By Mike
Whitney
02/05/08 "ICH"
-- -- Look
around. The
evidence of a
withering
economy is
everywhere. In
"good times"
consumers shun
the canned meat
aisle
altogether, but
no more. Today,
Spam sales are
soaring; grocery
stores can't
keep it on the
shelves.
Everyone is
looking for
cheaper ways to
feed their
families. The
Labor Dept.
assures us that
core-inflation
is only 4 per
cent, but
everybody knows
it's load of
malarkey. Food
prices are going
through the
roof. White
bread is up 13
percent, bacon
is up 7 percent
and peanut
butter is up 9
percent.
Inflation is
rampant and
there's no end
in sight. The
dollar
is closing in on
the peso and
working people
are struggling
just to get by.
The bottom line
is that more and
more people in
"the richest
country on
earth" are now
surviving on
processed
pig-meat. That
says it all.
In Santa
Barbara parking
lots are being
converted into
hostels so that
families that
lost their homes
in the subprime
fiasco can sleep
in their cars
and not be
hassled by the
cops. The same
is true in LA
where tent
cities have
sprung up around
the railroad
yards to
accommodate the
growing number
of people who've
lost their jobs
or can't afford
to rent a room
on
service-industry
wages. It's
tragic.
Everywhere
people are
feeling the
pinch; that's
why 9 out of 10
Americans now
believe the
country is now
headed in the
wrong direction
and that's why
consumer
confidence is at
its lowest ebb
since the Great
Depression. This
is the great
triumph of
Reagan's free
trade "trickle
down" Voodoo
economics; whole
families living
out of their
cars waiting for
the pawn shop to
open.
The economy is
on life-support.
The rest of the
world would be
doing us all a
favor if they
decided to chuck
the dollar and
boycott US
financial
products
altogether. That
would put an end
to Wall Street's
chicanery once
and for all.
Foreign
investors should
be demanding
restitution and
impounding
American assets
to compensate
for the
trillions of
dollars they
lost in the
subprime/securitization
swindle.
Litigate,
litigate,
litigate; that's
the only way to
make the guilty
parties pay for
their crimes.
Either that or
set up a gallows
on Wall Street
and get down to
business.
The pundits on
the business
channel are
telling us that
the "worst is
over"; that the
Force 5
hurricane in the
financial
markets
has weakened to
a squall. Don't
believe it. The
corporate bond
market is still
frozen, housing
is in free fall,
and the banking
system is
buckling from
the overload of
bad investments.
The FDIC is even
trying to lure
former employees
out of
retirement to
deal with the
tsunami of bank
failures set to
touch down later
in 2008.
Corporate
defaults are on
the rise and and
commercial real
estate is
crashing.
"Commercial
property prices
in the US in
February saw
their sharpest
decline since
records began
nearly 15 years
ago as sources
of finance for
deals has dried
up, according to
data from
Standard &
Poor’s out
yesterday. Sales
of commercial
properties were
down 71 per cent
in the first
quarter compared
with a year
earlier."
(Financial
Times)
Commercial real
estate is
following the
same downward
trajectory as
residential
housing. They're
both headed for
the bottom of
the fish-tank.
Any slump in CRE
will send
unemployment
skyrocketing
while adding to
the solvency
problems facing
the banks.
We're not out of
the woods by a
long shot, and
won't be for
years to come.
According to
Bloomberg News,
soaring raw
material costs
have caused a
sharp rise in
costs to
producers that
they won't be
able to pass on
to cash-strapped
consumers. That
means that
corporate
profits will
fall and stock
values will
plunge.
Last week,
Oppenheimer
analyst Meredith
Whitney
announced that:
"The real
harrowing days
of the credit
crisis are still
ahead of us and
will prove more
widespread in
effect than
anything yet
seen. Just as
strained
liquidity pushed
so many small
and mid-sized
specialty
finance
companies to the
brink, we
believe it will
do the same to
the US consumer.
We believe
losses will only
accelerate
further and far
worse than the
most draconian
estimates."
Whitney has been
one of the few
consistently
accurate
analysts of the
current market
meltdown.
The fate of the
larger
investment banks
is just as
uncertain as the
smaller
"depository"
banks. Carlyle
Group Chairman
David Rubenstein
summed it up
like this last
week, "US and
European banks
and financial
institutions
have enormous
losses from from
bad loans they
haven't yet
recognized and
may have a
harder time
wooing sovereign
fund rescuers.
Based on
information I
see, it will
take at least a
year before all
losses are
realized, and
some financial
institutions may
fail. Many
financial
institutions
aren't going to
be able to
survive as
independent
institutions."
That means there
will be greater
consolidation
and more
formidable
banking
monopolies, all
of which is bad
for the
consumer.
