The Fed is just
an Extension of the Banking Establishment;
The Bear bailout proves it
By Mike Whitney
19/03/08 "ICH"
-- - One picture
tells the whole story. It's a photo of five
grim looking men in gray suits staring ahead
blankly like they were in the dock with
Saddam awaiting sentencing. Every one of
them looks downcast and dejected; shoulders
rounded and jaws set. This is what
desperation looks like, which is why the
photo was kept off the front pages of our
leading newspapers.
The group took
no questions and, as far as the media was
concerned, the meeting never happened. But
it did happen; and it happened on Monday at
the White House at 2PM. That's when
President Bush convened the Working Group on
Financial Markets, also known as the Plunge
Protection Team, to explain their strategy
for dealing with deteriorating conditions in
the financial markets. The details of the
meeting remain unknown, but judging by the
sudden (and irrational) recovery in the
stock market yesterday; their plan must have
succeeded.
The Plunge
Protection Team is a panel that includes Fed
Chairman Ben Bernanke, Treasury Secretary
Henry Paulson, Securities and Exchange
Commission Chairman Christopher Cox, and
acting Commodity Futures Trading Commission
head Walter Lukken. According to John
Crudele of the New York Post, the
Plunge Protection Team’s (PPT) objective is
to redirect the stock market by “buying
market averages in the futures market, thus
stabilizing the market as a whole.” In the
event of a terrorist attack or a natural
disaster, the group's activities could play
an extremely positive role in saving the
market from an unnecessary meltdown.
However, direct intervention into supposedly
“free markets” is less defensible when it is
merely a matter of saving an over-leveraged
banking system from its inevitable Day of
Reckoning. And, yet, that appears to be the
reason for the White House confab.
The psychology
behind the PPT's activities are explained in
greater detail by Robert McHugh Ph.D. who
provides a description of how it works in
his essay “The Plunge Protection Team
Indicator”:
“The PPT
decides markets need intervention, a decline
needs to be stopped, or the risks associated
with political events that could be
perceived by markets as highly negative and
cause a decline, need to be prevented by a
rally already in flight. To get that rally,
the PPT’s key component -- the Fed -- lends
money to surrogates who will take that fresh
electronically printed cash and buy markets
through some large unknown buyer’s account.
That buying comes out of the blue at a time
when short interest is high. The unexpected
rally strikes blood, and fear overcomes
those who were betting the market would
drop. These shorts need to cover, need to
buy the very stocks they had agreed to sell
(without owning them) at today’s prices in
anticipation they could buy them in the
future at much lower prices and pocket the
difference. Seeing those stocks rally above
their committed selling price, the shorts
are forced to buy -- and buy they do. Thus,
those most pessimistic about the equity
market end up buying equities like mad,
fueling the rally that the PPT started.
Bingo, a huge turnaround rally is well
underway, and sidelines money from Hedge
Funds, Mutual funds and individuals’ rushes
in to join in the buying madness for several
days and weeks as the rally gathers a life
of its own. (Robert McHugh Ph.D., “The
Plunge Protection Team Indicator”)
The powers of
the PPT are greatly exaggerated; eventually
the liquidity they provide has to be drained
from the system. The popular myth that the
Fed simply creates as much money as it
chooses and spreads it around wherever it
likes; is pure rubbish. The Fed has very
defined balance constraints. The system is
not quite as rigged as many people imagine.
According to Bloomberg News, the Fed has
already depleted most of its arsenal:
“The Fed
has committed as much as 60 percent of
the $709 billion in Treasury securities
on its balance sheet to providing
liquidity and opened the door to more
with yesterday's decision to become a
lender of last resort for the biggest
Wall Street dealers.” (“Bernanke May Run
Low on Ammunition for Loans, Rates”,
Bloomberg)
The troubles in
the credit markets and real estate are
bigger than the Fed or the PPT; and they
know it. The next step is massive government
intervention; rate freezes, bailouts and
fiscal stimulus. Big government is back;
Reaganism has gone full-circle. That doesn't
mean that the PPT cannot have an important
psychological affect in soothing jittery
markets and stalling a system-wide collapse.
