would require giving money to the less fortunate which is anathema to 'silver spoon specimens' like Bush. - Jesse)

"The president is telling people to go out and get jobs—and there are no jobs for them," he said.

CNBC Interview with Joseph Stiglitz

CalPERS: CEO To Step Down Unexpectedly the Day after the Chief Investment Officer Resigns




The CalPERS CEO is stepping down according to Bloomberg Television. The Chief Investment Officer resigned yesterday to pursue an independent career in 'green investment.'




Calpers Chief Fred Buenrostro May Leave By Year End, People Say
By Dan Levy

April 25 (Bloomberg) -- California Public Employees' Retirement System Chief Executive Officer Fred Buenrostro is planning to leave by the end of the year, according to two people familiar with the matter.

The board is in discussions with Buenrostro about his departure from the largest U.S. public pension fund, known as Calpers, said the people, who declined to be identified. He has been in the job since 2002 and was on its board of directors for 15 years. Calpers has $244 billion in assets.

The executive would be the third top-ranking officer at Calpers to exit this year. Russell Read, Calpers' chief investment officer, said April 23 that he is resigning on June 30 to begin investing in environmental technologies.

Calpers' spokeswoman Pat Macht didn't immediately return a call for comment.

Buenrostro has a bachelor's degree from Pepperdine University and a law degree from the University of Pacific's McGeorge School of Law.

Read quit after overseeing Calpers investment strategy for two years. Chief Operating Investment Officer Anne Stausboll will replace him until a permanent successor is found.

Calpers last year placed its first direct investments in commodities and in February approved putting as much as 3 percent of its investments in raw materials, seeking to take advantage of soaring worldwide prices. The fund is shifting more of its portfolio from stocks and bonds into private equity, real estate and securities that perform well when inflation accelerates.

Calpers, based in Sacramento, earned a 19.1 percent return for the year ended June 30, 2007, according to its most recent annual report, compared with a gain of 18.4 percent on the Standard & Poor's 500 Index of stocks.

The fund had about 60 percent of its portfolio invested in public equity, about 24 percent in bonds and other fixed income, 8 percent in real estate, 6.7 percent in private equity and 1.4 percent in cash equivalents, the report said.


CalPERS' top investment officer stepping down
After just two years, Russell Read quits the state pension post to pursue green investing.
By Tom Petruno, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
April 24, 2008

The giant CalPERS pension fund is losing its investment chief to the green movement.

In a surprise, Russell Read -- who has been principal investment officer of the California Public Employees' Retirement System for just two years -- told the pension system's board this week that he's leaving June 30.

Read, 44, said in a letter to the board that he was quitting "to pursue my long-standing interest in environmental and clean-technology investing."

He said by phone from a meeting in New Orleans that his plans weren't fully formed.

He isn't sure if he'll try to manage his own investment fund or build a business in some other way. Whatever the model, he said, he wanted to help bring together what he viewed as now "disconnected efforts" worldwide to develop and implement the best green technologies.

"I might have the ability to play a major role in something that I think is of absolute paramount importance," he said.

Read said he hadn't planned to depart CalPERS this soon, but that events in the mushrooming green-investing industry overtook his own timing. "I didn't anticipate [its] rapid development," he said.

Yet Read, who holds a PhD in economics from Stanford University and earned $958,000 at CalPERS last year, knows plenty about green investing. He has long been a private investor in Maine timberland and is involved in a hardwood reforestation project there.

Read has been pushing the $242-billion CalPERS fund, the nation's largest public pension fund, to shift a chunk of its assets away from stocks and bonds and into commodities, such as oil and timberlands, as well as into public-private partnerships that build infrastructure projects.

One new CalPERS' initiative is a 10-year, $600-million commitment to private-equity funds that are focused on investing in companies developing new energy sources, anti-pollution devices, recycling technologies and other green efforts.

Anne Stausboll, CalPERS' assistant executive officer for investments, will take over as interim investment chief, CalPERS said.

Read came to CalPERS from New York-based Deutsche Asset Management.


CalPERS vows to ease market crisis
by Keren Holland 25 April 2008

The California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) has vowed to ‘aggressively deploy its capacity’ to alleviate current market disruption brought about by the collapse of the auction rate market.

At its recent investment committee, board members were told CalPERS’ Credit Enhancement Program had received an unprecedented number of enquiries to provide liquidity and credit enhancement for conversions into financing structures such as variable rate demand obligations.

The situation is the result of recent difficulties in the auction rate market, where public finance makes up 50% of the $330bn securities issued.

Auctions for these securities began to fail in February when investors declined to bid because of fears monoline insurers, which backed the debt, were no longer creditworthy, and large investment banks declined to act as bidders of last resort, as they had in the past.

This meant issuers were forced to pay a high penalty interest rate, which CalPERS said was putting an onerous burden on municipalities in California and beyond...



About CalPERS

The California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS) provides pension fund, healthcare and other retirement services for approximately 1.5 million California public employees.

As of October 2007, it owns $254.8 billion worth of stock, bonds, funds, private equity and real estate. It is the largest pension fund in the United States.

CalPERS provides benefits to all state government employees and, by contract, to local agency and school employees. Many California counties and large cities have their own retirement system.

California teachers are covered under CalSTRS (California State Teacher Retirement System), with funds in excess of $179.6 billion.



The US Consumer is Hitting the Wall


Real wages in the US for the working classes have been stagnant.

The government is lying about cost-of-living inflation through the use of statistical smoke and mirrors.

People have been borrowing heavily on the equity of their homes in order to pay for basic consumption needs.

The country is now in an economic recession with home prices falling and credit tightening.

Blue collar jobs continue to be sent overseas by corporations.

Economic distortions are leading to selective shortages in basic food supplies and health care.

Five large corporations control 90% of the non-Internet media outlets in the US.

The disparity in wealth between a small percentage of elites and most Americans continues to widen.

The Presidential candidates spend most of their time engaging in gossip and slander about each other encouraged by the media.

What is there to spark a recovery in our consumption based economy? Who is going to do all the consumption, the top 1% of the population?

We must find new lands from which we can easily obtain raw materials and at the same time exploit the cheap slave labor that is available from the natives of the colonies. The colonies would also provide a dumping ground for the surplus goods produced in our factories worthless financial instruments originated by Wall Street.” Cecil Rhodes


U.S. Economy: Consumer Sentiment Weakens More Than Anticipated
By Bob Willis

April 25 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. consumer confidence fell more than forecast in April to a 26-year low as record gasoline prices and rising unemployment threaten to reduce spending.

The Reuters/University of Michigan sentiment index decreased to 62.6, from 69.5 the previous month. The measure was down from a preliminary estimate of 63.2 issued on April 11.

Consumers are growing increasingly anxious because the economy has lost almost a quarter million jobs so far this year, the cost of refueling a car is up 17 percent and property values have fallen. Sales of houses and cars have declined as a result, contributing to a slowdown that may bring an end to the six-year expansion.

``Consumers are feeling the pinch, not only from the labor market, but also from prices,'' Aaron Smith, an economist at Moody's Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. ``There's a squeeze on incomes from two sides.''

Economists had forecast the consumer sentiment gauge would fall to 63.2 from 69.5 in March, according to the median of 60 projections in a Bloomberg News survey. Estimates ranged from a low of 62 to a high of 72.

The index of consumer expectations for six months from now, which more closely projects the direction of consumer spending, dropped to 53.3 from 60.1 last month.

Current Conditions

A measure of current conditions, which reflects Americans' perceptions of their financial situation and whether it's a good time to make big ticket purchases like cars, decreased to 77 from 84.2 last month.

Consumers were also more concerned about inflation. Americans thought prices would increase 4.8 percent over the next 12 months, up from a 4.3 percent estimate in March. Longer term, inflation was pegged at 3.2 percent, the highest level since August 2006 and compared with 2.9 percent last month.

The economy lost 80,000 jobs in March, the most in five years, following a 76,000 drop in payrolls in each of the prior two months, according to figures from the Labor Department. The jobless rate rose to 5.1 percent, the highest level in more than two years.

Rising fuel costs have contributed to a drop in auto sales and prompted some shoppers to limit trips to malls. The average price of regular unleaded gasoline rose to a record $3.58 a gallon yesterday, according to data from AAA.

Auto Sales

Cars and light trucks sold at an average 15.2 million annual pace in the first three months of the year, the fewest since the third quarter of 1998. Some 14.9 million autos will be sold this year, the fewest since 1995, Standard & Poor's forecast this month.

AutoNation Inc., the largest publicly traded U.S. car dealer, yesterday said first-quarter profit fell 35 percent as weak housing markets in states including California hurt demand for new vehicles.

``We expect to continue to see a challenging automotive retail market as long as the current economic difficulties persist,'' Chief Executive Officer Michael Jackson said in a statement.

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg earlier this month forecast consumer spending will rise at a 0.5 percent pace in the first half of the year, the smallest gain since 1991. The economy is unlikely to grow at all through June, the survey also showed.

Those polled put the odds of the economy entering a recession this year at 70 percent, up from 50 percent in the prior month's poll.

Falling Home Values

The biggest housing slump in a generation is leading the downturn. Home prices nationwide have fallen 10 percent from their peak, according to the S&P Case-Shiller home-price index, and many economists are forecasting values will keep dropping. Falling property prices make Americans feel less wealthy and reduce the amount of equity owners can tap for spending.

Rising foreclosures are also lifting stress levels. Foreclosure filings jumped 57 percent and bank repossessions more than doubled in March from a year earlier as rates on adjustable mortgages increased, Irvine, California-based RealtyTrac Inc., a seller of default data, said last week.

To contact the reporter on this story: Bob Willis in Washington at bwillis@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: April 25, 2008 10:41 EDT

Time to Hoard Food - Wall Street Journal


No this is not a joke. Its the theme we have discussed before of appearance versus reality. The cognitive dissonance between the stated inflation rates and rates of interest paid on savings, versus the actual supply of tangible commodities and the price inflation with wage stagnation people are experiencing in the world of reality.

Things are getting a little crazy out there aren't they? Why is the media trying to foment a food panic? That's clearly where a lot of recent media stories are going. Does Iran have rice? Is it time to annex Canada? Shock and awe on the people? One can only wonder what wicked thing is coming our way.


R.O.I.
By BRETT ARENDS

Load Up the Pantry
April 21, 2008 6:47 p.m.
Wall Street Journal

I don't want to alarm anybody, but maybe it's time for Americans to start stockpiling food.

No, this is not a drill.

You've seen the TV footage of food riots in parts of the developing world. Yes, they're a long way away from the U.S. But most foodstuffs operate in a global market. When the cost of wheat soars in Asia, it will do the same here.

Reality: Food prices are already rising here much faster than the returns you are likely to get from keeping your money in a bank or money-market fund. And there are very good reasons to believe prices on the shelves are about to start rising a lot faster.

"Load up the pantry," says Manu Daftary, one of Wall Street's top investors and the manager of the Quaker Strategic Growth mutual fund. "I think prices are going higher. People are too complacent. They think it isn't going to happen here. But I don't know how the food companies can absorb higher costs." (Full disclosure: I am an investor in Quaker Strategic)

Stocking up on food may not replace your long-term investments, but it may make a sensible home for some of your shorter-term cash. Do the math. If you keep your standby cash in a money-market fund you'll be lucky to get a 2.5% interest rate. Even the best one-year certificate of deposit you can find is only going to pay you about 4.1%, according to Bankrate.com. And those yields are before tax.

Meanwhile the most recent government data shows food inflation for the average American household is now running at 4.5% a year.

And some prices are rising even more quickly. The latest data show cereal prices rising by more than 8% a year. Both flour and rice are up more than 13%. Milk, cheese, bananas and even peanut butter: They're all up by more than 10%. Eggs have rocketed up 30% in a year. Ground beef prices are up 4.8% and chicken by 5.4%.

These are trends that have been in place for some time.

And if you are hoping they will pass, here's the bad news: They may actually accelerate.

The reason? The prices of many underlying raw materials have risen much more quickly still. Wheat prices, for example, have roughly tripled in the past three years.

Sooner or later, the food companies are going to have to pass those costs on. Kraft saw its raw material costs soar by about $1.25 billion last year, squeezing profit margins. The company recently warned that higher prices are here to stay. Last month the chief executive of General Mills, Kendall Powell, made a similar point.

The main reason for rising prices, of course, is the surge in demand from China and India. Hundreds of millions of people are joining the middle class each year, and that means they want to eat more and better food.

A secondary reason has been the growing demand for ethanol as a fuel additive. That's soaking up some of the corn supply.

You can't easily stock up on perishables like eggs or milk. But other products will keep. Among them: Dried pasta, rice, cereals, and cans of everything from tuna fish to fruit and vegetables. The kicker: You should also save money by buying them in bulk.

If this seems a stretch, ponder this: The emerging bull market in agricultural products is following in the footsteps of oil. A few years ago, many Americans hoped $2 gas was a temporary spike. Now it's the rosy memory of a bygone age.

The good news is that it's easier to store Cap'n Crunch or cans of Starkist in your home than it is to store lots of gasoline. Safer, too.

Write to Brett Arends at brett.arends@wsj.com

24 April 2008

A Few Charts in our 'Babson Style'


As regular readers know, we had been regularly sharing 'hand drawn' charts on key market indices for the past five years at least at the site formerly known as Jesse's Charts. We've had to stop doing this and switch to the pre-packaged Stockcharts.com format because eSignal bought Quote.com, which provided the base for our charting. They were determined to add improvements few wanted while discarding key features and functions (such as stability) to which most had become accustomed.

Such is the way of modern American business management, of which Vista and MS Office 2007 are two other sterling examples. Have these fellows ever heard of the phrase "If it ain't broke don't fix it?" Apparently not. Microsoft is particularly annoying and hard to work with as a demi-monopoly that is not afraid to really screw things up trying to gain some advantage over their customers. In that way they are similar to other hotbeds of inbred thinking and incompetent execution, such as the Bush II Administration.

With considerable annoying hand work we were able to update a few of the old charts. Whether we continue this, or do something else, is another matter. But for now, here they are.

A word of caution, the present financial managers of the US seem hell bent on getting their way in the short term, with the long term be damned. Please keep that in mind if you participate in the market fun and games, and try not to get hurt fighting what *could* turn out to be another attempt to inflate one bubble to fight another's collapse.

Watching the charts is worthwhile not to "predict" where things are going, but rather to help keep your bearings when so many others seem to lose their memory and their mental equilibrium, thrashing from one extreme to another. We get a chuckle reading the many predictions people put up on the web, and the way in which they come back and crow about any correct predictions while carefully ignoring their mistakes. The first they tend to carve in marble, and the latter are written in the sand.


23 April 2008

Bill Miller of Legg Mason Calls a Bottom (Hello Bottom? Please God, a Bottom!)


Thomson Financial News
Legg Mason Value Trust's Bill Miller forecasts 'worst is behind us'
04.23.08, 2:51 PM ET

SAN FRANCISCO (Thomson Financial) - Legg Mason Inc.'s Bill Miller, portfolio manager of Legg Mason Value Trust mutual fund, on Wednesday issued his first-quarter investment commentary to shareholders, projecting that the credit panic ended with the collapse of Bear Stearns.

'For planning purposes, here is my forecast: I think we will do better from here on, and that by far the worst is behind us,' Miller wrote. 'If spreads continue to come in, the write-offs at the big financials will end, and we may even have some write-ups in the second half instead of write-downs'

Miller noted that the wild card is commodities. (Another wild card might be the fund redemptions and margin calls Legg Mason Value Trust is getting as it hits 26 year lows. Bill's stuck now, he's got to keep going forward and hope for the best or call it a day. - Jesse)

'If commodities break, or even just stop their relentless rise, equity markets should do well,' he wrote. 'If they continue to move steadily higher, they have the potential to destabilize the global economy. We are already seeing unrest in many countries due to the soaring prices of rice and other grains.'

The weak dollar is another culprit of the commodity cycle, Miller said. However, he noted that the stage is set for 'what should be an improving environment for investors in stocks and in spread credit products. (Yes, things are looking just great. He's full steam ahead into the heart of a perfect financial storm like the skipper of the Andrea Gail - Jesse)

'Our portfolio, in my opinion, is in excellent shape, despite, or more accurately because of, its performance,' Miller said. 'Prices have declined substantially more than business values.'

Legg Mason Fund Hits 26 Year Low - Washington Post - April 5, 2008

The fund's top 10 holdings as of March 31 are Amazon.com Inc. at 6.5%, AES Corp. at 6.4%, JPMorgan Chase and Co. at 5%, Aetna Inc. at 4.9%, UnitedHealth Group Inc. at 4.5%, Yahoo Inc. at 4.4%, eBay Inc. at 4.2%, General Electric Co. at 4%, Sears Holding Corp. at 4%, and Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. at 3.5%.

The Legg Mason Value Trust dropped 19.7% in the quarter, compared with a loss of 9.4% for the S&P 500.

Shares of Baltimore-based Legg Mason were up 55 cents, or almost 1%, at $58.62.

Katherine Hunt

Legg Mason's Bill Miller Says 'The Worst is Over' - Forbes

We were going to give Bill the Pigman of the Week Award but the pigs started to complain.


US Financials Slump As Bond Insurer Ambac Hit by Fresh Subprime Losses


Ambac shares hit after $3bn loss warning
By Aline van Duyn and Stacy-Marie Ishmael in New York
Wednesday Apr 23 2008 12:50
Financial Times

Ambac Financial (NYSE:ABK) lost more than a third of its stock market value on Wednesday as the bond insurer warned that potential losses related to mortgage-backed securities could reach more than $3bn, vastly more than expected.

The company's ability to retain its crucial triple A credit ratings is again under question amid concerns that credit ratings agencies may require Ambac to raise a new round of fresh capital. (The fact that they even have it is the equivalent of a financial blasphemy in taking the name of creditworthiness in vain - Jesse)

Tamara Kravec, analyst at Bank of America, said: "It is realistic to assume that Ambac could fall short of ratings agency capital requirements.

"Concerns over the prospects for new business and a cloud of uncertainty over the magnitude of future potential [mortgage] losses will likely continue to put pressure on the shares."

Shares in Ambac fell to their lowest level. By midday in New York, the shares were down 35 per cent to $3.90. MBIA (NYSE:MBI) , the biggest bond insurer, was also hit, and its shares fell nearly 24 per cent to $10.15.

The potential knock-on effects of downgrades have caused concerns for regulators and banks. Bonds worth more than $1,000bn are guaranteed by Ambac and MBIA, and these could be downgraded if they lose their triple A ratings.

Ambac raised $1.5bn in capital last month, just in time to stave off cuts to its triple A ratings by Moody's Investors Service and Standard & Poor's. Fitch Ratings has cut Ambac's rating to double A, and all the agencies have a "negative outlook" for the group.

Ambac's first-quarter net loss of $1.7bn, or $11.69 a share, compared with a net income of $213m, or $2.04 a share, in the same period a year ago. Analysts polled by Thomson Financial forecast a loss of $1.51 a share in the first quarter.

The bond insurer incurred $940.4m in losses on collateralised debt obligations backed primarily by residential mortgages, and a total mark-to-market loss on credit derivative exposures of $1.7bn. CDOs are pools of debts that are sliced into tranches of varying risks and returns.

Ambac, which said it had been "severely impacted" by sharp declines in the value of mortgage securities, will also reserve $1bn to provide against further losses on these securities.

Michael Callen, interim chief executive of Ambac, admitted that "earlier expectations have turned out to be optimistic".

He said it was still not possible to be certain how large losses on mortgage-backed assets would be, amid continuing high levels of foreclosures across the US.

The uncertainty over the bond insurer's health and strategic direction has undermined its core business - guaranteeing debt issued by lower-rated municipalities, such as schools and local governments.

Ambac's shares had already lost more than 90 per cent of their value before the results.

Mr Callen said "the capital raised and strategic business actions taken during the quarter will enable us to get beyond this credit market."

Ambac Financial Hit By Subprime Losses

Top Financial Institutions in US Residential Mortgages


Source: National Mortgage News



22 April 2008

Shadow Exchanges for the Shadow Financial System: Dark Pools


Here's the latest twist on market manipulation in a financial system gone completely out of control. One 'secret' market for big players to trade where they do not have to report the price or volume, and another retail market where the small players show their cards and their orders up front.

If you are not a trader the full impact of this might not dawn on you right away. But it puts the retail investor/trader at a significant disadvantage to a few insiders who can 'see' the dark pool action, and use it to front run the slower and less informed retail exchanges.


Rise in secret stock trading may be skewering share prices
So-called dark pools of liquidity help large investors hide trades; they could also be roiling markets, some say

April 21, 2008

(Reuters)—A new obsession by big investors with veiling their stock trading patterns is rewriting the rules of the stock market, but some are questioning if the trend, for all its secrecy and sophistication, has created as many problems as it has solved.

The stealthy but rapid growth of off-exchange trading venues, known as dark pools of liquidity, may be playing a bigger role in the market than some expected.

Only a few years ago, investors could count on one hand the number of places to trade stocks in, for example, U.S. companies.

But today traders must navigate a virtual ocean of more than 40 venues to find the best prices—a phenomenon that may be adding to overall volatility and possibly compromising the validity of all stock prices.

In dark pools, where buyers and sellers anonymously match large stock orders keeping details about price and volume concealed, there is no guarantee that even big investors are getting the prices they should.

“My biggest concern with dark pools is that before, when you were using the Big Board as somewhat of a standard, you were trading with some level of information, and now in dark pools you are trading without information,” said Bob Koci, a trader with Principal Global Investors.

Investors have become accustomed to knowing the quoted price on traditional stock exchanges like the New York Stock Exchange, or Big Board, and Nasdaq, is generally fair and the best available at any point in time. But as trades are increasingly fragmented across different venues, making such assumptions in the future could be dicey.

“On one hand, there are trades being executed right now that would not be executed without dark pools,” said Robert Iati, a partner at market technology consulting firm The Tabb Group in New York.

“On the other hand, you can say it’s not visible and that makes it more volatile.”

