"Enough
With The Cuts,
Already"
By Mike
Whitney
22/04/08 "ICH"
-- -- Stop
Last week's
stock market
blowout added
more than 4
percent to the
Dow Jones
Industrials, but
it had no affect
on Libor rates.
Libor rose
steadily from
Tuesday through
Friday signaling
more troubles in
the banking
system. Libor,
which means
London Interbank-Offered
Rate, is the
rate that banks
charge each
other for loans.
It has a
dramatic effect
on nearly area
of investment.
When the rate
soars, as it did
last week, it
means that the
banks are either
too weak
financially to
lend to each
other or too
worried about
the ability of
the other bank
to repay them.
Either way, it
puts a crimp in
lending. Banks
serve as the
transmission
point for credit
to the broader
economy via
business and
consumer loans.
When they're
bogged down by
their own bad
investments or
when risks
increase; rates
go up and the
whole process
slows to a
crawl. When
banks are unable
to extend credit
freely, business
activity
decreases and
GDP shrinks.
The sudden surge
in stocks is not
a sign that
things are back
to normal; far
from it. If
anything, things
are worse than
ever. Credit
remains
unusually tight
despite
Bernanke's cuts
to the Fed Funds
rate or the
creation of
various “auction
facilities” that
remove mortgage-backed
securities (MBS)
from banks
balance sheets.
Businesses and
consumers are
still having a
hard time
getting funding,
which means that
the velocity of
money in the
financial system
is decelerating
rapidly
increasing the
likelihood of a
system-wide
freeze-up. Libor
is just the
flashing red
light.
A rise in Libor
adds billions in
additional
interest
payments for
homeowners,
businesses and
other borrowers.
According to the
Wall Street
Journal:
“Libor is one of
the world's most
important
financial
indicators. It
serves as a
benchmark for
$900 billion in
subprime
mortgage loans
that adjust --
typically every
six months --
according to its
movements.
Companies
globally have
nearly $9
trillion in debt
with interest
payments pegged
to Libor,
according to
data provider
Dealogic.”
Commercial real
estate deals are
mostly pegged to
Libor as are
adjustable rate
mortgages (ARMs).
In fact, most of
the mortgages
that were
written up
during the
boom-years were
tied to Libor.
That's why Peter
Fitzgerald,
chief financial
officer at Radco
Cos., said, "If
Libor were at 4%
instead of under
3%, there would
be a disaster
that would take
years to
unwind.” (WSJ)
Rising Libor
puts the Fed and
the Bank of
England in a
tough spot.
They're
trying to keep
rates
artificially low
so the banks can
increase their
lending and
recoup their
losses, but the
market is not
cooperating. The
market is
driving Libor
upward, which
means the Fed is
losing control.
The real cost of
money is going
up.
The Bank of
England was
forced to
intervene on
Monday. Mervyn
King, the UK's
central bank
governor,
launched a
“Special
Liquidity
Scheme” to
“improve the
liquidity of the
banking system
and raise
confidence in
financial
markets while
ensuring that
the risk of
losses on the
loans they have
made remains
with the banks.”
The plan will
provide $100
billion for
"illiquid assets
of sufficiently
high quality”
(Mortgage-backed
securities) to
“unfreeze” bank
lending. The
plan is similar
to the Fed's
auction
facilities which
have provided
over $200
billion in
exchange for
dodgy MBS,
collateralized
debt obligations
(CDOs) and
commercial paper
(ABCP) According
to Bloomberg:
“The Central
Banks move
allows financial
institutions to
add government
bonds to their
inventory of
liquid assets
and make it
easier for them
to raise cash
and lend,
especially to
consumers
seeking home
loans. In return
the government
will hold the
riskier
mortgage-backed
securities.” The
BOE said the
swaps would be
for a period of
one year and
could be renewed
for up to three
years, although
the banks would
be on the hook
for losses on
their loans. Its
a sweet deal for
the investment
banks and a
total loser for
the British
taxpayer who
could get stuck
with hundreds of
billions of
worthless MBS.
The $100 billion
liquidity-injection
is the biggest
bailout in the
BOE's history,
and it was
granted without
public input or
Parliamentary
authorization,
just like the
Bear Sterns
transaction. The
bankers call the
shots while the
public picks up
the tab. The
BOE's action
puts to rest the
idea that “the
worst is behind
us”. It isn't;
in fact, recent
estimates
suggest that
the losses to
the banking
system could
exceed $1
trillion.
There's still
a lot of carnage
ahead.
