The
Fed's role in the Bear Stearns Meltdown
By
Mike Whitney
06/30/07 "ICH" -- -- The Bank for International
Settlements issued a warning this week that the Federal
Reserve’s monetary policies have created an enormous equity
bubble which could lead to another “Great Depression”. The
UK Telegraph says that, “The BIS--the ultimate bank
of central bankers--pointed to a confluence a worrying
signs, citing mass issuance of new-fangled credit
instruments, soaring levels of household debt, extreme
appetite for risk shown by investors, and entrenched
imbalances in the world currency system.
The IMF and the UN
have issued similar warnings, but they've all been shrugged
off by the Bush administration. Neither Bush nor the Federal
Reserve is interested in “course correction”. They plan to
stick with the same harebrained policies until the end.
The “easy credit”
which created the subprime crisis in mortgage lending has
now spread to the hedge fund industry. The troubles at Bear
Stearns prove that Secretary of the Treasury Henry Paulson’s
assurance that the problem is “contained” is pure baloney.
The contagion is swiftly moving through the entire system
taking down home owners, mortgage lenders, banks, rating
agencies, and hedge funds. We are just at the beginning of a
system-wide breakdown.
The problem
originated at the Federal Reserve when Fed-chief Alan
Greenspan lowered the Feds Fund Rate to 1% in June 2003 and
kept rates perilously low for more than 2 years. Trillions
of dollars flowed into the economy through low interest
loans creating a massive equity bubble in real estate which
drove up housing prices and triggered a speculative frenzy.
The Feds’ “easy
money” policy has disrupted the “debt-to-GDP” balance which
maintains the integrity of the currency. By expanding
circulation debt via low interest rates; Greenspan put the
country on the path to hyperinflation and, very likely, the
collapse of the monetary system.
The problems at
Bear Stearns are the logical upshot of Greenspan’s policies.
The over-leveraged hedge funds are a good example of what
happens during a “credit boom”. Liquidity flows into the
markets and raises the nominal value of all asset classes
but, at the same time, GDP continues to shrink. That’s
because the wages of working class people have stagnated and
not kept pace with productivity. When workers have less
discretionary income, consumer spending—which accounts for
70% of GDP—begins to decline. That’s why this quarters
earnings reports have fallen short of expectations. The
American consumer is "tapped out".
The current rise
in stock prices does not indicate a healthy economy. It
simply proves that the market is awash in cheap credit
resulting from the Fed's increases in the money
supply. Consumer spending is a better indicator of the real
state of the economy than stocks. When consumer spending
drops off; it is a sign of overcapacity, which is
deflationary. That means that growth will continue to
shrivel because maxed-out workers can no longer purchase the
things they are making.
The underlying
problem is not simply the Fed’s reckless increases to the
money supply, but the growing “wealth gap” which is
undermining solid economic growth. If wages don’t keep pace
with productivity; the middle class loses its ability to
buy consumer items and the economy slows.
The reason that
hasn’t happened yet in the US is because of the
extraordinary opportunities to expand personal debt. The
Fed’s low interest rates have created a culture of
borrowing which has convinced many people that debt equals
wealth. It’s not; and the collapse in the housing market
will prove how lethal that theory really is.
To
large extent, the housing bubble has concealed the
systematic destruction of America’s industrial and
manufacturing base. Low interest rates have lulled the
public to sleep while millions of high-paying jobs have been
outsourced. The rise in housing prices has created the
illusion of prosperity but, in truth, we are only selling
houses to each other and are not making anything that the
rest of the world wants. The $11 trillion dollars that was
pumped into the real estate market is probably the greatest
waste of capital investment in the nations’ history. It
hasn't produced a single asset that will add to our
collective wealth or industrial competitiveness. It’s been a
total bust.
The Federal Reserve
produces all the facts and figures related to the housing
industry. They knew that trillions of dollars were being
diverted into a speculative bubble, but they did nothing to
stop it. Instead, they kept interest rates low and endorsed
the lax lending standards which paved the way for millions
of defaults. Now the effects of their "cheap money"
policies have spread to the hedge fund industry
where hundreds of billions of dollars in pensions and
savings are in jeopardy.
Alan Greenspan
played a major role in the housing boondoggle. On February
26, 2004, he said, “American consumers might benefit if
lenders provide greater mortgage product alternatives to the
traditional fixed rate mortgage. To the degree that
households are driven by fears of payment shocks but willing
to manage their own interest-rate risks, the traditional
fixed-rate mortgage may be an expensive method of financing
a home.”
Greenspan tacitly
approved the whacky financing which produced all manner of
untested loans—including ARMs, piggyback loans, “no doc”
loans, “interest only” loans etc. These loans are a break
from traditional financing and have contributed to the
increase in bankruptcies.