Some investors have always looked for ways to hide their cards, such as slicing a large block trade into smaller pieces, or placing a reserve order that displays a small amount of liquidity while keeping a larger amount hidden. However, recent advances in electronic trading and the 2001 switch to trading stocks in dollars and cents instead of fractions are credited with pushing traders into more secretive venues.

As investors found it increasingly difficult to trade discreetly on open markets, the average size of a stock trade on an exchange fell from close to 1,500 shares per trade a decade ago, to just 250 today, Tabb’s Mr. Iati noted. That trend developed at the same time hedge funds and institutional investors found it profitable to make riskier, more leveraged bets at faster speeds, he said.

“Indirectly, you have the market structure changing,” Mr. Iati said. “Now it is much more challenging overall for any investor to make money like they did 10 years ago in the plain-vanilla U.S. markets.”

Alternative, off-exchange trading systems, ranging from dark pools to electronic networks were set up rapidly to address demand. Some pools are sponsored by brokers like Goldman Sachs’s Sigma X, while others such as Liquidnet and BATS Trading were created independently or as joint ventures. Now even the exchanges are setting up their own pools to remain competititive.(Gee sounds great. Only Goldman Sachs sees the total market. Perfect - Jesse)

In dark pools, traders looking to buy or sell large blocks of stock get something akin to a wholesale discount.

When investors see a large buy order on a public exchange, they often jump in and bid up the price of the stock, assuming a big trader is making a strong bet about its direction. But if the trader who made the order is still trying to fill it, the price for the stock can move against him, adding to costs.

Hiding the bid from the public markets in a dark pool offers traders the ability to fill an order without suffering the impact of other traders changing the price.

Trades in dark pools are now estimated to account for some 10 to 12% of all stock trades, and consulting firm The Aite Group predicts that by 2011 dark pools will encompass more than 20% of market share in the United States.

But reaching such a critical volume of stock trades, could begin to affect the basic supply and demand equations used to price stocks, analysts say, as investors’ true feelings about how a stock should be traded are hidden.

NYSE President Catherine Kinney summarized the problem at a 2006 conference, saying every share traded in dark pools was one that did not help the markets determine an accurate price for that stock.

And while analysts cautioned recent market volatility is mostly due to economic worries and the subprime mortgage crisis, many said it is possible that hidden trades in dark pools are contributing to the storm.

“Lack of a central marketplace can add to volatility,” said Andrew Silverman, managing director of electronic trading at Morgan Stanley .

According to the Aite Group, stock trading on the NYSE and Nasdaq represented just 75% of average daily trading volume in the third quarter of 2007, down 5 percent from the second quarter of 2006.

Investors can also react more quickly in dark pools because they don’t have to splice and dice an order and trade it throughout the day. (Yes and it makes it MUCH easier to front run the retail exchanges if you know how things are moving in the dark pools - Jesse)

But on the flip side, no study has been published on whether dark pools increase volatility, or decrease it by limiting the market impact of trades.

“There’s kind of a mixed verdict on dark pools,” said Craig Pirrong, a finance professor at the University of Houston’s Bauer College of Business. “On one hand they provide competition (for exchanges), on the other they probably reduce the quality of price discovery marketplaces like the New York Stock Exchange.”

When traders meet in a dark pool, they are not necessarily looking to get the best price on their stock trade, but rather, the most efficient execution so they can limit market impact.

However, the execution price for trades in dark pools is actually derived from public quotes on exchanges, so dark pool traders are essentially “free riding” on the way public market investors price their transaction.

“If a retail customer puts in an order that is very well priced, and it becomes the best price available, all of a sudden, all these investors in dark pools have to trade off of that price,” said Bernard Donefer, Associate Director of the Subotnick Financial Services Center at Baruch College in New York. “The national best bid offer could be created by small retail investors. It used to be the opposite. It used to be that the institutional investors set the price and the retail investors got that price.” (Where is Joe Schmerky setting the price for mega-trades between Berkshire and Goldman Sachs? On Fantasy Island that's where you knucklehead - Jesse)

While some analysts say arbitrage traders would jump in and fix discrepancies between dark pool and exchange prices, it could become increasingly difficult for investors to assume the quoted exchange price takes into account all the trading information about the stock.

“The theory is if you keep it confidential you get the better price,” said Frederick Lipman, a corporate and securities lawyer at Blank Rome in Philadelphia.

“Whether that’s true or not remains to be seen.” (Its the guy who has the most and latest information that gets the best of all deals. - Jesse)


Rise in Secret Stock Trading May Be Skewering Prices

Pictures from an Exhibition of Reckless Financial Speculation


Five Banks have taken on the leverage normally reserved for hedge funds, placing the US dollar and the entire financial system at risk, and essentially holding it hostage to carry their losses while they take their profits.

They are JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America, Citibank, Wachovia, and HSBC.

JP Morgan alone is holding derivatives with a value of $84.8 Trillion. Yes they have netted that down, provided there are no significant counterparty failures in which case that netting goes to hell in a handbasket. Their credit exposure to capital ratio is 418.7. This gearing is priced to the perfection of a lossless countertrade with nothing even reasonably expected on the tails. They make LTCM almost look like grannies when to comes to being a risk-loving beta monster.

This is why their counterparty Bear Stearns had to be bailed out with public money. There are a few others to keep a close eye on including Merrill and Lehman with their derivatives exposures although they are not in the top five.

This is why its not over yet.

There are two classes of financial institutions in trouble. Those that are 'too big to fail' and those that are 'too big to mention the word failure in the same sentence.' The top five derivatives speculators are in the latter category.

This debate among deflation, stagflation, hyperinflation and disinflation ought to be expanded to include financial obliteration.

The source for these graphs is the latest report from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency OCC Dec. 07 Report

If the Federal Reserve had taken over supervision from the OCC as Secretary Paulson recommended, do you think we would be seeing such detailed reports on the concentration of risk in five financial market players? Or would they be skulking to the Discount Window to try and hold their books together with public money without any disclosure?








Japan's Hunger: the Dark Side of Globalization and Central Planning


Food shortages in Japan?

File this one under the divergence between the world of paper and the world of reality. And perhaps under moral hazard and unintended consequences of distorted markets and the failure of markets when they are free in name only, being over-adjusted in the grasp of the central planning of bureaucrats for sustained periods of time. Japan has not had a free market in decades, being the shining example of industrial policy focused on exports of manufactured goods, to the detriment of the rest of the economy. Let them eat Toyotas.


The Age - Australia
Business, Finance and Market News
Japan's hunger becomes a dire warning for other nations
Justin Norrie, Tokyo
April 21, 2008

MARIKO Watanabe admits she could have chosen a better time to take up baking. This week, when the Tokyo housewife visited her local Ito-Yokado supermarket to buy butter to make a cake, she found the shelves bare.

"I went to another supermarket, and then another, and there was no butter at those either. Everywhere I went there were notices saying Japan has run out of butter. I couldn't believe it — this is the first time in my life I've wanted to try baking cakes and I can't get any butter," said the frustrated cook.

Japan's acute butter shortage, which has confounded bakeries, restaurants and now families across the country, is the latest unforeseen result of the global agricultural commodities crisis.

A sharp increase in the cost of imported cattle feed and a decline in milk imports, both of which are typically provided in large part by Australia, have prevented dairy farmers from keeping pace with demand.

While soaring food prices have triggered rioting among the starving millions of the third world, in wealthy Japan they have forced a pampered population to contemplate the shocking possibility of a long-term — perhaps permanent — reduction in the quality and quantity of its food.

A 130% rise in the global cost of wheat in the past year, caused partly by surging demand from China and India and a huge injection of speculative funds into wheat futures, has forced the Government to hit flour millers with three rounds of stiff mark-ups. The latest — a 30% increase this month — has given rise to speculation that Japan, which relies on imports for 90% of its annual wheat consumption, is no longer on the brink of a food crisis, but has fallen off the cliff.

According to one government poll, 80% of Japanese are frightened about what the future holds for their food supply.

Last week, as the prices of wheat and barley continued their relentless climb, the Japanese Government discovered it had exhausted its ¥230 billion ($A2.37 billion) budget for the grains with two months remaining. It was forced to call on an emergency ¥55 billion reserve to ensure it could continue feeding the nation.

"This was the first time the Government has had to take such drastic action since the war," said Akio Shibata, an expert on food imports, who warned the Agriculture Ministry two years ago that Japan would have to cut back drastically on its sophisticated diet if it did not become more self-sufficient.

In the wake of the decision this week by Kazakhstan, the world's fifth biggest wheat exporter, to join Russia, Ukraine and Argentina in stopping exports to satisfy domestic demand, the situation in Japan is expected to worsen.

Bakeries, forced to increase prices by up to 30% in the past year, are warning that the trend will continue. Manufacturers of miso, a culinary staple, are preparing to pass on the bump in costs caused by the rising price of soybeans and cooking oil. And the nation's largest brewer, Kirin, is lifting beer prices for the first time in almost two decades to account for the soaring cost of barley.

"In the past, Japan was a rich country with a powerful yen that could easily buy cheap imports such as wheat, corn and soybeans," said Mr Shibata, who directs the Marubeni Research Institute in Tokyo. "But with enormous competition from the booming Chinese and Indian economies, that's changed forever. You also need to take into account recent developments, including the damage to crops caused by drought and other disasters in exporting countries like Australia," where the value of wheat exports has tumbled from $3.49 billion to $2.77 billion in the past three years.

The situation has been compounded by a surge in demand for bio-fuels such as ethanol, made from maize, encouraging farmers around the world to divert their efforts away from wheat and barley and into maize, further driving up prices.

Arguably Japan's biggest concern, however, is its weakening ability to sustain its population with domestic produce. In 2006 the country's self-sufficiency rate fell to 39%, according to the Agriculture Ministry. It was only the second time since the ministry began keeping records in 1960 that the population derived less than 40% of its daily calorie intake from domestically grown food.

Shinichi Shogenji, dean of the University of Tokyo's graduate school of agricultural and life sciences, said Japan's meat consumption had increased by 900% since 1955, in part because expanding incomes had enabled families to supplement the sparse national diet of rice, fish and miso soup with more Western-style food.

This trend, combined with rapid ageing and declining rural populations, had placed the country's self-sufficiency at a perilously low level, Professor Shogenji said.

In view of recent predictions by Goldman Sachs analysts that commodities could experience "explosive rallies" in the next two years, many are wondering if Japan could become an example to other rich nations that have relied too much on foreign supplies to put food on their tables.

Japan's Hunger Becomes a Dire Warning

21 April 2008

Why Gold is Not in a Bubble


A nicely done analysis by Paul Krugman, economist of Princeton, in The New York Times.

What Paul does fail to mention is the significant decline of the dollar tends to inflate the prices of all commodities and products not produced in domestic US or sold openly in world markets, and that commodities are significantly and increasingly the case, a triumph of the service economy. Further, the inputs to costs of extracting/producing those commodities are soaring because of the general inflation of energy products.

So even if the price had increased while the supply remained steady, or even increased, a case could be made for commodities priced in dollars that they are still not in a bubble because the US dollar is in a bubble of supply.

However, this brings us to the interesting anomaly. Why is metals production not increasing with the dramatic increases in prices?

Some say that gold and silver were actively priced suppressed by the paper markets in NY and Chicago for many years, with huge short positions keeping the benefits of adding sources of supply artificially low. So now we are paying the price, since it takes years to bring new supply, new mines, into production.

But that's Moral Hazard and Unintended Consequences, and we are told to ignore them, as Josef Goebbels told the German people to disregard the bombs falling on Berlin. And for now, we listen, and go forward into the night.

Moral Hazard: A dilemma that arises when government officials take steps to bail out countries or businesses that are in serious financial trouble. Although the action may help prevent widespread financial turmoil, thereby protecting innocent parties, it creates an expectation that governments will always come to the aid of failing countries and companies, potentially increasing risky behavior because there is no penalty. Webster's Dictionary

Since free markets and capitalism are based on the principle of discovering price and managing risk, the greatest hazard ultimately is that we will lose our free markets, and essentially lose that which we think we have based our market economy upon, until of course we hit the wall and collapse, in our markets or as a republic.

Commodities and speculation: metallic (and other) evidence
by Paul Krugman
April 20, 2008, 9:49 am
The NY Times

We’ve had a huge runup in commodity prices — fuels, food, metals. But why? Broadly, the debate is between those who see it as a speculative phenomenon, driven by some combination of low interest rates and irrational exuberance, and those who see it as a collision of rapidly growing demand with constrained supply.

My problem with the speculative stories is that they all depend on something that holds production — or at least potential production — off the market. The key point is that the spot price equalizes the demand and supply of a commodity; speculation can drive up the futures price, but the spot price will only follow if the higher futures prices somehow reduces the quantity available for final consumers. The usual channel for this is an increase in inventories, as investors hoard the stuff in expectation of a higher price down the road. If this doesn’t happen — if the spot price doesn’t follow the futures price — then futures will presumably come down, as it turns out that buying futures produces losses.

Which brings me to this chart, from the IMF’s World Economic Outlook:



Bubble, bubble, where’ the bubble?

As far as I can see, this creates real problems for any claim that high metal prices are speculatively driven. Food inventories are also historically low. I just don’t see how a low-interest-rate or bubble story works here.




Paul Krugman in the NY Times


US Dollar Crisis Gathers Pace: One Night in Bangkok Makes a Hard Man Humble


Ironic to hear about the worsening global financial crisis triggered by the US dollar from The Nation, Bangkok's business daily.

We're trying to obtain a copy of this "authoritative report" which Thailand's Largest Business Daily reference. Odd they never mention the title or author.

The irony of hearing about the dollar crisis from the home of the Thai baht, the currency that brought low the careers of many a trader including Victor Niederhoffer, is just too ironic. And now is it the dollar's turn? And will the poor unsuspecting US public finally hear about the source of their pricing problems from Thailand? No word in the US media. Its a mystery.

"Oh how are the mighty fallen..." 2 Samuel 1:27

"One night in Bangkok makes a hard man humble
Not much between despair and ecstasy
One night in Bangkok and the tough guys tumble
Can't be too careful with your company
I can feel the devil walking next to me."

FINANCIAL TURMOIL
Breakdown of dollar system ' gathers pace'
Full-blown US balance of payments crisis also looms

April 18, 2008
The Nation - Thailand's Business Daily

The US is experiencing a breakdown of the dollar system that is similar to the 1971 breakdown of the Bretton Woods system of international monetary management, says an authoritative US financial report.

"The breakdown of the US-dollar system has gone from slow to moderate in pace, and there is a significant risk of an acceleration in the coming months," said the report which was released earlier this month.

With extreme provisions of liquidity [by the Fed] investors are now extremely bearish for the dollar, which still has ample room to fall further.

"While the global nature of financial markets means that financial problems are affecting every major developed economy, the US consumer is at the centre of this current crisis," it said.

"The change from having extremely easy access to credit to almost none has been most extreme in the US. All the entities that rely on the US consumer, from smaller US businesses to US commercial real estate to municipalities, are under significant strain. In aggregate, the amount of US-dollar-denominated debt that is trading at historically high spreads is huge, and it is likely that the Fed (and the US government) will have a lot more heavy lifting to do to keep the financial system and the economy from a severe contraction.

"The implications for the balance of payments are very negative as well, and the US is at the edge of a full-blown balance-of-payments crisis."

Despite the magnitude of the financial crisis, the US faces the daunting prospect of attracting foreign capital with its economy contracting.

Last year, foreign and sovereign funds were quick to snap up distressed US assets at bargain value, but they may have moved in too quickly.

"Ultimately, the US balance-of-payments situation means that either a combination of a deep contraction in US consumption and a much larger decline in the dollar will occur or American households will keep going deeper into debt. But American households can't keep going into debt, because they can't handle the debts they [already] have, and lenders don't want to continue to aggressively lend to them," the report said.

It concluded that either an intolerable economic contraction or a deep decline in the dollar would have to occur and speculated that the economic contraction could be 6-8 per cent. The dollar's decline would have to be mostly against the currencies of emerging markets.

The report said the gap in incomes between workers in the US (and other mature industrialised countries) and those in emerging countries, now about 15 to 1, would have to narrow.

The nominal value of the dollar has declined about 27 per cent since 2002, and those who save their money in dollars have lost their savings.

"It is not hard to question the US dollar as a [means of storing] wealth when you have lost 25 per cent or more of that wealth in as little as six years," it said.

An implication of the US dollar breakdown is that there are opportunities in emerging market currencies. Thailand and other emerging-market countries have been maintaining relatively weak currencies in order to boost export competitiveness. But the US conditions are forcing these countries to readjust their currencies toward the upside.

As for the baht, the Bank of Thailand has been intervening in the foreign-exchange market to keep the nominal effective exchange rate (NEER) of the currency stable. The NEER is calculated from a trade-weighted exchange rate between the baht and 25 major currencies, mainly those of Thailand's export markets and its export competitors.

Supavud Saicheua of Phatra Securities wrote in a report last Friday that Thailand's NEER was relatively stable.

"The baht is nominally 21 per cent weaker today than it was prior to the economic crisis in 1997. "However, the real effective exchange rate (REER) is drifting upwards and now only 13 per cent below the precrisis level (the REER is the same as the NEER, except it incorporates inflation differences between Thailand and the other 25 trading partners)," he wrote.

"In short, the REER suggests the Thai economy has been inflating at a faster rate than these countries over the past several years," Supavud added.

US Dollar Crisis Gather's Pace


20 April 2008

Our Financial Sickness - First, Do No Harm


Today we present an excerpt from Doug Noland's weekly Credit Bubble Bulletin. This week Doug is responding to an op-ed piece by Marty Feldstein which suggests that the Fed ought to stop decreasing interest rates now.

We agreed with Feldstein's proposal for what we 'think' are the same reasons, and had come to the same conclusion some time ago. By lowering interest rates so precipitously, the Fed has taken a broad brush to solve a problem that might better have been addressed by a more selective remedy, which in some ways the Fed undertook with the opening of the Discount Window and the bailout Bear Stearns, although we disagree with specifics as we have already related.

The overall lowering of rates 'helps' the real economy which is also in a recession. The additional collapse of the credit Ponzi scheme by the banks is a significant complicating factor. We believe the recession we are entering is the child of past Fed actions in attempting to ameliorate prior financial slumps.

Clearly the Fed had a policy decision to make, and their decision was to throw the long term concerns and principles to the wind, and give a full force effort to holding the banking system together, inflation be damned. Anyone who suggests they have been conservative would probably like to see our economy run more like an Old West card game called Faro.

Doug suggests one step in addition to Marty's and that is that the Fed should increase interest rates now presumably to fight inflation and to strengthen the dollar, lowering commodity prices.

We've included Doug's entire argument because we wanted to make sure we had it right, since we're operating on short timeframes this weekend. What Doug is prescribing is to take the patient, which was brought in with an acute appendicitis, and after the Fed has removed it with a garden shovel, to take a cattle prod and try to get the patient back on its feet.

Nothing could more closely fulfill Jefferson's warning of 'first through inflation and then through deflation' the money controlling powers would destroy the middle class, making it serfs in the nation their forefathers created out of wilderness. Now that the speculative class have gained the bulk of the wealth, let's allow them to keep it, and make it all the more valuable through deflation, putting the middle class into early graves, for really little or no gain for the country. What good is a strong dollar when the real economy is in deep depression, and only a privileged few have them?

We are going to suggest, carefully we hope since Doug is a friend and a highly respected analyst, that raising rates now is the just counterpart, the flip side of the coin, to the mistake the Fed has made.

Using interest rates, the public money supply, to address a problem specific to the banking sector, a massive and pervasive case of credit fraud and at best the unintended consequence of irrational regulation and almost sociopathic venality, just once again uses the public as a bludgeon to try and hammer down the problem like a nightmarish game of whack-a-bubble. There needs to be an effort to specifically 'fix' the bank system, not by repair by through reform. Any remedy just keeps the game going is making the patient more feeble and imbalanced, requiring a more stringent and risky remedy at the end.

Put simply, anything that does not reform the banking system as part of the program, even in the near term, just compounds the problem through unintended consequences, with the larger public taking it right in the neck.

We thought the Naked Capitalist made a well thought proposal even better and more specific than the one which we had put forward some weeks ago.

1. Force as much OTC activity as has reasonable trading volume onto exchanges. That means at a minimum interest rate swaps, currency swaps, and credit default swaps. Yes, this will require standardization and some buyers will lose access to variants they might have liked. Too bad. Protecting the economy and the taxpayer is more important than indulging every investor’s pet need.

This of course will also considerably lower the profitability of the industry. Again, too bad. They screwed up and cost the populace a ton of dough. There are consequences for mistakes of that magnitude. They should consider themselves lucky not to have been subject to public beheadings.

Lower profits for banks has positive consequences. It means less talent and other resources are sucked into the FIRE economy (and remember, the FI in that equation are at best service providers to the real economy, and worse, when they become too large, parasites).

2. Prohibit off balance sheet vehicles.

3. Prohibit Level 3 assets; allow only Level 1 and strictly defined and audited Level 2 assets. This means regulators will not have anything overly arcane to assess; they ought to be able to get a clear picture of risks, processes, and exposures if they are dogged.

4. Prohibit these regulated institutions from lending, providing other funding, or investing in concerns that have Level 3 assets.

Hedge funds would continue to be unregulated. I might also prohibit any unregulated entity from going public. Speculators playing with investors’ money is tempting enough; having them have even less skin in the game via a public floatation makes it easier for them to get so large as to pose a danger. Yes, this can create problems of succession, but Wall Street dealt with it for a hundred years or so. These guys ought to be smart enough to figure it out.

I’d also have pretty draconian penalties for breaking the rules, the sort that can have individuals involved and their supervisors forfeit a lot of dough and go to jail.

Thus I’m not as pessimistic about the ability to leash and collar the industry, perhaps because I lived in it briefly when it was more heavily regulated and it functioned much better for society as a whole than it does now. And the bankers still made a very nice living, although nowhere near as egregious as the pay scales of late. The real constraint is political will, and I don’t think things have gotten bad enough yet for the public to demand an end to rule by finance. But that attitude will change if real estate prices fall another 10%.

