Bearly Alive: Investment
Giant Rushed To I.C.U.
By Mike
Whitney
16/03/08
"ICH" -- - On Friday, Bear Stearns
blew up. It was the worst possible news
at the worst possible time. A day
earlier, the politically-connected
Carlyle Capital hedge fund defaulted on
$16.6 billion of its debt. Carlyle
boasted a $21.7 billion portfolio of
AAA-rated residential mortgage-backed
securities, but was unable to make a
margin call of just $400 million. (Where
did the $21.7 billion go?) The news on
Bear was the last straw. The stock
market started reeling immediately;
shedding 300 points in less than an
hour. Then, miraculously, the
tide shifted and the market began to
rebound. If there was ever a time for
Paulson's Plunge Protection Team to come
to the rescue; this was it. For weeks,
the markets have been battered with bad
news. Retail sales are down,
unemployment is up, consumer confidence
is in the tank, inflation is rising, the
dollar is on the ropes, and the credit
crunch has spread to even the safest
corners of the market. Facing fierce
headwinds, Washington mandarins and
financial heavyweights had to decide
whether to sit back and let one small
investment bank take down the whole
equities market in an afternoon or
stealthily buy a few futures and live to
fight another day? Tough choice, eh?
We'll
never know for sure, but that's probably
what happened.
We'll
also never know if Bernanke's real
purpose in setting up his new $200
billion auction facility was to provide
the cash-strapped banks with a place
where they could off-load the
mortgage-backed junk that Carlyle dumped
on the market when they went belly-up.
That worked out well, didn't it? Now the
banks can trade these worthless MBS
bonds with the Fed for US Treasuries at
nearly full value. What a deal! That
must have been the plan from the
get-go.
The Bear
Stearns bailout has ignited a firestorm
of controversy about moral hazard and
whether the Fed should be in the
business of spreading its largess to
profligate investment banks. But the Fed
had no choice. This isn't about one bank
caving in from its bad bets. The entire
financial system is teetering and a
failure at Bear would have taken a
wrecking ball to the equities market and
sent stocks around the world into a
violent death-spiral. The New York Times
summed it up like this in Saturday's
edition:
“If the Fed
hadn't acted this morning and Bear did
default on its obligations, then that
could have triggered a widespread panic
and potentially a collapse of the
financial system”.
Bingo.
So, what
makes Bear so special? How is it that
one of the smallest investment banks can
pose such a threat to the whole system?
That's the
question that will be addressed in the
next couple weeks and people are not
going to like the answer. For the last
decade or so the markets have been
reconfigured according to a new
“structured finance” model which has
transformed the interactions between
institutions and investors. The focus
has been on maximizing profit by
creating a vast galaxy of exotic
debt-instruments which increase overall
risk and volatility in slumping market
conditions. Derivatives trading which,
according to the Bank of International
Settlements, now exceeds $500 trillion,
has sewn together the various lending
and investment institutions in a way
that one failure can set the derivatives
dominoes in motion and bring down the
entire financial scaffolding in a heap.
That's why the Fed got involved and (I
believe) approached Congress in a
closed-door session (which was supposed
to be about FISA legislation) to inform
lawmakers about the growing possibly of
a major economic meltdown if conditions
in the credit markets were not
stabilized quickly.
The
troubles at Bear and the danger they
pose to the overall system were
articulated in an article by
Counterpunch editor, Alexander Cockburn
in a November, 2006 article “Lame Duck:
The Downside of Capitalism”:
“In a
briefing paper under the chaste title,
'Private Equity: A discussion of Risk
and Regulatory Engagement', the FSA
raises the alarm.
"Excessive leverage: The amount of
credit that lenders are willing to
extend on private equity
transactions has risen
substantially. This lending may not,
in some circumstances, be entirely
prudent. Given current leverage
levels and recent developments in
the economic/credit cycle, the
default of a large private equity
backed company or a cluster of
smaller private equity backed
companies seems inevitable. This has
negative implications for lenders,
purchasers of the debt, orderly
markets and conceivably, in extreme
circumstances, financial stability
and elements of the UK economy."
