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It's Time For The Banks To
Face The Hangman
By Mike Whitney
“There is today
an incredibly speculative financial sector hell bent
on sustaining Credit and asset Bubbles – and
perfectly content to adulterate our functional
system of “money” in the process. The Federal
Reserve is perceived to condone the whole affair and
is openly willing to employ all measures to avoid
bursting Bubbles. And in a contemporary world of
acutely fragile finance structures, this ensures
that bust avoidance translates briskly to bubble
perpetuation and speculator delight.” Doug
Noland “Credit Bubble Bulletin”
“How can one defend a system that creates wealth
by making the majority poor?” Henry C. K. Liu
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Officials in the Treasury
Dept----working with their colleagues at Citigroup, J.P. Morgan
and Bank of America---have concocted a scheme to rescue the
banks from their massive losses in mortgage-backed securities.
The group is planning to set up a $100 billion emergency fund
which will purchase non-performing assets for short term debt.
In truth, the fund is a bailout which provides the financial
giants with an excuse for not reporting their enormous losses
from bad bets.
The story first appeared in Saturday’s Wall Street Journal and
was followed on Monday with a second headline piece:
“RESCUE READIED BY BANKS IS BET TO SPUR MARKET”
WSJ: “The high stakes plan to RESCUE BANKS FROM LOSSES on
mortgage securities amounts to a big bet that a consortium of
financial giants—AT THE PRODDING OF THE US GOVERNMENT—can
PERSUADE INVESTORS TO POUR MORE MONEY INTO THE TROUBLED CREDIT
MARKET.”
That’s right; the Treasury Dept is directly involved in a scam
that saves the banks while trying to “persuade” investors to
“pour more money” into toxic mortgage-backed sludge. Treasury
Dept officials clearly have a different idea of “moral hazard”
than the rest of us.
The banks are presently holding hundreds of billions of dollars
in mortgage-backed securities (MBSs) that they cannot
sell—because there are no buyers ---and don’t want to take back
on their balance sheets because they’ll be forced to increase
their capital reserves. So they’ve decided to launch a public
relations campaign to promote some goofy-sounding fund, called
the “Master-Liquidity Enhancement Conduit” or M-LEC, which will
allow the banks to place their unwanted bonds in Limbo until
some future date when the public appetite for garbage CDOs
improves.
The WSJ does a good job of disguising the real motive behind the
new “Super-Conduit” (aka the Bailout fund) but in the last
paragraph, buried in Section C-3, they reveal the truth:
“The goal is to reassure investors and make them more willing to
buy its short-term debt.” So, the fund is really just a way of
rearranging the marketplace until the next crop of gullible
investors sprouts up and buys more mortgage-backed garbage.
Where are the regulators? The SEC and Treasury should be forcing
the banks to be straightforward with the public and let them
know about the hanky-panky they’ve been up to with their risky
SIVs (structured investment vehicles) Citigroup alone has nearly
$80 billion in off-balance sheets operations which are in
distress. The bank accounts for “25% of the global SIV market.
As of August, assets held by SIVs totaled $400 billion”.
SIVs are set up as a way to make money without taking the risk
onto their balance sheets. “They issue their own short-term
debt, usually at relatively low rates …then use the proceeds to
buy higher yielding assets such as securities tied to
mortgages.” (WSJ)
Ever since Bear Stearns blew up in late July, investors have
been steering clear of any securities connected to real estate,
which means the SIVs are getting the Double Whammy---they can’t
sell their asset-backed commercial paper (because it’s
mortgage-backed) and they find buyers for their collateralized
debt obligations. (CDOs) To a large extent, the market is still
frozen despite the upbeat cheerleading on the business pages.
Clearly, the worst is yet to come.
How bad is it?
An article in yesterday’s Financial Times said that, “Only $9.9
billion of home equity loan securitizations have come to market
since July 1---A 95% DECLINE FROM THE $200.9 BILLION IN THE
FIRST HALF OF THIS YEAR AND A ROUGHLY 92% DECREASE FROM THE SAME
PERIOD LAST YEAR.”
The banks are in trouble. Big trouble. Main sources of revenue
have dried up overnight and they’re stuck with hundreds of
billions of debt. That’s why the papers broke the story on
Saturday when there was NO chance of triggering a stock market
crash.
Imagine the horror of investors around the world when they
discover that the major investment banks are running these
shabby “off-balance sheets” operations while concealing their
real financial condition from their investors. Consider the
disgust the public feels when they see Treasury officials
bailing out the banks instead of ordering them to report their
losses and get on with business.
