| Juicing the Stock Market
The secret
maneuverings of the Plunge Protection Team
By Mike Whitney
03/07/07 "ICH
" -- -- The Working Group on Financial Markets,
also know as the Plunge Protection Team, was created by Ronald
Reagan to prevent a repeat of the Wall Street meltdown of
October 1987. Its members include the Secretary of the Treasury,
the Chairman of the Federal Reserve, the Chairman of the SEC and
the Chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
Recently, the team has been on high-alert given the increased
volatility of the markets and, what Hank Paulson calls, "the
systemic risk posed by hedge funds and derivatives.”
Last Tuesday’s 416 point drop in the stock market has sent
tremors through global system. An 8% freefall on the Chinese
stock exchange triggered a massive equities sell-off which
continued sporadically throughout the week. The sudden shift in
sentiment, from Bull to Bear, has drawn more attention to deeply
rooted “systemic” problems in the US economy. US manufacturing
is already in recession, the dollar continues to weaken,
consumer spending is flat, and the sub-prime market in real
estate has begun to nosedive. These have all contributed to the
markets’ erratic behavior and created the likelihood that the
Plunge Protection Team may be stealthily intervening behind the
scenes.
According to John Crudele of the New York Post, the Plunge
Protection Team’s (PPT) modus operandi was revealed by a former
member of the Federal Reserve Board, Robert Heller. Heller said
that disasters could be mitigated by “buying market averages in
the futures market, thus stabilizing the market as a whole.”
This appears to be the strategy that has been used.
Former-Clinton advisor, George Stephanopoulos, verified the
existence of The Plunge Protection Team (as well as its methods)
in an appearance on Good Morning America on Sept 17, 2000.
Stephanopoulos said:
“Well, what I wanted to talk about for a few minutes is the
various efforts that are going on in public and behind the
scenes by the Fed and other government officials to guard
against a free-fall in the markets….perhaps the most important
the Fed in 1989 created what is called the Plunge Protection
Team, which is the Federal Reserve, big major banks,
representatives of the New York Stock Exchange and the other
exchanges and they have been meeting informally so far, and they
have a kind of an informal agreement among major banks to come
in and start to buy stock if there appears to be a problem. They
have in the past acted more formally… I don’t know if you
remember but in 1998, there was a crisis called the Long term
Capital Crisis. It was a major currency trader and there was a
global currency crisis. And they, with the guidance of the Fed,
all of the banks got together when it started to collapse and
propped up the currency markets. And, they have plans in place
to consider that if the markets start to fall.”
Stephanopoulos’ comments have never been officially denied. In
fact, as Ambrose Evans-Pritchard of the U.K. Telegraph notes,
Secretary of the Treasury, Hank Paulson has called for the PPT
to meet with greater frequency and set up “a command centre at
the US Treasury that will track global markets and serve as an
operations base in the next crisis. The top brass will meet
every six weeks, combining the heads of Treasury, Federal
Reserve, Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and key
exchanges”.
This suggests that the PPT may have been deeply involved in last
Wednesday’s “miraculous” stock market rebound from Tuesday’s
losses. There was no apparent reason for the market to suddenly
“go positive” following a ruinous day that shook investor
confidence around the world. The editors of the New York Times
summarized the feelings of many market-watchers who were baffled
by this odd recovery:
“The torrent of bad news on housing is only worsening, with a
report yesterday that new home sales for January had their
steepest slide in 13 years...Manufacturing has already slipped
into a recession, with activity contracting in two of the last
three months. How is it then that investors took Mr. Bernanke’s
words as a “buy” signal?”
How indeed; unless other forces were operating secretly behind
the scenes?
Market Rigging
“Gaming” the system may be easier than many people believe.
Robert McHugh, Ph.D. has provided a description of how it works
which seems consistent with the comments of Robert Heller.
McHugh lays it out like this:
“The PPT decides markets need intervention, a decline needs to
be stopped, or the risks associated with political events that
could be perceived by markets as highly negative and cause a
decline; need to be prevented by a rally already in flight. To
get that rally, the PPT’s key component — the Fed — lends money
to surrogates who will take that fresh electronically printed
cash and buy markets through some large unknown buyer’s account.