The banks and
financial
institutions
have never been
in worse shape.
They've already
written down
$344 billion
since the credit
crisis began
last August and
they'll write
down another
$200 billion
next year. By
the time the
crisis is over,
they will have
racked up an
estimated $1
trillion in
losses. That
represents a $3
trillion
contraction in
loans to
consumers and
businesses.
Also, these
estimates don't
take into
account the
losses of
revenue from the
slowdown in
consumer
spending,
shrinking GDP,
and massive
business
failures; all of
which will wreak
further havoc on
the financial
sector.
The amount of
stress on the
banking system
is
unprecedented.
The Fed is
loaning out
money
hand-over-fist
just to keep the
scaffolding in
place. Take a
look at what is
going on at the
Fed's so-called
"auction
facilities"
where the Fed is
providing loans
and US
Treasuries for "unsellable"
mortgage-backed
junk and other
toxic bonds. The
numbers are
staggering.
According to the
Seattle Times:
"The Federal
Reserve's
emergency loans
to banks climbed
to the highest
level on record
even as Wall
Street
investment
companies scaled
back their
borrowing....Banks
stepped up their
borrowing,
according to the
Fed report. They
averaged $15.95
billion in daily
borrowing for
the week ending
May 28, compared
with $13.5
billion for the
previous week,
and the total
was a record.
The previous
high of $14.4
billion came in
the week ending
May 14...In the
broadest use of
the central
bank's lending
power since the
1930s, the Fed
in March
scrambled to
avert a market
meltdown by
giving
investment
houses a place
to go for
emergency
overnight
loans....The Fed
also announced
Thursday it will
make a fresh
batch of
short-term cash
loans available
to banks as part
of an effort to
ease stressed
credit
markets...The
Fed said it will
conduct three
auctions in
June; each will
offer $75
billion in
short-term cash
loans. It would
mark the latest
round in a
program that the
Fed launched in
December to help
banks overcome
credit problems
so they will
keep lending to
customers."
("Banks step up
Fed loans,
investment firms
scale back",
Seattle Times)
Another $225
billion?!?
The Fed is
trashing its
balance
sheet--to the
tune of $225
billion--when
the money could
be used to
provide free
college tuition
and universal
health care.
What a waste.
Instead, the
money is being
used to throw a
lifeline to
dodgy
speculators
would were
trying to
snooker foreign
investors with
garbage
securities. At
the same time,
the Fed's
emergency
facilities have
done nothing to
restore trust
between the
individual banks
who are more
reluctant to
lend to each
other than ever.
The ongoing
scandal
surrounding
Libor (the
interest rate
that banks
charge each
other and which
determines the
rates on $3
trillion of
financial
products
including
mortgages)
strongly
suggests that
the banks are
lying about the
true rate they
are paying so
the public
doesn't find out
how battered
they really are.
Bloomberg News:
"Banks routinely
misstated
borrowing costs
to the British
Bankers'
Association to
avoid the
perception they
faced difficulty
raising funds as
credit markets
seized up."
Consumer
spending is
sluggish too,
since lending
standards have
tightened and
home equity
continues to
vanish. Subprime
problems have
migrated from
Wall Street to
Main Street as
credit trends
appear to be
getting worse.
Consumers are
maxed-out on
their credit
cards, student
loans, mortgages
and car loans.
The lack of
personal savings
is not the
result of a
profligate
lifestyle (as
the right wing
media likes to
opine) but 30
years of
stagnant wages
and class
warfare waged
via big business
and the federal
tax code. None
of the baby
boomers are
counting on
Social Security
to pay the bills
when they retire
but, still, that
doesn't justify
the money being
ripped-off from
their paychecks
every week and
slipped into the
general fund
where it is used
to pave roads
and purchase
cluster-bombs.
Social security
is nothing but a
flat tax for
paupers. (The
rich get a
free-ride after
the first
$87,000 income)
These are some
of the factors
that are bearing
down on an
American economy
like a Daisy
Cutter. 2009 is
looking is
looking more and
more like a
chapter out of
Revelation.
An article is
this week's The
Economist
summarizes the
malaise in
housing in
particularly
apocalyptic
terms:
"America's house
prices are
falling even
faster than
during the Great
Depression. As
house prices in
America continue
their rapid
descent,
market-watchers
are having to
cast back ever
further for
gloomy
comparisons. The
latest S&P/Case-Shiller
national
house-price
index, published
this week,
showed a slump
of 14.1% in the
year to the
first quarter,
the worst since
the index began
20 years ago.
Now Robert
Shiller, an
economist at
Yale University
and co-inventor
of the index,
has compiled a
version that
stretches back
over a century.