Still, Wall Street nonchalantly leaps from one swindle to the
next never considering the damage it’s doing to the credibility
of the market.
Susan Pulliam summed it up like this in the Oct 12 edition of
The Wall Street Journal:
“Since the invention of the ticker tape 140 years ago, America
has been able to boast of having the world's most transparent
financial markets. The tape and its electronic descendants
ensured that crystal-clear prices for stocks and many other
securities were readily available to everyone, encouraging
millions to entrust their money to the markets. These days,
after a decade of frantic growth in mortgage-backed securities
and other complex investments traded off exchanges, that clarity
is gone. Large parts of American financial markets have become a
hall of mirrors.”
“Hall of mirrors” is an understatement. The system is thoroughly
opaque and crooked as a ram’s horn. The market’s new
architecture, “structured finance”, is a dismal rip-off from
start to finish. Consider the mentality of the hucksters who
dreamed up “securitizing” subprime mortgages and selling them
off as precious jewels in the secondary market. This was a
blatant con-job. How can the liabilities of “borrowers with bad
credit” be traded to foreign investors and pension funds like
they were valuable assets? And where were the regulators while
this scam was going on?
Isn’t this sufficient evidence that the system is totally out of
whack?
Wall Street avoids transparency like the plague. That is to be
expected. But what about the government? It’s the government’s
job to protect the investor and maintain the integrity of the
system. Is that what Treasury Dept is doing or are they “LURING
investors to buy debt issued by the rescue fund as part of the
plan”? (quote from the Wall Street Journal)
“Luring”? Is that how Paulson sees it; like luring turkeys to
the chopping block with a trail of bread crumbs?
The idea of protecting the little guy has never occurred to
anyone in the Bush administration. Their job is to shift wealth
from one class to the other via equity bubbles and government
bailouts----anything that advances the corporate agenda.
Presently, the banks are sitting on $200 billion in
non-performing mortgage-backed securities (MBSs) and
collateralized debt obligations. (CDOs) They are also hold
another $300 billion in collateralized loan obligations (CLOs)
from mergers and acquisitions which stalled after the Bear
Stearns meltdown. If the present bailout doesn’t materialize,
we’re likely to see bank closures and a plummeting stock market.
Shouldn’t the regulators have considered the probability of a
crash before they allowed trillions of dollars of
radioactive-bonds to flood the market when no one had any idea
of their real value? Wouldn’t that have been the prudent thing
to do?
Now we know what they are worth. They’re worth nothing. That’s
why the banks are running scared and refusing to put them up for
auction. They’d rather sleaze them into a lofty-sounding
superfund that masks their true value.
In the last 2 weeks the stock market soared on the news that the
banks were reporting billions of dollars in losses. Investors
were hoodwinked into believing the banks were being honest and
had “come clean” about their financial condition. What a joke.
In reality, the banks only reported roughly 5% of their
potential losses; the rest were hidden in their off balance
sheets operations.
Equities skyrocketed to new heights. Wall Street was euphoric.
Now we know the truth. It was all baloney.
The Wall Street Journal: “The new fund is designed to stave off
what Citigroup and others see as a threat to the financial
markets world-wide: the danger that dozens of huge
bank-affiliated funds will be forced to unload billions of
dollars in mortgage-backed securities and other assets, driving
down their prices in a fire sale….The ultimate fear: If banks
need to write down more assets or are forced to take assets onto
their books, that could set off a broader credit crunch and hurt
the economy. It could make it tough for homeowners and
businesses to get loans.”
It could “hurt the economy” and “make it tough for homeowners
and businesses to get loans?”
Ahhh, yes. It’s all clear now. The banks only cooked up this
colossal bailout to make things better for us common people. How
is it that we didn’t notice that before? Our problem is that we
don’t see the magnanimity and altruism which drives the
corporate agenda.
From the New York Times:
“The conduit (The bailout fund) is expected to start operating
in 90 days and will stay in place for a few years until it has
disposed of the assets it buys, according to people familiar
with the negotiations.
To maintain its credibility with investors from whom it would
raising money, the conduit will not buy any bonds that are tied
to mortgages made to people with spotty, or subprime, credit
histories. Rather, it will buy debt with the highest ratings —
AAA and AA — and debt that is backed by other mortgages, credit
card receipts and other assets.”
We already know about the problems with the ratings agencies and
how they are in bed with the investment banks. We also know that
the whole purpose of the new fund is to off-load mortgage-backed
tripe which is no longer sellable on the market. What we didn’t
know is that the New York Times eagerly provides the peppy
public relations narrative to assist big business in dumping its
failing assets.