The $100 billion
will help to
stabilize the
money markets
and put the
banks on sounder
footing, but it
does nothing to
help the housing
market. The
British real
estate market is
on life support
because most of
the mortgage
financing was
coming from
investors who
bought MBS.
Mortgage
securities are
currently down
92 percent from
the same period
last year, which
leaves potential
buyers without a
funding source.
The BOE
is considering
creating a
British-style
Fannie Mae to
kick-start the
flagging housing
industry by
providing
government-backed
loans. The
private sector
will not be a
big player in
the housing
market for the
foreseeable
future.
The same is
true in the US.
If the Fed can't
bring Libor down
with interest
rate cuts, then
it will have
to develop
a back-up
plan. The next
step would be
“quantitative
easing”; a
monetary policy
that was
implemented by
the Bank of
Japan in 2001
“to revive that
country's
economy that was
stagnant for a
decade.
Quantitative
easing entails
flooding the
banking system
with excess
reserves,
resulting in
pushing the
benchmark
overnight bank
lending to
zero.” (Reuters)
There are
indications that
Bernanke is
preparing for
this radical
option already,
but there's
little chance
that it will
succeed. Whether
the banks are
able to lend or
not is
irrelevant.
Public attitudes
towards
indebtedness
have changed
dramatically in
the past few
months.
Overextended
consumers are
looking for ways
to pay off
their debts and
live within
their means.
This will make
it more
difficult for
Bernanke to
reflate the
equity bubble
through credit
expansion. When
people are
frightened or
pessimistic
about the
future, they
naturally
curtail their
spending. A
recent poll
conducted by the
Washington
Post/ABC
illustrates how
the publics
attitude towards
the economy has
darkened in a
matter of
months.
According to the
survey:
“Nine out of ten
Americans now
give the economy
a negative
rating, with a
majority saying
it is in 'poor'
shape, the most
to say so in
more than 15
years. And the
sense that
things are bad
has spread
swiftly. The
percentage who
hold a negative
view of the
economy is up 33
points over the
last year, and
the percentage
who rate the
economy 'poor'
has increased 13
points in the
last two months.
That is the
quickest 60-day
decline since
the Post and ABC
started asking
the question in
1985”
(Washington
Post)
The average
American is
showing a better
grasp of the
deteriorating
economic
conditions than
the stock
market. Housing
sales continue
to tumble,
manufacturing is
off,
unemployment is
steadily
increasing,
retail sales are
flat, and
inflation is
soaring.
Consumers are
feeling the
pinch of rising
food and energy
costs, loss of
home equity and
a general
downturn in the
credit markets.
Money is tight
and jobs are
scarce.
ARE YOU BETTER
OFF THAN YOU
WERE 8 YEARS
AGO?
When George W.
Bush took office
in 2000, oil was
$28 per barrel,
the euro was
$.87 on the
dollar, gold was
$274 per ounce,
and the national
debt was $5.9
trillion. Today,
oil is a record
$114 per barrel,
the euro is
nudging $1.60 on
the dollar, gold
is $945 per
ounce, and the
National Debt is
$9 trillion. The
country is
presently
engaged in a $2
trillion war in
Iraq with no end
in sight. The
federal
government has
expanded over
30% under Bush.
Wages for
working people
have stagnated,
unemployment has
risen, 47
million
Americans are
without health
care, and the
economy is
slipping into
recession. By
every objective
standard, the
country is worse
off today than
when Bush first
took office.
The Federal
Reserve has
played a major
role in
America's
economic
decline.
Greenspan's
“weak dollar”
policy pushed
trillions of
dollars of
credit into the
hands of people
who had no
realistic
prospect of
paying it back.
Now the banks
are buried
beneath a
mountain of bad
investments and
foreclosures are
at record highs.
(In California
65,000 homes are
now in some
stage of
foreclosure
while the total
number of homes
sold in
February—new and
used---was a
mere 20,513)
Michael S.
Rozeff explains
the current
downturn in his
article “The
Subprime Crisis
and Government
Failure”:
“How are we to
explain and
understand the
details of the
subprime crisis?
Is it a sudden
outcropping of
market madness?
Is this an
instance of a
free market gone
haywire? Is it a
case of mass
lender
stupidity? Is it
a case of greed
and corruption?
Is it a case of
inefficient
regulation by
the states?
The subprime
crisis is none
of these. Its
origin lies in a
housing price
bubble brought
about by
excessive
central bank
money creation
and the
subsequent
puncturing of
this bubble...
