Financial
Collapse
Edges Closer
By Martin
Hutchinson
16/07/08
"Asia Times"
-- -- The
financial
crisis in
the United
States and
worldwide
entered a
new phase
this week,
as Fannie
Mae and
Freddie Mac,
the two huge
US home-loan
institutions,
began what
appears to
be a "death
spiral"
similar to
that which
claimed Bear
Stearns four
months ago.
Fannie and
Freddie are
unique
institutions
and will
almost
certainly be
bailed out
by the
long-suffering
taxpayer.
However, for
the first
time, the
specter has
been raised
of a general
financial
meltdown,
such as the
US managed
to avoid in
1933 but
Sweden
succumbed to
in 1991.
Sweden's
financial
meltdown of
1991
involved the
government
guaranteeing
the
obligations
of the
entire
Swedish
banking
system, and
recapitalizing
the major
banks, with
the sole
major
exception of
Svenska
Handelsbanken.
The total
cost of the
rescue to
Swedish
taxpayers
was around
US$10
billion,
equivalent
to about $1
trillion in
the context
of today's
US economy.
The causes
of the
crisis would
be familiar
to most
Americans
today:
misuse of
off-balance
sheet
securitization
vehicles to
invest
excessively
in real
estate and
mortgage
lending.
It is thus
not
impossible
for the
entire US
banking
system to
implode. It
didn't
happen in
1933 (though
about a
quarter of
US banks
failed)
because US
banks in the
1920s had
been
relatively
conservative
in their
lending,
with many
banks
requiring a
50% down
payment for
home
mortgage
loans, for
example.
Stock margin
lending got
way out of
control in
1928-29, but
relatively
few banks
were
involved
significantly
in that.
The main
problem in
1932-33 was
quite simply
liquidity;
the Fed
failed to
supply
adequate
reserves to
the banking
system, so
crises of
confidence
in
individual
banks led to
panic
withdrawals
of deposits
that caused
the banks
themselves
to fail.
This time
around, the
problem is
the
opposite.
Whereas the
Fed had been
appropriately
cautious in
the late
1920s, so
only in the
area of
stock margin
lending did
the banking
system get
out of
control,
this time
around the
Fed has been
hopelessly
profligate
in monetary
creation for
over a
decade. The
initial
result of
this
profligacy,
the tech
bubble of
1999-2000,
caused only
modest
problems in
the banking
system
through
telecom
losses. The
more recent
profligacy
and the
housing
bubble it
caused have
had much
more serious
consequences,
mirroring
those in
Sweden
leading up
to 1991. The
additional
loosening
since
September
has
distorted
the
financial
system
further,
producing a
commodity
price bubble
that itself
seems likely
to have
substantial
further
adverse
consequences.
Fannie and
Freddie are
probably
toast, and
about time
too. Federal
Reserve
Board
chairman Ben
Bernanke's
statement on
Friday that
the two
companies
can discount
paper with
the Fed may
prolong the
inevitable,
but also
increases
its likely
huge cost to
taxpayers.
There can be
no economic
justification
for the
government
guaranteeing
the great
majority of
the nation's
home
mortgages,
and the
spurious
"government-sponsored
enterprise"
structure of
Fannie and
Freddie
merely hid
the likely
consequences
of their
default.
Their senior
employees
have been
paid as if
they were
counterparts
of Wall
Street
high-flyers
for
performing a
function
that was
economically
entirely
unnecessary,
and they
have
survived for
more than 50
years simply
through
their
ability to
offer
lucrative
consulting
contracts to
ex-congressmen
and other
politically
well-connected
people.
It is thus
necessary
that any
"rescue" for
Fannie and
Freddie be a
euthanasia
not a
lifeline.
They have
extracted
their rents
from the
market for
too long and
have
encouraged
the growth
of a
securitized
mortgage
market that
has proved
entirely
unsound
because of
its perverse
incentives.
Simply
providing
them with
$100 billion
or so of
extra
capital at
taxpayer
expense,
probably
structured
as some
economically
unjustified
form of
subordinated
debt so that
the
shareholders
are left
undiluted
and allowing
them to
continue
operating,
doesn't
solve the
problem; it
exacerbates
it.
The simplest
from of
euthanasia
for Fannie
and Freddie
would be a
takeover by
the Office
of Federal
Housing
Oversight (OFHEO),
their
regulator,
on the
grounds that
they were no
longer able
to operate
independently.
In Freddie's
case that
could be
carried out
at any time,
since the
company has
failed to
follow
through on a
promise to
OFHEO to
raise $5.5
billion in
new capital
- which at
Thursday's
closing
share price
would dilute
existing
shareholders
by 55%. In
any case,
further
declines in
their share
prices and
withdrawal
of funding
by the bond
markets are
likely to
cause a
sufficient
crisis in
the next few
weeks to
make such a
takeover
inevitable
if a rescue
is not
organized
(which it
shouldn't
be.)
Following a
takeover,
Fannie and
Freddie
would need
to continue
performing
their
current
functions of
guaranteeing
home
mortgages,
as without
such
guarantees
home
mortgages
are
currently
impossible
to obtain.
However,
changes must
be made to
recognize
the revised
nature of
the
business.
Since the
new
guarantees
would be
direct
government
obligations
(OFHEO being
an arm of
the
government)
rather than
simply
implied
obligations,
the fees for
obtaining
them should
be jerked
sharply
upwards,
perhaps to
1.5% per
annum on the
outstanding
amount of
the
mortgage.
