12 April 2012

For Capitalism to Survive, Crime Must Not Pay


There are too many people in the financial sector, with their enablers, familiars, and camp followers, engaged in distorting markets and public policy discussions while collecting their enormous and counterproductive entitlements from corruption, fraud, and the misery of others.

They are crippling the economic recovery. These are not 'job creators' or even real wealth creators; they are con men, parasites, and leeches.

I was planning on writing something like this, but Bruce Judson says it quite well.

If the people allow it, the crony capitalists will destroy the capitalist economy and the democratic republic that sustains it. They will destroy it because they hate it.

They hate the risk and the narrow profits of honest competition and productive work in a free and open society, and so they create monopolies, cartels, private privilege, and fraud. They also hate equality, and the freedom that threatens to give other people the ability to curtail their insatiable lust for power.

If the people allow it, they will destroy themselves in their vanity and greed, which might not be all that bad as in the case of Bernie Madoff, Ken Lay and Jon Corzine, for example, but they tend to take a lot of innocent and good people with them, and that is a shame, and most often a tragedy.

For Capitalism to Survive, Crime Must Not Pay
by Bruce Judson
04/12/2012 - 3:52 pm

Unequal enforcement of the law will distort and destroy any capitalist society, and we may be witnessing just such a downward spiral in the financial sector.

Capitalism is not an abstract idea. It is an economic system with a distinct set of underlying principles that must exist in order for the system to work. One of these principles is equal justice. In its absence, parties will stop entering into transactions that create overall wealth for our society. Justice must be blind so that both parties — whether weak or powerful — can assume that an agreement between them will be equally enforced by the courts.

There is a second, perhaps even more fundamental, reason that equal justice is essential for capitalism to work. When unequal justice prevails, the party that does not need to follow the law has a distinct competitive advantage. A corporation that knowingly breaks the law will find ways to profit through illegal means that are not available to competitors. As a consequence, the competitive playing field is biased toward the company that does not need to follow the rules.

The net result of unequal justice is likely to be the destruction of the overall wealth of our society. I don’t mean the wealth of individuals; I mean the total wealth of goods and services that are the benefits of healthy competition. To the extent that unequal justice prevails, entities that are exempt from the laws will, in all likelihood, be more profitable than law abiding competitors. Then they use their profits to further weaken competitors by using their illegal profits to further build their businesses at the expense of competitors. All of this business building activity is based on a foundation of sand, and ultimately the entire industry — or even the larger economy — becomes distorted. The “rogue” company gains power, changes markets, and destroys direct and indirect competitors because it is playing by different rules...

Read the rest here.

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts



To say that these are fairly cynical traders' markets, rather than anything tied to fundamental valuations, is an understatement.

The trading desks engage in heavy handed bear raids, smacking the price of bullion and related markets like miners down lower, and then ride them slowly back up to trend.

Wash, rinse, repeat.

There are far too many people in the financial sector collecting the counterproductive entitlements of fraud.



SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Wash, Rinse, Repeat



A continuing rebound in the trend channel, as the Street anticipates more sugar from Uncle Ben.



Securitization - The Undead Heart of the Shadow Banking System



Here is a study of the shadow banking system, and what changed that helped to fuel the credit bubble and the financial collapse.

The root of this was in the overturning of the Glass-Steagall, the well funded lobbying effort for deregulation in the financial sector under the banner of the efficient markets hypothesis and the trickle down theory, and of course, a systematic undermining of regulation, the media, and the law by the monied interests.

Debt is not money. But it can be animated and treated as faux money through fraud, and the end is always bitter for the many, but sweet for the perpetrators of this scheme, if they can get away with it and keep their loot.  They are actively on the look out for fall guys and patsies, and their number one target are their past victims.

There is a difference, the subtlety of which is lost on many, between the deleveraging of a debt inflation and a genuine monetary deflation itself.  In this case the traditional money supply is expanded to save the banking system, which is the primary victim of a debt asset deflation.  That highly unproductive expansion of the fiat money supply, without a commensurate increase in production of real wealth, is what is causing the recession in the real economy today, and the soaring price of hard currency alternatives. 

The real economy is starved for real money, but instead is flooded with counterfeits which flows to frauds of every type.  It cannot bear to submit to economic discipline because it is not born of savings and investment.

Since this is someone else's thoughts it would be extraordinary for me to agree with everything, but I found it a fresh take and well said, and substantially congruent with my own thoughts.

Enjoy.

Securitization – the Undead heart of the Shadow banking machine
By Liar's Lexicon

At the centre of all debates about the Banking crisis, the shadow Banking system and the bank bail-outs is Debt. For a long time I have been arguing that what this debt is, is in fact a new, bank created, bank issued and ultimately bank debased debt-backed currency. And the collapse in value of this unregulated currency IS the crisis. Its cause and its logic.

In order to explain why I think this and why I do not think ‘fixing’ the banking system back to any semblance of how it was, just prior to the crash, will be anything other than a disaster, I have to explain how debt is turned into money. And how, clever as this process is, it also contains within it the seeds of its own undoing.

To do so I have to take you into the undead heart of the machine – securitization. Securitization is what animates the global financial and shadow banking system in whose shadow we now live. It is how modern finance turns debt into money. It is the impious alchemical dream of turning lead to gold, water into wine.

When Securitization was invented it soon wrested control of the money supply away from nations and gave it to the banks. Nations still printed and controlled their currency. But securitization gave banks the ability to print their own currency. And this new securitized currency, based on debt, was theirs to print, control, spend, and ultimately to debase. In short, it gave banks a power to rival nations. It is worth, therefore, understanding its outlines at least.

Please don’t panic. Like most financial stuff its not nearly as difficult as the priesthood would have you believe...

Read the rest of Part 1 here.

Read Part II here.

Read Part III here.