It just means, that markets will eventually
correct regardless of what anyone does. The
sharp downturn in the financial markets is
the result of unsustainable credit expansion
that can't be fixed by the parlor tricks of
the PPT. The rate at which financial
institutions are deleveraging and destroying
capital will inevitably trigger an economic
crisis equal to the Great Depression. What
is needed is strong leadership and a
re-commitment to transparency, rather than
the “business as usual” deception of the
public that keeps the balls in the air for
another day or two.
“Sucker
rallies”, like yesterday's 400 point surge
on Wall Street just obfuscate the systemic
problems that need to be addressed before
investor confidence is restored. Blogger
Rick Ackerman summed it up succinctly in
last night's entry:
“These
psychotic, 400-point rallies in the Dow do
not augur renewed confidence. They are being
driven almost entirely by short-covering,
and even the otherwise clueless news anchors
are starting to dismiss them as meaningless.
One of these days, moments after the last
surviving bear’s short position has been
liquidated, stocks are going to fall so
steeply that even the Plunge Protection Team
will call for back-up. Then, the financial
collapse that so many have been expecting
will unfold in just a few days, with enough
power to leave the global economy in ruins
for a generation.” (Rik's Piks Rick
Ackerman)
Whether
Ackerman's dire predictions materialize or
not, there's no denying that the situation
is getting worse by the day. In just the
last week, two major financial institutions,
Carlyle Capital and Bear Stearns, have
either gone under or been bailed out wiping
out tens of billions in market
capitalization. These flameouts increase the
rate of the deflation adding to the
already-prodigious losses from housing
foreclosures, delinquent credit card debt,
defaulting car loans, and the accelerating
deleveraging in the hedge fund industry.
Fortress America has sprung a leak, and
capital is escaping in a torrent.
"One thing is
for certain, we're in challenging times,"
Mr. Bush opined on Monday after meeting with
his top economic aides. “But we are on top
of the situation”.
That's
comforting. Bush is all over it.
Yesterday's 75
basis point rate cut by the Fed is a further
sign of desperation. The Fed Funds rate is
now 2 percentage points below the rate of
inflation; a obvious attempt on Bernanke to
reflate the equity bubble at the expense of
the dollar. Is that why Wall Street was so
happy; another savage blow to the currency?
The Fed's
statement was as bleak as any they have ever
released sounding more like passages from
the Book of the Dead than minutes of the
Federal Open Market Committee:
"Recent
information indicates that the outlook for
economic activity has weakened further.
Growth in consumer spending has slowed and
labor markets have softened. Financial
markets remain under considerable stress,
and the tightening of credit conditions and
the deepening of the housing contraction are
likely to weigh on economic growth over the
next few quarters.
Inflation has been elevated, and some
indicators of inflation expectations have
risen...... uncertainty about the inflation
outlook has increased. It will be necessary
to continue to monitor inflation
developments carefully.
Today’s policy action..should help to
promote moderate growth over time and to
mitigate the risks to economic activity.
However, downside risks to growth remain.”
Wall Street
rallied on the cheery news.
Also, on
Tuesday, the battered investment banks began
posting first quarter earnings which were
better than expected. Goldman Sachs Group
Inc. and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. beat
estimates which added to the giddiness at
the NYSE. Unfortunately, a careful reading
of the reports, shows that things are not as
they seem. The jubilation is unwarranted;
it's just more smoke and mirrors.
“Lehman
Brothers Holdings Inc. reported a 57% drop
in fiscal first-quarter net income amid
weakness in its fixed-income business,
though results topped analysts'
expectations.” (Wall Street Journal)
The same
was true of financial giant Goldman Sachs:
“Goldman
Sachs Group Inc.'s fiscal first-quarter net
income dropped 53% on $2 billion in losses
on residential mortgages, credit products
and investments ...The biggest Wall Street
investment bank by market value reported net
income of $1.51 billion, or $3.23 a share,
for the quarter ended Feb. 29, compared to
$3.2 billion, or $6.67 a share, a year
earlier....Results included $1 billion in
losses on residential mortgage loans and
securities, and nearly $1 billion in losses
on credit products and investment losses
...” (Wall Street Journal)
The bottom line
is that both companies first quarter
earnings dropped by more than a half in just
one year alone while, at the same time, they
booked heavy losses. Hardly a reason for
celebration. The major investment banks
remain on the critical list because of the
billions of dollars of toxic debt they still
carry on their balance sheets. Consider
industry titan Goldman Sachs for example,
which is sitting on a backlog of bad paper
from the subprime/securitization debacle as
well as an unknown amount of LBOs (Leveraged
buyouts) and commercial real estate deals (CREs)
that are heading south fast. Economic's
analyst, Mark Gongloff, has compiled some
interesting figures in his article “Crunch
Proves A Test of Faith For Street Strong”:
“All of the
brokerage houses are highly leveraged, with
a high ratio of assets to shareholders'
equity, a sign they have used debt heavily
to build up positions in hope of greater
returns. Morgan Stanley, which will report
Wednesday, had a leverage ratio of 32.6-to-1
at the end of last year, nearly as high as
Bear's 32.8-to-1. Lehman was leveraged
30.7-to-1, and Merrill Lynch 27.8-to-1. And
the would-be rock, Goldman? It was leveraged
26.2-to-1.”
