According to a
recent Bloomberg article:
“A year ago $20
million would have gotten Luminent Mortgage
Capital Inc. access to $640 million in loans to
buy top-rated mortgage-backed securities. Now
that much cash gets the firm no more than $80
million. ...(Only) 6 lenders are offering 5
times leverage, while a year ago, 20 banks
extended 33 times.”
The banks are
not providing anywhere near as much money for
leveraged investments as they did just last
year. And, when credit shrinks on a national
scale--as it is---so does the economy. It' a
simple formula; less money means less economic
activity, less growth, fewer jobs, tighter
budgets, more pain.
Bloomberg
continues:
“Wall Street
firms, reeling from $146 billion in losses on
their debt holdings, are fueling a credit crisis
by clamping down on lending to investors and
hedge funds that use borrowed money to buy
securities. By pulling back, (the banks) are
contributing to reduced demand and lower prices
throughout the fixed-income world.”
The banks are in
no position to be extravagant because they're
already saddled with $400 billion in MBSs and
CDOs---as well as another $170 billion in
private equity deals---for which there is
currently no market. They've had to dramatically
cut back on their lending because they either
don't have the resources or are facing
bankruptcy in the near future.
An article which
appeared on the front page of the Financial
Times last week, illustrates how hard-pressed
the banks really are:
“US banks have
been quietly borrowing massive amounts of money
from the Federal Reserve...$50 billion in one
month”.
The Fed's new
Term Auction Facility “allows the banks to
borrow money against all sort of dodgy
collateral,” says Christopher Wood, analyst at
CLSA. “The banks are increasingly giving the Fed
the garbage collateral nobody else wants to take
... [this] suggests a perilous condition for
America’s banking system.”
The move has
sparked unease among some analysts about the
stress developing in opaque corners of the US
banking system and the banks’ growing reliance
on indirect forms of government support.” (“US
Banks borrow $50 billion via New Fed Facility”,
Financial Times)
(The story
appeared no where in the US media)
At the same time
the banks are getting backdoor injections of
liquidity from the Fed; banking giant Citigroup
has been trying to off-load some of its branches
so it can cover its structured investment
losses. It all looks rather desperate, but
scouring the planet for capital to shore up
flagging balance sheets is turning out to be a
full-time job for many of America's largest
investment banks. It is the only way they can
stay one step ahead of the hangman.
In the last few
days, gold has spiked to $950, a new high, while
oil futures passed the $100 per barrel mark. The
battered greenback has already taken a beating,
and yet, Fed chairman Bernanke is signaling that
there are more rate cuts to come. The prospect
of a global run on the dollar has never been
greater. Still, Bernanke will do whatever he can
to resuscitate the faltering banking system,
even if he destroys the currency in the process.
Unfortunately, interest rates alone won't cut
it. The banks need capital; and fast. Meanwhile,
the waning dollar has sent food and energy
prices soaring which is leaving consumers
without the discretionary income they need for
anything beyond the basic necessities. As a
result, retail sales are down and employers are
forced to lay off workers to reduce their
spending. This is all part of the
self-reinforcing negative-feedback loop that
begins with falling home prices and then rumbles
through the broader economy. There is no chance
that the economy will rebound until housing
prices stabilize and the rate of foreclosures
returns to normal. But that could be a long way
off. With housing inventory at historic highs
and mortgage applications at new lows, the
economy could keep somersaulting down the
stairwell for a full two years or more. Only
then, will we hit rock-bottom.
The country is
now headed into a deep and protracted recession.
Low interest credit and financial innovation
have paralyzed the credit markets while
inflating a monstrous equity bubble that is
wreaking havoc with the world's financial
system. The new market architecture, “structured
finance” has collapsed from the stress of
falling asset-values and rising defaults. Many
of the banks are technically insolvent already,
hopelessly mired in their own red ink. Public
confidence in the nations' financial
institutions has never been lower. Monetary
policy and deregulation have failed. The system
is self-destructing.
Now that
the credit crunch has rendered the markets
dysfunctional, spokesmen for the investor class
are speaking out and confirming what many have
suspected from the very beginning; that the
present troubles originated at the Federal
Reserve and, ultimately, they are the ones who
are responsible for the meltdown. In an article
in the Wall Street Journal this week, Harvard
economics professor and former Council of
Economic Advisers under President Reagan, Martin
Feldstein, made this revealing admission:
“There is plenty of blame to go around for
the current situation. The Federal Reserve bears
much of the responsibility, because of its
failure to provide the appropriate supervisory
oversight for the major money center banks. The
Fed's banking examiners have complete access to
all of the financial transactions of the banks
that they supervise, and should have the
technical expertise to evaluate the risks that
those banks are taking. Because these banks
provide credit to the nonbank financial
institutions, the Fed can also indirectly
examine what those other institutions are doing.