Millions of people who were hoodwinked into buying
homes with “interest-only”, “no down” loans will now either
lose their homes or be shackled to an asset of decreasing
value for the next 30 years. They've been tricked into a
life of indentured servitude.
A recent article in
the Wall Street Journal revealed the extent of Greenspan’s
involvement in the housing fiasco. Here’s an excerpt from
the article:
“Edward Gramlich,
who was Fed governor from 1997 to 2005, said he proposed to
Mr. Greenspan in or around 2000, when predatory lending was
a growing concern, that the Fed use its discretionary
authority to send examiners into the offices of
consumer-finance lenders that were units of Fed-regulated
bank holding companies.
"I would have liked
the Fed to be a leader" in cracking down on predatory
lending, Mr. Gramlich, now a scholar at the Urban Institute,
said in an interview this past week. Knowing it would be
controversial with Mr. Greenspan, whose deregulatory
philosophy is well known, Mr. Gramlich broached it to him
personally rather than take it to the full board.
"He was opposed to
it, so I didn't really pursue it," says Mr.
Still, Mr. Greenspan's
views did color the regulatory environment, facilitating
growing concentration in banking and a hands-off approach to
derivatives and hedge funds. That approach, broadly shared
by both the Clinton and Bush administrations, is coming
under increased scrutiny”. (Wall Street Journal)
So, Greenspan had
the chance to “crack down on predatory lending” and he
refused. Now millions of low income people are saddled with
payments they have no reasonable prospect of paying off. How
much of the present carnage could have been avoided if he
had Greenspan done the right thing?
The “Not So
Great” Depression
An article appeared
this week in the UK Telegraph by
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard which supports the theory
that Greenspan’s “loose monetary
policy” fueled a huge credit bubble, which is pushing the
global economy towards a “1930s-style slump.”
The article quotes
from a statement made by The Bank for International
Settlements:
"Virtually nobody foresaw the
Great Depression of the 1930s, or the crises which affected
Japan and Southeast Asia in the early and late 1990s. In
fact, each downturn was preceded by a period of
non-inflationary growth exuberant enough to lead many
commentators to suggest that a 'new era' had arrived".
But today we face “worrying
signs” of another economic meltdown.
The BIS said that they were
“starting to doubt the wisdom of letting asset bubbles build
up on the assumption that they could safely be ‘cleaned up’
afterwards”. (Greenspan’s method) and that, “while cutting
interest rates in such a crisis may help, it has the effect
of transferring wealth from creditors to debtors and sowing
the seeds for more serious problems further ahead.’"
“The
bank said it was far from clear whether the US would be able
to ignore the consequences of its latest imbalances, ($800
billion per year) citing a current account deficit running
at 6.5% of GDP, a rise in US external liabilities by over $4
trillion from 2001 to 2005, and an unprecedented drop in the
savings rate. ‘The dollar clearly remains vulnerable to a
sudden loss of private sector confidence.”’
The BIS referred to
the toxic effect of the “$470 billion in collateralized debt
obligations (CDO), and a further $524 billion in "synthetic"
CDOs which have spread through hedge funds industry. These
CDOs are the loans (many sub primes) which were bundled off
to Wall Street and turned into securities which are highly
leveraged in hedge funds for maximum profitability. As Bear
Stearns is discovering, these CDOs are like roadside bombs;
exploding without notice whenever the stock market suddenly
dips.
The BIS also cautioned about the
excess of “leveraged buy-outs (mergers) which touched
$753bn, with an average debt/cash flow ratio hitting a
record 5.4…. ‘Sooner or later the credit cycle will turn and
default rates will begin to rise.’”
The central banks
around the world are increasingly worried that the Bush
administration’s profligate spending and irrational monetary
policies will trigger a global depression. The recent
volatility in the stock market suggests that the credit boom
is just about over. Once the liquidity dries up---stocks
will fall sharply.
The Housing Slump
Yesterday’s housing
data, shows that sales are still weak while inventory
continues to grow. Existing home sales dropped 3% while
prices dropped another 2.1%. Falling prices mean that
cash-strapped home owners will not be able to tap into their
home’s equity for other expenses. Last year, mortgage equity
withdrawals (MEWs) accounted for $600 billion of consumer
spending. This year, the amount will be negligible at best.
The media and the
Fed continue to mislead the public about the magnitude of
the housing bubble. Fed chief Bernanke assures us that the
sub prime calamity hasn’t “spread to other parts of the
economy” (tell that to Bear Stearns) and the media keeps
cheerily reiterating that a “turnaround” or “soft landing”
is just ahead.