Fiat money
inflations often
bring on real
estate booms
followed by
busts. These
inflations are
the common
element in real
estate cycles
that span many
countries and
many centuries,
and they put the
lie to the
hypothesis that
bad lending
practices are
the culprit.
Fraudulent money
creation is the
culprit, not
faulty
evaluation of
the credit risks
of borrowers.”
(Michael S.
Rozeff , “The
Subprime Crisis
and Government
Failure”,
lewrockwell.com)
The knock-on
effects of the
housing bust are
just now
rippling through
the broader
economy.
Consumer
spending is
sluggish, growth
is weak, and the
stock market is
more volatile
than anytime
since the 1930s.
The Fed has
usurped
congressional
powers to deal
with insolvency
problems at the
banks. Public
money is now
being provided
for the purchase
of dubious
assets held by
unregulated
investment banks
owned by private
speculators. The
Fed is simply
making
up the rules as
it goes along.
Bernanke's
actions have not
yet been
challenged by
any congressman
or senator.
The Fed's
monetary
policies have
triggered a
run-up in
commodities
prices which is
driving up the
cost of
everything from
corn to copper.
Food riots have
broken out in
capitals around
the world and
leaders are
worried about
growing
political
instability. The
media is blaming
drought, high
energy prices,
and biofuels for
the sudden rise
in prices, but
these are only
secondary
factors.
Currency
devaluation has
played a bigger
role than
shortages or
blight. The
world is awash
in dollars which
are steadily
losing value.
Pension funds
and foreign
central banks
are diverting
dollars into
commodities
rather than
keeping them in
corporate bonds
or the sagging
stock market.
Here's an
excerpt from the
Wall Street
Journal that
sums it up:
“Inflation is
rising
throughout the
world due to
dollar weakness,
and the prices
of such
commodities as
oil and corn
have soared.
..As former Fed
Chairman Paul
Volcker noted
last week, we
are already in a
“dollar crisis”.
Even the IMF---typically
the temple of
devaluationists—is
alarmed by the
dollar's fall.
Dollar weakness
has already
contributed to
soaring
commodity prices
that have
walloped US
consumers just
when their
spending is most
needed to offset
the housing
slump. ...The
commodity boom
is result in
large part of
the Fed's weak
dollar policy,
and it may have
tipped the US
into recession
that could have
been avoided.”
(Wall Street
Journal)
Economics editor
for the UK
Telegraph,
Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard,
draws the same
conclusion in
his recent
article, "Oil,
Surges as
Investors hunt
for
Anti-dollar":
“Société
Générale said
the near $30
spike in prices
since early
February is
largely due to
money pouring
into commodity
index funds, now
worth some
$200bn. Crude
has taken on a
"safe-haven"
role for
investors
fleeing the
dollar, or those
betting that
central banks
will let rip
with excess
liquidity.
"This is now
entirely
investor
driven," said Dr
Frederic
Lasserre,
Société
Générale's head
of commodities
research. He
added that most
of the money is
coming from
pension funds,
insurers and
other long-term
investors. They
view the US
recession as a
mere hiccup in a
powerful upward
cycle, convinced
that Chinese and
Mid-East demand
will hold up
long enough for
America to
recover. "They
are all
convinced by the
fundamental
tightness of the
market," he
said.” (UK
Telegraph)
Commodities
prices are now
being driven by
an
ever-weakening
dollar. As
Pritchard notes,
oil futures have
become a sort of
“anti-dollar”; a
more reliable
store of value
than the anemic
greenback.
The Fed's loose
money policies
have put the
dollar at risk
of losing its
role as the
world's reserve
currency. If the
dollar falls
from its perch,
the empire will
soon follow. The
macroeconomic
impact of
Greenspan's low
interest rates
will be seismic.
Foreign banks
and investors
currently hold
$6 trillion in
dollar-based
assets and
currency. When
the dollar
falls;
speculation will
increase and
prices will
rise. Currently,
the US is
exporting its
inflation and
fueling
political unrest
in the process.
If Bernanke
continues to
slash interest
rates, the
problems will
only get worse.
The Fed could
raise rates by
50 basis points
tomorrow and the
commodities
bubble would
explode
overnight, but
that doesn't
look likely.
The idea that
soaring
commodity prices
are the result
of speculation
is
controversial.
(I could be
wrong!)
Economist Paul
Krugman does not
think that “low
interest rates
and irrational
exuberance” are
responsible for
the high prices.
Rather, he
thinks they are
the result of
“rapidly growing
demand and
constrained
supply”. This is
certainly
possible.
Perhaps, there
is no bubble at
all.