That buying comes out of the blue at a time when short interest
is high. The unexpected rally strikes blood, and fear overcomes
those who were betting the market would drop. These shorts need
to cover, need to buy the very stocks they had agreed to sell
(without owning them) at today’s prices in anticipation they
could buy them in the future at much lower prices and pocket the
difference. Seeing those stocks rally above their committed
selling price, the shorts are forced to buy — and buy they do.
Thus, those most pessimistic about the equity market end up
buying equities like mad, fueling the rally that the PPT
started. Bingo, a huge turnaround rally is well underway, and
sidelines money from Hedge Funds, Mutual funds and individuals’
rushes in to join in the buying madness for several days and
weeks as the rally gathers a life of its own.” (Robert McHugh,
Ph.D., “The Plunge Protection Team Indicator”)
If a secret team is interfering in the stock market, it presents
serious practical and moral issues. For one thing, it disrupts
natural “corrections” which are a normal part of the business
cycle and which help to maintain a healthy and competitive slate
of equities.
More importantly, outside intervention punishes the people who
see the weaknesses in the stock market and have invested
accordingly. Clearly, these people are being ripped off by the
PPT’s back-channel manipulations. They deserve to be fairly
compensated for the risks they have taken.
Moreover, artificially propping up the market only encourages
over-leveraged speculators and smiley-face Pollyanna’s who
continue to believe that the grossly-inflated market will
continue to rise. Rewarding foolishness only stimulates greater
speculation.
The tinkering of the PPT is sure to erode confidence in the
unimpeded activity of capital markets. It’s astonishing to think
that, after years of singing the praises of the “free market” as
the ultimate expression of God’s divine plan; these same
conservative ideologues and “market purists” favor a strategy
for direct intrusion. The actions of the Plunge Protection Team
prove that it’s all baloney. The “free market” is merely a
public relations myth with no basis in reality. Saving the
system will always take precedent over ideology; just as the
“invisible hand” will always be overpowered by the manicured and
mettlesome fingers of banking elites and Wall Street big wigs.
It’s their system and they’re not going to let it get wiped out
by some silly commitment to principle.
The free market system is supposed to be “self cleansing”
through cyclical purges of over-inflated equities and
over-extended speculators. Do we really want “central planning”
from an unelected, Market-Nanny that re-jiggers the system
according to its own economic interests?
The Plunge Protection Team may wrap itself in pompous rhetoric,
but it operates like a Fiscal Politburo inserting itself into
the market in way that promotes the narrow interests of its own
constituents. It’s an outrage.
Besides, the market is so fragile it trembles every time someone
halfway around the world sells a fistful of equities. It needs a
good shakedown.
The years of deregulation have taken their toll. The market is
resting on a foundation of pure quicksand. Collateralized debt,
rickety hedge funds, shaky sub-prime equities, and an ocean of
margin debt are just a few examples of deregulation’s excesses.
These untested debt-instruments are presently bearing down on
Wall Street like a laser-guided missile. It’ll take more than
Hank Paulson and his PPT “plumber’s unit” to prevent the
implosion.
Wall Street needs to regain its lost credibility with more
regulation and stricter laws. The system needs a major
face-lift. Still, even as the markets rumble and shake, Paulson
rejects any move towards greater government supervision.
According to the New York Times:
“Henry Paulson and top financial regulators said the government
need not — and should not — provide greater oversight for the
$1.4 trillion hedge fund industry, or, by extension, the
trillions of dollars more in complex derivative transactions
spawned by the industry. That stance is mostly free-market
ideology run amok. But it is also based on the unproven
assumption that unregulated investing, which dispersed risk and
reduced volatility as markets surged, will continue to do so
when markets tank.
The upshot is a one-sided bet for investors. They have explicit
assurances from regulators and policy makers that almost
anything goes when the markets are hot, and implicit assurances
— based on past experience — that the Fed would lower interest
rates to contain a financial crisis should one erupt.
Unfortunately, there is no guarantee that easing up on rates
would have the same powerful effect in a future crisis as it had
in the past.
The next crisis appears to be building around weakness in the
United States, not in Russia or Asia or South America. That
means money could flow out of the country if markets were
rattled. That would weaken the dollar and require speedy and
complex remedial action by the world’s central banks — not just
a rate cut by the Fed.” (NY Times)
The Times is right, Paulson’s “hands off” attitude is a classic
example of “free-market ideology run amok”. A meltdown in the
Hedge funds industry or the derivatives market would bring the
entire economy crashing to earth. Paulson’s Plunge Protection
Team is a band-aid approach to a much more serious dilemma. It’s
time for the government to get involved and protect the small
investor.