These claims are
ridiculous. Apart from the 80 or more sub-prime lenders that
have gone “belly-up” in the last few months, the rickety
collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) and mortgage backed
securities (MBSs) are steamrolling their way through the
stock market bowling down everything their path. Bear
Stearns is just the first on the casualties list. There’ll
be many more before the storm is over.
Fed-chairman
Bernanke knows what’s going on. He was given a full rundown
by “John Burns Real Estate
Consulting that the national sales information for both new
and existing homes, is “misleading and covering up a deep
plunge of the housing sector.” The housing market is
freefalling. Existing-home sales are down 22% in May and
mortgage applications have fallen a whopping 18%....In
Florida home sales are down 34%, not 28% as NAR reported;
Arizona sales are down 38%, not 28%; and California's down
37%, not 24% as NAR reports.”
Down 37% in
California!?!
Gadzooks! It’s a
landslide.
As the defaults
continue to pile up; the hedge funds will take a bigger and
bigger pounding. It can’t be avoided. That’s what happens
when bankers abandon traditional lending standards and lend
trillions of thousands of dollars to people who have bad
credit and lie on their loan applications.
Thousands of these
same shaky sub primes loans have been wrapped up like the
Crown Jewels and sold off to Wall Street as CDOs. Now they
are ripping through the hedge fund industry like a tornado
in a trailer park. The media has tried to downplay the
damage, but its not hard to see what is really going on.
According to Reuters:
“Banks doubled the
amount of CDOs outstanding in the past two years to $2.6
trillion, including a record $769 billion sold last year,
according to J.P. Morgan. These figures include funded and
unfunded issuance. Pimco’s Bill Gross said there are
hundreds of billions of dollars of subprime residential
mortgage-backed securities (RMBS), derivatives on subprime
RMBS and collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) that buy
subprime RMBS and/or the derivatives on the RMBS -- all of
which he considers "toxic waste.”’
"$2.6 trillion"!
That's enough to bring down the whole economy. And, as Bear
Stearns proves, the whole mess is
beginning to unwind
pretty quickly.
“Foreign investors
have been the dominant buyers of these exotic debt
instruments in recent years, owing to their insatiable
demand for yield. ‘If investors start dumping them, oh boy,
watch out for some massive credit widening," said Dan Fuss,
Vice Chairman at Loomis Sayles. (Reuters)
If the hedge fund
industry follows the downward slide of the housing bubble,
foreign investors will run for the exits. In fact, this may
already being happening.
China sold $5.8
billion in US Treasuries in May; the first time they have
dumped USTs on the market. This may be the first sign of
“capital flight”---foreign investment fleeing the US for
more promising markets in Asia and Europe. The greenback’s
survival now depends on the generosity of foreign bankers.
If they refuse to recycle our $800 billion current account
deficit by purchasing US bonds and securities, then the
dollar will sink like a stone and lose its place as the
world’s reserve currency.
More Housing Blowdown
Last Friday, the
stock market took a 185-point nosedive on the news that Bear
Stearns was trying to raise $3.2 billion to rescue its
battered hedge fund. According to the New York Times,
however, Bear was only able to came up with "$1.6 billion in
secured loans to bail out one of the 2 hedge funds".
The funds are the
latest victim of the sub-prime meltdown which Bernanke and
Paulson assured us was “largely contained”. In fact, Paulson
even said, "We have had a major
housing correction in this country," and "I do believe we
are at or near the bottom."
Anyone who believes
Paulson should take a look the chart linked below:
http://www.belowthecrowd.com/photos/ackman.jpg?ref=patrick.net
It illustrates that how loan
“resets” will continue to pound the housing market for at
least another year and a half getting steadily worse as
inventory grows.
The disaster is so
bad that even the realtors are beginning to tell the truth.
As one agent noted, “It’s a bloodbath.”
But the debacle in
housing is only the first part of a much larger problem—a
global liquidity crisis. Banks and mortgage lenders have
already begun to tighten up their lending practices and many
have abandoned sub prime loans altogether. (20% of the
housing market in 2006 was sub prime) Now the focus has
shifted to the stock market, where banks are beginning to
see that “risk” has not been properly calculated. That means
that if more hedge funds collapse, the banks may not be able
to cover the losses.
The Bear Stearns
fiasco has had a chilling affect on lending. In fact, the
New York Times reported on 6-26-07 that “After years of
supersize private equity deals…the buyout boom may be about
to hit a bump…Rising interest rates and tougher terms from
investors may signal that private equity players will soon
be struggling to continue reaping the outsize returns that
have made the buyout business so lucrative.” (Private Equity
Investors Hint at Cool Down” NY Times)
Liquidity is drying
up in the private equity business. The troubles at Bear
Stearns has changed the credit-landscape overnight. Bankers
are nervous, money is getting tighter, and liquidity is
vanishing.
