The
Real State of the US Economy
Henry Paulson Has Lost Control Over US
Finance
By William F. Engdahl
02/08/08 " Global
Research" -- -- When Henry Paulson agreed to
leave his job as chairman of the powerful Wall Street investment
bank, Goldman Sachs to go to Washington as Treasury Secretary in
2006 he demanded extraordinary powers as de facto economic czar.
He got it. Paulson is also head of the President’s Working Group
on Financial Markets -- the secretary of the treasury and the
chairmen of the Federal Reserve Board, the Securities and
Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission. The Working Group is the financial world's
equivalent of the Pentagon war room. Paulson, not Fed chairman Bernanke, is the person running the Administration’s crisis
management. And his recent actions indicate he has lost control
as the snowballing problems from the semi-government mortgage
companies Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae to the collapse of the
multi-trillion dollar market in Asset Backed Securities (ABS) to
the real economy are compounding into the worst crisis since the
1930’s Great Depression.
‘The US banking system
is sound…’
In an eerie echo of President Herbert Hoover in 1930, during a
Presidential campaign against Roosevelt, following the stock
market crash and collapse of numerous smaller banks, Paulson
recently appeared on national TV to declare "our banking system
is a safe and sound one." He added that the list of "troubled"
banks "is a very manageable situation." In fact what he did not
say was that the US bank deposit insurance fund, the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) has a list of problem banks
that numbers 90. Not included on that list are banks such as
Citigroup, until recently the largest bank in the world.
The statement is
hardly reassuring. The California savings bank, IndyMac Bank
which was declared insolvent a month ago was not on the FDIC
list a week before it collapsed. The reality is the crisis
created by "securitizing" millions of home mortgages into new
financial instruments and selling the packages to pension funds
and investors is unfolding like a snowball rolling down the
Swiss Alps.
Indication of
the lack of control is the statement just weeks ago by Paulson
that "financial institutions must be allowed to fail." That was
two weeks before Paulson went to Congress to ask for
"Congressional authority to buy unlimited stakes in and lend to
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac." As I noted in my
recent piece, Financial Tsunami: The Next Big Wave is
Breaking: Fannie Mae Freddie Mac and US Mortgage Debt ,
those two private companies insured some $6 trillion worth of
home mortgages, half the entire US mortgage debt. Paulson
defended the request by calling Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae "the
only functioning part of the home loan market."
That comes back
to the statement about a "sound banking system". Can we have a
sound banking system where the only functioning part is
literally insolvent—its debts greater than its assets?
It is well known
on Wall Street that some of the largest financial institutions
have huge undeclared problems with Asset Backed Securities they
have valued far above their worth to make their books look
better than they are. The names Citigroup, Lehman Bros., Morgan
Stanley, even Paulson’s old firm, Goldman Sachs and of course
the inventor of sub-prime mortgage securitization, Merrill
Lynch, all hold a huge percentage of what are called Level Three
assets, these being assets where no one is willing to buy but
the bank declares their worth based on "fantasy." In short the
value of those core financial institutions of the US financial
system is massively overvalued compared with their value were
they forced to sell into the open market today. In a sobering
aside, readers should not expect any serious economic remedies
for the crisis from a President Barack Obama. Obama’s National
Campaign Finance Chairman is Chicago real estate billionaire,
Penny Pritzker, who is heir to among other things the Hyatt
Hotels. It was Pritzker together with Merrill Lynch ten years
ago who first developed the model for securitizing "sub-prime"
real estate, the trigger for the current Financial Tsunami
crisis.
Already
Citigroup has been forced to go to Dubai hat in hand and ask for
billions in cash. After it announced it would not need more
capital. Now Citigroup just announced plans to sell some $500
billion more assets to raise funds. Is Citigroup really solvent
is the question sober investors are asking. Similarly Merrill
Lynch raised $6.6 billion from Kuwait Mizuho, stated it was fine
and weeks later had to raise still more capital. Morgan Stanley
sold a 10% share of the company to China International Corp.
The real economy
contracting rapidly
Behind the
reassuring statements from Paulson and others that the "worst is
over" the reality of the credit collapse since August 2007 is a
deepening economic contraction which I have said several times
in this space will surpass the Great Depression of the 1929-1938
period. A goof friend who is an unemployed homebuilder in a
prosperous part of Arizona just sent me the following list of US
department retail store closures. It is worth noting that over
70% of the US GDP is consumer spending and that the entire
Federal Reserve strategy of Alan Greenspan after the March 2000
collapse of the stock market bubble, was to bring US interest
rates to their lowest levels since the 1930’s in order to
stimulate consumer spending on credit, i.e. debt, to avoid
"recession." Note the scale of the following store closings
across America in recent weeks:
Ann
Taylor closing 117 stores nationwide.
Eddie
Bauer to close more stores after closing 27 stores in
the first quarter.
Cache,
a women’s retailer is closing 20 to 23 stores this year.
Lane
Bryant, Fashion Bug, Catherines closing 150 stores
nationwide
Talbots,
J. Jill closing stores. Talbots will close all 78 of its
kids and men's stores plus another 22 underperforming
stores. The 22 stores will be a mix of Talbots women's and
J. Jill.
Gap Inc.
closing 85 stores
Foot
Locker to close 140 stores
Wickes
Furniture is going out of business and closing all of
its stores. The 37-year-old retailer that targets
middle-income customers, filed for bankruptcy protection
last month.