We would go a step or two further, but this would be a great start. We need to separate the capital allocation system from the speculation system. We need to place strong accountability in the speculation system, in a sense firewalling off the real economy from the excesses of easy money speculation.

Is it really all that simple? Yes, it is. But it will be made to seem complex and dangerous because the banks fought against Glass-Steagall for years, and spent hundreds of millions doing it, to have the type of system exactly which we have today. They wish to be able to tap Other People's Money (OPM) in order to socialize their losses, while keeping inordinate gains and accumulate fabulous wealth when they are right.

And they will continue to corrupt the country as collateral damage to the national intellect by distorting reality and buying the best minds, until the republic is a shell of itself. Such is the work of parasites, which is exactly the type of unproductive and madly inefficient financial system which we have today.


Setting the Backdrop for Stage Two
by Doug Noland

Martin Feldstein, Harvard professor and former chairman of the President’s Council of Economic Advisors, wrote an op-ed piece in Wednesday’s Wall Street Journal – “Enough with Interest Rate Cuts” – worthy of comment.


“It’s time for the Federal Reserve to stop reducing the federal funds rate, because the likely benefit is small compared to the potential damage. Lower interest rates could raise the already high prices of energy and food, which are already triggering riots in developing countries. In order to offset the inflationary impact of higher imported commodity prices, central banks in those countries may raise interest rates. Such contractionary policies would reduce real incomes and exacerbate political instability.

The impact of low interest rates on commodity-price inflation is different from the traditional inflationary effect of easy money. The usual concern is that lowering interest rates stimulates economic activity to a point at which labor and product markets cause wages and prices to rise. That is unlikely to happen in the U.S. in the coming year. The general weakness of the economy will keep most wages and prices from rising more rapidly. But high unemployment and low capacity utilization would not prevent lower interest rates from driving up commodity prices.

Many factors have contributed to the recent rise in the prices of oil and food, especially the increased demand from China, India and other rapidly growing countries. Lower interest rates also add to the upward pressure on these commodity prices – by making it less costly for commodity investors and commodity speculators to hold larger inventories of oil and food grains. Lower interest rates induce investors to add commodities to their portfolios. When rates are low, portfolio investors will bid up the prices of oil and other commodities to levels at which the expected future returns are in line with the lower rates. An interest rate-induced rise in the price of oil also contributes indirectly to higher prices of food grains. It does so by making it profitable for farmers to devote more farm land to growing corn for ethanol.”

While I concur with the basic premise of the article (stop the cuts!), the substance of Mr. Feldstein’s analysis leaves much to be desired. First of all, I find it strange than he would address the issues of overly accommodative Federal Reserve policy, commodity price risk, and inflationary pressures without so much as a cursory mention of our weak currency. The word “dollar” is nowhere to be found – not a mention of our Current Account Deficits. The focus is only on interest rates - and such one-dimensional analysis just doesn’t pass muster in our complex world.

Most remain comfortably oblivious to today’s inflation dynamics. Mr. Feldstein mentions increased demand from China and India. He seems to imply, however, that portfolio buying (financed by low interest rates) by “commodity investors and speculators” is providing the major impetus to rising inflationary pressures generally. Perhaps price gains could have something to do with the $2.5 TN increase in global official reserve positions over the past two years (85% growth). I would also counter that destabilizing speculative activity is an inevitable consequence – rather than a cause - of an alarmingly inflationary global backdrop.

I’ll remind readers that we live in a unique world of unregulated Credit. Excess has evolved to the point of being endemic to an apparatus that operates without any mechanism for adjustment or self-correction. There is, of course, no gold reserve system to restrain domestic monetary expansions. Some years back the dollar-based Bretton Woods global monetary regime lost its relevance.

And, importantly, the market-based disciplining mechanism (“king dollar”) that emerged at times to ruthlessly punish financial profligacy around the globe throughout the nineties has morphed into a dysfunctional dynamic that these days nurtures self-reinforcing excesses. The “recycling” of our “Bubble dollars” (in the process inflating local Credit systems, asset markets, commodities and economies across the globe) directly back into our securities markets rests at the epicenter of Global Monetary Dysfunction.

A historic inflation in dollar financial claims was the undoing of anything resembling a global monetary system, and now this anchorless “system” of wildcat finance is the bane of financial and economic stability. To be sure, massive and unrelenting U.S. Current Account Deficits and resulting dollar impairment have unleashed domestic Credit systems around the globe to expand uncontrollably. Today, virtually any major Credit system can and does inflate domestic Credit to create the purchasing power to procure inflating global food, energy, and commodities prices.

The long-overdue U.S. Credit contraction and economic adjustment could change this dynamic. But for now there are reasons to expect this uninhibited Global Credit Bubble to instead run to precarious extremes - and for resulting Monetary Disorder to become increasingly problematic. Destabilizing price movements and myriad inflationary effects are poised to worsen. The specter of yet another year of near-$800bn Current Account Deficits coupled with huge speculative flows out of dollars is just too much for an acutely overheated and unstable global currency and economic “system” to cope with.

I hear pundits still referring to a “deflationary Credit collapse.” Well, the U.S. Credit system implosion was largely stopped in its tracks last month. The Fed bailed out Bear Stearns; opened wide its discount window to Wall Street; and implemented unprecedented liquidity facilities for the benefit of the marketplace overall. Central banks around the globe executed unparalleled concerted market liquidity operations. Here at home, the GSEs’ regulator spoke publicly about Fannie and Freddie having the capacity to add $200 billion of mortgages to their balances sheets, with the possibility of increasing their guarantee business as much as $2 TN this year (certainly including “jumbo” mortgages). The Federal Home Loan Bank system was given the ok to continue aggressive liquidity injections and balloon its balance sheet in the process. And now (see “GSE Watch” above) we see that the Federal Housing Administration (with its new mandate and $729,550 loan limit) is likely to increase federal government mortgage insurance by as much as $200bn this year, while Washington’s Ginnie Mae is in the midst of a securitization boom.

Together, the Fed and Washington have effectively nationalized a large portion of both mortgage and market liquidity risk. It is, as well, worth noting that JPMorgan Chase expanded assets by $80.7bn during the first quarter (20.7% annualized) to $1.642 TN, with six-month growth of $163.3bn (22.1% annualized). Goldman Sachs expanded its balance sheets by $69.2bn during Q1 (24.7% annualized) to $1.189 TN, with half-year growth of $143.2bn (27.4%). Even Wells Fargo grew assets at an almost 14% pace this past quarter. And we know that Bank Credit overall has expanded at a 12.6% rate over the past 38 weeks. Meanwhile, GSE MBS issuance has been ramped up to a record pace. And let’s not forget the Credit intermediation function now being carried out by the money fund complex – with assets having increased an unprecedented $371bn y-t-d (41.3% annualized) and $900bn over the past 38 weeks (47.7% annualized). It is also worth noting the $184bn y-t-d increase (29% annualized) in foreign “custody” holdings held at the Fed. Sure, the Credit system remains under significant stress, with additional mortgage and corporate Credit deterioration in the offing. But, at least for now, policymakers have successfully stemmed systemic deleveraging. The Credit system is simply not in deflationary collapse mode.

I could not be more pessimistic with regard to our economy’s prognosis. And certainly much more severe Credit problems lay ahead. I could argue further that recent Credit system developments are indeed consistent with the unfolding “worst-case scenario”. Yet I tend this evening to see benefits from analyzing the current backdrop in terms of the conclusion of the first Stage of the Crisis. The key aspect of this “first Stage” was a breakdown in Wall Street’s highly leveraged risk intermediation and securities speculation markets. The speed and force of the unwind was extraordinary and in notable contrast to traditional banking crises that track real economy developments. “Resolution” came only through the Federal Reserve and federal government assuming unprecedented risk – and at a cost of a policymaking mix of interest-rate cuts, marketplace interventions, and government guarantees. It is worth pondering some of the near-term ramifications.

First of all – and as the market recognized this week – yields have been driven to excessively low levels. Fed funds are today ridiculously priced in comparison both to the inflationary backdrop and to global rates. Mr. Feldstein is calling for a halt to rate cuts when it would be more appropriate for the Fed to move immediately to return rates to a more reasonable level. They, of course, would not contemplate as much. So I will presume that today’s non-imploding Credit system – replete with government-backed mortgage securitizations, government-guaranteed bank Credit, presumed government-backstopped money funds and a recovering debt issuance apparatus – will suffice in the near-term in generating Credit sufficient to perpetuate our enormous Current Account Deficits. This is no minor point.

I have in past Bulletins made the case that U.S. Credit and Economic Bubbles had become untenable – the scope of Credit and risk intermediation necessary to support the maladjusted economy had become too large. Extraordinary measures to effectively “nationalize” mortgage and market liquidity risk change somewhat the direction of the analysis. I would today argue that the risk of a precipitous economic downturn has been reduced in the near-term. As a consequence, U.S. Credit growth could surprise on the upside with risks to global Price Instability increasing markedly.

I would argue firmly that – in the face of a rapidly weakening economic backdrop - global inflation dynamics coupled with our highly maladjusted economy ensure intractable trade deficits. I would further argue that the current inflationary backdrop will prove an impetus to Credit creation – that then begets only more heightened inflationary pressures. There are certainly indications that the over-liquefied global “system” is not well situated today to handle more dollar liquidity (akin to throwing gas on a fire). Inflation and its consequences have quickly become major issues around the world.

With crude hitting a record $117 today, there is every reason to expect that newly created global liquidity will further inflate energy, food, and commodity prices generally. The Goldman Sachs Commodities index has gained 21% already this year. But when it comes to Monetary Instability, our financial markets might just prove the unappreciated wildcard. When the Fed and Washington radically altered the rules of U.S. finance last month, they placed in jeopardy huge positions that had been put in place to hedge against and profit from systemic crisis. With the end of “Stage one” arises a major short squeeze in the Credit, equities, and derivatives markets. And when it comes to contemplating the scope and ramifications of today’s “hedging” activities, we’re clearly in Uncharted Waters. It is not beyond reason that a disorderly unwind of “bearish” Credit market positions could incite a mini bout of liquidity, speculation, and Credit excess that exacerbates Global Monetary Instability - while Setting the Backdrop for Stage Two of the Crisis.

Doug Noland's Credit Bubble Bulletin

19 April 2008

Russia Buys Deliverable Gold and the Madness of Bankers


Here's an odd little story we have come across. Russia has purchased gold for its reserves directly from the gold producers, not from the interbank market, the central bank boys' club. This is the first time they have had to do this.

Significant?

Perhaps, if Russia found that there was not enough deliverable gold on the central interbank market to fill its needs, and had to find fresher sources of the physical metal at today's prices, rather than interbank IOU's.

As you recall, the G7 central banks have been selling their gold slowly but surely for quite a few years now, with some having sold most of their reserves. Apparently they do this to raise cash when their printing presses are trés fatigué.

Sometimes they have done it quite noisily and a little stupidly, as in the case of the Bank of England. A seller generally does not crush the price with clumsy announcements before they intend to sell. At least not the seller who seeks a fair price and a reasonable profit, especially when selling on consignment.

The IMF has pledged to sell the same 400 tonnes of gold about twenty times if memory serves. If they were paid for announcements of sale rather than actual sales, they would be simply rolling.

But some central banks have been buying, and building up their reserves, and strengthening their currencies for the future.

Perhaps this is nothing, and not even close to a significant development.

But it strikes a chord. The US has sold off its entire official store of silver which was enormous, and now must scramble in the open markets to buy actual silver for the Mint.

Spain has sold off its gold reserves entirely we hear. They are content to have a claim on Germany's gold. Even the frugal Swiss have been releasing their national savings of the barbarous relic. Einer für alle, alle für nichts.

Such are the changing fashions in the haute couture of bank reserves and monetary taste. Most of the banks in the US are already fashionably insolvent, with paper claims on paper claims, although we hear London is also vying for title to the financial grande dame (pun intended as 'grand lady' or 'big hurt') for the world.

La moneta è mobile, qual piuma al vento, muta d'accento — e di pensiero.

Its an interesting theme, the world of financial speculation diverging from the natural world, into a realm of self-absorbed arbitrariness. Almost like a form of collective madness among the bankers, with their mountains of derivatives and paper bets and claims on the same set of things over and over, coming up short in fits and starts, shakes and shudders, slips and the occasional stumbles.

Nearly had a nasty spill the other week when the dice came up unfavorably for one of the largest banks at the table. Some think this will frighten them into more conservative behaviour, eliminating the need for reform. We predict they will be back at the tables as though nothing had happened.

Sempre un'amabile, furtivo banca, in pianto o in riso, — è menzognero.

Who is mad, the savers and builders or those who gamble and consume into hopeless indebtedness? Who is mad, conservative banks or the massively-leveraged English-speaking banks? As Churchill would say, "KBO." For none dare call the Emperor naked.

Russia. The new hard money currency. Possible candidate for the world's reserve currency? Oh the irony!


Russia & CIS
11:23 GMT, Apr 18, 2008 Latest Headlines...

For first time, Central Bank buys gold from producers - source

MOSCOW. April 18 (Interfax) - For the first time, the Central Bank
of Russia purchased gold for its international reserves from gold
producers, a source in banking circles told Interfax.

Previously the Central Bank had always purchased gold on the
interbank market.

jh (Our editorial staff can be reached at eng.editors@interfax.ru)

Interfax - Russia Goes to the Producers to Buy Its Gold
Libretto
Rigoletto, Verdi
La donna è mobile
Qual piuma al vento,
Muta d'accento — e di pensiero.
Sempre un amabile,
Leggiadro viso,
In pianto o in riso, — è menzognero.


Woman is variable
Like a feather in the wind,
Changing her tone — and her mind.
Always sweet,
Pretty face,
In tears or in laughter, — always lying

18 April 2008

TGIF - Thank God Its FED'sday on Wall Street.....


Don't forget to count your blessings!

Have a GREAT weekend!





US Dollar (DX) Commitments of Traders as of April 15




Demystifying the TED Spread


TED is an acronym for Treasury and EuroDollar.

A Spread is just the difference or 'distance' between one thing and another.

Eurodollars are bank deposits denominated in U.S. dollars but held at locations outside of the U.S. Initially, the term only referred to dollar deposits in London but has been expanded to include dollar deposits at any offshore location. The deposits may be held by the foreign branches of U.S. banks or by non-U.S. banks. Eurodollar deposits may be Eurodollar certificates of deposit or simply Eurodollar time deposits.

T bills are US Treasury debt of short duration are considered to be risk free.

TED Spread = Yield on Eurodollar deposits - Yield on T Bills

The TED Spread is the difference between U.S. Treasury bill yields and yields for Euro deposit contracts of the same maturity, generally three months.

The theory is that US dollars held in offshore accounts are not subject to short term market activity and regulations by the Fed. They are a slightly better measure of the short term risk associated with holding dollars that are not US Treasuries.

The TED spread is used as a measure of investor confidence. Remember, for the individual components (T bills and Eurodollar deposits) the higher the yield the higher the perceived risk, the lower the yield the lower the perceived risk.

When the spread is small, investors are not requiring a large amount of additional compensation for the additional risk of deposits. This means the Eurodollar yield is lower, and closer to that of the T Bills.

When the spread is large, investors are demanding a higher yield on Eurodollars as compared to the higher quality of U.S. Treasury bills.

A sudden widening of the TED spread is indicative of a flight to quality and a perception of risk in corporate credit markets.

A rising TED spread at the extreme is thought to foretell a downturn in the U.S. stock market as liquidity is withdrawn from the equity markets. We think this is more of a confirming indication than a bellwether since analysis of the SP after extreme readings using TED alone is mixed. In that sense we would use it much as we would use VIX to indicate a period of high or low volatility and elevated or quiescent risk. Spreads by definition are indicators of risk.


TED Spread Chart on Bloomberg

17 April 2008

US Crackdown on Credit Card Fees Coming


Good news in general although our skeptical sense is that the Fed is trying to stall the Democrats' effort in this area which is likely to be a little more rigorous.

No wonder the Wall Street Banks were so anxious to get that Visa IPO out the door come hell or high water or another wave of credit defaults.

The tide seems to be receding for the credit vultures.


US crackdown on credit card fees seen by year-end
18 Apr, 2008, 0016 hrs
The Economic Times

WASHINGTON: The Federal Reserve will soon unveil a broader plan to protect consumers from abusive credit card practices than a proposal it issued last year, a Fed official told lawmakers on Thursday.

The Fed's new plan, which it hopes to finalize by December, would restrict retroactive rate increases and other fees that consumer groups and lawmakers have criticized as exorbitant. In February, U.S. House of Representatives Democrats introduced a bill to stop arbitrary interest rate increases, penalties for consumers who pay only a portion of their balances on time, and excessive fees charged by credit card issuers.

Sandra Braunstein, director of consumer affairs at the Fed, acknowledged that a Fed proposal last June did not go far enough to help consumers. (How unusual. Let's give the Fed more power to do nothing effectual. - Jesse)

That plan would have required plain-English disclosures by credit card issuers to help consumers understand fees and rates. (What a draconian reform! The industry proposal was for the disclosures to be in an obscure dialect of the Anasazi Indians. PLAIN English! Wait! The Fed didn't specify what kind of English. How about plain MIDDLE English? The language of Chaucer. Ah! - Jesse)

"Careful measures that would restrict credit card terms or practices may, in some instances, be more effective than disclosure to prevent particular consumer injuries," Braunstein told a House Financial Services subcommittee hearing. (No shit Sandy, really? I've heard the State Police are going to stand on the edge of the highway and chastise reckless drivers with stern glares as they speed by. Did you design that reform too? - Jesse)

Chairing the hearing was Rep.Carolyn Maloney, a New York Democrat who wants Congress to adopt a credit card holder's bill of rights. Some lawmakers expressed concern that the regulators' efforts could conflict with congressional efforts to revamp credit card rules. "I'm very concerned about how we are doing this," said Rep. Mike Castle, a Republican from Delaware. (I am sure Mike is primarily concerned about the large contributions he receives from credit card companies operating out of his state. - Jesse)

Banks that offer credit cards, such as Bank of America Corp and Capital One Financial Corp, oppose the legislation. They have warned it could raise fees and reduce the amount of credit available to consumers. John Carey, chief administrative officer of Citigroup Inc unit Citi Cards, said new restrictions would penalize responsible customers. (How about a national usury law? We'll know its good if the CEOs of Capital One, BAC, and Citi blow chunks when they read it. - Jesse)

"The financial burdens associated with the higher-risk customers will be spread across all customers," Carey said in testimony prepared for the subcommittee. The Fed is aware that proposed restrictions could have unintended negative consequences, such as reduced credit availability and raised costs, Braunstein said. (Oh yeah but when it comes to bubbles the Fed can't find its own ass with both hands. - Jesse)

Also working on the proposed regulations to crack down on abusive practices are the U.S. Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) and National Credit Union Administration, she said. (Oh great idea. If they ever write reforms for organized labor abuses can we conjure the ghost of Jimmy Hoffa to help? - Jesse)

OTS Deputy Director John Bowman said his agency shared lawmakers' concerns about the practice of increasing the annual percentage rate on an outstanding balance for reasons other than cardholder behavior directly related to the account.

"In our ... proposal we expect to place restrictions on some of these types of practices," Bowman said. Bowman called the practice of computing finance charges based on account balances in billing cycles preceding the most recent billing cycle "troubling." (Criminal and obscene were the ones that first came to mind. - Jesse)

For example, when a consumer makes a payment on a portion of his bill, the credit card company may still charge interest on the full amount, even though part has been repaid. (Gee, how could anyone object to that? I think we should start doing the same thing with corporate income tax payments, retroactive to the beginning of the Bush Administration. - Jesse)

"It is very difficult for consumers to avoid the increased costs associated with double-cycle billing because most consumers simply can't understand it," Bowman said. "This is another area that we address in our proposal." (I think they understand it all right. Its just that they can't do anything about it. - Jesse)

The OTS supervises credit card activities of thrift institutions. The agency is "at the beginning "stage of crafting tougher rules and will soon issue a notice of proposed rule making, Bowman said. But Braunstein said the Fed may use its unique authority to impose stricter regulations on the credit card industry. (These guys make FEMA look like Delta Force - Jesse)

How Phil Gramm and the Banks Helped to Destroy the US Financial System - An Insider's Perspective


A well-informed explanation of how we got to where we are. Relevant even more now perhaps since Mr. Gramm, among other things, is John McCain's economic advisor.

Fresh Air from WHYY, April 3, 2008 · Perplexed by the U.S. economy? You're not alone. Law professor Michael Greenberger joins Fresh Air to explain the sub-prime mortgage crisis, credit defaults, the shaky future of other types of loans and what we can expect from the U.S. financial markets.

Michael Greenberger Our Confusing Economy - Explained (Audio)


Michael Greenberger is the Director of the Center for Health and Homeland Security (CHHS) at the University of Maryland and a professor at the School of Law. In 1997 Professor Greenberger left private practice to become the Director of the Division of Trading and Markets at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. In that capacity, he was responsible for supervising exchange traded futures and derivatives. He also served on the Steering Committee of the President's Working Group on Financial Markets, and as a member of the International Organization of Securities Commissions' Hedge Fund Task Force. He has frequently been asked to speak both in the media and at academic gatherings about issues pertaining to financial regulation, and has appeared on the ABC Evening News, The Jim Lehrer News Hour, and C-Span to discuss financial issues arising out of the Enron, Arthur Anderson, and WorldCom, and Refco failures.


Bankers Ask: Are the Bankers Rigging the Markets?


This is a particularly timely article. In essence, banks are raising the alarm that the LIBOR rates might be 'fixed' by large global banks providing false information. The banks are concerned because as a widely followed interest rate benchmark, LIBOR affects a signficant amount of financial activity in the real economy. And its bad for the banks' business, which is why it made the front pages of the WSJ and several leading economic blogs.

Categorize this under the title "Lack of Genuine Price Discovery in Manipulated Markets Leads to a Moral Hazard and Economic Distortion in the Real Economy."

