Are The Banks In Trouble?
By Mike Whitney
“The
new capitalist gods must love the poor – they
are making so many more of them.” Bill
Bonner, “The Daily Reckoning”
“The hope of every central bank is that the
real problem can be kept from public view. The
truth is that the public---even professionals on
Wall Street---have no clue what the real problem
is. They know it has something to do with
derivatives, but none of them realize that it’s
more than a $20 trillion mountain of unfunded,
unregulated paper that has just been discovered
to not have a market and, therefore, no real
value… When the dollar realizes the seriousness
of the situation---be that now or sometime
soon---the bottom will drop out.” Jim
Sinclair, Investment analyst
09/07/07 "ICH"- -- -About
a month ago, I wrote an article “Stock
Market Brushfire: Will there be a run on the
banks?”
which showed how the collapse in the housing
market and the deterioration in mortgage-backed
bonds (CDOs) in the secondary market was
creating difficulties for the banking system.
Now these problems are becoming more apparent.
From the Wall Street
Journal:
“The rising interbank lending
rates are a proxy of sorts for the increased
risk that some banks, somewhere, may go belly
up.” (Editorial; WSJ, 9-6-07)
Ironically, the WSJ editorial
staff—-which normally defends deregulation and
laissez faire economics---is now calling for
regulators to make sure they are “on top of the
banks they are supposed to be regulating, so we
don’t get any surprise bank failures that spook
the markets and confirm the worst fears being
whispered about.”
“Surprise bank failures?”
Credit standards have
tightened and banks are increasingly reluctant
to loan money to each other not knowing who may
be sitting on billions of dollars in toxic
mortgage-backed debt. (Collateralized debt
obligations) It makes no difference that the
“underlying economy is sound” as Bernanke likes
to say. When banks hesitate to loan money to
each other; it shows that there is real
uncertainty about the solvency of the other
banks. That slows down normal commerce and the
gears on the economic machine begin to rust in
place.
The banks woes have been
exacerbated by the flight of investors from
money market funds, many of which are backed by
Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS). Wary investors
are running for the safety of US Treasuries even
though yields that have declined at a record
pace. This is causing problems in the Commercial
Paper market as well as for the lesser-know SIVs
and “conduits”. These abstruse-sounding
investment vehicles are the essential plumbing
that maintains normalcy in the markets.
Commercial paper is a $2.2 trillion market. When
it shrinks by more than $200 billion ---as it
has in the last 3 weeks--the effects can be felt
through the entire system.
The credit crunch has spread across the whole
gamut of commercial paper and low-grade debt.
Banks are hoarding cash and refusing loans to
even credit-worthy applicants. The collapse in
subprime loans is just part of the story. More
than 50% of all mortgages in the last two years
have been unconventional loans—no down payment,
no verification of income “no doc”,
interest-only, negative amortization, piggyback,
2-28s, teaser rates, adjustable rate mortgages “ARMs”.
All of these reflect the shoddy lending
standards of the past few years and all are
contributing to the unprecedented rate of
defaults. Now the banks are holding $300 billion
of these "unmarketable" mortgage-backed CDOs and
another $200 billion in equally-suspect CLOs.
(Collateralized loan obligations; the CDOs
corporate-twin).
Even more worrisome, the large investment banks
have myriad “off-book” operations which are in
distress. This has forced the banks to circle
the wagons and reduce their issuance of loans
which is accelerating the downturn in housing.
Typically, housing bubbles unwind very slowly
over a 5 to 10 year period. That won’t be the
case this time. The surge in inventory, the
financial distress of many homeowners and the
complete breakdown in loan-origination (due to
the growing credit crunch) ensures that the
housing market will crash-land sometime in late
2008 or early 2009. The banks are expected to
write-off a considerable portion of their CDO-debt
at the end of the 3rd Quarter rather
than keep the losses on their books. This will
further hasten the decline in housing prices.
The banks are also suffering
from the sudden sluggishness in leveraged
buyouts (LBOs). Credit problems have slowed
private equity deals to a dribble. In July there
were $579 billion in LBOs. In August that number
shrunk to a paltry $222 billion. By September
those figures will deteriorate to double-digits.
The big deals aren’t getting done and debt is
not rolling over. More than $1 trillion in debt
will have to be refinanced in the next 5 weeks.
In the present climate, that doesn’t look
likely. Something’s has got to give. The market
has frozen and the Fed’s $60 billion repo-lifeline
has done nothing to help.