"We know that these
holdings are not unique to Bear Stearns," said Professor
Joseph R. Mason, co-author of a recent study warning of
dangers in securities backed by home loans to high-risk
borrowers. "It would be hard to find a Wall Street firm that
hasn't created similar funds."
That’s right; the
industry is waist-deep in these sub-prime time-bombs. Shaky
loans and rising foreclosures threaten to knock the
foundation blocks out from under the stock market and set
off a wave of panic selling.
Could it have been
avoided?
Perhaps, if there
were better regulations on rating bonds and restricting
leverage.
Consider this: one
of Bear Stearns hedge funds took a $600 million investment
and leveraged it 10 times its value to $7 billion. Their
portfolio was chock-full of dicey CDOs and “illiquid assets”
such as timber holdings in foreign countries and toll roads.
These assets are difficult to price and nearly impossible to
quickly auction off if the market suddenly takes a downturn.
It looked like
Merrill Lynch & Co., was going to auction off $850 million
of Bear Stearns CDOs this week, but backed off at the last
minute. (They were reportedly only offered 30 cents on the
dollar!) Once the hedge funds start selling these CDOs, then
everyone will know how little they're worth. That could
trigger a wave of selling that could bring down the stock
market. Even if that scenario doesn’t play out, the Bear
Stearns incident ensures that CDOs in other hedge funds will
be face a substantial downgrading that could take a big
chunk out of their bottom line.
And, there’s a bigger
fear on Wall Street than the fact that 2 hedge funds
are headed into bankruptcy, that is, that a sudden
tightening of credit will send the over-leveraged stock
market into a downward spiral.
The market is
particularly sensitive to any rise in interest rates or
tougher lending standards. It's become addicted to cheap
credit and any break in the chain will cause equities to
plummet.
Economist Henry C K
Liu sums it up like this:
“The liquidity boom
has been delivering strong growth through asset inflation
without adding commensurate substantive expansion of the
real economy. …. Unlike real physical assets, virtual
financial mirages that arise out of thin air can evaporate
again into thin air without warning. As inflation picks up,
the liquidity boom and asset inflation will draw to a close,
leaving a hollowed economy devoid of substance. …A global
financial crisis is inevitable”. (Henry C K Liu “Liquidity
boom and looming crisis” Asia Times)
In other words, the
“virtual” wealth of Wall Street is a chimera which
was created by the Fed's inexorable expansion of debt.
It can vanish in a flash if the sources of liquidity are cut
off.
Puru Saxena draws
the same conclusion in his article “A Gradual Transition”:
“Thanks to the Federal
Reserve’s expansionary monetary policies over the past 5
years, US asset-prices have risen considerably; also known
as the “wealth effect”. At the end of last year, the market
capitalization of the US stock market rose to a record-high
of US$20.6 trillion, matching the value of household
real-estate, which also rose to a record-high at the same
time. On the surface, this may seem like brilliant news,
however you must realize that this “wealth illusion”
achieved by an ocean of money and record-high indebtedness
is only a consequence of inflation."
Code Red: Subprime
Chernobyl
We expect that the
mounting losses in CDOs and the continuing defaults in the
housing industry will precipitate a “severe credit crunch”
which will end in a stock market crash. A report which
appeared yesterday in the UK Telegraph appears to agree with
this analysis. Lombard Street Research predicted that:
“Excess liquidity in
the global system will be slashed. Banks Capital is about to
be decimated, which will require calling in a swathe of
loans. This is going to aggravate the US ‘hard landing”’
(“Banks set to call in swathe of loans” UK Telegraph
6-26-07)
Three of the
main hoses which provide liquidity for the market, have
either been cut off or severely damaged. These are "securatized"
subprime CDOs, corporate mega-mergers and hedge fund
leveraging. Without these instruments for expanding debt;
liquidity will dry up and stocks will fall. The period of
"easy credit" will end in disaster.
We should now be
able to see the straight line that connects the Fed's low
interest rates to the impending stock
market meltdown. The problems began at the central bank.
Presidential
candidate Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) summed it up best when he
said:
“From the Great
Depression, to the stagflation of the seventies, to the
burst of the dot.com bubble; every economic downturn
suffered by the country over the last 80 years can be traced
to Federal Reserve policy. The Fed has followed a consistent
policy of flooding the economy with easy money, leading to a
misallocation of resources and artificial “boom” followed by
recession or depression when the Fed-created bubble
bursts”.