The tricksters at Enron were able to manipulate the market for energy prices to the extent that they almost brought down the state of California, which is the size of most countries. Were the markets reformed? No, let's just move on.

The government has been manipulating key interest rate benchmarks pretty brazenly for years, such as CPI, through some of the most tortured and ridiculous of rationales imaginable. Some might say that this stealing from pensioners sets a rather poor example for the rest of the financial marketplace.

Just this morning the action in the S&P500 futures market was comparable to water running uphill. A recent ex-Treasury Secretary maintained its easier to fix "the problem" by manipulating the futures markets than cleaning it up afterwards. Not only was this NOT condemned, it was embraced by many academic financial types as clever and practical and cool.

Apparently some financial thinkers failed to learn the basic lessons of the schoolyard such as honesty and reputation and trust, because they were obviously hiding in the cloakrooms or library most of the time. Once you cheat or steal or lie, 'just this one time,' you often start doing it more and more for convenience until you do it all the time as a reflex. You parse the world into clever boys like yourself and stupid honest fools to be cheated. You become known as a cheat and a thief and a liar, and you hit the wall and fall from grace, and find yourself on the bottom.

(To the ex-Treasury Secretary's credit he did not use the word "manipulate," he used a more palatable euphemism which we cannot recall. But he is also not alone. Can you believe that there are some financial thinkers who maintain that by controlling the prices of key commodities and benchmarks the government can actually mask the impact of their reckless money printing? They call it 'managing the perception of inflation.' Take all this behaviour and put it on the schoolgrounds. What do you think about these boys now? Amoral little monsters. Yikes! - Jesse)

When the government gives a 'wink and a nod' to market manipulation, and either turns a blind eye and fails to prosecute, or bails out the miscreants using public money when they stumble and fall, or provides wristslaps without admitting guilt to the offending corporations when they get caught red-handed engaging in obviously illegal acts in the markets----

THAT IS MORAL HAZARD you fatheaded prunes.

There has been a lot of fuzzy thinking lately from economists who somehow have taken the posture that financial utilitarianism is the 'scientific approach' and that whatever 'fixes the problem' most quickly and cleanly is the optimum economic approach. Well, you might be able to build a career out of cheating, beating the system, invoking private privilege, and fundamental amoral lowness, but its a rough way to try and approach the problem of creating a sustainable, productive economy. It always and everywhere results in some form of totalitarianism.

"The President's Secret Working Group on Financial Markets" indeed. Future generations will think we were simply hypocrites or mad or deluded or all of it. Let's make reality a certain way by merely saying and acting as though it is.

What these fellows don't realize is that economic decisions almost always rest on the assumption of a moral judgement. There is no escaping it. It is better to cheat and break the rules one way and punish this group (usually of weaker innocents), than to hold some other more powerful group to account.

One has to do certain things when one is in a position of power. No, it when one is under stress in a position of power that they hold their whole selves in their hands, and their character is tested, and if they let go, they are lost.

Well, this is where that sort of thinking has brought us. We urge all economic students to take note of the slippery slope of moral retardation for the sake of expediency, and to start preparing now for the new wave of economic thinking that will come out of this period of economic vacuousness and lifeless neo-liberal madness.

Oh, and when this whole rats nest of dishonesty blows up in our faces, don't say you haven't been warned.


LIBOR FOG
Bankers Cast Doubt On Key Rate Amid Crisis
By CARRICK MOLLENKAMP
April 16, 2008
The Wall Street Journal

LONDON -- One of the most important barometers of the world's financial health could be sending false signals.

In a development that has implications for borrowers everywhere, from Russian oil producers to homeowners in Detroit, bankers and traders are expressing concerns that the London inter-bank offered rate, known as Libor, is becoming unreliable.

Libor plays a crucial role in the global financial system. Calculated every morning in London from information supplied by banks all over the world, it's a measure of the average interest rate at which banks make short-term loans to one another. Libor provides a key indicator of their health, rising when banks are in trouble. Its influence extends far beyond banking: The interest rates on trillions of dollars in corporate debt, home mortgages and financial contracts reset according to Libor.

In recent months, the financial crisis sparked by subprime-mortgage problems has jolted banks and sent Libor sharply upward. The growing suspicions about Libor's veracity suggest that banks' troubles could be worse than they're willing to admit.

The concern: Some banks don't want to report the high rates they're paying for short-term loans because they don't want to tip off the market that they're desperate for cash. The Libor system depends on banks to tell the truth about their borrowing rates. Fibbing by banks could mean that millions of borrowers around the world are paying artificially low rates on their loans. That's good for borrowers, but could be very bad for the banks and other financial institutions that lend to them.

True Borrowing Costs

No specific evidence has emerged that banks have provided false information about borrowing rates, and it's possible that declines in lending volumes are making some Libor averages less reliable. But bankers and other market participants have quietly expressed concerns to the British Bankers' Association, which oversees Libor, about whether banks are reporting rates that reflect their true borrowing costs, according to a person familiar with the matter and to government documents. The BBA is now investigating to identify potential problems, the person says.

Questions about Libor were raised as far back as November, at a Bank of England meeting in which United Kingdom banks, the firms that process bank trades and central bank officials discussed the recent financial turmoil. According to minutes of the meeting, "several group members thought that Libor fixings had been lower than actual traded interbank rates through the period of stress." In a recent report, two economists at the Bank for International Settlements, a sort of central bank for central bankers, also expressed concerns that banks might report inaccurate rate quotes.

ARMA spokesman for the BBA, John Ewan, said the trade group is monitoring the situation. "We want to ensure that our rates are as accurate as possible, so we are closely watching the rates banks contribute," Mr. Ewan said. "If it is deemed necessary, we will take action to preserve the reputation and standing in the market of our rates." Libor is expected to be on the agenda of a bankers' association board meeting on Wednesday.

In a recent research report on potential problems with Libor, Scott Peng, an interest-rate strategist at Citigroup Inc. in New York, wrote that "the long-term psychological and economic impacts this could have on the financial market are incalculable." Mr. Peng estimates that if banks provided accurate data about their borrowing costs, three-month Libor would be higher by as much as 0.3 percentage points.

A small increase in Libor can make a big difference for borrowers. For example, an extra 0.3 percentage points would add about $100 to the monthly payment on a $500,000 adjustable-rate mortgage, or $300,000 in annual interest costs for a company with $100 million in floating-rate debt. On Tuesday, the Libor rate for three-month dollar loans stood at 2.716%.

Libor has become such a fixture in credit markets that many people trust it implicitly. Concerns about its reliability are "actually kind of frightening if you really sit and think about it," says Chris Freemott, a Naperville, Ill., mortgage banker who depends on Libor to tell him how much his firm, All America Mortgage Corp., owes First Tennessee bank for a credit line that he uses to make loans.

The Libor system was developed in the 1980s. Banks were looking for a benchmark that would allow them to set rates on syndicated debt -- corporate loans that typically carry interest rates that adjust according to prevailing short-term rates. By pegging lending rates to Libor, which is supposed to represent the rate banks charge each other for loans, banks sought to guarantee that the interest rates their clients pay never fall too far below their own cost of borrowing.

Banks typically set their lending rates at a certain "spread" above Libor: A company with decent credit, for example, might pay an interest rate of Libor plus one-half percentage point. A risky "subprime" mortgage loan might carry an interest rate of Libor plus more than six percentage points.

Today, Libor rates are set for 15 different loan durations -- from overnight to one year -- and in 10 currencies, including the pound, the dollar, the euro and the Swedish krona. They serve as the basis for payments on trillions of dollars in corporate loans, mortgages and student loans. Libor rates are also used to set the terms of more than $500 trillion in "derivatives" contracts such as interest-rate swaps, which companies all over the world, including U.S. mortgage guarantors Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, use to protect themselves against sudden shifts in the difference between long-term and short-term interest rates.

When banks want to borrow money, they contact banks directly or phone a loan broker, such as ICAP PLC in London. Much of the interbank lending takes place between 7 a.m. and 11 a.m. London time. In broker speak, a bank might ask for a "yard" -- one billion in a designated currency. Brokers communicate with bank clients by phone or through desktop voice boxes, which are faster. At ICAP, brokers track bids and offers by looking up at a big whiteboard above the trading floor, where a "board boy" posts information. The actual rates at which banks borrow from each other are known only to the lenders and borrowers, and possibly to their brokers.

Every morning by 11:10 London time, "panels" of banks send data to Reuters Group PLC, a London-based business-data and news company, on what it would cost them to borrow a "reasonable amount" in a designated currency. The dollar Libor panel, for example, consists of 16 banks, including U.S. banks Bank of America Corp. and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. and U.K. banks HBOS PLC and HSBC Holdings PLC. Reuters uses the reported borrowing rates to calculate Libor "fixings." To reduce the possibility that any bank could manipulate an average by reporting a false number, Reuters throws out the highest and lowest groups of quotes before calculating averages.

Justin Abel, global head of data operations for Reuters, said in a statement that his company's role is solely to calculate fixings based on the information provided by banks. "It is their data alone we distribute. Reuters is purely the facilitator," he said.

Wary of Lending

The global financial crisis that began last summer has made it more difficult for banks to package and sell all kinds of loans as securities, as well as to issue bonds and short-term IOUs to investors. Increasingly, banks have turned to the interbank market to borrow cash. But their mounting losses on mortgage securities and other investments have raised fears that a major institution could go bust.

That's made banks increasingly wary of lending to one another.

Such jitters have made many banks unwilling to extend loans to each other for more than one week. As a result, the rates they quote for loans of three months or more are often speculative, because there's little to no actual lending for that time period, brokers say. "It amounts to an average best guess," says Don Smith, an economist at ICAP, the London broker of interbank loans and derivatives.

These bank problems are proving costly to other kinds of borrowers around the world. One way to measure the rough cost is by comparing the three-month Libor rate with an interest rate that doesn't reflect worries about banks' financial health -- such as the yield on a three-month Treasury bill, which is backed by the U.S. government. The gap between the two stood at 1.58 percentage points Tuesday, and has averaged 1.39 percentage points since the crisis began in August. In the five years before the financial crisis started, it averaged only 0.28 percentage points.

(This is a decent example of the problem of lack of true price discovery in rigged markets. - Jesse)

Citigroup's Mr. Peng believes banks could be understating even those abnormally high Libor rates. He notes that the Federal Reserve recently auctioned off $50 billion in one-month loans to banks for an average annualized interest rate of 2.82% -- 0.1 percentage point higher than the comparable Libor rate. Because banks put up securities as collateral for the Fed loans, they should get them for a lower rate than Libor, which is riskier because it involves no collateral. By comparing Libor with that indicator and others -- such as the rate on three-month bank deposits known as the Eurodollar rate -- Mr. Peng estimates Libor may be understated by 0.2 to 0.3 percentage points.

Other Benchmarks

In one sign of increasing concern about Libor, traders and banks are considering using other benchmarks to calculate interest rates, according to several traders. Among the candidates: rates set by central banks for loans, and rates on so-called repurchase agreements, under which borrowers provide banks with securities as collateral for short-term loans.

In a report published in March by the Bank for International Settlements, economists Jacob Gyntelberg and Philip Wooldridge raised concerns that banks might report incorrect rate information. The report said that banks might have an incentive to provide false rates to profit from derivatives transactions. The report said that although the practice of throwing out the lowest and highest groups of quotes is likely to curb manipulation, Libor rates can still "be manipulated if contributor banks collude or if a sufficient number change their behaviour."

16 April 2008

The Fed Is Serving the Wall Street Banks Not the Republic


In times such as these we like to look past the bought and paid for house economists and over-eager-for-an-Undersecretary-of-the-Treasury-appointment academics for serious, seasoned, and meaningful commentary from those who have been in and actually understand the markets.

14 April 2008
The Fed Has Power, but No Will
By MARTIN MAYER
Barron's Online

THERE'S SOMETHING STRANGE ABOUT THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT'S suggestions for the reform of banking regulation and about the cascade of commentary on it. From one end to the other, there's an assumption that the Federal Reserve has somehow lacked the information and authority it could have used to prevent the insanity that has engulfed the credit markets.

The Fed, we are told, had access through its examiners to what the commercial banks were doing, but not to what the investment banks were doing. Yet the investment banks that mattered, including Bear Stearns (and Morgan Stanley, Merrill, Lehman and Goldman, not to mention the mortgage lender Countrywide), were all among the 20-odd primary dealers who help the Fed distribute Treasury bills in the weekly auctions that fund the federal government.

All participants in those auctions were supposed to keep the Fed informed of any significant changes in their balance sheets-on a continuous basis. When Joe Jett's purchase of strips and reconstitution of Treasury bonds led to a weakening of Kidder Peabody's financial position in 1994, there was all hell to pay at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, because its government-securities division was not promptly informed.

Our present regulatory structure goes back not to the Great Depression, but only to 1999 and the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which undid the Depression-era Glass-Steagall Act.

The great controversy as the repeal bill moved to passage was about responsibility for supervising the banks in their exercise of new powers. If nationally chartered banks were permitted to be brokers and dealers and underwriters and mutual-fund managers, their work would be supervised by the Comptroller of the Currency, whose examiners inspected these banks. But if the law gave the new powers only to the holding companies that owned the banks, everything would be controlled by the Fed, which was to be the umbrella regulator for the new financial-services institutions.

THAT'S WHAT THE FED WANTED. Rep. Jim Leach, who was chairman of the House Banking Committee, was a great admirer of Alan Greenspan and the Federal Reserve, so that's what the Fed got.

Most commentators on the current credit crisis have argued that the banking regulators and supervisors played no role in its inception, because the bad mortgages were written and sold and packaged by unregulated mortgage brokers and mortgage bankers. But all the bank-holding companies had subsidiaries that were active in the mortgage market, and virtually all the mortgages packaged for sale by private entities passed through some subsidiary of some bank-holding company or some bank-controlled investment vehicle at some time between the inking of the contract and its disappearance into a collateralized security.

There was plenty of opportunity for bank examiners checking out the holding companies to notice that some of the paper in the vaults had inadequate or dishonest documentation, and to "classify" it. When the examiner classifies an asset, he forces the bank to reduce its reported profits and discourages further investment in similar assets.

Of course, Fed examiners don't look at individual loans any more; they just ask banks whether they are living up to their own standards of due diligence, and if it's OK with the bank it's OK with the Fed.

MEANWHILE, THE FINANCIAL SECTOR under the Fed's umbrella regulation was building a highly unsafe structure that abandoned many private-sector security features that had been created in the 1970s. With the systems developed then and perfected more recently, the buyers and sellers of stocks or exchange-traded futures or options have no contact with each other once the trade is confirmed by both sides later that day. At that moment of confirmation, the entire market, in the form of the clearinghouse, becomes the counterparty -- the guarantor that the buyer will get his stock or option or future and the seller will get his cash.

Among the useful attributes of this arrangement for the options and futures markets is that most contracts are extinguished by the purchase of an opposing contract: A previous seller buys, or a previous buyer sells, and the contract with the clearinghouse disappears. At the end of every day, the clearinghouse reports trades and "open interest."

But as banks honed the profitability of derivatives trading, they made more and more individual over-the-counter trades that involved payment from buyer to seller, delivery from seller to buyer, no clearinghouse, and a continuing relationship of the two counterparties. This was presented as innovation, and the Fed was committed not to discourage innovation. Now it can be seen as the retrograde development it really was. Like the stock market of the 1960s, this over-the-counter system has blown up, leaving behind gaseous waves of mistrust.

In the OTC derivatives market, people who want to get out of their previous trades have to offset the obligations of that trade by creating a new instrument with a new counterparty. Take a credit-default swap, by which each party guarantees to accept the payout on a debt instrument held by the other party. It's an insurance instrument, with some differences: The holder of the insured instrument can sell it, and the new owner becomes the beneficiary of the insurance. And the insurer may find someone who will accept a lower premium to take the burden of the insurance, allowing him to lay off his risk at an immediate profit.

The one trade thus generates two new instruments, with four new counterparties, and as the daisy chain of reinsurance expands, the numbers become ridiculous: $41 trillion face value of credit-default swaps.

BEAR STEARNS APPARENTLY had created trillions of dollars of positions this way, which is why it had to be kept in business. Once you begin to remove individual flower girls from the daisy chain of credit swaps, you don't know who will wind up with obligations they thought they had insured against and they can't meet. Suddenly, all counterparties for all sorts of trade become suspect. We should note in passing that the big beneficiaries of the Fed's action on Bear Stearns were the sellers of credit derivatives insuring Bear's obligations. The counterparties' paper had been worth very little on Thursday night and quite a lot on Sunday afternoon.

The Fed could easily have prevented this ruinous expansion of OTC credit-default swaps by requiring banks to keep extra reserves against such holdings, larger than the margin requirements of the exchanges where derivatives were traded, cleared in a clearinghouse, properly settled and extinguished. Instead, the Fed promoted the false idea that the banks in their own interest would police the gambling of the mortgage bankers and the credit-gobbling quantitative traders and the leveraged-buyout fakirs -- and that the hidden trading of non-standard, bilaterally settled, opaque derivative instruments would improve the stability of markets. Such ridiculous claims are still being made.

Quite apart, then, from the philosophical question of whether bank examination and control of monetary policy fit well together (they don't), the Fed has done nothing to deserve Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's recommendation that its role in supervising the markets should be expanded by new laws.

The truth is that the Fed had plenty of authority to take the steps that would have avoided today's dangers and its own embarrassments. The problem was that the Fed lacked the will to supervise. Before we can restore the self-confidence of the market, we will need to create a Federal Reserve that believes in its own regulatory mission more than it believes in prudence at the banks.

MARTIN MAYER is a guest scholar at the Brookings Institution and author of numerous books about banking and finance. "If anyone knows more about money, banking, and investments, that individual is keeping the information to himself," wrote James Grant of Grant's Interest Rate Observer in reviewing Martin Mayer's 1991 book Stealing the Market. In 1993, Publisher's Weekly described Mayer's Nightmare on Wall Street as "A landmark treatment of the money world." Martin Mayer has been writing about business and financial subjects for forty years. Mayer's latest book, The Bankers: The Next Generation, was published in January 1997.


Speculation Nation


We have been taking a look at some volume figures with colleagues, and discussing the remarkably low NYSE volumes over the past few days. We were comparing volumes across various exchanges, and wondering about the dark pools of trading that are cleared in off exchange venues. Some wondered if the NYSE volume was primarily the 'retail trade.'

We're not sure just what we think of that yet. But in the course of discussion one of our trader friends brought up the volume of option trades. (Hat tip to George Slezak).

As you know, options are a derivative trade on the future course of a stock or index in a given period of time. Investors normally do not trade in options, unless they are selling covered calls to incrementally increase return, or buying puts to safeguard against downside.

Below are two charts of CBOE volume going back into the 1990's. We were interested to see the spike in volumes of calls in particular around periods of high speculation and important tops.

Another Peak in Speculative Activity?

Are we there again? We're not so sure. But with the data at hand, the overall derivatives volumes including options, and the relative volumes of stocks on transparent exchanges at least, we are concluding that stocks are once again in a speculative bubble, and are "trading like commodities" with less price discovery and only a tenuous connection to the financial fundamentals of individual stocks and the equity markets.

This makes sense. Companies have been spending an inordinate amount of their profits on buybacks of their own stock. This has the putative effect of 'returning value to shareholders' but we suspect it has more to do with washing out the dilution of share floats as management grants themselves enormous amounts of stock options.

However it goes, the current environment is not what might be called 'healthy' by a level-headed economist, especially not one on the pad to a major trading house.

We might add that buying stock option 'calls' is one way to beat the margin requirements and take highly leveraged positions in stocks for periods of time. Despite the recent financial slump we still have roughly 8000 hedge funds out there, in addition to a wave a new retail financial speculation, and 'banks' increasingly dependent on their trading volumes for profits.

This type of wild speculative environment is generally fostered by a loose regulatory environment and even looser credit, and often is the prelude to a serious reversion to the mean of price discovery, aka a stock market crash.

This is the market that has been fostered by the Republican Administration and the Fed. This is hardly what might be called a 'productive economy.' Its an easy money economy. Let's see what happens.


If you have not already done so, please take the time to read The Trillion Dollar Meltdown" which is a couple blog entries below this one. Its worth it.

US Stocks Expected to Fall an Additional 15 percent Near Term - Goldman


Goldman Sachs and Wells Fargo warn 'delusional' investors on stocks
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard,
International Business Editor
UK Telegraph
Last Updated: 1:58am BST 15/04/2008

Wall Street faces the growing risk of an equities bloodbath in coming months as the credit crunch spreads to the wider economy and earnings crumble, according to a pair of grim reports issued by Goldman Sachs and Wells Fargo.

Goldman Sachs said the key for equities will be the full-year guidance offered by companies.

David Kostin, the chief US investment guru for Goldman Sachs, expects the S&P 500 index of Wall Street equities to plummet a further 15 per cent over the "near term" as companies scramble to lower their outlook for this year.

"Although only a few firms have reported first quarter results, early signs are awful. We expect a swath of lowered profit guidance," he said in a research note published today, entitled 'Fasten Seatbelts'.

Mr Kostin, who replaced the ever-bullish Abby Cohen as chief strategist in December, expects the S&P index to reach 1,160, which would amount to a fall of 27pc from the bull market peak of 1,576 in September and enter the annals as a relatively severe bear market.

Goldman Sachs was the only major investment bank on Wall Street to turn a profit from the credit crunch, taking out huge "short" positions on sub-prime mortgage bonds before they went into a tailspin.

The firm's daily trading notes are one of the most closely watched sources in global finance.

Scott Anderson, chief economist at Wells Fargo, is equally pessimistic, describing the bullish views of some market players as "bordering on delusional".

"The equity markets have not yet priced in a prolonged downturn in economic growth in my opinion. We are still in the early stages of the credit crunch. Earnings estimates for the second half of the year are likely still far too high," he said.