Currency
Intervention to
Save the Dollar
The G-7 finance
ministers met in
Washington last
week and
announced their
“resolve” to
minimize the
volatility in
the currency
markets. Many
people took this
to mean that
foreign central
banks would take
a more active
role in shoring
up the dollar.
So far, there's
been no
indication of
support. The
dollar has
stayed within
the $1.58-1.59
per euro range
for more than a
week. Help could
be on the way
but, then, maybe
not. The only
one who can
really save the
dollar now, is
Bernanke. All he
needs to do
is indicate that
the rate cuts
are over and the
bleeding will
stop. But that
might be too
much to hope
for. Bernanke
has already cut
the Fed Funds
rate from 5.25
percent to 2.25
percent since
September. (way
below the 4.1
percent rate of
inflation) Its
clear that he
sees a
deflationary
tidal wave about
to hit
sometime in the
next few
quarters. Why
else would he
slash rates so
aggressively
while stretching
the Fed's
mandate (“make
sure the markets
function
properly”) to
the limit?
Last week,
former Fed
chairman Paul
Volcker took the
unusual step of
publicly
chastising Bernanke
in a speech he
gave to the
Economic Club of
New York.
Volcker's
comments
indicate the
level of
frustration
with the
Fed's dollar-savaging
rate cuts which
have caused
problems around
the world.
Volcker said
“The recession
is not the Fed's
problem. It's
the
government's.
The Fed's job is
to defend the
currency and
fight
inflation—exactly
the opposite of
what this Fed is
doing.” The
former Fed chief
thinks Bernanke
should raise
rates now,
because if he
doesn't, he'll
have to raise
them even more
later, “with
even more awful
consequences.”
Martin
Feldstein,
chairman of the
Council of
Economic
Advisers under
Ronald Reagan,
joined Volcker
in blasting the
Fed and calling
for an end to
the rate cuts.
In a Wall Street
Journal
editorial on
April 15
Feldstein said:
“It's time for
the Federal
Reserve to stop
reducing the
federal funds
rate, because
the likely
benefit is small
compared to the
potential
damage....Lower
interest rates
could raise the
already high
prices of energy
and food, which
are already
triggering riots
in developing
countries. In
order to offset
the inflationary
impact of higher
imported
commodity
prices, central
banks in those
countries may
raise interest
rates. Such
contractionary
policies would
reduce real
incomes and
exacerbate
political
instability....lowering
interest rates
stimulates
economic
activity to a
point at which
labor and
product markets
cause wages and
prices to rise.
That is unlikely
to happen in the
U.S. in the
coming year. The
general weakness
of the economy
will keep most
wages and prices
from rising more
rapidly.....But
high
unemployment and
low capacity
utilization
would not
prevent lower
interest rates
from driving up
commodity
prices.
Lower interest
rates induce
investors to add
commodities to
their
portfolios. When
rates are low,
portfolio
investors will
bid up the
prices of oil
and other
commodities to
levels at which
the expected
future returns
are in line with
the lower
rates.”
Feldstein is
right.
Additional cuts
will probably
have negligible
effect on
housing and
consumer
spending, but
they could be a
death-blow to
the dollar. It's
not worth it.
Lower rates will
be devastating
for people
living in poorer
countries. In
the US, middle
class families
spend only 15
percent of net
earnings on
food. In poorer
countries people
spend upwards of
75 percent of
their income
just trying to
feed themselves.
That's why riots
are breaking out
everywhere; the
Fed's monetary
policy is a
catalyst for
political
instability.
Besides, lower
interest rates
don't
necessarily
increase demand
or make credit
more easily
available. The
only way to
spark demand is
to make sure
that wages keep
pace with
production so
that workers can
buy the things
they
produce. That's
the only way
to create a
prosperous economy,
too; build a
strong and
well-educated
work-force.
“Economic
recovery will
require
resolving the
difficult
problems of the
credit markets,
dealing with the
millions of
homeowners who
may now be
tempted to
default on
mortgages that
exceed the value
of their homes,
and reducing the
risk that the
ongoing decline
in house prices
will push
millions of
additional
homeowners into
a vulnerable,
negative equity
condition,” says
Feldstein. “A
lower fed funds
rate will not
solve any of
those problems.”
Right again. The
problems we face
can't be
resolved with
rate cuts and
auction
facilities. They
require new
thinking, fiscal
solutions and
public
engagement.
There's no quick
fix and no
perfect
solution; not
everyone will
get a fair
deal. But its
pointless
to wreck the
currency when
nothing is
gained by it.
