Bernanke's State of the Economy
Speech:
"You are all Dead Ducks"
By Mike Whitney
16/02/08 "ICH"
-- - Even veteran
Fed-watchers were caught
off-guard by Chairman Bernanke's
performance before the Senate
Banking Committee on Thursday.
Bernanke was expected
to make routine comments on the
state of the economy but,
instead, delivered a 45
minute sermon detailing the
afflictions of the foundering
financial system. The Senate
chamber was stone-silent
throughout. The gravity of
the situation is finally
beginning to sink in.
For the most part, the
pedantic Bernanke looked uneasy;
alternately biting his lower
lip or staring ahead blankly
like a man who just watched
his poodle get run over by a
Mack truck. As it turns out,
Bernanke has plenty to worry
about, too. Consumer confidence
has dropped to levels not seen
since the 1970s recession, real
estate has gone off a cliff,
credit-brushfires are breaking
out everywhere, and the stock
market continues to gyrate
erratically. No wonder the
Fed-chief looked more like a
deck-hand on the Lusitania than
the monetary-czar of the most
powerful country on earth.
Bernanke's prepared remarks were
delivered with the solemnity of
a priest performing Vespers. But
he was clear, unlike his
predecessor, Greenspan, who
loved speaking in hieroglyphics.
Bernanke: "As you know,
financial markets in the United
States and in a number of other
industrialized countries have
been under considerable strain
since late last summer.
Heightened investor concerns
about the credit quality of
mortgages, especially subprime
mortgages with adjustable
interest rates, triggered the
financial turmoil. However,
other factors, including a
broader retrenchment in the
willingness of investors to bear
risk, difficulties in valuing
complex or illiquid financial
products, uncertainties about
the exposures of major financial
institutions to credit losses,
and concerns about the weaker
outlook for the economy, have
also roiled the financial
markets in recent months.”
Yes, of course. The banks
are ailing from their subprime
investments while Europe is
sinking fast from $500 billion
in unsellable asset-backed
garbage. The whole system
is clogged with crappy paper and
deteriorating collateral. Now
there are problems popping up in
auction rate sales and the
normally-safe municipal bonds.
The whole financial Tower of
Babel is cracking at the
foundation.
Bernanke continues: "Money
center banks and other large
financial institutions have come
under significant pressure to
take onto their own balance
sheets the assets of some of the
off-balance-sheet investment
vehicles that they had
sponsored. Bank balance sheets
have swollen further as a
consequence of the sharp
reduction in investor
willingness to buy securitized
credits, which has forced banks
to retain a substantially higher
share of previously committed
and new loans in their own
portfolios. Banks have also
reported large losses,
reflecting marked declines in
the market prices of mortgages
and other assets that they hold.
Recently, deterioration in the
financial condition of some bond
insurers has led some commercial
and investment banks to take
further markdowns and has added
to strains in the financial
markets."
Bernanke sounds more like an Old
Testament prophet reading
passages from the Book of
Revelations than a Central
Banker. But what he says is
true; even without the
hair-shirt. The humongous losses
at the investment banks have
forced them to go trolling for
capital in Asia and the Middle
East just to stay afloat. And,
when they succeed, they're
forced to pay excessively high
rates of interest. The true cost
of capital is
skyrocketing. That's why the
banks are protecting their
liquidity and cutting back
on new loans. Most of the banks
have also tightened lending
standards which is slowing
down the issuance of credit and
threatens to push the economy
into a deep recession. When
banks cramp-up; the overall
economy shrinks. It's just that
simple; no credit, no growth.
Credit is the lubricant that
keeps the capitalist locomotive
chugging-along. When it
dwindles, the system screeches
to a halt.
