30 November 2011

The Other One Percent: Corporate Psychopaths and the Global Financial Crisis




Anyone who has ever worked in a large corporation has seen the empty suits that seem to inexplicably rise to positions of power.  They talk a great game, possessing extraordinary verbal acuity, and often with an amazing ability to rise quickly without significant accomplishments to positions of great personal power, and often using it ruthlessly once it is achieved.

Their ruthless obsession with power and its visible rewards rises above the general level of narcissism and sycophancy that often plagues large organizations, especially those with an established franchise where performance is not as much of an issue as collecting their rents.

And anyone who has been on the inside of the national political process knows this is certainly nothing exclusive to the corporate world.

Here is a paper recently published in the Journal of Business Ethics that hypothesizes along these lines. It is only a preliminary paper, lacking in full scholarship and a cycle of peer review.

But it raises a very important subject. Organizational theories such as the efficient markets hypothesis that assume rational behaviour on the part of market participants tends to fall apart in the presence of the irrational and selfish short term focus of a significant minority of people who seek power, much less the top one percent of the psychologically ruthless.

Indeed, not only was previously unheard of behaviour allowed, it became quite fashionable and desired in certain sections of American management where ruthless pursuit of profits at any cost was highly prized and rewarded.  And if caught, well, only the little people must pay for their transgressions.  The glass ceiling becomes a floor above which the ordinary rules do not apply.

If you wish to determine the character of a generation or a people, look to their heroes, leaders, and role models.
This is nothing new, but a lesson from history that has been unlearned. The entire system of checks and balances, of rule of law, of transparency in government, of accountability and personal honor, is based on the premise that one cannot always count on people to be naturally good and self-effacing. And further, that at times it seems that a relatively small group of corrupt people can rise to power, and harm the very fabric of a society.

‘When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall one by one, an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle.’

Edmund Burke


'And remember, where you have a concentration of power in a few hands, all too frequently men with the mentality of gangsters get control. History has proven that.'

Lord Acton

These things tend to go in cycles.  It will be interesting to see how this line of analysis progresses. I am sure we all have a few candidates we would like to submit for testing.   No one is perfect or even perfectly average.  But systems that assume as much are more dangerous than standing armies, since like finds like, and dishonesty and fraud can become epidemic in an organization and a corporate culture, finally undermining the very law and principle of stewardship itself. 

'Our government...teaches the whole people by its example. If the government becomes the lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law; it invites every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy.'

Louis D. Brandeis

MF Global, and the reaction to it thus far, is one of the better examples of shocking behaviour that lately seems to be tolerated, ignored,  and all too often met with weak excuses and lame promises to do better next time, while continuing on as before.

"These corporate collapses have gathered pace in recent years, especially in the western world, and have culminated in the Global Financial Crisis that we are now in.

In watching these events unfold it often appears that the senior directors involved walk away with a clean conscience and huge amounts of money. Further, they seem to be unaffected by the corporate collapses they have created. They present themselves as glibly unbothered by the chaos around them, unconcerned about those who have lost their jobs, savings, and investments, and as lacking any regrets about what they have done.

They cheerfully lie about their involvement in events are very persuasive in blaming others for what has happened and have no doubts about their own continued worth and value. They are happy to walk away from the economic disaster that they have managed to bring about, with huge payoffs and with new roles advising governments how to prevent such economic disasters.

Many of these people display several of the characteristics of psychopaths and some of them are undoubtedly true psychopaths. Psychopaths are the 1% of people who have no conscience or empathy and who do not care for anyone other than themselves.

Some psychopaths are violent and end up in jail, others forge careers in corporations. The latter group who forge successful corporate careers is called Corporate Psychopaths...

Psychologists have argued that Corporate Psychopaths within organizations may be singled out for rapid promotion because of their polish, charm, and cool decisiveness. Expert commentators on the rise of Corporate Psychopaths within modern corporations have also hypothesized that they are more likely to be found at the top of current organisations than at the bottom.

Further, that if this is the case, then this phenomenon will have dire consequences for the organisations concerned and for the societies in which those organisations are based. Since this prediction of dire consequences was made the Global Financial Crisis has come about.

Research by Babiak and Hare in the USA, Board and Fritzon in the UK and in Australia has shown that psychopaths are indeed to be found at greater levels of incidence at senior levels of organisations than they are at junior levels (Boddy et al., 2010a). There is also some evidence that they may tend to join some types of organisations rather than others and that, for example, large financial organisations may be attractive to them because of the potential rewards on offer in these organizations."

Clive R. Boddy, The Corporate Psychopaths Theory of the Global Financial Crisis, Journal of Business Ethics, 2011


Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Crony Capitalism and More On Modern Monetary Theory



Bernanke and the western Central Banks stepped in to provide a jolt to the paper markets, and of course, the commodity markets including precious metals.

Intraday commentary on this here.






Steve Schwarzman, Chairman (and co-founder with Peter G. Peterson) of Blackstone and a Prince among crony capitalists, was on Bloomberg television today. Blackrock is the world's largest private equity fund.

Last year Steve referred to any attempt to raise taxes on his income via changes to the 15% rate on carried interest as 'a war,' the equivalent of 'Hitler invading Poland in 1939.' This was said in a private meeting, and was a big departure from his smoothly polished public persona.