Translation: It's about to blow!
"The
duration and potential impact of any
credit event may be exacerbated by
operational issues which make it
difficult to identify who ultimately
owns the economic risk associated
with a leveraged buy out and how
these owners will react in a crisis.
These operational issues arise out
of the extensive use of opaque,
complex and time consuming risk
transfer practices such as
assignment and sub-participation,
together with the increased use of
credit derivatives. These credit
derivatives may not be confirmed in
a timely manner and the amount
traded may substantially exceed the
amount of the underlying
assets."(snip)
Translation: "The world's credit system
is a vast recycling bin of untraceable
transactions of wildly inflated value.
The problem is that the oversight and
stability of the world credit system is
no longer within the purview of familiar
international institutions like the
International Monetary Fund or the Bank
of International Settlements. Private
traders are now installed at all the
strategic nodes, gambling with
stratospheric sums in such speculative
pyramids as the credit derivative market
which was almost nonexistent in 2001,
yet which reached $17.3 trillion by the
end of 2005. Warren Buffett, America's
most famous investor, has called credit
derivatives "financial weapons of mass
destruction." ( Alexander Cockburn, “Lame
Duck: The Downside of Capitalism”
)
Cockburn's article anticipates the
current problems at Bear and shows why
the Fed cannot allow them to fester
and spread throughout the system. The
investment banks and brokerages all do
business with each other, taking sides
in trades as counterparties. If one
player goes down it increases the
likelihood of more failures. So the
problem has to be contained.
The
volume of derivatives contracts, that
are not traded publicly on any of the
major exchanges, has exploded in the
last few years. These unregulated
transactions, what Pimco's Bill Gross
calls the shadow banking system, have
taken center-stage as market conditions
continue to deteriorate and the
downward-cycle of deleveraging begins to
accelerate. The ongoing massacre in real
estate has left the structured
investment market frozen, which means
that the foundation blocks (ie
mortgage-backed securities) upon which
all this excessive leveraging rests; is
starting to crumble. It's a real mess.
Derivatives trading, particularly in
credit default swaps, is
oftentimes exceeds the value of the
underlying asset many times over. Credit
Default Swaps are financial instruments
that are based on loans and bonds that
speculate on a company's ability to
repay debt. (a type of unregulated
insurance) The CDS market is roughly $45
trillion, whereas, the aggregate value
of the US mortgage market is only $11
trillion; four times smaller. That's a
lot of leverage and it can have a
snowball effect when the CDSs trades
begin to unwind.
In truth, the biggest risk to the
financial system is counterparty risk;
the possibility that some large
investment bank, like Bear, goes under
and sucks the rest of the market with it
from the magnitude of its losses. Last
year, Bear was the 12th
largest counterparty to CDS trades
according to Fitch ratings. If they were
to suddenly disappear, the effects to
the rest of the system would be
catastrophic.
Fed
Chairman Bernanke sat on the board of
the FOMC when the investment gurus and
brokerage sharpies customized the
markets in a way that enhanced their
own personal fortunes while increasing
the risks of systemic failure. The SIVs,
the conduits, the opaque derivatives,
the off-balance sheets operations, the
dark pools, the massive leverage, and
the reckless expansion of credit; all
emerged during his (and Greenspan's)
tenure. The Federal Reserve is largely
responsible for the brushfire they are
presently trying to put out.
Now,
once again, Bernanke is acting beyond
his mandate and invoking a law that
hasn't been used since the 1960s so the
Fed can become the creditor for an
institution that attempted to enrich
itself through wild speculative bets on
dubious toxic investments which are now
utterly worthless. If that isn't a good
enough reason for abolishing the Federal
Reserve; then what is?
The
world's most transparent and profitable
markets have been transformed into a
carnival sideshow managed by hucksters,
flim-flam men, and rip off artists. The
Bear bailout is yet another glaring
example of a system that lacks all
credibility and is quickly
self-destructing.