Paulson has shown that he understands the problem; he simply
resists the solution. Just a few months ago he opined, “We need
to be vigilant and make sure we are thinking through all of the
various risks and that we are being very careful here. Do we
have enough liquidity in the system"?
No, we don’t. And Paulson knows it; that’s why there’s a plan to
fiddle the system and try to “cheat the Reaper”. But it won’t
work. This is the biggest equity bubble in history. Neither
increasing the money supply nor lowering interest rates will
fend off the impending catastrophe. We need to address the
mushrooming risk that has arisen from lending hundreds of
billions in sub-prime loans, and from overexposure in the hedge
funds and derivatives markets. These things need to be
confronted immediately as they pose a “clear and present danger”
which could set off a chain reaction of defaults and
bankruptcies.
The world’s markets are facing a global liquidity crisis which
will become more evident as the real estate sub-prime market
continues to deteriorate. This will undoubtedly be accompanied
by larger and more ferocious gyrations in the stock market.
Does “Hans Brinker” Paulson really believe he can stop the flood
by sticking his well-burnished finger in the dike?
It’s All Uphill from Here on Out
The U.S. economy faces daunting challenges in the near-future; a
steadily shrinking manufacturing sector, increasing job losses
in housing, a nascent currency crisis, and a real estate market
that is in full retreat. Additionally, the “always dependable”
American consumer is showing signs of fatigue which is pushing
investors towards foreign markets.
This explains why “the SEC said it aims to slash margin
requirements for institutions and hedge funds on stocks,
options, and futures to as low as 15pc, down from a range of
25pc to 50pc.The ostensible reason is to lure back hedge funds
from London, but it is odd policy to license extra leverage just
as the Dow hits an all-time high and the VIX 'fear' index nears
an all-time low – signaling a worrying level of risk appetite.
The normal practice across the world is to tighten margins to
cool over-heated asset markets.” (Ambrose Evans-Pritchard,
“Monday View: Paulson Reactivates Secretive support team to
prevent markets meltdown” UK Telegraph)
This is yet another red flag. The stewards of the system are
actively seeking larger infusions of marginal debt just to keep
the faltering market on its last legs.
That’s not reassuring and it is clearly a step in the wrong
direction. It further illustrates the worrisome level of
recklessness at the top rungs of the decision-making apparatus.
Converting the PPT into another Safety-net for Private Industry
The original purpose of the Plunge Protection Team was to
prevent another 1987-type “Black Monday" stock market crash.
This seems like a reasonable way to address the prospect of a
major economic collapse following a terrorist attack or a
natural disaster. However, the systemic weakness in the market
and the great uncertainty surrounding hedge funds and
derivatives suggests that the PPL is probably being used to
stabilize an over-leveraged and thoroughly-debauched system.
If that’s the case, then we need to know whether the PPT really
operates in the public interest or if it is just a stopgap for
big business to avoid a painful retrenchment?
It’s the corporate warlords and banking moguls who have
benefited the most from dismantling the regulatory system. The
PPT creates an additional “taxpayer-supported” safety net for
dubious debt-instruments which are finally beginning to unravel.
There’s no reason why the market should be manipulated simply to
protect private investment. It is a fundamental contradiction to
the workings of a free market.
According to Michael Edward: (“The Secrets of the Plunge
Protection Team” Rense.com)
“Since 911, there have been at least three major long-term stock
market rallies. In all 3 instances, when the markets opened all
the indexes began to quickly plunge. In each incidence, by early
afternoon the markets were brought back from the brink of
collapse to the surprise of everyone, including historical
analysts….An event that should have sent markets spiraling
downward was the Enron, et al, unprecedented corporate
accounting scandals. Yet despite this, an unprecedented
across-the-board markets rally began on July 24, 2002. Once
again, the European Press called it a ‘PPT rally’". Edward goes
on to say that outside the US it’s “no secret” that the market
is being manipulated. He cites an article in the UK Guardian on
9-16-01 which states, "that a secretive committee... dubbed 'the
plunge protection team'... is ready to coordinate intervention
by the Federal Reserve on an unprecedented scale. The Fed,
supported by the banks, will buy equities from mutual funds and
other institutional sellers.”