Remember,
Carlyle Capital was leveraged 32 to 1 ($22
billion equity) and went “poof” in a matter
of days when it couldn't scrape together a
measly $400 million for a margin call. How
vulnerable are these other maxed-out players
now that the credit bubble has popped and
the whole system is quickly unwinding?
Not very safe,
at all. As Gongloff points out:
“Based in
part on numbers reported at the end of
Bear's fourth quarter, estimated that Bear
Stearns had $35 billion in liquid assets and
borrowing capacity, enough to operate for 20
months. Turns out it had enough for three
days.”
That's right;
three days and it was over. Why would anyone
think it will be different with these other
equally-exposed banks? These institutions
are basically insolvent now. The Federal
Reserve is making a big mistake by
protecting them from the consequences of
their speculative excesses. As
hyper-inflated assets continue to lose
altitude, and structured investments and
arcane hedges against default begin to
disintegrate; these wastrel institutions
will be crushed by a stampede of panicking
investors running for the exits. The flight
to safety has already begun. Cash is king.
Look what
has transpired just since Monday.
“Crude oil,
copper and coffee led a decline in
commodities that may be the biggest ever
recorded on speculation that a U.S.
recession will stall demand for raw
materials.” (Bloomberg) Yes, all asset
classes fall in a deflationary spiral even
commodities which many people believe are a
safe bet. Not so. In fact, even gold has
begun to retreat as hedge funds and other
market participants are forced to relinquish
their positions.
In other
news, Reuters reports:
“The yield
on U.S. 3-month Treasury bills fell below 1
percent on Monday to levels not seen in 50
years prompted by intense safety bids for
cash spurred by the ongoing global credit
crunch...Investors were pulling money out of
stocks and even the booming commodity market
even after the Federal Reserve conducted a
fresh round of measures over the weekend to
alleviate the credit crisis.”
Again, the
“flight to safety” as investors recognize
the warning signs of deflation. This trend
will further intensify even though the Fed
will continue to cut rates and real earnings
on Treasuries will go negative. In another
report from Reuters:
“The Chicago
Board Options Exchange Volatility Index or
VIX on Monday surged to its highest level in
nearly two months as a fire sale of Bear
Stearns and an emergency Federal Reserve cut
in the discount rate reignited credit fears.
"Fear is
higher now than it has been in a long time.
Option traders are loading up on index puts
in the Standard & Poor's 500 index.” The
“Fear Gage, as it is called, is soaring to
new heights as credit problems continue to
mount and business begins to slow to a
crawl.
And, perhaps
most important of all: “The cost of
borrowing in dollars overnight rose by the
most in at least seven years after the
Federal Reserve's emergency cut in the
discount interest rate stoked concern that
credit losses are deepening....The London
interbank offered rate, or Libor climbed 81
basis points to 3.86 percent, the British
Bankers' Association said today. It was the
biggest increase since at least January
2001. The comparable pound rate rose 28
basis points to 5.59 percent, the largest
gain since Dec. 31, 2007.” (Bloomberg)
This may
sound like technical gibberish geared for
market junkies, but it is critical to
understanding the gravity of what is really
going on. The Fed's rate cuts are not
affecting the lending between banks which is
actually deteriorating quite rapidly. And,
when banks don't lend to each other (because
they are worried about getting their money
back) the wheels of capitalism grind to a
halt. The banks are the essential conduit
for providing credit to the broader economy,
so there must be traffic between the major
lending institutions. The banks are hoarding
cash to cover losses on their steadily
downgraded mortgage-backed assets and to
shore up their skimpy capital reserves. As a
result, consumer spending will slow, housing
will continue to falter, business will
contract and GDP will shrink.