Mr Anderson said investors should pay attention when the International Monetary Fund cuts its global growth forecast for 2008 three times in less than five months. The Fund has put the odds of a world recession at 25pc and predicted $945bn in losses from the credit debacle spread across banks, hedge funds, pension funds, and insurers.

"Even more alarming, the IMF estimates that only a quarter of these potential losses have been recognized," he said.

"Rarely do we ever see such uncertainty surrounding the economic and financial outlook. The forecasts for GDP growth in the second quarter of 2008 are currently all over the map. If you feel you must wade into equities at the present time, I would suggest spreading your bets widely," he said.

Goldman Sachs said the key for equities will be the full-year guidance offered by companies rather than first quarter profits. It cited the example of Bed Bath & Beyond, where the stock fell sharply last week after the firm said the earnings prospects for 2008 would be around 16pc below consensus estimates.

Mr Kostin said investors often "look through" downturns, preparing for the sunny uplands that lie on the other side as the cycle recovers. But the pattern in this bear market has been a series of earnings shocks precipitating sudden share price falls.

The implication is that investment funds have been caught badly off guard by the severity of the economic slump and are scrambling to catch up with reality.



Goldman Sachs and Wells Fargo warn 'delusional' investors on stocks

15 April 2008

The Trillion Dollar Meltdown


We have not read the book yet, but are reasonably informed that it is on the way via(we'll pay for it with what's left of the stimulus check after buying Silver eagles).

In the meanwhile, here is a brief synopsis of the author's hypothesis as it appeared online recently at Foreign Policy.


8 Steps to a Trillion-Dollar Meltdown
By Charles R. Morris
April 2008

How did the U.S. financial crisis happen? A review of the road to ruin reveals a course littered with more villains than heroes.

No, it’s not the Great Depression, but the United States is facing a nasty economy-wide retrenchment following the excesses of the 2000s, with no easy way to dance through it. Think 1979 to 1982, when then U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker exorcised consumer price inflation from the economy. The difference today is that the inflationary explosion has been absorbed by prices of assets—houses, stocks and bonds, office buildings—rather than by the prices of things you buy at the store. Here’s how it happened.

1. The Fed spikes the punch bowl. In the wake of the dot-com bust and 9/11, the Fed lowers interest rates to 1 percent, the lowest since 1958. For more than 2½ years, long after the economy has resumed growing, the Fed funds rate remains lower than the rate of inflation. For banks, in effect, money is free.

2. Leverage soars. Financial sector debt, household debt, and home prices all double. Big banks shift their business models away from executing transactions for customers to “principal trading”— or gambling from their own accounts with borrowed money. In 2007, the principal-trading accounts at Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, and Merrill Lynch balloon to $1.3 trillion.

3. Consumers throw a toga party. Soaring home prices convert houses into ATMs. In the 2000s, consumers extract more than $4 trillion from their homes in net free cash (excluding financing costs and housing investment). From 2004 through 2006, such extractions exceed 7 percent of disposable personal income. Personal consumption surges from its traditional 66 to 67 percent of GDP to 72 percent by 2007, the highest rate on record.

4. A dollar tsunami. The United States’ current-account deficits exceed $4.9 trillion from 2000 through 2007, almost all for oil or consumer goods. (The current account is the most complete measure of U.S. trade, as it encompasses goods, services, and capital and financial flows.) Economists, including one Ben S. Bernanke, argue that a “global savings glut” will force the world to absorb dollars for another 10 or 20 years. They’re wrong.

5. Yields plummet. The cash flood sweeps across all risky assets. With so many people taking advantage of cheap loans, the most risky mortgage-backed securities carry only slightly higher interest rates than ultra-safe government bonds. The leverage, or level of borrowing, on private-equity company buyout deals jumps by 50 percent. Takeover funds load even more debt onto their portfolio companies to finance big cash dividends for themselves.

6. Hedge funds peddle crystal meth. Aggressive investors pour money into hedge funds generating artificially high returns by betting with borrowed money. To maximize yields, hedge funds also gravitate to the riskiest mortgages, like subprime, and to the riskiest bonds, which absorb losses on complex pools of lower-quality mortgages known as collateralized debt obligations or CDOs. The profits from selling bonds based on very risky underlying securities override bankers’ traditional risk aversion. By 2006, high-risk lending becomes the norm in the home-mortgage industry.

7. A ratings antigravity machine. Pension funds cannot generally invest in very risky paper as a mainstream asset class. So, banks and investment banks, with the acquiescence of the ratings agencies, create “structured” bonds with an illusion of safety. Eighty million dollars of “senior” CDO bonds backed by a $100 million pool of subprime mortgages will not incur losses until the defaults in the pool exceed 20 percent. The ratings agencies confer triple-A ratings on such bonds; investors assume they are equivalent to default-proof U.S. Treasury bonds or blue-chip corporates. To their shock, investors around the world discover that as pool defaults start rising, their senior CDO bonds rapidly lose trading value long before they suffer actual defaults.

8. The Wile E. Coyote moment arrives. Suddenly last summer, all the pretenses start to come undone, and the market is caught frantically spinning its legs in vacant space. The federal government responds with more than $1 trillion in new mortgage lending and lending authorizations in multiple guises from Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the Federal Housing Finance Board, and the Federal Reserve. Home prices still drop relentlessly; signs of recession proliferate; risky assets plummet.

What now?

The collapse of Wall Street investment bank Bear Stearns may be a watershed moment. Participant reports suggest that JPMorgan Chase came into weekend negotiations last month prepared to do a deal without Fed support. But after examining Bear’s balance sheet, which looks completely conventional, except for $46 billion of hard-to-value mortgage assets, Morgan apparently said, “Hell no!”

The $30 billion backup line of credit Morgan got from the Fed implies that they expect mortgage portfolio losses of some 70 cents on the dollar. Had Morgan recognized those losses, they could have forced comparable write-downs on a string of other banks. Bear’s default, in addition, could have triggered huge cash liabilities by thinly capitalized “bond insurers” and hedge funds that had guaranteed Bear’s debt. Many of the guarantors might have failed to have made good their guarantees. The Fed chose to pay up.

Analysts at Goldman Sachs recently estimated the total losses from this mess at $1.2 trillion, including nearly $500 billion at the banks. The cleanest solution would be for regulators to force banks to revalue their assets down to realistic levels in one fell swoop. (If the Fed and the Securities and Exchange Commission drive such a process, it might be accomplished within a single quarter.) The revaluations would almost certainly wipe out all or most equity capital at a number of the larger banks. Since it is unlikely that new private, nongovernmental capital could supply the entire shortfall, the federal government would have to act as the equity supplier of last resort.

But what about the homeowners who are stuck with mortgages they can no longer pay? Helping them will be simpler once their problems are untangled from the banks’ goal of protecting overpriced assets. A change in the bankruptcy laws, for example, could empower judges to convert excessive mortgages into market-rate rentals, which are usually much cheaper.

All current rescue proposals being floated in the U.S. Congress have the taxpayer buying up the loans the banks no longer want, absorbing the losses just as taxpayers did in the savings and loan crisis of the late 1980s. As an equity investor, however, the U.S. government would get the same terms as other private investors, leaving the losses to fall on the shareholders and executives who either caused the debacle or allowed it to happen. Concerns about the government’s holding bank stock directly could be allayed by depositing the shares in the Social Security trust funds. As the banks return to normal operations, they would become quite valuable securities and probably greatly improve the system’s returns.

Bank shareholders and executives made extraordinary financial gains during the 2000s. Now that their Ponzi scheme has been exposed, they are demanding that the public absorb much of their losses, and the Federal government has been responding with huge showers of money.

The Bear Stearns rescue demonstrates the need to draw a line. From now on, the banks, their shareholders, and their executives should eat their own losses. If that wipes out the capital of essential depositary institutions, the federal government should step in. Save the banks and help struggling homeowners, yes. But no more largesse for bank executives and shareholders.

Charles R. Morris, a lawyer and former banker, is the author of The Trillion Dollar Meltdown: Easy Money, High Rollers, and the Great Credit Crash (New York: PublicAffairs, 2008).

The Madness of Ben Bernanke - Der Spiegel


There are certain parts of this article from Der Spiegel with which we simply do not agree. But its interesting to see the American financial crisis as viewed through the eyes of others.

We are not sure of course, but we suspect strongly that history will view the last 20 years as a period of collective madness in the United States.

It is a madness brought on by the gods to the proud: ὕβρις hubris, and those who would be as gods, but stumble and fall through a tragic flaw, an error in judgement: ἁμαρτία hamartia. Often that flaw is related to the strength that had made them great.

The US can fall from greatness through pride and imbalanced judgement, and therein lies the recipe for tragedy. But we see few Hamlets or King Lear's on the stage as individuals: Greenspan is Iago, Bernanke seems like Polonius but we would not rule out Ophelia, and Bush is more Falstaff than Prince Hal.


The Madness of Ben Bernanke
By Gabor Steingart

WAHSINGTON - Der Spiegel - The dollar is in a tailspin, the trade deficit is growing and a recession is on the horizon. The American way of life is in serious danger. But the head of the Federal Reserve keeps on pumping easy credit into the system -- a crazy policy that will worsen the crisis.

Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke have more in common with the big cat entertainers Siegfried & Roy than any of us can be comfortable with.

The Las Vegas magicians call themselves "Masters of the Impossible" and have been fascinating audiences for decades by getting snow-white tigers to leap through burning rings.

The legendary Federal Reserve Chairman and his successor were equally adept at fascinating their audiences -- with a policy of miraculous monetary growth that gave America one of the longest periods of economic expansion in modern times. Many saw them as "Masters of the Universe." It seemed as if the central bankers had tamed predatory capitalism with their constant interest rate cuts.

Siegfried & Roy at times seemed at one with their cats, until the day everything went out of control. A tiger bit Roy in the neck during a show and looked as though it were about to devour him alive.

Greenspan and Bernanke too have lost their magic touch, and their image has been shredded by the real estate crisis and the dollar slide. The ravages of the financial markets aren't doing them any personal harm. But devalued stocks, bad mortgage loans and the diving dollar are damaging millions of small investors and savers.

It's as if the tiger has leapt of the stage and is mauling the audience. We can't blame wild cats or financial markets for being ruthless. It's in their nature to be brutal. Their unmistakeable message is: you can take things this far and no further.

In the case of the real estate crisis which reached the banks and is now unsettling the stock markets, the markets are now showing what G7 finance ministers and central bank governors meeting last weekend in Washington for their annual spring get-together declined yet again to admit publicly: Americans must change their lives -- or it will be changed for them by force.

American Way of Life Under Threat

The credit-financed consumer boom of recent years is coming to a painful end. Today's American Way of Life has no chance of surviving the coming years undamaged. The virus will continue to ravage its way through the financial system.

The property crisis is likely to spread to credit card providers soon and will then probably infect car manufacturers, furniture makers and all the other firms that owe their sales increases to the growth in credit finance. "The virus will keep on infecting the system," one management board member from a large bank said, requesting anonymity in return for the candour of his analysis.

His argument is that banks that grant mortgages to home buyers virtually unable to pay their bills are unlikely to be especially scrutinizing when it comes to lending cash to the buyers of fridges, cars and furniture. Indeed, a furniture store in Miami recently tried to lure consumers with the following offer: buy now, pay your first credit installment in three years, and no need for a down-payment.

The credit-financed way of life is typical of the US these days. Many people resort to credit to plug the gap between the lifestyle they have become accustomed to and their declining wages.

Dulling the Pain With Credit

The borrowed cash is like an anaesthetic against the painful impact of globalisation. Private household debt has been growing by $4 billion each business day for years.

All this wouldn't be so bad if the US economy were at least doing well in foreign markets. But it isn't, and hasn't been for a long time. Despite the depreciation of the dollar, which makes imports into the US far more expensive while making US exports cheaper in foreign markets, US manufacturers are finding it hard to sell their products.

Contrary to forecasts by both the Federal Reserve and the Treasury, the trade deficit has continued to grow, by 6 percent in February alone. America imported $62 billion worth of goods more than they exported in February, including a disturbingly large number of cars, computers and pharmaceutical products. Try as they might, most private households in America can't keep up this consumer miracle. The savings behavior of many Americans means that many of them now live from hand to mouth.

But Bernanke is doing nothing to dampen this hunger for credit. The former advisor to President George W. Bush is even trying to whip up credit-financed consumption by lowering interest rates. This is helping to fuel inflation because the monetary growth isn't being matched by growth in real economic output. Inflation in the US currently stands at 4 percent.

It's a paradox. The private commercial banks which have just had to make billions of dollars in write downs have become more cautious. They're scared of further risks. The management resignations at Citigroup and Bear Stearns have had a sobering impact.

Patriotic Madness

Meanwhile the Federal Reserve is urging the banks to go on taking risks. It has been injecting cash into the banking system for the past half-year while urging bank CEOs in confidential chats to offer more credit. The aim is to keep on financing consumer spending and even to stimulate it further -- for reasons of patriotism.

There's a word for this policy -- madness.

But because there is method in this madness, the meeting of mighty central bank governors and finance ministers in Washington over the weekend remained silent about it, at least officially. Outside the meeting rooms, though, there were murmurings about the poisoned legacy of Alan Greenspan and Bernanke's irresponsible behavior.

One participant told me: "There's an unwritten code of honor that says central bank governors should refrain from criticizing each other." Not least out of respect for the independence of central banks.

But the US is unlikely to realize the error of its ways on its own. "The Americans will always do the right thing," British Prime Minister Winston Churchill once said, "after they've exhausted all the alternatives."

Central bankers and tiger tamers have something else in common -- obstinacy. Roy has recovered from his wounds and wants to return to the stage in Las Vegas. "The magic is back," came the defiant announcement.

Alan Greenspan cut a similarly indestructible figure at the weekend. Even though criticism of his cheap money policy was only murmured privately, the 82-year-old legend of central banking said: "I was praised for things I didn't do. I am now being blamed for things I didn't do."

Not that he ever complained about getting false praise.

The Madness of Ben Bernanke - Der Spiegel

Housing Madness


This is the legacy of Greenspan and his chairmanship at the Federal Reserve.

Yes, the borrowers are also at fault, and 'no one made them borrow' as the Wall Streeters and their sock puppets like to say at bubble-bust times like these (remember the tech bubble: 'no one made them buy stocks' - CNBC).

But let's not allow the spin to muddy the waters.

It was fraud. Fraud on a massive and pre-meditated scale. Not unprecedented unfortunately.

It had its core in the Clinton-Bush administrations and the chairmanship of Alan Greenspan. It was aided and abetted by a host of enablers in the media and the universities. And at the heart of it all was the Wall Street Banks.

There is madness in crowds, but the genesis of the madness is in those who assemble the crowds, give them weapons, and walk among them whispering.... madness.

Let there be no doubt. The housing bubble was a financially engineered Ponzi scheme with the Wall Street Banks at the center. And its not over yet. They will not, and probably cannot, stop on their own. The banks must be restrained.

"If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency...the banks and the corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the people of all property until their children wake up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered. The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs." Thomas Jefferson, 1802



U.S. Foreclosures Jump 57% as Homeowners Walk Away
By Dan Levy

April 15 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. foreclosure filings jumped 57 percent and bank repossessions more than doubled in March from a year earlier as adjustable mortgages increased and more owners gave up their homes to lenders.

More than 234,000 properties were in some stage of foreclosure, or one in every 538 U.S. households, Irvine, California-based RealtyTrac Inc., a seller of default data, said today in a statement. Nevada, California and Florida had the highest foreclosure rates. Filings rose 5 percent from February.

About $460 billion of adjustable-rate loans are scheduled to reset this year, according to New York-based analysts at Citigroup Inc. Auction notices rose 32 percent from a year ago, a sign that more defaulting homeowners are ``simply walking away and deeding their properties back to the foreclosing lender'' rather than letting the home be auctioned, RealtyTrac Chief Executive Officer James Saccacio said in the statement.

``We're not near the bottom of this at all,'' said Kenneth Rosen, chairman of Rosen Real Estate Securities LLC, a hedge fund in Berkeley, California and chairman of the Fisher Center for Real Estate at the University of California at Berkeley. ``The foreclosure process will accelerate throughout the year.''

Rising foreclosures will add more inventory to an already glutted market, keep home prices down through at least next year and thwart efforts by Congress and President George W. Bush to help homeowners avoid default, Rosen said in an interview.

`Drag' on Prices

About 2.5 million foreclosed properties will be on the market this year and in 2009, Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. analysts led by Michelle Meyer said in an April 10 report. U.S. home price declines will probably double to a national average of 20 percent by next year, with lower values most likely in metropolitan areas in California, Florida, Arizona and Nevada, mortgage insurer PMI Group Inc. said last week in a report.

Borrowers who owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth may be buffeted by increasing job losses in a ``very substantial recession,'' Rosen said. About 8.8 million borrowers had home mortgages that exceeded the value of their property, Moody's Economy.com said last week.

``At least 2 million jobs will be lost because of this recession, so we'll get a cumulative negative spiral,'' Rosen said. ``A normal recession is 10 months. We think this one may be twice as long.''

Bank seizures climbed 129 percent from a year earlier, according to RealtyTrac, which has a database of more than 1 million properties and monitors foreclosure filings including defaults notices, auction sale notices and bank repossessions. March was the 27th consecutive month of year-on-year monthly foreclosure increases. In February, foreclosure filings rose 60 percent.

Nevada Leads

A surge in defaults among subprime borrowers, those with poor or limited credit, spurred the collapse of the U.S. home loan market and has led more than 100 mortgage companies to stop lending, close or sell themselves. As the value of securities tied to mortgages plummeted, lenders and securities firms have reported writedowns and credit losses of at least $245 billion since the beginning of 2007, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Nevada had the highest U.S. foreclosure rate in March at one for every 139 households, almost four times the national rate, RealtyTrac said. Filings there increased almost 62 percent from a year earlier to 7,659.

California had the second-highest rate at one filing for every 204 households, and the most filings for the 15th consecutive month at 64,711. Foreclosure filings more than doubled from a year earlier and were up about 21 percent from February.

Florida, Ohio

Florida had the third-highest rate, one filing for every 282 households, and ranked second in total filings at 30,254. Foreclosures increased 112 percent from a year earlier and decreased almost 7 percent from February, RealtyTrac said.

Ohio ranked third in filings at 11,273 and had the seventh- highest foreclosure rate, one for every 448 households. Georgia, Texas, Michigan, Arizona, Illinois, Nevada and Colorado also ranked among the top 10 states with the most filings, RealtyTrac said.

``The continued increase in new foreclosures implies an even larger drag on prices in 2008,'' Goldman Sachs Chief U.S. Economist Jan Hatzius wrote April 8. Home prices fell 8.9 percent in the fourth quarter, the biggest decline in 20 years as measured by the S&P/Case-Shiller home price index.

Some borrowers are ``hanging on at the margins'' in the face of resets, said Mark Goldman, a loan officer at Windsor Capital Mortgage Corp. in San Diego.

Goldman said one of his clients is a self-employed contractor whose adjustable-rate mortgage rose by two percentage points two months ago. His mortgage payment has increased to $7,200 from $4,900.

``I've had people sitting in my office in tears because there are no loans available,'' said Goldman. ``There are no loans for someone who's upside down on their house.''

To contact the reporter on this story: Dan Levy in San Francisco at dlevy13@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: April 15, 2008 05:25 EDT

14 April 2008

The Fed Failed As Regulator - It Was in Good Company


Wall Street veteran Henry Kaufman says in an interview with the Financial Times this week: “Certainly the Federal Reserve should shoulder a substantial part of this responsibility. . . it allowed the expansion of credit in huge magnitudes."

In the Fed's defense, a significant feature of their failure was the chairmanship of Alan Greenspan, who is probably most personally responsible of all the Fed governors for failing to safeguard the US financial system. As the long term chairman he had a significant power and influence over the rest of the board.

Also in the Fed's defense, their failure was no worse than the failure of the SEC and the CFTC, the Bush Administration and the Republican Congress in acting in the public's best interests. However, Chairman Greenspan is a personal standout culprit to anyone who follows the markets closely.

We find it ironic indeed that the plans to 'reform' the markets include giving more power to the Fed, since they are most certainly culpable in the current fiasco, not a public agency, still opaque and unaudited, apparently lacking sufficient checks and balances and public oversight.


Kaufman says Fed failed as regulator
By Aline van Duyn in New York

Published: April 14 2008 03:39 Last updated: April 14 2008 03:39

Henry Kaufman, the distinguished Wall Street economist, has added his voice to the debate about the Federal Reserve’s role in the credit crisis, saying the central bank failed to give enough importance to its role as a regulator.

In a video interview with the Financial Times, Mr Kaufman criticised the Fed’s monetary policy. He said it allowed too much credit expansion over the past 15 years and that this contributed to the market turmoil.

“Certainly the Federal Reserve should shoulder a substantial part of this responsibility. . . it allowed the expansion of credit in huge magnitudes,” Mr Kaufman said.

“Besides its monetary policy approach, [the Fed] really indicated very clearly that it was performing its role as a supervisor . . . in a minute fashion, not in an encompassing fashion. Monetary policy had a high priority, supervision and regulation within the Fed had a smaller priority.”

Mr Kaufman, who is on the board at Lehman Brothers, has long advocated tougher regulation of the biggest financial firms, arguing that they need to be made “too good to fail”, rather than remain “too large to fail”.

The near-collapse of Bear Stearns last month, and the Fed’s intervention which resulted in a purchase of the Wall Street firm by JPMorgan Chase, has triggered a renewed debate about whether banks can regulate themselves, or whether regulators need to impose tougher rules.

The credit crisis, which stems from losses on securities backed by risky mortgages made during the height of the housing bubble, could lead to total losses and writedowns of nearly $1,000bn for banks and investors around the world, according to the International Monetary Fund.

Mr Kaufman said a distinctive feature of the financial crisis was “much greater lapses in official supervision and regulation than in earlier periods”.

He said there should be a new federal regulator appointed who would work with the Federal Reserve but who would have responsibility for “intensively” regulating the 30 or 40 biggest financial firms. Failure to do so could lead to a “crisis that’s bigger than the one which we have today”.