"DOWNSIDE RISKS TO GROWTH HAVE
INCREASED"
Bernanke again: "In part as
the result of the developments
in financial markets, the
outlook for the economy has
worsened in recent months, and
the downside risks to growth
have increased. To date, the
largest economic effects of the
financial turmoil appear to have
been on the housing market,
which, as you know, has
deteriorated significantly over
the past two years or so. The
virtual shutdown of the subprime
mortgage market and a widening
of spreads on jumbo mortgage
loans have further reduced the
demand for housing, while
foreclosures are adding to the
already-elevated inventory of
unsold homes. Further cuts in
homebuilding and in related
activities are
likely.....Conditions in the
labor market have also softened.
Payroll employment, after
increasing about 95,000 per
month on average in the fourth
quarter, declined by an
estimated 17,000 jobs in
January. Employment in the
construction and manufacturing
sectors has continued to fall,
while the pace of job gains in
the services industries has
slowed. The softer labor market,
together with factors including
higher energy prices, lower
equity prices, and declining
home values, seem likely to
weigh on consumer spending in
the near term."
So,
let's summarize. The banks are
battered by their massive
subprime liabilities. Housing is
in the tank. Manufacturing is
down. Food and energy are
up. Unemployment is rising. And
consumer spending has shriveled
to the size of an acorn. All
that's missing is a trumpet
blast and the arrival of
the Four Horseman.
How is it that Bernanke's
economic post-mortem
never made its way into the
major media? Is there some
reason the real state of the
economy is being concealed from
'we the people'?
Bernanke continues: "On the
inflation front, a key
development over the past year
has been the steep run-up in the
price of oil. Last year, food
prices also increased
exceptionally rapidly by recent
standards, and the foreign
exchange value of the dollar
weakened. ...(If) inflation
expectations to become unmoored
or for the Fed's
inflation-fighting credibility
to be eroded could greatly
complicate the task of
sustaining price stability and
reduce the central bank's policy
flexibility to counter
shortfalls in growth in the
future."
Right. So, if the Fed's
rate-cutting strategy doesn't
work and the economic troubles
persist (and prices continue to
go through the roof) then we're
S.O.L. (sh** out of luck)
because the Fed has no more
arrows in its quiver. It's rate
cuts or death. Great. So, we can
expect Bernanke to hack away at
rates until they're down to 1%
or lower (duplicating the
downturn in Japan) hoping that
the economy shows some sign of
life before it takes two full
wheelbarrows of greenbacks
to buy a quart of milk and a few
seed-potatoes.
Sounds like a plan!
We don't blame Bernanke. He's
been remarkably straightforward
from the very beginning
and deserves credit. He's
simply left with the thankless
task of mopping up the ocean of
red ink left behind by
Greenspan. It's not his
fault. He should be applauded
for dispelling the decades-long
illusion that a nation
can borrow its way to
prosperity or that chronic
indebtedness is the same as real
wealth. It's not; and the bill
has finally come due.
Of
course, now that the
low-interest speculative orgy is
over; there's bound to be a
painful unwind of hyper-inflated
assets, falling home prices,
tumbling stock markets,
increased unemployment, and a
generalized credit-contraction
throughout the real economy.
Ouch. Who said it was going to
be easy?
Bernanke's summation:
"At present, my baseline outlook
involves a period of sluggish
growth, followed by a somewhat
stronger pace of growth starting
later this year as the effects
of monetary and fiscal stimulus
begin to be felt....It is
important to recognize that
downside risks to growth remain,
including the possibilities that
the housing market or the labor
market may deteriorate to an
extent beyond that currently
anticipated, or that credit
conditions may tighten
substantially further."
(Editor's
translation) "Discount
everything I've said here today
if the economy blows up---as I
fully-expect it
will---from decades of
regulatory neglect and the
myriad multi-trillion dollar Ponzi-schemes
which have put the
entire financial system at risk
of a major heart attack".
Bernanke's candor is
admirable, but it is little
relief for the people who will
have to soldier-on through the
hard times ahead. Perhaps, next
time he could spare us all the
lengthly oratory and
just forward a brief cablegram
to Congress saying something
like this:
"We are deeply sorry, but we
have totally fu**ed up your
economy with our monetary
hanky-panky. You are all in very
deep Doo-doo. Prepare for the
worst."
our sincerest regrets,
the Fed