20 May 2008

Economists Discover the Law of "Separate but Equal"


On June 9, the 30th day of the McCarthy Army hearings, Army Defense Counsel Robert Welch challenged Roy Cohn to provide McCarthy's list of 130 Communists or subversives in defense plants "before the sun goes down."

McCarthy stepped in and said that if Welch was so concerned about persons aiding the Communist Party, he should check on a man in his Boston law office named Fred Fisher, who had once belonged to the National Lawyers Guild, which Attorney General Brownell had called "the legal mouthpiece of the Communist Party."

Welch responded, "Until this moment, Senator, I think I never gauged your cruelty or your recklessness..."

When McCarthy resumed his attack, Welch interrupted him: "Let us not assassinate this lad further, Senator. You've done enough. Have you no sense of decency, sir, at long last? Have you left no sense of decency?" When McCarthy once again persisted, Welch cut him off and demanded the chairman "call the next witness."

At that point, the gallery erupted in applause and a recess was called.


Until this moment I think I never gauged the cruelty or recklessness of some conservative economists, politicians and their masters the Pigmen. They have created a wreckage of financial devices and led us on the edge of a societal precipice. Have they not done enough? Have they no sense of decency left at long last?

Must they now attempt to define the poor as those who by their nature prefer cheap and shoddy goods, and a lower standard of life, and who are therefore are separate but equal with the wealthy who are genetically compelled (entitled?) to require the finer things in life?

The words to lowlifes like McCarthy and Cohn still fit after all these years, to those lacking the basic integrity of the schoolyard, who thrive on and generate conflict, and who will say or do almost anything in their pursuit of the will to power.

Inequality and Prices
May 20, 2008
Lane Kenworthy’s weblog

Steven Levitt and Will Wilkinson point to a new paper that Levitt says “shatters the conventional wisdom on growing inequality” in the United States. The paper is by Christian Broda and John Romalis, economists at the University of Chicago.

Here’s their argument: income inequality has increased over time. But analysis of consumption data indicates that people with low incomes are more likely than those with high incomes to buy inexpensive, low-quality goods. In part because those goods increasingly are produced in China, their prices rose less between 1994 and 2005 than did the prices of goods the rich tend to consume. Hence the standard measure of inequality, which is based on income rather than consumption, greatly overstates the degree to which inequality increased. The incomes of the rich rose more than those of the poor, but because the cost of living increased more for the rich than for the poor, things more or less evened out.

Their point that the prices of some goods have risen less than the overall inflation rate, and that this is due in large part to imports from China, seems perfectly valid and worth making. It has important implications for our understanding of how absolute living standards for America’s poor have changed over time.

But I’m not sure why Broda and Romalis, or Levitt and Wilkinson, think this should alter our assessment of the trend in inequality. Do they mean to suggest that the revealed preference of the poor for cheap goods is exogenous to their income? In other words, people with low incomes simply like buying inexpensive lower-quality goods, and they would continue to do so even if they had the same income as the rich. Likewise, the rich simply have a taste for better-quality but pricier goods, and they would continue to purchase them even if they suddenly became income-poor. If this is the assumption, I guess the conclusion follows. But I can’t imagine the authors, or anyone else, really believe that.

Actually, Levitt may believe it. “How rich you are,” he says, “depends on two things: how much money you have, and how much the stuff you want to buy costs” [my emphasis - LK].

Consumption is worth paying attention to. But income is important in its own right because it confers capabilities to make choices. What matters, in this view, is what you are able to buy rather than what you want to buy.

If a rich person with expensive tastes gets an extra $100,000, she can continue buying high-end clothes and gadgets. Or she can choose to purchase low-end Chinese-made products and save the difference. Suggesting that if she opts for the former there has been no rise in inequality is not very compelling.



Moody's Cuts Bond Insurer to Junk


Moody's slashes CIFG unit to junk on capital woes
Tue May 20, 2008 1:46pm EDT

NEW YORK, May 20 (Reuters) - The bond insurance arm of CIFG Holding Ltd was slashed to junk status by Moody's Investors Service on Tuesday, due to concern about its capital position.

Two months ago the insurer held pristine "Aaa" or "AAA" ratings from the major rating firms. Rating cuts and downgrade warnings of bond insurers, including MBIA Inc and Ambac Financial Group, had roiled financial markets earlier this year. (They are insolvent, we're just too scared to admit it - Jesse)

However, the impact of subsequent rating cuts has been muted as many investors already had accounted for potential cuts and losses at the bond insurers before the rating companies completed their reviews.

Moody's downgraded the insurance financial strength ratings of bond insurer CIFG Guaranty, CIFG Europe and CIFG Assurance North America, Inc to "Ba2," two levels below investment grade, from "A1," the fifth highest, and kept the ratings under review with uncertain direction.

The rating cuts "reflect the high likelihood that, absent material developments, the firm will fail minimum regulatory capital requirements," due to losses stemming from its debt and exposure to subprime mortgages, Moody's said.