In the first 7 months of 2007,
LBOs accounted for “$37 of every $100 spent on
deals in the US”.
37%! How will the financial
giants make up for the windfall profits that
these deals generated?
Answer: They won’t. Just as they
won’t make up for the enormous origination fees
they made from “securitizing” mortgages and
selling them off to credulous pension funds,
insurance companies and foreign banks.
As Steven Rattner of DLJ
Merchant Banking said, “It’s become nearly
impossible to finance a private equity
transaction of over $1 billion.” (WSJ) The
Golden Era of Acquisitions and Mega-mergers is
coming to an end. We can expect that the
financial giants will probably follow the same
trajectory as the Dot.coms following the 2001
NASDAQ-rout.
The investment banks are also facing enormous
potential losses from liabilities that “operate
off their balance sheets” In David Reilly’s
article “Conduit Risks are hovering over
Citigroup” (WSJ 9-5-07) Reilly points out that “banks
such as Citigroup Inc. could find themselves
burdened by affiliated investment vehicles that
issue tens of billions of dollars in short-term
debt known as commercial paper”… Citigroup, for
example, owns about 25% of the market for SIVs,
representing nearly $100 billion of assets under
management. The largest Citigroup SIV is
Centauri Corp., which had $21 billion in
outstanding debt as of February 2007, according
to a Citigroup research report. There is NO
MENTION OF CENTAURI IN ITS 2006 ANNUAL FILING
with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Yet some
investors worry that if vehicles such as
Centauri stumble, either failing to sell
commercial paper or suffering severe losses in
the assets it holds, Citibank could wind up
having to help by lending funds to keep the
vehicle operating or even taking on some
losses”.
So, many
investors don’t know that Citigroup could be
holding the bag for “$21 billion in outstanding
debt”? Or, perhaps, the entire $100 billion is
red ink; who knows? (Citigroup’s stock dropped
by more than 2% after this report appeared in
the WSJ.)
Another report which appeared
in CNN Money further adds to the suspicion that
the banks’ “brokerage affiliates” may be in
trouble:
“The Aug. 20 letters from the
Fed to Citigroup and Bank of America state that
the Fed, which regulates large parts of the U.S.
financial system, has agreed to exempt both
banks from rules that effectively limit the
amount of lending that their federally-insured
banks can do with their brokerage affiliates.
The exemption, which is temporary, means, for
example, that Citigroup's Citibank entity can
substantially increase funding to Citigroup
Global Markets, its brokerage subsidiary.
Citigroup and Bank of America requested the
exemptions, according to the letters, to provide
liquidity to those holding mortgage loans,
mortgage-backed securities, and other
securities…This unusual move by the Fed shows
that the largest Wall Street firms are
continuing to have problems funding operations
during the current market difficulties.” (CNN
Money)
Does this
mean that the other large banks are involved in
the same type of “hide-n-seek” strategies?
Sounds a lot like Enron’s “off-the-books”
shenanigans, doesn’t it?
Wall
Street Journal:
“Any
off-balance-sheet issues are traditionally
POORLY DISCLOSED, so to some extent, you're
dependent on the insight that management is
willing to provide you and that, frankly, is
very limited," says Mark Fitzgibbon, director of
research at Sandler O'Neill &
Partners.”…..Accounting rules DON’T REQUIRE
BANKS TO SEPARATELY RECORD ANYTHING RELATED TO
THE RISK that they will have to loan the
entities money to keep them functioning during a
markets crisis.”….” The vehicles (SIVs and
conduits) ARE OFTEN ESTABLISHED IN A TAX HAVEN
AND ARE RUN SOLEY FOR INVESTMENT PURPOSES AS
OPPOSED TO TYPICAL CORPORATE ACTIVITIES.”
Still
think the banks are on solid ground?
“Citigroup, the nation's largest bank as
measured by market value and assets. Its latest
financial results showed that it administers
off-balance-sheet, conduit vehicles used to
issue commercial paper that have assets of about
$77 BILLION.
Citigroup
is also affiliated with structured investment
vehicles, or SIVs that have "nearly $100
billion" in assets, according to a letter
Citigroup wrote to some investors in these
vehicles last month.” (IBID)
Yes; and
how many of these “assets” are in fact cooperate
debt, auto loans, credit card debt, and student
loans that have been securitized and are now
under extreme pressure in a slumping market?