NY Times: “The conduit will pay market prices for the securities
it buys. But it remains unclear how officials will determine the
price of some bonds that have not been actively traded since
August, because the difference between what buyers are willing
to pay and what sellers want has widened significantly.”
Of course, they’ll pay full price because they want to be “made
whole” again. The truth is, however, that these derivatives will
probably only fetch pennies on the dollar unless they get
another Wall Street PR face-lift.
Christian Stracke, market analyst from the research firm
CreditSights, said the effort appears to be “an attempt to
soothe tense investors in the debt market, rather than to
provide substantive relief to the worst-hit mortgage
securities”.
Stracke added, “For me, this is more of a P.R. blitz.”
Bingo.
The announcement of the forthcoming Master-Liquidity Enhancement
Conduit or M-LEC further underlines the gravity of the problems
facing the banking system. The fund creates a “buyer of last
resort” so that these dubious assets won’t be sold on the market
at fire-sale prices.
Citigroup appears to be the greatest beneficiary of the current
plan. They have a number of Enron-type SIVs which could be at
risk.
Again, the problems that are surfacing in the banking sector
today are the direct result of Greenspan’s loose monetary
policies coupled with the dismantling of the regulatory regime
that was created following the 1929 stock market crash. We are
now back to Square 1. All of the various scams and swindles
which permeated that hyper-inflated market are now back in
full-force foreshadowing a steep decline in investor confidence,
increased market manipulation, and an unavoidable economic
calamity.
“Structured finance” has transformed US markets into a carnival
sideshow. Productivity and real growth have been replaced with
never-ending credit expansion and speculative abuses. Reckless
monetary policies and the behemoth current account deficit have
destabilized the global economy a set the stage for a fiscal
Armageddon.
The subprime mortgage crisis and subsequent shrinking of
asset-backed commercial paper (ABCP) has thrown a wrench in the
funding of daily corporate operations. These are the harbingers
of an impending recession. As mortgages continue to default at a
record pace; the aftershocks will continue to rumble through the
credit markets where subprime loans have been “securitized” into
bonds and leveraged at maximum levels. It’s just one domino
knocking down the next.
The financial system is at greater risk now than any time in the
last 80 years. Regrettably, the only remedies coming from the
Fed are more currency-destroying rate cuts or hundreds of
billions of dollars in repos to remove mortgage-backed bonds
from the banks’ balance sheets. Neither of these solutions
addresses the critical issues; they do not stabilize the market,
reinvigorate lending, or restore investor confidence. They are
merely band aids on a sucking chest-wound. They won’t stop the
bleeding.
The Fed’s monetary policies promote financial speculation which
inevitably leads to equity bubbles. Under Greenspan’s
stewardship, the country has lurched from the 1990’s bond
bubble, to the dot.com bubble, to the subprime meltdown, to the
liquidity crisis, to the credit crunch---all engineered at the
Federal Reserve with ancillary assistance from the charlatans in
the banking industry.
An article in China Worker, “Credit Crunch threatens Global
Downturn” summarizes our present predicament it like this:
“Financial globalization has rebounded on the system. Capitalist
leaders boasted that the near total integration of financial
markets across the globe would provide lenders and borrowers
everywhere with instant access to a completely liquid money
market. New types of financial securities and sophisticated
derivatives would spread the risk of borrowing so widely that it
would eliminate risk entirely. While economies were growing and
bubbles inflating, it appeared that---through derivatives
trading--- losses would be widely diffused among speculators,
reducing risk to very low levels. Not even the most astute
financial analysts could predict what would happen in the event
of recession. The unanswerable question was: Who would
ultimately bear the risks arising from widespread defaults or
bankruptcies? The veteran investor, Warren Buffet, warned that
derivatives would prove to be ‘weapons of mass destruction’.
The fantasy of financial alchemy transforming high risk gambling
into low risk money-making has now been shattered.”
The author is right. “Structured finance” is a fraud. Risk has
not been eliminated. In fact, it has exploded and become a
system-wide problem. The dead wood is everywhere.
The banks are being crushed by a debt-load they generated
through “securitization”. They need to accept responsibility for
their poor judgment (or greed?) and report their losses. The
Super-Conduit is just a dodge to put off the unavoidable day of
reckoning. The whole wretched plan should be scrapped. No amount
of financial chicanery will eradicate billions of dollars in bad
bets. It’s time for the banks to face the hangman.
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