That would
allow
mortgage
finance to
remain
available at
a cost that
is still
reasonable
in current
markets
(Fannie Mae
paper
already pays
a 0.75%
premium over
the
government
for its
borrowings),
but as
markets
recovered it
would make
Fannie/Freddie
guaranteed
mortgages
highly
uncompetitive
against
direct home
loans, by
far the
healthiest
way for
housing to
be financed.
Together
with the
salary
reductions
outlined
below, it
would also
begin to
reimburse
the
unfortunate
taxpayer for
the gigantic
costs of
this
non-rescue
operation.
Treasury
Secretary
Hank Paulson
has called
for "covered
bonds"
similar to
the German
pfandbriefe
to be used
to finance
housing.
Since
pfandbriefe,
bonds issued
by German
banks to
finance
housing,
remain on
German bank
balance
sheets and
retain the
bank
guarantee,
allowing the
banks only
to escape
the funding
risk of
lending for
30 years at
a fixed
rate, they
avoid the
moral
hazards of
the
securitization
markets, and
are thus an
attractive
alternative.
To encourage
their use,
and to
reduce the
capital cost
to banks of
holding
mortgages on
balance
sheet, the
Basel 1 bank
regulations,
currently
being phased
out, should
be retained;
they allowed
mortgages to
carry only a
4% capital
charge as
against 8%
for regular
loans. By
this and
other means,
the private
banking
sector would
be
encouraged
to make
sound home
loans
directly,
without the
unnecessary
Fannie/Freddie
guarantees.
The
objective
would be
over a
five-10 year
period for
Fannie and
Freddie to
become
insignificant
participants
in the
mortgage
market,
after which
they could
be closed
altogether.
Meanwhile,
costs in
Fannie and
Freddie
could be cut
drastically,
particularly
on the
staffing
side.
Since Fannie
and Freddie
staff would
now be
government
employees,
they should
be paid on
the GS
(government)
payscale,
with the
chief
executive,
as a GS-15,
receiving
appropriate
remuneration
between
$115,317 and
$149,000,
according to
his years of
service.
Even if the
chief
executive
officer was
able to
argue
himself onto
the SES
(senior
executive
service) pay
scale -
after all,
he has
excellent
congressional
contacts -
he would be
limited to
about
$205,000 in
the
Washington
area.
Naturally,
many
Fannie/Freddie
employees
would be
outraged at
this cut in
their living
standards
and would
attempt to
find
alternative
better-paid
employment;
I venture to
suggest that
few would
succeed in
doing so.
That way,
redundancy
payments
would be
avoided
while salary
costs were
slashed.
There would
be a
devastating
effect on
the Northern
Virginia
housing
market,
where many
senior
Fannie/Freddie
employees
have
overextended
themselves
with giant
home
mortgages
for vulgar
McMansions,
but that
problem too
is probably
survivable.
More
important,
the
now-disgruntled
employees
would
perform
their job
poorly,
making
applying for
a
Fannie/Freddie
guarantee a
bureaucratic
and
uncertain
process,
similar to
negotiating
with the
Inland
Revenue
Service.
That too
should
hasten the
disappearance
of the firms
from the
housing
market.
Fannie and
Freddie do
not
represent
the entire
US finance
sector, far
from it.
Nevertheless
their
insolvency
would
further
erode
confidence
in the rest
of the
sector, very
likely
leading to a
cascade of
death
spirals
among other
institutions.
After all,
the best-run
large
non-global
US bank,
Wachovia,
has itself
got in
trouble by
its insanely
foolish
acquisition
of the
California
mortgage
lender
Golden West
Financial at
the peak of
the market
in 2006,
while Bank
of America,
the largest
retail-oriented
US bank,
voluntarily
took on more
of the mess
by its
purchase of
the diseased
and probably
criminal
Countrywide
Financial as
recently as
last
January.
Citigroup is
in deep
trouble in a
number of
areas,
particularly
relating to
its
over-enthusiasm
for the
discredited
technique of
securitization,
while JP
Morgan Chase
chief
executive
Jamie Dimon
wrecked his
credibility
in May by
announcing
that the
financial
crisis was
"mostly
over" -
presumably
wishful
thinking in
the light of
his huge
holdings of
dodgy Bear
Stearns
paper.
Only Goldman
Sachs
appears
serenely
above the
fray, but
don't forget
that at May
this year
its "Level
3" assets
were $78
billion,
more than
twice its
capital.
Level 3
assets, you
may
remember,
are those
for which
there is no
market, so
can be
valued only
by the
internal
mathematical
models of
the
institution
concerned.
Since this
arcane
highly
illiquid
paper is the
most likely
to suffer
catastrophic
erosion of
"value" in a
downturn,
Goldman
Sachs, like
Jamie Dimon,
must be
keeping
fingers
crossed that
somehow this
nightmare
must end
soon.
It mustn't;
from past
experience
of such
follies it
probably has
at least
another year
to go. Thus
a total
collapse of
the US
financial
system,
while not
inevitable,
is a
contingency
which should
now be
planned for.
Martin
Hutchinson
is the
author of
Great
Conservatives
(Academica
Press, 2005)
- details
can be found
at
www.greatconservatives.com
.
(Republished
with
permission
from
PrudentBear.com.
Copyright
2005-07
David W Tice
&
Associates.)