In an
“up market” loans can provide a valuable
income-stream that that transforms someone
else’s debt into a valuable asset. In a
down-market, however, defaults can wipe out
trillions in market capitalization overnight.
How Did We
Get into this Mess?
More
than 20 years of dogged lobbying from the
financial industry paid off with the repeal of
the Glass-Steagall Act which was passed by
Congress following the 1929 stock market crash.
The bill was written to limit the conflicts of
interest when commercial banks are permitted to
underwrite stocks or bonds.
The
financial industry whittled away at Glass-Steagall
for years before finally breaking down its
regulatory restrictions
in August 1987,
Alan Greenspan -- formerly a director of J.P.
Morgan and a proponent of banking deregulation
-- became chairman of the Federal Reserve Board.
“In
1990, J.P. Morgan became the first bank to
receive permission from the Federal Reserve to
underwrite securities, so long as its
underwriting business does not exceed the 10
percent limit. In December 1996, with the
support of Chairman Alan Greenspan, the Federal
Reserve Board issues a precedent-shattering
decision permitting bank holding companies to
own investment bank affiliates with up to 25
percent of their business in securities
underwriting (up from 10 percent).
This
expansion of the loophole created by the Fed's
1987 reinterpretation of Section 20 of Glass-Steagall
effectively rendered Glass-Steagall obsolete.”
(“The Long Demise of Glass Steagall, Frontline,
PBS)
In
1999, after 25 years and $300 million of
lobbying efforts, Congress aided by President
Bill Clinton, finally repealed Glass-Steagall.
This paved the way for the problems we are now
facing.
Another
contributing factor to the current
banking-muddle is the Basel rules. According to
the BIS (Bank of International Settlements)
website:
“The
Basel Committee on Banking Supervision provides
a forum for regular cooperation on banking
supervisory matters. Its objective is to enhance
understanding of key supervisory issues and
improve the quality of banking supervision
worldwide. It seeks to do so by exchanging
information on national supervisory issues,
approaches and techniques, with a view to
promoting common understanding. At times, the
Committee uses this common understanding to
develop guidelines and supervisory standards in
areas where they are considered desirable. In
this regard, the Committee is best known for its
international standards on capital adequacy; the
Core Principles for Effective Banking
Supervision; and the Concordat on cross-border
banking supervision.”
The Basel Committee on
Banking (Basel 2) requires “banks to
boost the capital they hold in reserve against
the loans on their books.”
Sounds like a good
thing, doesn’t it? This protects the overall
financial system as well as the individual
depositor. Unfortunately, the banks found a way
to circumvent the rules for minimum reserves by
“securitizing” pools of mortgages (MBS) rather
than holding individual mortgages. (which called
for more reserves) This provided lavish
origination and distribution fees for banks, but
shifted much of the risk of default to Wall
Street investors. Now, the banks are saddled
with roughly $300 billion in mortgage-backed
debt (CDOs) that no one wants and it is
uncertain whether they have sufficient reserves
to cover their losses.
By
October, we should know how this will all play
out. As David Wessel points out in “New Bank
Capital requirements helped to Spread Credit
Woes”:
“Banks
now behave more like securities firms, more
likely to mark down the value of assets when
market prices fall---even to distressed
levels---rather than sitting on bad loans for a
decade and pretending they’ll be paid back.”
The
downside of this is that once that banks write
off these toxic MBSs and CDOs; the hedge funds,
insurance companies and pension funds will be
forced to do the same----dumping boatloads of
this bond-sludge on the market driving down
prices and triggering a panic-sell-off. This is
what the Fed is trying to prevent through its
$60 billion repo-bailout.
Regrettably, the Fed cannot hope to remove
half-trillion of bad debt from the balance
sheets of the banks or forestall the collapse of
related financial institutions and funds which
are loaded with these “unmarketable” time-bombs.
Besides, most of the mortgage derivatives (CDOs)
have been massively enhanced with low interest
leverage from the “carry trade”. When the value
of these CDOs is finally determined---which we
expect will happen sometime before the end of
the 3rd Quarter—we can expect the
stock market to fall sharply and the housing
recession to turn into a full-blown economic
crisis.
ALAN
GREENSPAN: THE FIFTH HORSEMAN?
So, who’s to blame? The
finger-pointing has already begun and more and
more people are beginning to see how this
massive economy-busting equity bubble originated
at the Federal Reserve--- it is the logical
corollary of former Fed-chief Alan
Greenspan's “easy money” policies.