In March, Moody's had estimated CIFG's expected loss on asset-backed collateralized debt obligations at $433 million, and stress losses, consistent with a 21 percent cumulative loss on 2006 subprime mortgage first liens pools, at $1.3 billion.

"The breach of such regulatory capital requirements would put the firm in a precarious position," Moody's said in a statement, due to the company's exposure to credit default swaps, Moody's said.

CIFG in March asked Fitch Ratings to withdraw ratings for its CIFG Guaranty unit and two affiliates, citing lack of confidence in Fitch's methods. (Fitch is excessively honest - Jesse)

The two other major rating firms, Standard & Poor's and Moody's, earlier this year stripped CIFG of its top "AAA" rating, and Moody's move on Tuesday shows how fast a top rating can turn into junk status.

"The review with direction uncertain reflects potential changes in the credit profile of the firm that could occur over the next couple of months as CIFG attempts to implement capital strengthening plans," Moody's said.

(Reporting by Walden Siew; Editing by Leslie Adler)

What Will the Banks Do Now?


Nouriel Roubini asks an excellent question, and it deserves some thought. We include only a brief excerpt, cutting to the chase as it were. The entire piece can be read here.

For the short term the investment banks can live off the public dole, scamming lunch money by short term manipulation of the markets, and copping the odd fee or so from corporations that have not fallen by the wayside.

In the longer term there will be far fewer money center banks, more small and regional banks, and more a return to banking regulations.

Certain parts of the economy are going to be dead money for a long time. The pit traders are going to get a lot of practice making paper airplanes.

The hope will be that the corporate sector will build up its cash reserves, start capex spending to regenerate the real economy, and of course buy up competitors generating goodies for Wall Street.

There will be an effort to find fresh countries to despoil overseas.

The US financial system is a teetering wreck, and a significant amount of liquidation and consolidation lies ahead of us. The problem with bankers in key roles like the Fed is that they NEVER like to see a bank fail, so they keep propping up losers far beyond their natural life, wasting dear resources for the real job ahead, infecting society with the stench of rotting Ponzi schemes.


How will financial institutions make money now that the securitization food chain is broken?
Nouriel Roubini
May 19, 2008

The most severe financial crisis in decades has not only damaged the balance sheet of financial institutions. It has also severely affected their P&L, i.e. the process of generating revenues and profits. ....

So how will mortgage brokers, banks, broker dealers, monoline insurers, rating agencies generate revenues and profits now that this slice & dice scheme has unraveled? The current market delusion that the worst is behind us for financial institutions is based on the view that most of the writedowns of the toxic assets have already been done.

But this is not just a balance sheet problem. Now financial institutions have a more severe P&L problem, i.e. how to generate income and earnings from now on when they cannot originate junk any more. The entire income generating model of financial institutions – make income out of securitization fees rather than by holding the credit risk - is broken now that the generalized credit bubble (not just subprime mortgages) has burst; thus, how will these financial institutions generate earnings over time?

Capital losses are one-time problems; but destruction of the income generation process is a more severe and persistent problem that will require banks and other financial institutions to rethink their overall business model of credit risk transfer. But there is no clear and sound new business model for them: going back to the old days of “originate and hold” is not fully possible while the new “originate and distribute” model has shown all of its wrong and distorted incentives, risks and systemic failures.

So banks and other financial institutions will have to seriously rethink their business model and how they are going to make money: the model of slice and dice and pile fees upon fees and transfer the credit risk is broken. It is not clear if banks and other financial institutions have a better model. May they will have to go back to old fashioned banking: carefully assess the creditworthiness of their borrowers, lend on sensible terms and hold a good part of the credit risk now that the easy fee/profit generating machine of securitization is terminally broken.



Banks Suffer Losses From Bets On Their Employees' Deaths


Here's a good parable of our highly advanced service economy. Not only can we make money doing each other's laundry, but now we can make money out of each other's death.

Banks have been buying life insurance policies on their employees, not for the workers' benefit, but rather for their own. If the employee dies the bank gets an insurance payment that is tax free. They can report the death payments as quarterly income. If an employee dies the survivors must certainly turn in a death certificate for the company benefit program. This gives the banks the proof they need to collect on a life insurance policy on said former employee. (That's the hitch by the way, in case you were thining about taking out blanket policies on the unsuspecting.)

The lawsuits are not related to this particularly ghoulish scheme. Rather, the suit is against insurance companies that apparently invested the premium payments in some dodgy places, including a Falcon Hedge Fund run by Citigroup which is faltering.

This raises some interesting questions. First of course is the quality of bank earnings, which are pretty poor. Secondly is the obvious tax loophole here. Its one thing for a death insurance payment to be tax free to a spouse or a family member. But to a bank taking out blanket policies on their employees? Gee if it works, why not expand it. Think of the possibilities. China and India take note.