There are myriad other examples which support Edward’s basic
theory. As the NY Post’s John Crudele said, “Over the next few
years, people like me suspected that Heller’s plan was indeed in
effect. Whenever the stock market was in trouble someone seemed
to ride to the rescue.”
Crudele is right; the market is being manipulated.
This may explain why the Federal Reserve mysteriously decided to
stop publishing its M-3 report. Since the Fed is the “main
resource” for buying averages in the futures market “the money
is injected into markets via the New York Fed’s Repo desk, which
easily showed up in the M-3…. Without the useful resource of
M-3”, Robert McHugh, Ph.D.says, “we need to find other tools to
monitor when the PPT is likely to intervene, and kill shorts”.
What? So by abolishing the M-3, the Federal Reserve has removed
its greasy fingerprints from the smoking gun of market meddling?
It appears so.
Trust in the Free Market is Wavering
Whatever happened to the idea of completing the “market cycle”
and allowing markets to self-correct whether that meant
belt-tightening or not? And, what about the ethical question of
whether government manipulation should be allowed in a “free
market”?
Also, by what authority do the government and the
privately-owned banks interfere in the futures’ markets and
shift momentum from the prevailing trend? Is this a free market
or a command economy?
The precariousness of our present economic situation has caused
these dramatic changes and strengthened the conjugal
relationship between the privately-owned Central Bank, major
corporations and the state. The market is more vulnerable now
than anytime since the late 1920s, a fact that was emphasized in
a statement by the IMF just 2 months ago:
“Financial markets have failed to price in the risk that any one
of a host of threats to economic security could materialize and
deliver a massive shock to the world economy. It is clear that
risks are on the downside of a sharper than expected slowdown in
house prices that would produce weaker-than-expected growth that
would have implications for global growth and financial
markets.” (“IMF: Risk of global crash is increasing” UK
Independent)
Risk, over-exposure, cheap money, shaky loans, a falling dollar,
low reserves and a confidence deficit; these are the crumbling
cinder-blocks upon which America’s Empire of Debt currently
rests. The possibility of a major disruption grows more likely
by the day. Consider the world's 8,000 unregulated hedge funds
with $1.3trillion at their disposal or the wobbly derivatives
market and the effects that a sudden downturn might have.
Kenneth J. Gerbino put it like this in his recent article “The
Big Sell Off” on kitco.com:
“With a global market panic starting in a low interest rate and,
so far, low inflation environment, one has to be wonder about
the real reason for (Tuesday’s) sell-off. Easy money almost
everywhere leads to leverage and speculation. No where is this
more prevalent than in the global derivatives market. It is not
out of the question that third party defaults and risk aversion
designed instruments that collapse and go sour may someday
overwhelm the financial markets. Latest figures from the Bank of
International Settlements: $8.3 trillion of real money is
controlling $313 trillion in derivatives. That’s 38 to 1
leverage. These figures are just for the over - the - counter
derivatives and do not include the global exchange traded
derivatives in currencies, stocks and commodities which are
another $75 trillion.”
“$8.3 trillion of real money is controlling $313 trillion in
derivatives!”
This illustrates the sheer magnitude of the problem and the
economy-busting potential of a miscalculation. That’s why Warren
Buffett calls derivatives “weapons of mass destruction”. If
there’s a fire-sale in hedge funds or derivatives, there’s
nothing the Plunge Protection Team or the Federal Reserve will
be able to do to stop a meltdown. The market will crash leaving
nothing behind.
We are reaping the rewards of a lawless, deregulated system
which has removed all the safeguards for protecting the small
investor. There is no government oversight; it’s a joke. The
stock market is a crap-shoot that serves the sole interests of
establishment elites, corporate plutocrats, and banking giants.
The small investor is trapped beneath the wheel and getting
squeezed more and more every day. He has no way to fix the
markets like the big guys and no lobby to promote his interests.
He must arrive at his decisions by researching publicly
available information and then plunking down his money. That’s
it. He’d be better off in a casino; the odds are about the same.
Click here
to comment on this and other articles
In accordance
with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material
is distributed without profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving the
included information for research and educational
purposes. Information Clearing House has no
affiliation whatsoever with the originator of
this article nor is Information ClearingHouse
endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
|