“The supervision of major financial institutions requires deep skills in credit, deep skills in risk analysis techniques and it requires within that organisation, very skilled, trained professional people,” Mr Kaufman said. “That is lacking in the supervisory area in the United States.”

He added that recent proposals from Hank Paulson, secretary of the US Treasury, to overhaul US regulation “lack focus”. “There is going to be some reform of financial supervision and regulation; hopefully it will be along my lines rather than the big compendium of suggestions that came out of the US Treasury”, he said.

Henry Kaufman Video Interview at Financial Times Online


Earnings Lower, Stocks to Follow?


The remedy being prescribed by economic thinkers at the Fed and at the academy is to 'bury the problem in liquidity.' They had better be prepared to pile it high and deep.

In the short term remember this is April stock options expiry week and the Bowery Boys are flush with hot money, so anything can happen.


Goldman Strategists Say U.S. Earnings Are `Awful'
By Alexis Xydias

April 14 (Bloomberg) -- An ``awful'' start to the first- quarter U.S. earnings season is a ``harbinger of things to come'' that will push stocks lower, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

``Early signs are awful,'' a team led by New York-based David Kostin, Goldman's U.S. investment strategist, wrote in a note today. ``We expect generally disappointing results and a swath of lowered profit guidance that will drive the Standard & Poor's 500 Index lower in coming weeks.''

The S&P 500, the benchmark index for American equities, dropped 2.7 percent last week after General Electric Co. said the credit-market crisis caused an unexpected earnings decline, while slowing economic growth and rising energy prices eroded profit at United Parcel Service Inc. and Alcoa Inc. Futures on the S&P 500 lost 0.1 percent at 10:50 a.m. in London.

Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg have cut their projections for first-quarter earnings at S&P 500 companies every week since Jan. 4. They now predict a 12.3 percent drop, compared with an estimate for an increase of 4.7 percent at the start of 2008.

Alcoa marked the start of the earnings reporting season on April 7 when it became the first company in the Dow Jones Industrial Average to post results.

Johnson & Johnson, the world's largest maker of consumer health-care products, is scheduled to report earnings tomorrow, while International Business Machines Corp., the biggest computer-services company, will follow a day later. Merrill Lynch & Co. will report April 17, while Citigroup Inc. will post results April 18.

Merrill and Citigroup will reveal at least $15 billion more of subprime mortgage writedowns this week, the Sunday Times of London reported yesterday, citing analysts it didn't identify...

To contact the reporter on this story: Alexis Xydias in London at axydias@bloomberg.net.



Wachovia Posts Loss, Plans $7 Billion Capital Raising
By David Mildenberg

April 14 (Bloomberg) -- Wachovia Corp., the fourth-largest U.S. bank, reported an unexpected loss because of subprime- infected mortgage holdings, cut its dividend and said it will raise about $7 billion in a share sale to replenish capital.

The first-quarter loss of $393 million, or 20 cents a share, compared with earnings of $2.3 billion, or $1.20, a year earlier, the Charlotte, North Carolina-based company said in a statement today. Analysts had been estimating Wachovia would earn about 40 cents a share, according to a survey by Bloomberg. Wachovia fell 8.4 percent to $25.66 in German trading.

Chief Executive Officer Kennedy Thompson said he was ``deeply disappointed'' after Wachovia posted its first quarterly loss since 2001 and reduced the dividend to preserve $2 billion of funds. The company's market value has dropped 50 percent since its ill-timed $24.6 billion takeover of Golden West Financial Corp. in 2006 at the peak of the housing market.

``The most painful decision was to reduce the dividend because it adversely affects our shareholders,'' Thompson said in the statement. ``But we believe the long-term benefit to shareholder value outweighs the disadvantage of the dividend reduction as we fortify our balance sheet against continued instability in the housing and capital markets.''

Wachovia also said today it will cut 500 investment banking jobs, without providing specifics. The planned capital raising, comprising common stock and convertible preferred shares, has attracted strong interest from investors and will ``enhance our ongoing financial flexibility,'' Thompson said. The bank listed a Tier 1 capital ratio of 7.5 percent.

13 April 2008

Fed Says the Credit Crisis Is Not Over


From The Times
April 14, 2008

US Federal Reserve says that credit crisis is not over yet
Suzy Jagger in Washington

The credit crisis engulfing the banking system on both sides of the Atlantic has further to run, said the vice-chairman of the US Federal Reserve. As the US Treasury Secretary and central bankers gave warning that proposed financial reforms would not prevent a repeat of the biggest shock to the world economy since the Great Depression, Donald Kohn, of the Fed, said of the present trouble: “It is not over yet.”

His gloomy forecast about the duration of the credit crisis, delivered at the annual spring meeting in Washington of the Group of Seven leading economies, came after the International Monetary Fund had estimated that the market turmoil would trigger losses of almost $1 trillion (£507 billion) among banks, hedge funds and pension groups since last summer. Mr Kohn said: “The market is still adjusting. The turmoil has not settled down yet. It is still a very fragile situation.”

Finance ministers from the United States, Britain, Canada, Japan, France, Germany and Italy endorsed a set of wide-ranging financial reforms to address the credit crisis, but they also said that none of the measures would prevent a similar crisis in the future.

Among the ideas being considered are changes to the way that banks reward staff with huge annual bonuses. Officials are concerned that bonuses encourage risk taking and have proposed an alternative remuneration system that would pay out over a longer time period. Henry Paulson, the US Treasury Secretary, said: “No silver bullet exists to prevent the excesses of the past from re-occurring. It took time to build up recent excesses and it will take time to work through the consequences. We must expect more bumps in the road: 2008 will be a more difficult year.”

Mr Kohn said: “All we can do is to try to make the system more resilient. To make the effects more muted, absorbed by liquidity. Enhanced information and transparency will be greater and will, hopefully, make markets and economies more resilient.”

Mr Kohn was speaking as part of the executive team running the Financial Stability Forum, whose recommendations have been endorsed by the G7 group of nations in a bid to strengthen regulation. The G7 wants to force banks to adopt new crisis prevention measures, such as eventually raising the amount of capital that they hold on their books to act as a cash cushion during difficult market conditions. (The banks do everything they can to circumvent this, as in SIVs in response to the Basel II requirements. So what will change? This is a bandaid on an infected wound. - Jesse)

They have also issued more immediate demands for financial institutions to quickly declare their losses from the crisis. They want to make banks increase the level of transparency to shareholders and regulators about the strength of assets on their balance sheets and to urge regulatory bodies to co-operate better and to share information. They also threatened to introduce legislation that would compel credit rating agencies to admit to conflicts of interest when they rate securities. (Oooooh. Everything they do is a conflicted under the current system. - Jesse)

The G7 finance ministers and bankers agreed to implement reforms within a 100-day timetable, which would make banks set out “fully and promptly” losses and exposures to illiquid mortgage-backed securities blamed for the seizure of credit markets.

However, the policymakers were also keen to say that it was unrealistic to expect regulators to devise an early warning system that would identify the start of a financial crisis or a banking institution that was in difficulties. (Bring back Glass-Steagall. Firewall the guaranteed banking system from reckless speculation and conflicts of interest - Jesse)

Timothy Geithner, of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, said: “If we could figure out a way to have on our desks a screen with the capacity to predict financial crises it would be terrific, but it is very hard to do. What we can do is make the system more resilient.”

(What we need to do is make the system accountable, credible, and honest. Bring back Glass-Steagall and close the loopholes as we saw with the S&L's. The banks spent hundreds of millions of dollars lobbying to repeal it. Firewall the banking system while they try to reform the speculative arenas. Let them steal from each other and not dip into the public's pockets. - Jesse)

12 April 2008

The Financial Stability Forum Meets the Bowery Boys


Financial Stability Forum Report to the G7 April 7/08 (PDF)

"...the balance sheets of financial institutions are burdened by assets that have suffered major declines in value and vanishing market liquidity. Participants are reluctant to transact in these instruments, adding to increased financial and macroeconomic uncertainty.

To re-establish confidence in the soundness of markets and financial institutions, national authorities have taken exceptional steps with a view to facilitating adjustment and dampening the impact on the real economy. These have included monetary and fiscal stimulus, central bank liquidity operations, policies to promote asset market liquidity and actions to resolve problems at specific institutions. Financial institutions have taken steps to rebuild capital and liquidity cushions.

Despite these measures, the financial system remains under stress. While national authorities may continue to consider short-term policy responses should conditions warrant it, to restore confidence in the soundness of markets and institutions, it is essential that we take steps now to enhance the resilience of the global system.

To this end, the FSF proposes concrete actions in the following five areas:


• Strengthened prudential oversight of capital, liquidity and risk management.
• Enhancing transparency and valuation.
• Changes in the role and uses of credit ratings.
• Strengthening the authorities’ responsiveness to risks.
• Robust arrangements for dealing with stress in the financial system."


FINANCIAL STABILITY FORUM

Executive Summary

Strengthened prudential oversight of capital, liquidity and risk management

Capital requirements:

Specific proposals will be issued in 2008 to:
• Raise Basel II capital requirements for certain complex structured credit products;
• Introduce additional capital charges for default and event risk in the trading books of banks and securities firms;
• Strengthen the capital treatment of liquidity facilities to off-balance sheet conduits.

Changes will be implemented over time to avoid exacerbating short-term stress.
(Special challenge: banks have been using SIVs extensively to blow off the Basel II requirements as they had been. What good will raising them do? - Jesse)

Liquidity:

Supervisory guidance will be issued by July 2008 for the supervision and management of liquidity risks.
(Yeah it can wait. Its only the heart of the crisis. - Jesse)

Oversight of risk management:

Guidance for supervisory reviews under Basel II will be developed that will:
• Strengthen oversight of banks’ identification and management of firm-wide risks;
• Strengthen oversight of banks’ stress testing practices for risk management and capital planning purposes;
• Require banks to soundly manage and report off-balance sheet exposures;

Supervisors will use Basel II to ensure banks’ risk management, capital buffers and estimates of potential credit losses are appropriately forward looking.
(Here's a teaspoon and a feather-duster, go clean that Augean Stable. - Jesse)

Over-the-counter derivatives:

Authorities will encourage market participants to act promptly to ensure that the settlement, legal and operational infrastructure for over-the-counter derivatives is sound.
This sounds like sending a copy of MISS MANNERS to Al Capone. -Jesse)

Enhancing transparency and valuation

Robust risk disclosures:
• The FSF strongly encourages financial institutions to make robust risk disclosures using the leading disclosure practices summarised in Recommendation III.1 of this report, at the time of their mid-year 2008 reports.
• Further guidance to strengthen disclosure requirements under Pillar 3 of Basel II will be issued by 2009.
(Sixtieth Rule of Ferengi Acquisition: Keep Your Lies Consistent. - Jesse)

Standards for off-balance sheet vehicles and valuations:
Standard setters will take urgent action to:
• Improve and converge financial reporting standards for off-balance sheet vehicles;
• Develop guidance on valuations when markets are no longer active, establishing an expert advisory panel in 2008.

Transparency in structured products:

Market participants and securities regulators will expand the information provided about securitised products and their underlying assets.
(The core of the problem is that the risk management models these jokers have been using have some whoppers of assumptions in them, and are essentially grounded in foo-foo dust. But let's do more of it and it will get better. - Jesse)

Changes in the role and uses of credit ratings

Credit rating agencies should:
• Implement the revised IOSCO Code of Conduct Fundamentals for Credit Rating Agencies to manage conflicts of interest in rating structured products and improve the quality of the rating process;
• Differentiate ratings on structured credit products from those on bonds and expand the information they provide.

Regulators will review the roles given to ratings in regulations and prudential frameworks.


Strengthening the authorities’ responsiveness to risks

• A college of supervisors will be put in place by end-2008 for each of the largest global financial institutions.
(College! Cool! We'll be Animal House. Ben can be Dean Wurmer. Aw, everyone wants to be Bluto. The Board wants to dance wif yo dates. Road Trip!! - Jesse)

Robust arrangements for dealing with stress in the financial system
• Central banks will enhance their operational frameworks and authorities will strengthen their cooperation for dealing with stress.
(Group yoga sessions? - Jesse)



SP 500 WEEKLY Chart - Bear Market Update April 12


The intra-week volatility is significant, and snapback short covering rallies are normal, and not the exception in this market.

Despite the Fed's almost unprecedented interventions, at least since the 1930's, the market trend is still lower. Look at the daily charts linked on the side of this blog to keep an eye on those chart formations.

Be careful with your leverage, and in particular the use of options, especially April stock index and 'popular plays.' With these continuing low volumes heavy trades to one side invite a violent hit from the well-heeled trading desks.

Watch for cross market correlations and inversions and use these as hedges if you wish to be an aggressive trader. This requires significant capital to maintain adequately.

Cash is a position. Contra-dollar 'cash' positions paying decent yields have been some of our most rewarding plays. There are forex ETF's in addition to actual foreign government bonds and high dividend stocks. Forex trading is triple black diamond, for experienced traders only, with the odds heavily against even a talented amateur.

Sometimes NOT trading is a very powerful tool as you wait for the odds to improve in your favor, or your gains to run higher over time in a position. We have positions contra-dollar we've not touched since early 2006.



Hyperinflationary Depression in the US 2010 - John William, Shadow Government Statistics


We don't necessarily agree with John Williams' analysis here. But its not sufficient to merely disagree. One has to listen to the argument, the key points and mechanisms, and then show WHY they might be invalid and where they might be less probable than something else.

John may be right. We have an enormous respect for him. His site is worth looking at, and his arguments are worth a listen. But we think he makes the error of assuming that the trends will be as they are today, and one can just extend them into the future, without limit, and not account for 'step changes' and likely exogenous events. This is an all too common error with model based predictors.

As a thumbnail sketch of our disagreement, we think that deflation and hyperinflation can only occur deterministically with reference to an external standard. With the lapse of the gold standard, there is none. Therefore its more likely to be the end result of policy decision(s).

Before the US lapses into a hyperinflationary depression the G8 will have an enormous incentive to essentially bail the US out by inflating their own currencies in sympathy and allowing the US to essentially and selectively default on its sovereign debt, in order to save the world financial system. In many ways Bear Stearns is a microcosm of the United States Treasury.

Doing nothing increases the probability that there will be a war, a significant world war, which will tend to wipe the slate clean, at least for the victor (if there is one) in terms of debt obligations. Not only is the US too big to fail, its too big a warpower for anyone to be easily able to collect what's owed to them.

That's what we think, but all things being equal, John does have his points in order, and his hypothesis is probable, more so than deflation, which is also a possibility. Volcker said deflation has an extraordinarily slim chance of occurring in the US. We tend to view it as an overt policy decision. Net debtors do not willingly choose deflation; they are compelled to it by some external force or constraint.

The best argument for the deflation alternative is that our monetary system is dependent on bank loans for the expansion of debt, and debt is money. However, we think the Fed is going to give us a lesson in monetizing debt, and there is plenty of it to go around. Common sense is a fine tool, but more detailed knowledge and rigorous thinking is essential.

John Williams is interviewed by Jim Puplava - MP3 Audio download: A Hyperinflationary Depression in the US 2010

Shadow Government Statistics Homepage

11 April 2008

An Accounting View of the Financial Credit Crisis


Here's a joke to cheer up GE shareholders on this difficult morning.
(Hat tip to Sean, the Irish gnome in Zurich)

There are two sides to a bank's balance sheet - the left side and the right side.

The problem is that, on the left side, there is nothing right,
and on the right side, there is nothing left!

And some weekend reading for Jeff Immelt.

As a reminder, US financial companies start reporting their quarterly results next week.


PigMan of the Week Award


Thanks go to Lloyd Blankfein of Goldman Sachs for giving the markets some weasel-worded false encouragement Thursday morning that the credit crisis is "almost over." It helped to trigger a sucker's rally.

And "if we are in a recession, its a mild one." We'll put that one down in the books. In fact, we wish someone would take a look at your trading book.

Lloyd, who received about $70 million of compensation last year by some estimates, also said that shareholder votes on executive pay would "constrain the board and hurt the investment bank's ability to attract the best employees."

Lloyd, you get the "PigMan of the Week Award."


Reuters
Goldman CEO says "say on pay" a bad idea
Thursday April 10, 2:24 pm ET
By Joseph A. Giannone

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Goldman Sachs Group Inc (NYSE:GS - News) Chief Executive Lloyd Blankfein, who received about $70 million of compensation last year by some counts, said on Thursday that shareholder votes on executive pay would constrain the board and hurt the investment bank's ability to attract the best employees.

So-called "say on pay" initiatives, which allow shareholders to provide a nonbinding approval or rejection of a board's proposed pay package for senior executives, have become a hot topic among shareholder groups, pensions and other large investors focused on corporate governance issues.

In a spirited annual meeting held in a downtown Manhattan, a number of Goldman shareholders urged the board and investors to adopt an advisory vote as a tool to keep a lid on excessive pay. Advocates also argued the proposal would give shareholders a greater voice on an important matter, without binding directors.

Blankfein, in an extended response, expressed his concern that "say on pay" would limit directors in exercising their judgment.

Say on pay would "create a feedback loop. It would create a cloud, a constraint, a limitation on decisions that have been at the heart of what a board has done," Blankfein said.

The board, he said, needs to have the flexibility to weigh compensation packages and the market environment. He also expressed concern that decisions by board member could be judged by uninformed investors.

"Our compensation has been very well-correlated to performance," he said.

Goldman's shareholders apparently agreed, as the say on pay proposal was rejected, receiving approval by 43 percent of shares voted and 30 percent of shares outstanding.

Some speakers argued Goldman's compensation was enormously high. According to the proxy statement, Goldman's top five senior executives received roughly $250 million last year in salary, cash bonuses, stock awards and other compensation, excluding stock options.

For context, that haul was greater than JPMorgan Chase & Co's initial fire-sale takeover bid of $236 million for Bear Stearns Cos Inc.

10 April 2008

"Nothing Fundamentally Broken on Wall Street" - Bernanke


If this is ANYTHING like the assurance that Benny gave us last year about the minimal impact of the subprime mortgage situation we'd have to conclude that the markets are probably screwed up beyond all recognition, and that a major Depression lasting twelve years and a day is on our doorstep.

THE FED
Nothing fundamentally broken on Wall Street: Bernanke
By Greg Robb, MarketWatch
Last update: 1:58 p.m. EDT April 10, 2008

WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- There is nothing fundamentally broken on Wall Street that a little regulation and incentives for participants to be slightly more honest couldn't fix, said Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Thursday. (You could have said the same thing about Ma Barker and her boys - Jesse)

Bernanke's comments put him at odds with former Fed chairman Paul Volker, who said in a speech earlier this week that the financial turmoil that began last summer showed that the "new Wall Street" hadn't passed the market test. (Our money is on Volcker. Ben is Bush-Paulson's schmendrick. Volcker is always and everywhere a no BS econo-asskicker. - Jesse)

At issue is the move by Wall Street over the past twenty years to an "originate to distribute" business model, where commercial and investment banks create new complex forms of securities and sell them to investors looking for high yield. This replaced the old "originate and hold" model. (Bring back Glass-Steagall. Bring it back today. - Jesse)

In a speech to the World Affairs Council in Richmond, Bernanke said that it is clear the originate-to distribute model "broke down at a number of key points." (No shit, Shalom. - Jesse)

But he quickly added that "these problems notwithstanding, the originate-to-distribute model has proved effective in the past and with adequate repairs could be so again in the future." (Our unquestioned nominee for Meshugener of the Year - Jesse)

This model "seems likely to remain an important component of our system of credit provision," he said. (The Wall Street three card monty system feeding bad debt to the world. These guys are like herpes. - Jesse)

The Bush administration and the Fed have poured billions of dollars into financial markets since August seeking to restore the flow of credit to consumers. (Its all about confidence, children. You can't buy back a good reputation - Jesse)

The Fed is concerned that a lack of credit is creating a vicious downward growth spiral. (That's what happens when a Ponzi scheme collapses, propeller head - Jesse)

"Healthy, well-functioning financial markets are essential to sustainable growth," Bernanke said.(Hence our almost-certain-to-be-severe recession - Jesse)

The turmoil has led some to raise fundamental questions about Wall Street. (Would y'all like that Necktie party with or without tar and feathers on a rail? - Jesse)

In a speech in New York on Tuesday, Volker said that in his view, simply stated, the bright new financial system, for all its talented participants, for all its rich rewards, has failed the test of the marketplace."

But Bernanke argued against any need for radical reform. (What would it take to require some serious reform? The dollar worth .20 euros and the Dow Industrial at parity with gold? - Jesse)

He trumpeted a recent road-map released by the President's Working Group on Financial Markets, chaired by Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson and which includes the heads of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

The PWG plan called for several steps to strengthen federal oversight of the mortgage and credit markets and a complete overhaul of the market for mortgage derivatives. (Their track record has been so outstanding, right Elliot? - Jesse)

The plan also said that credit-rating agencies must differentiate between ratings for derivatives and corporate bonds. (Grading on a curve? Let them eat CAPM model and only exchange traded products to be held by government regulated entities like banks - Jesse)

In addition, international financial market reform will be spearheaded by the Financial Stability Forum, set to release their recommendations this weekend.

Bernanke stressed that the financial crisis was not over. But he said it was not too early to draw some conclusions about the turmoil on public policy.

"We do not have the luxury of waiting for markets to stabilize before we think about the future," Bernanke said. (And we're not sure we have the luxury of waiting for you to quit being a spineless putz - Jesse)

He dismissed suggestions that markets should be left to sort the crisis out without government interference.

Bernanke, a student of the Great Depression, said that, although there are similarities between the current credit crunch and the 1930s, the U.S. "will not experience" anything like the Depression, which lasted for 12 years. (We are so fucked - Jesse)

Greg Robb is a senior reporter for MarketWatch in Washington.

SP 500 Bear Market Update - Daily Charts - April 10


In this comparison of the SP 500 declines in the bear markets of 2000-3
and 2007-9 we perform a more precise time comparison.