Economist and author
Henry C K Liu sums up Greenspan’s tenure at the
Fed in his article “Why
the Subprime Bust will Spread”:
“Greenspan
presided over the greatest expansion of
speculative finance in history, including a
trillion-dollar hedge-fund industry, bloated
Wall Street-firm balance sheets approaching $2
trillion, a $3.3 trillion repo (repurchase
agreement) market, and a global derivatives
market with notional values surpassing an
unfathomable $220 trillion.
On
Greenspan's 18-year watch, assets of US
government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs)
ballooned 830%, from $346 billion to $2.872
trillion. GSEs are financing entities created by
the US Congress to fund subsidized loans to
certain groups of borrowers such as middle- and
low-income homeowners, farmers and students.
Agency mortgage-backed securities (MBSs) surged
670% to $3.55 trillion. Outstanding asset-backed
securities (ABSs) exploded from $75 billion to
more than $2.7 trillion.”( Henry Liu,
“Why
the Subprime Bust will Spread”, Asia Times)
"The greatest
expansion of speculative finance in history".
That says it all.
But no
one makes the case against Greenspan better than
Greenspan himself. Here are some of his comments at
the
Federal Reserve System’s Fourth Annual Community
Affairs Research Conference, Washington, D.C.
April 8, 2005. They show that Greenspan “rubber
stamped” every one of the policies which have
since metastasized and spread through the entire
US economy.
Greenspan: Champion of Subprime loans:
“Innovation has
brought about a multitude of new products, such
as subprime loans and niche credit
programs for immigrants. Such developments are
representative of the market responses that have
driven the financial services industry
throughout the history of our country.
With these advance in technology, lenders have
taken advantage of credit-scoring models and
other techniques for efficiently extending
credit to a broader spectrum of consumers.”
Greenspan:
Main Proponent of Toxic CDOs
“The
development of a broad-based secondary market
for mortgage loans also greatly expanded
consumer access to credit. By reducing the risk
of making long-term, fixed-rate loans and
ensuring liquidity for mortgage lenders, the
secondary market helped stimulate widespread
competition in the mortgage business. The
mortgage-backed security helped create a
national and even an international market for
mortgages, and market support for a wider
variety of home mortgage loan products became
commonplace. This led to securitization of a
variety of other consumer loan products, such as
auto and credit card loans.”
Greenspan: Supporter of Loans to People with
Bad Credit
“Where
once more-marginal applicants would simply have
been denied credit, lenders are now able to
quite efficiently judge the risk posed by
individual applicants and to price that risk
appropriately.
These
improvements have led to the rapid growth in
subprime mortgage lending…fostering constructive
innovation that is both responsive to market
demand and beneficial to consumers.”
“Improved
access to credit for consumers, and especially
these more-recent developments, has had
significant benefits.
Unquestionably,
innovation and deregulation have vastly expanded
credit availability to virtually all income
classes. Access to credit has enabled families
to purchase homes, deal with emergencies, and
obtain goods and services. Home ownership is at
a record high, and the number of home mortgage
loans to low- and moderate-income and minority
families has risen rapidly over the past five
years. Credit cards and installment loans are
also available to the vast majority of
households”
Greenspan: Big Fan of “Structural Changes” which
increase Consumer Debt
As we
reflect on the evolution of consumer credit in
the United States, we must conclude that
innovation and structural change in the
financial services industry have been critical
in providing expanded access to credit for the
vast majority of consumers, including those of
limited means. Without these forces, it would
have been impossible for lower-income consumers
to have the degree of access to credit markets
that they now have.
This fact
underscores the importance of our roles as
policymakers, researchers, bankers, and consumer
advocates in fostering constructive innovation
that is both responsive to market demand and
beneficial to consumers.”
(Federal Reserve
Chairman, Alan Greenspan;
Federal Reserve System’s Fourth Annual Community
Affairs Research Conference, Washington, D.C.
April 8, 2005
Greenspan’s own words are the most powerful
indictment against him. They show that he played
a central role in our impending disaster. The
effort on the part of media pundits, talking
heads, and so-called experts to foist the blame
on the rating agencies, predatory lenders or
gullible mortgage applicants (who may have lied
on their loans) misses the point entirely. The
problems began at the Federal Reserve and that’s
where the responsibility lies.