This shows that
the latest fall
in nominal
prices is
already much
bigger than the
10.5% drop in
1932, the worst
point of the
Depression. And
things are even
worse than they
look. In the
deflationary
1930s house
prices declined
less in real
terms. Today
inflation is
running at a
brisk pace, so
property prices
have fallen by a
staggering 18%
in real terms
over the past
year." ("The
Economist")
The country is
undergoing a
collapsing real
estate market
that surpasses
the Great
Depression and
former Fed-chief
Alan Greenspan's
book is still on
the New York
Times Best
Seller list.
How's that for
irony?
Regrettably,
there's no sign
of a bottom yet
in housing. Some
markets have
already dropped
by 30% costing
the states (like
California and
Florida)
billions in tax
revenue and
triggering a
steep increase
in foreclosures.
In California,
sales are not
only down by
roughly 50 per
cent, but 40 per
cent of new
sales are sales
of foreclosed
homes. The pool
of potential
buyers has dried
up. Now the
vultures are
circling and
picking up homes
for $.50 on the
dollar. The
losses are
enormous. If the
downward trend
continues, (as
many now expect)
and housing
prices drop 30
per cent
nationwide; the
market will shed
$6.5 trillion in
aggregate value
and lower
household
spending by $300
billion. That
means GDP will
shrink at least
another full
percentage
point.
The crisis in
the financial
markets won't be
resolved until
housing prices
stabilize,
that's why the
Fed and Congress
are scrambling
to put together
a plan (Hope
Now) that will
slow the rate of
foreclosures.
Trillions of
dollars in
complex bonds
and
mortgage-backed
securities will
continue to be
downgraded until
investors see
that it is safe
to "dip their
toes in the
water" again and
reinvest in a
(currently)
moribund market.
So far, Congress
has made little
headway in
keeping
homeowners from
defaulting on
their mortgages.
Credit Suisse
predicts that
foreclosures
will be
somewhere north
of 6.5 million
homeowners over
the next few
years. It is the
equivalent of
Hurricane
Katrina sweeping
from one side of
the country to
the other.
The next
administration---whether
it's McCain or
Obama---will be
forced to
restore the
Resolution Trust
Corp., which was
created in 1989
to dispose of
assets of
insolvent
savings and loan
banks. The RTC
would create a
government-owned
management
company that
would buy
distressed MBS
from banks and
liquidate them
via auction. The
state would pay
less than
full-value for
the bonds (The
Fed currently
pays 85 per cent
face-value on
MBS) and then
take a loss on
their
liquidation.
"According to
Joseph Stiglitz
in his book,
Towards a New
Paradigm in
Monetary
Economics, the
real reason
behind the need
of this company
was to allow the
US government to
subsidize the
banking sector
in a way that
wasn't very
transparent and
therefore avoid
the possible
resistance."
There it is; a
taxpayer-funded
bailout of
Biblical
proportions
looming on the
horizon,
possibly as soon
as 2009.
Ultimately, it
is the only
sure-fire way to
stabilize the
crumbling
banking system
and put a floor
under housing
prices. The
effects on the
dollar, however,
will be
catastrophic.
Don't expect the
greenback to
survive as
the world's
"reserve
currency". Those
days are about
over.
The troubles in
the financial
markets will be
with us for some
time. The
massive
expansion of
credit has
created numerous
equity bubbles
that are
unwinding at
an unpredictable
pace. Author
James Howard
Kunstler calls
the present
process "the
remorseless
algebra of a
deflationary
death spiral".
That's about as
close to a
perfect
description as
imaginable.
There's bound to
be considerable
disagreement
about the
origins of the
bubble and who
is to blame. Was
it the Fed's
"low interest "
policy following
the dot.com bust
in 2000, or the
lack of
government
regulation in
the
securitzation
process, or was
it just the
natural
corollary of a
political system
which
invariably bows
and scrapes to
Wall Street?
The real origin
of the
problem is
ideological.
It's rooted in
the prevailing
"trickle down"
orthodoxy which
opposes any
increases in
wages or
benefits for
working people.
Henry Ford
realized what
today's captains
of industry and
finance refuse
to accept; that
if workers
aren't
adequately paid
for their
labor---and
wages do not
keep pace with
production---then
the economy
cannot grow
because
consumers do not
have the money
to buy the
things they
make. It's just
that simple.
Greenspan and
his ilk believed
that they could
prosecute the
class war and
make up the
difference by
relaxing lending
standards,
changing
bankruptcy laws,
and by creating
a nearly endless
array of exotic
financial
products that
expanded credit.
But shifting
wealth from one
class to another
has its costs.
By crushing the
worker the
Friedmanites
have killed the
golden goose.
The world's most
prosperous
consumer society
is in terminal
distress and no
amount of "free
market"
gibberish
will keep it
from crashing.