In each chart the end point is exactly 183 days from the top.




US Losses Likely to Top $1 Trillion - IMF and Soros


Worst from credit crisis yet to come; losses likely to top US$ 1 trillion
10 Apr, 2008, 1020 hrs
The Economic Times

SHANGHAI: The credit crisis is far from over, billionaire financier George Soros warned Thursday, urging regulators to move faster to contain damage from the collapse of the housing finance markets.

``I think the situation is more serious than the authorities admit or recognize,'' Soros told journalists in a conference call. Measures taken so far to slash interest rates and stimulate the economy were ``necessary but not sufficient,'' he said.

``Because of that, I think the situation is going to get worse before it gets better.'' Soros is promoting a new book, ``The New Paradigm for Financial Markets: The Credit Crisis and What It Means.'' He has urged regulators to move more aggressively to improve market oversight to curb risks from excessive reliance on debt for financial speculation.

He said he agreed with the International Monetary Fund's estimate of more than US$1 trillion (euro640 billion) in losses linked to the collapse of mortgage-backed securities. Losses disclosed by financial institutions so far are related only to the decline in value of those financial instruments, Soros said.

``They do not reflect in any way a possible decline in the value of the loans held by the banks,'' he said. ``We have not yet seen the full effect of the possible recession.''


Soros pointed to the potential for massive losses from complex investments linked to the U.S. subprime mortgage market, such as credit default swaps, or CDS,
which allow investors to put bets on the likelihood that companies will default on bond payments.

He described as a ``Sword of Damocles'' the US$45 trillion (euro29 trillion) worth of credit swaps. ``That's more than five times the entire government bond market of the United States. It's almost equal to the entire household wealth of the United States,'' Soros said. ``This US$45 trillion market is totally unregulated,'' he said.

09 April 2008

What's In Ben's Wallet: Roll the Printing Presses and The Fed Panics


Not to worry about the Fed's Balance Sheet as reported in The Dollar Is Being Devalued. As suspected, the Treasury and Fed have plans to print plenty of money in case the bankers feel the need, as outlined in the WSJ story below.

Will there be austerity plans on Wall Street? Besides the inevitable layoffs-- the Street always eats its young. Thinner bonuses? Get real. More banks cutting the dividend? F-- the shareholders, but don't touch the options. Johnnie Walker Black instead of Johnnie Walker Blue for après-fraud? Oh all right. K instead of coke? Damn. Cabs instead of limos? Ouch. Scandals instead of Scores? Oh the humanity!

Sacrifices must be made, and all you rubes must do your part. Perhaps CNBC can host a telethon: PigAid.

Not to put too fine a point on this, but since about ninety-nine out of a hundred readers will not understand the implications of "the Plan," let's just say that IF the Fed and Treasury actually go through with this as described, depending on how its structured our fiat currency has just kicked it up a notch and the money machine is switched to "on." And for what? Bonuses for the uber rich?

No, afraid not. There's a more likely possibility. Its worse, MUCH worse than they are letting on. The US financial system is teetering on the edge of a nasty fall, and the Fed and Treasury are in a panic. They are concerned as the word of how bad this is reaches the global public awareness, and not for stocks per se. The stock market is an important player, but the Bond and the Dollar are the franchise.)


Fed Weighs Its Options In Easing the Crunch
By GREG IP
April 9, 2008; Page A3

WASHINGTON -- The Federal Reserve is considering contingency plans for expanding its lending power in the event its recent steps to unfreeze credit markets fail.

Among the options: Having the Treasury borrow more money than it needs to fund the government and leave the proceeds on deposit at the Fed; issuing debt under the Fed's name rather than the Treasury's; and asking Congress for immediate authority for the Fed to pay interest on commercial-bank reserves instead of waiting until a previously enacted law permits it in 2011.

• The Issue: The Fed has sold or committed a lot of its Treasury portfolio to support markets. Some worry it will soon run out of room to do more.
• The News: The Fed is considering several contingency plans for getting more lending capacity so that won't happen.
• The Bottom Line: The Fed has lots of firepower left before it has to turn to these contingencies.

No moves are imminent because the Fed still has plenty of balance sheet room for additional lending now. The internal discussions are part of a continuing effort at the Fed, similar to what is under way at foreign central banks, to determine its options if the credit crunch becomes even more severe. Fed officials believe the availability of such options largely eliminates the risk of exhausting its stockpile of Treasury bonds and thus losing its ability to backstop the financial system, as some on Wall Street fear.

British and Swiss central banks also are contemplating contingency plans. For now, the European Central Bank is reluctant to consider options that require substantial modifications of its standard tools. (The ECB should thank God for the German memory of Weimar - Jesse)

The Fed, like any central bank, could print unlimited amounts of money, but that would push short-term interest rates lower than it believes would be wise. The contingency planning seeks ways to relieve strains in credit markets and restore liquidity without pushing down rates. (more like break the bill and strain the acceptability of US debt to all but captive subordinate financial entities like US taxpayers [and client states like the Saudis and Japan] - Jesse)

The Fed is reluctant to heed calls from some Wall Street participants and foreign officials for the Fed to directly purchase mortgage-backed securities to help a market that still is not functioning normally. (reluctant but could be persuaded, no? Those strumpets. LOL - Jesse)

Before the credit crunch began in August, the Fed had $790 billion in Treasury securities on its balance sheet, about 87% of its total assets. Since then, it has sold or lent about $300 billion. In their place, the Fed has made loans to banks and securities firms to assist them in financing holdings of mortgage-backed and other securities. Some on Wall Street say the potential for further declines in Fed treasury holdings could leave it out of ammunition.

The Fed holds assets to manage the nation's money supply and influence the federal-funds rate, which banks charge each other on overnight loans. When the Fed buys Treasuries or makes loans directly to banks, it supplies financial institutions with cash; in effect, it prints money. The cash ends up as currency in circulation or in banks' reserve accounts at the Fed.

Since reserves earn no interest, banks lend cash that exceeds their required minimum. That puts downward pressure on the federal funds rate, currently targeted by the Fed at 2.25%. The Fed could purchase securities and make loans almost without limit, expanding its balance sheet. That would cause excess reserves to skyrocket and the federal funds rate to fall to zero. The Fed would contemplate such "quantitative easing" only in dire circumstances. The Bank of Japan took this step this decade after years of economic stagnation.

Weighing the Possibilities

So the Fed is seeking ways to expand its balance sheet without causing the federal funds rate to drop. The likeliest option, one the Fed and Treasury have discussed, is for the Treasury to issue more debt than it needs to fund government operations. The extra cash would be left on deposit at the Fed, where it would be separate from bank reserves on deposit and thus would have no impact on interest rates. The Fed would use the cash to purchase an offsetting amount of Treasuries in the open market; for legal reasons, it generally cannot buy them directly from Treasury. (that's a bookkeeping nicety at best. The Fed is trying to get a little bit pregnant, to keep it from showing. - Jesse)

Treasury's principal constraint is the statutory limit debt. Treasury debt was $453 billion below the limit Monday. In the past, Congress always has responded to administration requests to raise the limit, sometimes only after political theatrics. (they also have another constraint, the value of the US dollar in world trade - Jesse)

Fed officials also are investigating the feasibility of the Fed issuing its own debt and using the proceeds to purchase other assets or make loans. It has never done so; the legality is unclear. Some foreign central banks, such as the Bank of Japan, do so.

Another possibility is seeking congressional approval to pay interest on banks' reserves immediately instead of waiting until a 2006 law permits that in 2011. If the Fed paid, say, 2% interest on reserves, banks would have no incentive to lend out excess reserves once the federal funds rate fell to that level. (as opposed to raising the minimum reserve requirements and tightening the rules on sweeps? - Jesse)

Congress put off the effective date because paying interest on reserves reduces the Fed profits that are turned over to the Treasury each year, widening the budget deficit. Although preliminary explorations suggest Congress would be open to accelerating the date, the Fed is leery of depending on action by Congress.

The Fed is inclined to use any additional maneuvering room to lend through its existing and recently expanded avenues. Officials are reluctant to buy mortgage-backed securities directly. They worry that such purchases would hurt the market for MBS that the Fed is not permitted to buy: those backed by jumbo and subprime and alt-A mortgages, which are under the greatest strain.

Moreover, the Fed is not operationally equipped to hold MBS and would probably have to outsource their management. Such holdings wouldn't help avert foreclosures much, since the Fed would have little control over the mortgages that comprise MBS.

Write to Greg Ip at greg.ip@wsj.com1



Demise of the US MIddle Class: the Downward Spiral of Dumbness


A quick review of a recent blog entry titled Republican Presidents and Income Inequality in America might help clear up any mysteries after reading this NY Times story about how the US middle class has been economically screwed, first by one group of elitists, and then again by another.

If that does not do it for you, a quick review of this blog entry The Big Lie ought to be enough to get the message across.

If you understand no more needs to be said. And if not after all this, then there are none so blind as those who will not see.

The downward spiral of dumbness of the middle class in the US seems to be coming to an end with the over 50 crowd, at least according to the recent election polls. Let's hope that the middle class finally gets at least an even break.


April 9, 2008
Economic Scene
For Many, a Boom That Wasn’t
By DAVID LEONHARDT

How has the United States economy gotten to this point?

It’s not just the apparent recession. Recessions happen. If you tried to build an economy immune to the human emotions that produce boom and bust, you would end up with something that looked like East Germany.

The bigger problem is that the now-finished boom was, for most Americans, nothing of the sort. In 2000, at the end of the previous economic expansion, the median American family made about $61,000, according to the Census Bureau’s inflation-adjusted numbers. In 2007, in what looks to have been the final year of the most recent expansion, the median family, amazingly, seems to have made less — about $60,500. (Thank God there is no inflation right? - Jesse)

This has never happened before, at least not for as long as the government has been keeping records. In every other expansion since World War II, the buying power of most American families grew while the economy did. You can think of this as the most basic test of an economy’s health: does it produce ever-rising living standards for its citizens?

In the second half of the 20th century, the United States passed the test in a way that arguably no other country ever has. It became, as the cliché goes, the richest country on earth. Now, though, most families aren’t getting any richer.

“We have had expansions before where the bottom end didn’t do well,” said Lawrence F. Katz, a Harvard economist who studies the job market. “But we’ve never had an expansion in which the middle of income distribution had no wage growth.”

More than anything else — more than even the war in Iraq — the stagnation of the great American middle-class machine explains the glum national mood today. As part of a poll that will be released Wednesday, the Pew Research Center asked people how they had done over the last five years. During that time, remember, the overall economy grew every year, often at a good pace.

Yet most respondents said they had either been stuck in place or fallen backward. Pew says this is the most downbeat short-term assessment of personal progress in almost a half century of polling.

The causes of the wage slowdown have been building for a long time. They have relatively little to do with President Bush or any other individual politician (though it is true that the Bush administration has shown scant interest in addressing the problem). (This guy can't possibly be serious. Bush has been like death for the middle class. Not that Clinton-Rubin was much better with their sweetheart deals with China in return for campaign contributions. But it was certainly Reagan, Bush I & II that did in the great majority of Americans - Jesse)

The slowdown began in the 1970s, with an oil shock that raised the cost of everyday living. The technological revolution and the rise of global trade followed, reducing the bargaining power of a large section of the work force. In recent years, the cost of health care has aggravated the problem, by taking a huge bite out of most workers’ paychecks.

Real median family income more than doubled from the late 1940s to the late ’70s. It has risen less than 25 percent in the three decades since. Statistics like these are now so familiar as to be almost numbing. But the larger point is still crucial: the modern American economy distributes the fruits of its growth to a relatively narrow slice of the population. We don’t need another decade of evidence to feel confident about that conclusion.

Anxiety about the income slowdown has flared at various times over the past three decades. It seemed to crescendo in the first half of the 1990s, when voters first threw George H. W. Bush out of office, then, two years later, did the same to the Democratic leaders of Congress. Pat Buchanan went around preaching a kind of pitchfork populism during the 1996 New Hampshire Republican primary — and he won it.

Then came a technology bubble that made everything seem better, for a time. Record-low oil prices in the 1990s helped, too. So did the recent housing bubble, allowing families to supplement their incomes by taking equity out of their homes.

Now, though, we appear to be out of bubbles. It’s hard to see how the economy will get back on track without some fundamental changes. This, I think, can fairly be considered the No. 1 economic project awaiting the next president.

Fortunately, there is an obvious model waiting to be dusted off. The income gains of the postwar period didn’t just happen. They were the product of a deliberate program to build up the middle class, through the Interstate highway system, the G. I. Bill and other measures.

It’s easy enough to imagine a new version of that program, with job-creating investments in biomedical research, alternative energy, roads, railroads and education. On the campaign trail, Hillary Clinton, John McCain and Barack Obama all mention ideas like these. (We have lots of income creating programs its just that they are for large corporations like Halliburton, KBR, etc. - Jesse)

But there is still a lack of strategic seriousness to the discussion, as Bruce Katz of the Brookings Institution notes. After all, the United States spends a lot of money on education already but has still lost its standing as the country with the highest college graduation rate in the world. (South Korea and a couple of other countries have passed us, while Japan, Britain and Canada are close behind.)

The same goes for public works. Spending on physical infrastructure is at a 20-year high as a share of gross domestic product, but too much of the money is spent on the inefficient pet programs championed by individual members of Congress. Pork barrel spending does not add up to a national economic strategy.

Health care and taxes will have to be part of the discussion, too. Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel of the National Institutes of Health pointed out to me that a serious effort to curtail wasteful medical spending would directly help workers. It would spare them from paying the insurance premiums and taxes that now cover that care.

The tax code, meanwhile, has become far more favorable to high-income workers at the same time that they — and they alone — have received large pretax raises. That doesn’t make much sense, does it? (It makes a lot of sense to George W. Bush and his cronies - Jesse)

It’s a pretty big to-do list. But it’s a pretty big problem. Since the economy now seems to be in recession, and since recessions inevitably bring their own pay cuts, my guess is that the problem will look even bigger by the time the next president takes office.

E-mail: leonhardt@nytimes.com

Volcker: the Dollar is in Crisis, the Financial System Has Failed the Test of the Marketplace


Volcker Says Fed's Bear Loan Stretches Legal Power
By John Brinsley and Anthony Massucci

April 8 (Bloomberg) -- Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker questioned the central bank's decision to rescue Bear Stearns Cos. with a $29 billion loan, saying it was at ``the very edge'' of its legal authority.

``The Federal Reserve has judged it necessary to take actions that extend to the very edge of its lawful and implied powers, transcending in the process certain long-embedded central banking principles and practices,'' Volcker said in a speech to the Economic Club of New York.

Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke last month agreed to lend against Bear Stearns securities, paving the way for JPMorgan Chase & Co. to buy its Wall Street rival. Bernanke, who worked with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson to broker the bailout, last week defended the move as necessary to prevent ``severe'' damage to financial markets.

Volcker, the Fed chairman from 1979 to 1987, had implicit criticism for U.S. regulators and market participants who allowed ``excesses of subprime mortgages'' to spread into ``the mother of all crises.'' The Fed's Bear Stearns loan was unusual, he said.

``What appears to be in substance a direct transfer of mortgage and mortgage-backed securities of questionable pedigree from an investment bank to the Federal Reserve seems to test the time-honored central bank mantra in time of crisis: lend freely at high rates against good collateral; test it to the point of no return,'' he said.

Wall Street Subsidy

Lawmakers, while praising the Fed and Treasury for averting a financial collapse, have also questioned the plan to subsidize Wall Street while the Bush administration resists using government funds to assist homeowners cope with the worst housing crisis in 25 years.

Volcker said the Fed's loan may send investors the wrong message.

``The extension of lending directly to non-banking financial institutions -- while under the authority of nominally `temporary' emergency powers -- will surely be interpreted as an implied promise of similar action in times of future turmoil,'' he said. (this is the very substance of moral hazard - Jesse)

Volcker said the modern financial system has ``failed the test'' of the marketplace.

When asked whether he predicts a ``dollar crisis,'' he said, ``you don't have to predict it, you're in it.''

The dollar has dropped 15 percent against the euro and 14 percent versus the yen in the past year.

$945 Billion in Losses

``What Chairman Volcker said in his remarks is that we need to make sure we are taking a look at the implications of the Fed decision,'' Glenn Hubbard, former chairman of President George W. Bush's Council of Economic Advisers, said in an interview. ``The question is: How do we then redesign regulation around a decision that bold?''

Volcker's critique comes as policy markers struggle to prevent the world's largest economy from contracting, a prospect Bernanke himself raised last week. The International Monetary Fund today said the global losses from securities tied to commercial real estate and loans to consumers and companies may reach $945 billion.

``The bright new financial system, with all its talented participants, with all its rich rewards, has failed the test of the marketplace,'' Volcker said.

As credit markets seized up, the Fed gave the 20 primary dealers in U.S. government bonds the same access to discount- window loans that had previously been reserved for banks. The central bank now auctions as much as $100 billion to lenders a month, and has cut the cost on direct loans to just a quarter- point above the overnight rate on loans between banks.

``The implications of these decisions, and the lessons from the unfolding crisis itself, surely deserve full debate and legislative review in the period ahead,'' Volcker said.

Fed's Response

The Fed has also lowered its benchmark rate six times since September to 2.25 percent from 5.25 percent, and traders anticipate it will cut by at least another quarter point this month to cushion the economy's downturn.

Volcker, 80, said the problems stemmed in part from trading of increasing complicated securities including derivatives that ``have taking on a trading life of their own,'' and said the turmoil ``adds up to a clarion call for an effective response.''

`There was no pressure for change, not in Washington which was spending money and keeping taxes low, not on Wall Street which was wallowing in money, not on Main Street with individuals enjoying easy credit and rising house prices,'' Volcker said. (that pressure ought to have come from the Fed. It is their job to 'take away the punch bowl.' - Jesse)

To contact the reporter on this story: John Brinsley in Washington at jbrinsley@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: April 8, 2008 17:50 EDT

08 April 2008

The Fed is Increasingly Concerned about Stagflation


If we get an inflationary recession, it is because of Greenspan and Bernanke, Clinton and Rubin, Bush and Paulson, and their inability to keep their hands out of the markets, tinkering and fine-tuning them to advantage their own ends and those of their cronies.

Will they never learn? Do they really care?

Fed minutes: Severe downturn possible
Tue Apr 8, 2008 2:40pm

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Members of the Federal Reserve's policy-setting committee worried at their most recent meeting that housing and financial market stress could trigger a nasty slide in the economy, even as inflation pushed higher, minutes of the meeting released on Tuesday show.

"Some believed that a prolonged and severe economic downturn could not be ruled out given the further restriction of credit availability and ongoing weakness in the housing market," minutes of the March 18 meeting said.

A staff forecast buttressed that somber outlook, projecting "a contraction of real GDP in the first half of 2008 followed by a slow rise in the second half," the report said.

At the same time, Fed officials found recent inflation reports "disappointing," noting also with concern that some indicators of inflation expectations were edging higher.

Policy-makers said there were limits to what could be done through interest rate cuts to deal with problems underlying the collapsed housing market and the credit crunch, but agreed trimming borrowing costs might provide some help.

However, Fed officials said it would be hard to calibrate policy responses because their aggressive rate cuts in recent months would take some time to show their effects on economic activity.

The Fed has cut benchmark interest rates by three percentage points to 2.25 percent in six months.

U.S. rate futures rose on the gloomy Fed economic outlook, and the implied chance of the federal funds rate being cut to 1.75 percent by mid-year rose to 90 percent from 68 percent. U.S. stocks stayed weak after the minutes were released.

The Fed said that while exports were getting a boost from a cheapening U.S. dollar, there also was a risk that the devalued greenback will further add to inflationary pressures from costlier oil and other commodities.

(Reporting by Mark Felsenthal and Glenn Somerville; Editing by Theodore d'Afflisio)

The Dollar is Being Devalued


This chart is from an excellent blog called Sudden Debt. We read it regularly, and suggest you do as well.

Someone sent us this chart and asked: What do you make of this? and by inference: What does it mean, what does it imply?

We make a lot of it, because it has been a recurrent theme at this blog since the first: The Die is Cast for the US Dollar, Is the Fed Monetizing Bad Debt, Is the Fed Accountable? and The Odyssey of Ben Bernanke.

It has also been a recurrent theme at The Crossroads Cafe, postings at various places around the web, and a primary investment strategy in our personal portfolios since about 1999. Let's put it up as a headline, and in one nice simple sentence.

The Fed is being forced to devalue the US Dollar.

At one time the dollar was backed solely by US sovereign debt: AAA Treasuries and a few fully guaranteed agencies like Ginnie Mae. Now it is backed at least in good part by collateralized debt obligations for which there is no market at stated values.

The devaluation of the dollar has been gaining steam relative to the other fiat currencies around the world like the euro and the yen under the Bush Administration. The strong dollar under the Clinton administration was effectively an accounting illusion. Commodities are a real problem because so many of them are controlled by non-G8 countries.

A lot of breath has been wasted debating the Hegelian dialectic between inflation and deflation. In a purely fiat regime it is a policy decision, nothing more.

Japan made their decision for their own reasons and got a protracted deflation, probably because they had a huge national savings at hand, an industrial policy of net exports, and a complex kereitsu controlled economy in cooperation with the bureaucrats at Ministry of International Trade and Industry 通商産業省 or MITI.

The US is making its decisions its way and is getting inflation, probably because it has a huge national deficit and no savings. Debtors do not willingly choose deflation. Without external standards its a policy decision. But the debate masks the real issue, that we are falling into a centralized command economy, and moving away from free market discipline. The further they go, the more the Fed will have to control directly. Some say that dollars can only be created if banks make loans, as if it is some law of physics. Oh really? Who says this? Where and by whom is it written? When will the decisive moment come when this is put to the test.

Its all about moving to a common and interlinked fiat system, not necessarily one currency. Its an arranged system similar to Bretton Woods with a renewed dollar hegemony, except the fix might be more flexible and less explicit. Its does not have its basis in evil. Its fault is hubris, the fatal flaw of all central command economies and those who would rule them.