Levitz
- the furniture retailer, announced it was going out of
business and closing all 76 of its stores in December. The
retailer dates back to 1910.
Zales,
Piercing Pagoda plans to close 82 stores by July 31
followed by closing another 23 underperforming stores.
Disney
Store owner has the right to close 98 stores.
Home
Depot store closings 15 of them amid a slumping US
economy and housing market. The move will affect 1,300
employees. It is the first time the world's largest home
improvement store chain has ever closed a flagship store.
CompUSA
(CLOSED).
Macy's
- 9 stores closed
Movie
Gallery – video rental company plans to close 400 of
3,500 Movie Gallery
and
Hollywood Video stores in addition to the 520 locations the
video rental
chain closed
last fall as part of bankruptcy.
Pacific
Sunwear - 153 Demo stores closing
Pep Boys
- 33 stores of auto parts supplier closing
Sprint
Nextel - 125 retail locations to close with 4,000
employees following 5,000 layoffs last year.
J. C.
Penney, Lowe's and Office Depot are all scaling back
Ethan
Allen Interiors: plans to close 12 of 300 stores to cut
costs.
Wilsons
the Leather Experts – closing 158 stores
Bombay
Company: to close all 384 U.S.-based Bombay Company
stores.
KB Toys
closing 356 stores around the United States as part of its
bankruptcy reorganization.
Dillard's
Inc. will close another six stores this year.
For anyone
familiar with American shopping malls and retailing, this
represents a staggering part of the daily economic life of the
nation, from furniture stores to clothing to video rentals to
leather. The process has only begun and neither major party
Presidential candidate has dared to mention this on the ground
economic reality, because they evidently have no solutions to
offer that would not jeopardize their campaign finances. Obama
is tied to not only Pritzker but also to Omaha billionaire,
Warren Buffett and George Soros. McCain depends on the
traditional money contributions of the Republican Party which
demand permanent tax reform for highest income earners and a
pro-bank laissez faire treatment of millions of homeowners
facing home foreclosure and asset seizure by banks.
Banks across the
country have severely cut back on loans, fearful of bad debts.
That has aggravated the consumer collapse documented above.
Hundreds of thousands of real estate brokers, small and large
bankers, furniture workers and salespeople, and construction
workers are unable to find work. Jobs are being cut wholesale
and those working are often on reduced hours. Car sales in June
plunged by 28% for Ford, 18% for General Motors and even 21% for
Toyota which will mean more layoffs in coming weeks. This will
be the next wave of unemployment.
The economic
reality is not reflected in official US Commerce Department or
Labor Department statistics. There the data is constantly being
"revised" to hide the grim reality in an election year.
My good friend,
economist John Williams of California, has meticulously tracked
such "data revisions" for more than 25 years and found the
manipulation of reality so alarming that he founded an
independent subscriber service titled "Shadow Government
Statistics" (http://www.shadowstats.com/
), where he makes best estimate calculations of the reality not
the official mythology.
By Williams’
calculations the US economy first entered recession, defined as
two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth, at the end of
2006. Ever since, the recession has deepened, dramatically so in
the past 12 months. Little known is the fact that the Labor
Department also publishes six different unemployment statistics
from U1, U2 through to U6 being the most comprehensive. The
reported "official unemployment" is the very narrowly defined U3
which stands at 5.5%. However, as Williams notes, U6 is the real
measure and that officially shows 9.7% unemployed. His
calculations put the figure at 13.7% actually unemployed and
seeking work.
A personal
account
The unemployed
homebuilder from Arizona I mentioned above recently sent me the
following personal note on the situation:
"Here is how it looks to people like me: Real estate dealings
fuelled the economy in most areas of the country for the past
decade or more. We’ve been in a market downturn for three years.
We have seen the cost of doing business increase for builders,
along with a big drop in buyers as everyone tightens their
belts, or can’t sell existing homes. Many employers have gone
under ending thousands of jobs. If they have a job people are
worried about losing it. Driving long distances to work is not
possible with gasoline costs double that of 2006. There has been
a 40% drop in most peoples’ home equity worth. Many people are
"underwater" on their homes, meaning they owe more than the
market price is worth today. So many under-employed don’t show
up in government unemployed statistics. Self employed like me
never get counted."
The Arizona
homebuilder continued, "Today nobody is building. Unsold home
inventories are triple that of 2003. Banks no longer give easy
credit for home buyers. Many realtors I know have gone two years
without selling a home. Empty storefronts are becoming common.
In many areas unemployment among construction trades people is
50% or more. Tens of thousands of illegal Mexicans who did most
of the manual labor have returned to Mexico to find work. What
now? Well, I do handyman projects of all sorts, big or small and
make about 70-90% of what it takes to survive with a family of a
wife and three young children. My savings make up the rest. That
can’t go on for too much longer. We went from affluent and
comfortable to nervous and broke with diminished opportunities
in just three years. We used to be the middle class."
To be
continued…
F.
William Engdahl is author of A Century of War:
Anglo-American Oil Politics and the New World Order (Pluto
Press) and Seeds of Destruction: The Hidden Agenda of Genetic
Manipulation (www.globalresearch.ca).
He is at work on a new book, from which this has been adapted,
Power of Money: The Rise and Decline of the American Century. He
may be reached through his website,
www.engdahl.oilgeopoitics.net.
© Copyright William
F. Engdahl, Global Research, 2008
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