His solution to the financial deficit is to have poor and lower income people pay more federal income taxes, in addition to state, sales, gasoline, and payroll taxes, to 'broaden the tax base' as it were, so they can have 'more skin in the game.' His own taxes should obviously remain unchanged.

I was intrigued by this particular general principle that Steve shared: "Whenever credit is more constrained, it is extended to someone. The key is to be that someone."  No matter what it takes.  And at advantageous rates I presume, in order to buy distressed assets like sovereign assets on the cheap.

Steve strongly endorsed Mitt Romney for President as a personal choice saying, "I've made money with that man." 16x their money on the first, and 24 x on the second to be exact. And he hopes to make and keep even more with Mitt as President.

Speaking of money, here is a short primer on Modern Monetary Theory.



And the Regulatory Process in Efficient Markets



SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts



What European crisis? What Bank downgrades? lol

As a reminder, today was the end of the month, and the funds had a lot of catching up to do after one of the worst Thanksgiving week markets on record.


Currency Wars: Fed Acts To "Increase the Availability of Dollars Outside the United States"



Several people have asked what I think about this.

I wrote about this just yesterday.   I could not ask for a better straight man than Ben Bernanke.

"I think the major monetization is already occurring in the Eurodollar markets, and an ongoing stealth bailout of European debt, in order to save the big money center banks at home and broaden the reach of the Dollar.

And this is why the Fed stopped reporting on Eurodollars some years ago, as a component of M3. It was to pave the way for the monetary equivalent of a financial neo-con, to addict European governance to the US dollar and pave the way for a stronger position for the dollar as a one world currency."

Currency Wars: The Anglo-American Century and Why the Financial Engineers Hate Gold and Silver

Here is a primer on the Fed Swaps. Keep in mind that it is written by the Fed.

I had also suggested after the bell that there would be an effort to blow off the downgrade of the big money center banks. I suspected there would be a more singular effort to pump up the SP futures from the Fed's house banks, but it appears the Central Banks, led by the Fed, decided to hit the markets with a major sugar rush of cheap dollars. That is US dollars.

"I will be surprised if they do not try and rally stocks in the face of this to put the brave face on and whistle past the graveyard once again. This is what traders like to do when they have been caught offsides by the news. But they may not be able to sustain it without official help from the strong trading desks of the financial sector."

The Chinese cut reserve requirement ratio on their banks by .5 percentage points. This will help them release more of their huge hoard of US dollars back into the global financial system.

This action, led by the US Fed, has had a marked effect on commodity prices in dollars. So the beneficiaries, or at least those protecting their wealth, are those holding precious metals and positions in dollar sensitive commodities.

Although the Fed will say that there is no potential loss in this to US taxpayers, in fact there is ALWAYS a loss to be realized at some point in the deliberate mispricing of risk.  This loss will be taken by all holders of US dollars.

This is not QE3 and does little to help the US economy per se.  This is just a big serving of a quick energy drink to ease the short term liquidity problem in Eurodollars. It is also timed to dull the news impact of the bank downgrades.

When the sugar rush wears off, and it will because this is does little to help the average person in the real economy, we will see how the markets react to the ever growing piles of paper dollars covering the landscape of a mismanaged and ruined economy.

But it was extraordinarily kind of the Fed to announce this just in time for the banks and the hedge funds to repair some of the damage from the stock market decline before they close their trading books on November.

The Eurozone problems have not been solved by this. The US domestic economy has not been improved by this, except to weaken the dollar and increase commodity prices.

It has only bought the Western banks some time, and further addicted the world to US dollars. This is government of the one percent, by the one percent, and for the one percent.

NY Times
Central Banks Take Joint Action to Ease Debt Crisis
By Binyamin Appelbaum
November 30, 2011

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve moved Wednesday with other major central banks to buttress financial markets by increasing the availability of dollars outside the United States, reflecting growing concern about the fallout of the European debt crisis.

The central banks announced that they would slash by roughly half the cost of an existing program under which banks in foreign countries can borrow dollars from their own central banks, which in turn get those dollars from the Fed. The banks also said that loans will be available until February 2013, extending a previous endpoint of August 2012.

"The purpose of these actions is to ease strains in financial markets and thereby mitigate the effects of such strains on the supply of credit to households and businesses and so help foster economic activity," the banks said in a statement. The participants in addition to the Fed are the Bank of England, the European Central Bank, the Bank of Japan, the Bank of Canada and the Swiss National Bank.

The move makes clear that regulators increasingly are concerned about the strain that the European debt crisis is placing on financial companies, which are facing increasing difficulty in borrowing through normal channels the money that they need to fund their operations and obligations.

The European Central Bank borrowed $552 million through the existing facility during the week ending Nov. 23 to meet the liquidity needs of European banks. Data for the past week is not yet available.

Under the new terms of the program, the existing interest rate premium of 0.1 percentage points on those loans will be reduced by half, to 0.05 percentage points, effective Dec. 5.

The other central banks said they had also agreed to make similar loans of their own currencies as necessary, but they noted that the only extraordinary demand at present was for dollars.

Stocks surged after the action was announced, with European markets up more than 4 percent in afternoon trading, while United States stock futures were up sharply.

“U.S. financial institutions currently do not face difficulty obtaining liquidity in short-term funding markets. However, were conditions to deteriorate, the Federal Reserve has a range of tools available to provide an effective liquidity backstop for such institutions and is prepared to use these tools as needed to support financial stability and to promote the extension of credit to U.S. households and businesses,” the Fed said in its statement.