“We know
we're in a sharp (decline), and there's no
doubt that the American people know that the
economy has turned down sharply,” said Henry
Paulson on NBC television on Sunday.
“There's turbulence in our capital markets
and it's been going on since August. We're
looking for ways to work our way through
it.”
But Paulson
is clearly out of his depth. He's just not
the man to deal with a crisis of this
magnitude. His only interest is bailing out
his friends in the banking industry. The
interests of workers and consumers are just
brushed aside. Has anyone from the Dept of
the Treasury (or the Fed) suggested a
bailout for the 14,000 Bear Stearns
employees who lost not only their jobs but
the entire retirement when the company was
purchased by JP Morgan?
Of course,
not. Because both Paulson and Bernanke take
a class oriented approach to the
problem that narrows their range of vision
and limits their ability to pose viable
remedies. They are unable to see the whole
playing field. For example, Bernanke assumes
that if he keeps cutting rates, he can
reflate the equity bubble by reenergizing
consumer spending. But that won't happen.
First of all, the banks are not passing on
the savings to customers. And, second, the
banks are only lending to applicants with a
flawless credit history. In other words, the
Fed's cuts may be good for Bernanke and
Paulson's buddies, but they do nothing for
either the consumer or the broader economy.
Also, as Michael Hudson notes in his latest
article “Save the Economy, Dismantle the
Empire” (counterpunch.org) the banks are
making no attempt to stimulate the economy,
but simply turn a profit with capital
borrowed from the Fed:
“This week
the Fed tried to reverse the plunge in asset
prices by flooding the banking system with
$200 billion of credit. Banks were allowed
to turn their bad mortgage loans and other
loans over to the Federal Reserve at par
value (rather at just 20% "mark to market"
prices). The Fed's cover story is that this
infusion will enable the banks to resume
lending to "get the economy moving again."
But the banks are using the money to bet
against the dollar. They are borrowing from
the Fed at a low interest rate, and buying
foreign euro-denominated bonds yielding a
higher interest rate--and in the process,
making a currency gain as the euro rises
against dollar-denominated assets. The Fed
thus is subsidizing capital flight,
exacerbating inflation by making the price
of imports (headed by oil and other raw
materials) more expensive. These commodities
are not more expensive to European buyers,
but only to buyers paying in depreciated
dollars.”
The Fed's
strategy has even failed to lower mortgage
rates which are pinned to the 30 year
Treasury and which has actually gone up
since Bernanke began slashing rates. This
inability to pass on the Fed's rate cuts to
potential mortgage applicants ensures that
the housing meltdown will continue unabated
well into 2009 and, perhaps, 2010.
In the last
few days, the Fed has provided $30 billion
to buy up the least liquid speculative debts
of a privately-owned business, Bear Stearns,
which was leveraged at 32 to 1 and which
will remain unsupervised by federal
regulators. How does that address the
underlying issues of the credit crunch? Are
Bernanke and Paulson really trying to put
the financial markets back on solid footing
again or are they merely expressing their
bank-centered cultural bias?
That
question was answered in an article on
Tuesday by the Wall Street Journal which
offered this explanation of the real reasons
behind the Bear bailout:
“That
illusion was shattered Saturday morning,
when Mr. Paulson was deluged by calls to his
home from bank chief executives. They told
him they worried the run on Bear would
spread to other financial institutions.
After several such calls, Mr. Paulson
realized the Fed and Treasury had to get the
J.P. Morgan deal done before the markets in
Asia opened on late Sunday, New York time.
"It was just
clear that this franchise was going to
unravel if the deal wasn't done by the end
of the weekend," Mr. Paulson said in an
interview yesterday.'” (“The Week that Shook
Wall Street”, Wall Street Journal)
Ah-ha! So
all it took was a little nudge from his
banking buddies to put Paulson over the top.
The Bear
bailout was engineered to serve the needs of
the banking establishment; nothing more. The
Federal Reserve and the US Treasury are
merely an extension of the financial
industry. The Bear bailout proves it.