But secondly, if insurance companies managing life insurance for banks death-to-our-employees-for-the-sake-of-the-bottom-line programs are hurting because of investments, isn't it logical to wonder how they are doing on your own life insurance policies? How about your pension plan?

See, this is far from over. The reverberations of this Ponzi Scheme are going to travel through our economy. At the least we will see the dollar take a further hit as the Fed, on behalf of its banking owners, spreads the losses to all holders of dollar assets to essentially bailout the banks.

Welcome to our Human Resources Meeting. Sorry, the company is cutting back on healthcare benefits again. Here have another doughnut. The quarter is almost over.


Citigroup Hedge-Fund Loss Weighs on Three Banks
By DAVID ENRICH
May 20, 2008; Page C1
Wall Street Journal

The downward spiral of a Citigroup Inc. hedge fund has caused steep losses for at least three large U.S. banks that hoped it would rev up returns on a controversial type of employee life insurance.

Besides triggering a lawsuit against an insurer and brokerage firm that arranged the hedge-fund investment for Fifth Third Bancorp, the losses may pressure Citigroup to give the banks some of their money back, as it has agreed to do for individual investors. Such a bailout would be costly, because the clobbered banks sank more than $1.6 billion into the hedge fund, according to the lawsuit and people familiar with the matter.

The collapse is another headache for Citigroup's new management, led by Chief Executive Vikram Pandit, as it tries to rebound from crippling losses that stemmed partly from inadequate risk controls. Falcon's descent has caused a handful of high-level brokers to quit in frustration. Citigroup is spending $250 million to allow retail investors to exit from their positions without absorbing the fund's full losses.

Falcon also attracted major banks that invested in the hedge fund as part of their bank-owned life insurance programs. Wachovia Corp., the fifth-largest U.S. bank by stock-market value, was the most heavily exposed, with more than $1 billion invested, people familiar with the situation say. The stake represented at least 7% of the Charlotte, N.C., bank's $14.9 billion in BOLI-related assets as of March 31.

Fifth Third, of Cincinnati, sank $612 million into Falcon, according to the lawsuit the regional bank filed last month in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio. That was about a third of the bank's BOLI assets as of Dec. 31. Another regional bank also invested a sizable amount, people familiar with Falcon's operations say. The name of that bank couldn't be determined.

In such bank-owned life-insurance programs, banks buy policies on their employees. When employees die, the banks collect. Because the income is tax-free, some critics contend that BOLI is a tax shelter.

Last year, nearly 700 banks reported holding a combined $117.5 billion in their BOLI accounts, according to Michael White Associates LLC, a bank-insurance consulting firm in Radnor, Pa., and executive-benefits firm MullinTBG, of Deerfield, Ill.

In recent years, many banks have grown aggressive with their BOLI programs, putting premiums into investment vehicles that let the banks record quarterly profits -- or losses. Quarterly profits or losses are tax-free, and the policies still pay when employees die.

Falcon began stumbling last fall and by March 31 was valued at 20% of the original value, according to Citigroup documents. Fifth Third, which reaped $238 million in gains on its BOLI portfolio in a three-year period, suffered a BOLI-related loss of $177 million in the fourth quarter and a $152 million loss in 2008's first quarter.

At Wachovia, Falcon's woes caused the bank's first-quarter loss to widen to $708 million from its previously announced $393 million loss. Wachovia didn't identify the exact source when it disclosed May 6 that it had a $315 million loss on its BOLI investments, but spokeswoman Christy Phillips-Brown confirmed that it came from Falcon. She wouldn't comment on the size of Wachovia's investment in the hedge fund or whether the company plans to pursue legal action.

The market's turbulence has hurt BOLI results at other banks, too, from tiny Evans Bancorp Inc. in Hamburg, N.Y., to regional bank BB&T Corp. The Winston-Salem, N.C., bank had a loss of $15 million on its BOLI portfolio in the first quarter. Spokesman Bob Denham declined to say whether BB&T was a Falcon investor, though any future losses "will be small."

A Citigroup spokeswoman wouldn't comment on the fund's impact on banks. Citigroup has said that Falcon was marketed only to sophisticated investors.

In its lawsuit, Fifth Third alleges that Transamerica Life Insurance Co. and Clark Consulting Inc., both units of Dutch insurer Aegon NV, "utterly failed to properly manage and monitor" premiums that were invested in Falcon. Citigroup isn't named as a defendant. A Fifth Third spokeswoman declined to comment.

Cindy Nodorft, an Aegon spokeswoman, counters that Fifth Third "was free to choose from a number of investment alternatives that they were familiar with," adding that the "terms of the policy were adhered to."

Ms. Nodorft wouldn't say whether the Aegon units placed other banks in Falcon. "We continue to work closely with Citigroup as well as other financial institutions to address the developments in market conditions," she said.

Write to David Enrich at david.enrich@wsj.com2

Banks Suffer Losses on Bets on Employees Deaths