Its a neo-liberal Keynesian dream in which the country is managed as a command economy by a small group of elites, and the rest of the world accepts their designated place in the grand scheme of things.

An important milestone along the way will be when the Fed runs out of Treasuries to back the dollar currency in circulation. Will people care that the dollar is now backed by questionable Wall Street debt? Will the Treasury find a graceful way to give them unlimited supplies? Will the rest of the world keep providing us with key commodities and manufactured goods? Its an awkward bridge that must be crossed in which appearance slips and the crowd gets a brief glimpse of reality. But its not the last obstacle, and perhaps not the biggest.

Will it succeed? We surely do not know. As the president said, it would be easier to make things happen if we had a dictatorship. We like the idea of hedging against a possible failure.

Until 1971 the US dollar was backed by gold. The Dollar is no longer the reserve currency of the world. Until last month it was backed by the sovereign debt of the United States government. One can presume that it is still backed by the full faith and credit of the federal government, no matter what. Although the nature and character of its backing is clearly changing, the final outcome of what it will become exactly is yet to be decided.

The die is cast

Someone just sent me this April 8 interview with Jim Rogers in which he says similar things. Its worth reading. Jim Rogers: More Pain for the Greenback, and the Failure of the Federal Reserve

07 April 2008

The Big Lie: the Fed is Blameless


"The question is whether you were lying then or are you lying now... or whether in fact you are a chronic and habitual LIAR!..."

"My Lord, may I also remind my learned friend that his witness, by her own admission, has already violated so many oaths that I am surprised the Testament did not LEAP FROM HER HAND when she was sworn here today! I doubt if anything is to be gained by questioning you any further! That will be all, Frau Greenspan! "

Sir Wilfrid played by Charles Laughton, Witness for the Prosection


USA TODAY February 23, 2004

"Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said Monday that Americans' preference for long-term, fixed-rate mortgages means many are paying more than necessary for their homes and suggested consumers would benefit if lenders offered more alternatives.

In a standing-room-only speech to the Credit Union National Association meeting here, Greenspan also said U.S. household finances appeared generally sound, despite rising debt levels and bankruptcy filings. Low interest rates and surging home prices have given consumers flexibility to manage debt, he said. "Overall, the household sector seems to be in good shape."

Alan Greenspan, April 8,2005 Washington, D.C.

"Innovation has brought about a multitude of new products, such as subprime loans and niche credit programs for immigrants...

With these advances in technology, lenders have taken advantage of credit scoring models and other techniques for efficiently extending credit to a broader spectrum of consumers...

Where once more marginal applicants would simply have been denied credit, lenders are now able to quite efficiently judge the risk posed by individual applicants and to price that risk appropriately. These improvements have led to rapid growth in subprime mortgage lending... fostering constructive innovation that is both responsive to market demand and beneficial to consumers."


The Fed is blameless on the property bubble
By Alan Greenspan
Financial Times - Commentary

Published: April 6 2008 22:03

I am puzzled why the remarkably similar housing bubbles that emerged in more than two dozen countries between 2001 and 2006 are not seen to have a common cause. The dramatic fall in real long-term interest rates statistically explains, and is the most likely major cause of, real estate capitalisation rates (rent as a percentage of a property’s value) that declined and converged across the globe. By 2006, long-term interest rates for all developed and main developing economies declined to single digits, I believe for the first time ever.

Doubtless each individual housing bubble has its own idiosyncratic characteristics and some point to Federal Reserve monetary policy complicity in the US bubble. But the US bubble was close to median world experience and the evidence that monetary policy added to the bubble is statistically very fragile. Paul De Grauwe, writing in the Financial Times’ Economists’ Forum, depends on John Taylor’s counterfactual model simulations to conclude that the low funds rate was the source of the US housing bubble. Mr Taylor (with whom I rarely disagree) and others derive their simulations from model structures that have been consistently unable to anticipate the onset of recessions or financial crises. Counterfactuals from such flawed structures cannot form the basis for policy.

Mr De Grauwe asserts that “signs of recovery” (I assume he means sustainable recovery) were evident before 2004 and hence the Fed should have started to tighten earlier. With inflation falling to quite low levels, that was not the way the pre-2004 period was experienced at the time. As late as June 2003, the Fed reported that “conditions remained sluggish in most districts”. Moreover, low rates did not trigger “a massive credit ... expansion”. Both the monetary base and the M2 indicator rose less than 5 per cent in the subsequent year, scarcely tinder for a massive credit expansion.

Bank loan officers, in my experience, know far more about the risks and workings of their counterparties than do bank regulators. Regulators, to be effective, have to be forward-looking to anticipate the next financial malfunction. This has not proved feasible. Regulators confronting real-time uncertainty have rarely, if ever, been able to achieve the level of future clarity required to act pre-emptively. Most regulatory activity focuses on activities that precipitated previous crises.

Aside from far greater efforts to ferret out fraud (a long-time concern of mine), would a material tightening of regulation improve financial performance? I doubt it. The problem is not the lack of regulation but unrealistic expectations about what regulators are able to prevent. How can we otherwise explain how the UK’s Financial Services Authority, whose effectiveness is held in such high regard, fumbled Northern Rock? Or in the US, our best examiners have repeatedly failed over the years. These are not aberrations.

The core of the subprime problem lies with the misjudgments of the investment community. Subprime securitisation exploded because subprime mortgage-backed securities were seemingly underpriced (high-yielding) at original issuance. Subprime delinquencies and foreclosures were modest at the time, creating the illusion of great profit opportunities. Investors of all stripes pressed securitisers for more MBSs. Securitisers, in turn, pressed lenders for mortgage paper with little concern about its quality. Even with full authority to intervene, it is not credible that regulators would have been able to prevent the subprime debacle.

Martin Wolf argues in the FT that central banks “can surely lean against the wind” even if they cannot eliminate bubbles. I know of no instance in which such a policy has been successful. For reasons I have outlined elsewhere (American Economic Association, January 2004), I doubt that it is possible. If it turns out to be feasible, I would become a strong supporter of “leaning against the wind”.

As far as US monetary policy being (in Mr Wolf’s words) “dangerously asymmetrical”, I point out that over the past half-century the US economy has been in recession only one-seventh of the time. Yet the unemployment rate exhibits no trend. Hence the average rate of rise of unemployment has been far greater than its average pace of decline. Monetary policy in response has been more active during recessions than during periods of expansion, but scarcely “dangerous”.

Much of the commentary critical of my FT article (Comment, March 17) is directed less at its substance and more, as Mr Wolf describes it, at “the ideology I display”. Ideology defines that set of ideas that we each believe explains how the world works and how we need to act to achieve our goals. Some of our views of causative forces are rational, some otherwise. Much of what we confront in reality is uncertain, some of it frighteningly so. Yet people have no choice but to make judgments on the nature of the tenuous ties of causation or they are immobilised.

I do have an ideology. So does each member of the forum. I trust our views are subject to the same standards of evidence that apply to all rational discourse. My view of how the efficiency of global capitalism has evolved over the decades as new evidence has appeared contradicts some earlier judgments and confirms others. I have been surprised by the fierceness of investors in retrenching from risk since August. My view of the range of dispersion of outcomes has been shaken but not my judgment that free competitive markets are the unrivalled way to organise economies. We have tried regulation ranging from heavy to central planning. None meaningfully worked. Do we wish to retest the evidence?

The writer is former chairman of the US Federal Reserve. A longer version of this article is on the FT’s Economists’ Forum at www.ft.com/wolfforum

US Corporate Earnings Estimates Decline Further


We start the first quarter earnings reports this afternoon with Alcoa.

Earnings prospects continue to decline for US companies not involved in the energy sector. Especially hard hit will be the financials.

The biggest events this week may be currency related with interest rate decisions from the ECB and BOE, and the US Trade deficit and IM/EX prices at the last part of the week.

Be careful with trading this information since much has already been discounted in the current stock market prices, and volumes on the NYSE are the lowest of the year.

Be even more careful about listening to the usual Wall Street siren song about now being the time to buy. Its traditional to try and lure the non-US and small investor into the market to help cushion the next leg down, which looks like at some point within the next month or so. A 'trigger event' could take this market down sharply despite the best efforts of the President's Working Group on Markets and the Federal Reserve trying to overlay the cracks with the plaster of monetary inflation.

P.S. @ 5:25 PM - After the closing bell today Alcoa missed estimates, and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) warned.


Wall St sees sharper drop in Q1 earnings

NEW YORK: April 7, 2008 (Reuters) Wall Street analysts have cut their first-quarter earnings forecasts for US companies even further, according to figures from media estimates on Monday.

Earnings for Standard & Poor's 500 companies are now expected to decline 11.8 per cent, compared with the 8.1 per cent drop projected last week. When the quarter began on January 1, analysts had forecast earnings to grow 4.7 per cent in the period.

The revised forecast comes as a deep global credit crisis has dented the profit outlook for many US companies, particularly those in the financial sector. Financial companies are expected to be affected the most, with earnings projected to fall 61 percent. Consumer companies follow, with earnings expected to drop 11 per cent as US shoppers faced with higher food and energy prices and declining home values spend carefully.

The energy and technology sectors are expected to show the best gains for the quarter, up 33 per cent and 10 per cent respectively, according to Reuters Estimates.

The overall projected rate combines actual figures for companies that have reported with estimates for companies that have not.

The turbulent environment has prompted most companies to issue negative outlooks for the upcoming quarter. There are 242 negative outlooks, and 169 positive, according to Reuters Estimates.




05 April 2008

The Die is Cast for the US Dollar


The Rubicon is a river that marked the boundary between the Roman province of Gallia Cisalpina to the north and Italy proper to the south. Roman law prohibited its returning generals from crossing into Italy with their army, protecting the civilian basis of the Roman Republic: Senatus Populusque Romani. SPQR: the Senate and the People of Rome. (A modern equivalent is the US law of posse comitatus.)

When the Roman general Gaius Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon with his army in 49 BC with the intention of going to Rome, he challenged the independence of the Roman political system and made a war to resolve the outcome of the change inevitable. Hence the phrase, "crossing the Rubicon" to mean an action that precipitates major change and inevitable consequences.

The Republic was replaced by an autocracy as Caesar assumed the title dictator perpetuus, dictator for life.

As Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon, the historian Suetonius reports that he uttered the phrase alea iacta est, "the die is cast".

Until 1971 the US dollar was backed by gold. The Dollar is no longer the reserve currency of the world. Until last month it was backed by the sovereign debt of the United States government. One can presume that it is still backed by the full faith and credit of the federal government, no matter what. Although the nature and character of its backing is clearly changing, the final outcome of what it will become exactly is yet to be decided.

And so the die is cast.



Bearing Down on the Fed's Balance Sheet
By Randall W. Forsyth
Barron's

Congress turned its sites this week on the rescue -- don't call it a bailout! -- of Bear Stearns by the Federal Reserve and JPMorgan Chase.

All the principals involved, from Treasury to the Fed to the banks, insisted the deal staved off a certain bankruptcy of Bear on St. Patrick's Day, which would have set off a chain reaction that might have threatened a meltdown of the global financial system.

They're probably right; the risk of letting Bear go bust was too great to take. And since then, financial markets have begun to rebound. Stocks have bounced, but more importantly from the standpoint of the economy, the capital markets have improved materially.

Starting with Lehman Brothers' $4 billion convertible preferred offering earlier this week, the capital markets have become much more receptive, allowing banks and other financial firms to rebuild capital that was hit by writedowns of sub-prime-related assets.

While balance sheets in the private sector are being rebuilt, the opposite is happening to the balance sheet of the nation's central bank. Specifically, the Fed's holdings of U.S. Treasury securities are plummeting. In their place, the Fed's various new-fangled lending facilities to banks and the rest of the financial system are burgeoning.

Since Dec. 6, just before the Fed instituted its Term Auction Facility to auction loans to banks, its holdings of Treasury securities plummeted from $780 billion to an average of $589 billion in the week ended Wednesday.

As MacroMavens' Stephanie Pomboy points out, at this rate the Fed will be out of Treasuries before Labor Day, or Aug. 14 to be exact.

Meantime, TAF lending has climbed to $100 billion. And the Primary Dealer Credit Facility -- representing the opening up of the discount to non-banks -- averaged $38.1 billion in the week ended Wednesday. JPMorgan Chase chief executive Jamie Dimond told Congress that Bear Stearns is borrowing about $25 billion via this facility.

That is apart from the controversial $29 billion that will be provided by the Fed to JPMorgan Chase and backed by Bear Stearns collateral -- which won't happen until the merger closes.

In addition, the Fed lent an average of $64.3 billion a day in Treasuries under its Term Securities Lending Facility in the week to Wednesday, in addition to the $21.3 billion a day in Treasuries lent under its overnight lending scheme. Lending Treasuries in exchange for other, lower-quality and less-liquid securities doesn't expand overall liquidity. But it does give dealers securities that are as good as cash in exchange from securities that, in essence, aren't.

But, wait, there's more. In the week ended Wednesday, so-called Other Fed Assets leapt by $21.4 billion a day, to an average of $64.9 billion. In that category resides foreign assets, such as currency swaps with foreign central banks such as the Swiss National Bank and the European Central Banks.

The latest bank-statement week took in the turn of the quarter, when money markets tighten, especially in skittish times such as these. So, European banks likely turned to their friendly, local central bankers for dollar liquidity, which the central banks apparently obtained by drawing on swap lines to the Fed. And those loans were an asset on the Fed's balance sheet, requiring it to shed Treasuries as an offset.

It's enough to make anybody's head spin. But the key point is that all these new and novel loans are displacing Treasuries on the Fed's balance sheet. That means, in effect, the Fed is taking on far greater credit risk in support of the banking system. (and it is the Fed's Balance Sheet Assets that provide the backing for the Federal Reserve Notes - US currency - in circulation - Jesse)

Indeed, says Robert Rodriguez, chief executive of First Capital Advisors, we have "crossed the Rubicon."

"In our opinion, a new financial system is in process of being created," he writes in a report to shareholders. "Some may refer to it as Pre-Bear Stearns and Post-Bear Stearns."

As it becomes the protector of the financial system, Rodriguez continues, the Fed's focus may be distorted by the credit risks that now reside on its balance sheet. Having these risky assets might influence the Fed to follow a less stringent anti-inflation policy as when it just held Treasuries.

For now, Job 1 for the Fed is to keep the financial system functioning -- even if it compromises its other objectives. Hobson, here's your choice.

Fitch Downgrades Debt Insurer MBIA Over Capital Levels


MBIA Loses AAA Insurer Rating From Fitch Over Capital
Christine Richard

April 4 (Bloomberg) -- Fitch Ratings cut MBIA Inc.'s insurance unit to AA from AAA, saying the bond insurer no longer has enough capital to warrant the top ranking.

MBIA, the world's largest financial guarantor, would need as much as $3.8 billion more in capital to deserve an AAA, New York-based Fitch said today in a report. The outlook is negative, Fitch said.


Fitch issued the new, lower rating even though Armonk, New York-based MBIA asked the ratings company last month to stop assessing its credit worthiness. The two companies disagree over how much capital MBIA needs to absorb losses on the bonds it insures. Moody's Investors Service and Standard & Poor's both affirmed their AAA ratings earlier this year.

''It will be difficult for MBIA to stabilize its credit trend until the company can more effectively limit the downside risk'' from collateralized debt obligations, Fitch said.

The long-term rating of MBIA Inc. was cut to A from AA, Fitch said.

''We respectfully disagree with Fitch's conclusions,'' MBIA Chief Financial Officer Chuck Chaplin said today in a statement. ''MBIA has a balance sheet that is among the strongest in the industry with over $17 billion in claims-paying resources, and has a high quality insured portfolio.''

MBIA shares closed down 68 cents, or 4.8 percent, to $13.61 in New York Stock Exchange Composite trading. The stock has declined 27 percent this year.

Capital Raising

MBIA raised $2.6 billion in capital through a bond offering and the sale of a stake to Warburg Pincus LLC, eliminated its dividend and stopped guaranteeing asset-backed securities for six months.

Those decisions prompted Moody's and S&P to keep their top ratings for MBIA. Fitch continued its review. Fitch has rated MBIA's insurance unit since at least 2000, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. S&P and Moody's have rated the company since at least 1987, the data show.

MBIA last month asked Fitch to stop rating the company because it disagreed with the ratings company's requirement that MBIA hold more capital.

MBIA, which started as the Municipal Bond Insurance Association in 1974, and the rest of the bond insurers stumbled after expanding into CDOs that caused losses of more than $7 billion. CDOs repackage pools of assets into securities with varying degrees of risk. The company previously recorded at least 15 years of consecutive profits insuring bonds sold by schools, hospitals and municipalities.

''It's tough for a rating agency to downgrade a bond insurer, to take away the AAA rating,'' said Mark Adelson, founding member of Adelson & Jacob Consulting in Long Island City, New York.

Holding Company

The capital MBIA raised has yet to be contributed to its insurance company and could be diverted to meet obligations at the holding company, Fitch said in its report. MBIA's holding company engages in transactions that may require it to post collateral, creating a rising demand for cash, Fitch said.

MBIA's suspension of its structured finance business, which includes CDOs and asset-backed securities, may help to boost the company's rating back to AAA in the future, Fitch said today.

MBIA will have losses on CDOs backed by subprime mortgages of as much as $4.9 billion after taking into account that they will be paid over time, Fitch said.

The analysis assumes that subprime mortgages backing securities sold in 2006 will experience losses of 21 percent and those originated in 2007 will lose 26 percent, Fitch said. Subprime mortgages are given to borrowers with poor credit.

To contact the reporters on this story: Christine Richard at crichard5@bloomberg.net

04 April 2008

Jobs Numbers Revised Back to 2003: Confirm Recession


You may have missed this in today's Jobs Report, but when we started to update our Excel spreadsheets with the jobs data we noticed that the Bureau of Labor Statistics has revised the Jobs Data. It was not the usual revision back a month or two. It went back all the way to early 2003.

Admittedly they could have worked this revision in February or even January, since we don't often go back into prior years to look for major changes. But the fact remains that the data has been significantly revised, and downward.

We're working with really large numbers here overall, and its hard to see these changes in graphs. We're not sure its even worth looking at the monthly changes in the graphs.

What is important is the TREND. And the revised numbers showed a significant confirmation in the downtrends, that our 12 Month moving average has been showing since the beginning of last year.

The US is in a slowdown. More precisely, the US entered an economic recession in the first quarter of 2008 at the latest, and perhaps the fourth quarter of 2007. We'll say what Nouriel Roubini probably wishes he could say: anyone who says we are not in a recession now is either a stooge or merely ignorant.

Look for the Wall Street and government spin to shift from denying that we are in recession, to a new slant that we are in recession but its now half over and its time for stocks to start pricing in recovery in the second half of the year.

Let's see if the President's Working Group can keep stocks propped up to give the average Joe the impression that things are not so bad.

There is only one play in this current team's playbook: fraud - bubble - bust. Because that's all that they know how to do.

They don't know how to facilitate a productive economy to build genuine prosperity for the nation. For the most part they have never created anything worthwhile in their lives, but lived off the labor of others. But they do know how to enrich a few of their cronies, and to deceive, inflate and try to patch the mess once the bubble they created breaks. At least so far.

























And here's a report on the Jobs number from John Williams over at Shadow Government Statistics.

March Payroll Decline Easily Topped 120,000

When a Fed Chairman begins talking recession, a recession is in place. Chairman Bernanke's comment on Wednesday that the U.S. economy "even could contract slightly" in the first half of 2008 was more reporting than a prognostication. He certainly had an advance idea of the March employment data that now show a decline in average first-quarter 2008 payrolls versus fourth-quarter 2007, where seasonally-adjusted March 2008 payrolls are down at an annualized 0.7% rate from December 2008.

Despite the bad news in the monthly jobs data, the reported numbers still were overly Pollyannaish, thanks to extreme gimmicking. As anticipated, the industrial production benchmark revisions showed considerably weaker economic activity than previously reported, while the purchasing managers survey again showed a deepening economic contraction and surging inflation.

Also on the inflation front, money supply M2 continued to surge in the latest weekly reporting up a seasonally-adjusted, annualized 24.3% in the week ended March 24th, with annual growth in March M3 now a fair bet to top 17.2%, up from the 16.9% historic high set in February. The money supply numbers will be updated over the coming weekend on the Alternate Data tab at www.shadowstats.com, after tonight's data releases.

Jobs Data Should Continue Fueling Recession Forecasts.

The reported third consecutive decline in monthly payrolls, as of March, will do much to reinforce recession outlooks, but the data remain severely gimmicked, understating the monthly declines in payroll employment, thanks to the usual statistical shenanigans at the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). Net of gimmicks, the decline in payrolls and the rise in the unemployment rate were statistically significant......

Seasonal-Factor Gimmicks.

Year-to-year growth should be virtually identical in both the seasonally-adjusted and unadjusted series, and applying the unadjusted annual change to the seasonally-adjusted year-ago numbers for February and March suggests that the seasonally-adjusted month-to-month change should have been a contraction of 124,000. This reporting gimmick is made possible by the "recalculation" each month of the monthly seasonal factors. If the process were honest, the suggested differences would go in both directions. Instead, the differences almost always suggest that the seasonal factors are being used to overstate the current month's relative payroll level, as seen last month and the month before....

Household Survey.

The usually statistically-sounder household survey, which counts the number of people with jobs, as opposed to the payroll survey that counts the number of jobs (including those of multiple job holders), showed household employment dropped by 24,000 in March against a 255,000 decline in February.

The March 2008 seasonally-adjusted U.3 unemployment rate showed a statistically-significant increase to 5.08% +/- 0.23% from 4.81% in February. Unadjusted, U.3 held at 5.2% in March. The broader U.6 unemployment rate rose to an adjusted 9.1% (9.3% unadjusted) in March, versus 8.9% (9.5% unadjusted) in February. Adjusted for the "discouraged workers" defined away during the Clinton Administration, actual unemployment, as estimated by the SGS-Alternate Unemployment measure, rose to 13.0% in March, up f