"To the Bunkers!":
Central banks slash rates in emergency "midnight" meeting
By Mike
Whitney
08/10/08 "ICH'
-- - -Stocks
fell sharply
across
Europe and
Asia last
night
following
another down
day on Wall
Street where
the Dow
Jones lost
508 points
and the S&P
500 slipped
below the
1,000 mark
for the
first time
since 2003.
Japan's
benchmark
index, the
Nikkei, lost
nearly 10
percent
while shares
in London at
one point
slumped more
than 7
percent.
Trading was
suspended in
Indonesia
and Russia
where stocks
fell 10
percent each
on opening.
According to
Bloomberg
News: "The
Federal
Reserve,
European
Central
Bank, Bank
of England,
Bank of
Canada and
Sweden's
Riksbank cut
interest
rates in an
emergency
coordinated
bid to ease
the economic
effects of
the
financial
crisis."
The move by
the Fed's
Open Market
Committee (FOMC)
brings the
Fed's Fund
rate down to
1.5 percent,
500 basis
points below
the current
rate of
inflation.
Following
yesterday's
508 point
bloodbath,
President
George Bush
tried to
calm jittery
investors
about the
turmoil in
the markets.
He said, "I
know that
the days are
dim right
now for a
lot of
folks. But I
firmly
believe
tomorrow is
going to be
brighter."
Just hang in
there.
The present
crisis,
which has
its roots in
the
unsupervised
expansion of
credit in
the United
States, has
spread from
subprime
mortgages
and toxic
securities,
to the
entire global
financial
system,
where it has
roiled
equities
markets and
is now
threatening
to do
incalculable
damage to
the US and
European
banking
systems.
Yesterday,
Fed chairman
Ben Bernanke
announced
plans to
pump an
estimated
$1 trillion
of
short-term
loans
(commercial
paper) to
head off a
growing
liquidity
squeeze.
Unlike,
Treasury
Secretary
Paulson's
$700 billion
bailout,
which was
opposed by
over 200
economists,
Bernanke's
plan targets
the source
of the
problem and
could
actually
succeed.
(ed:
Commercial
paper is a
low-cost
source of
cash for
companies to
meet
short-term
financial
needs. It's
cheaper than
tapping a
line of
credit at a
bank) The
Fed will
start
providing
businesses
and
financial
institutions
with the
short-term
credit they
need to
maintain
normal
day-to-day
operations.
The Fed is
invoking
emergency
powers under
its "unusual
and exigent
circumstances"
clause in
order to
avert an
even larger
shock to the
financial
system
beyond the
wreckage in
the stock
market and
hundreds of
bank
closures
that are
expected
into 2010.
Providing
unsecured
loans
directly to
businesses
is
controversial,
but
necessary.
If these
corporations
and
financial
institutions
fail just
because they
cannot roll
over their
short term
debt, the
overall
damage to
the economic
system could
be
devastating
In
yesterday's
speech, Fed
chairman
Bernanke
gave a
gloomy
summary of
present
economic
conditions:
"Economic
activity had
shown signs
of
decelerating
even before
the recent
upsurge in
financial-market
tensions. As
has been the
case for
some time,
the housing
market
continues to
be a primary
source of
weakness in
the real
economy as
well as in
the
financial
markets.
However, the
slowdown in
economic
activity has
spread
outside the
housing
sector.
Private
payrolls
have
continued to
contract,
and the
declines in
employment,
together
with earlier
increases in
food and
energy
prices, have
eroded the
purchasing
power of
households.
This
sluggishness
of real
incomes,
together
with tighter
credit and
declining
household
wealth, is
now showing
through more
clearly to
consumer
spending.
Indeed,
since May,
real
consumer
outlays have
contracted
significantly.
Meanwhile,
in the
business
sector,
worsening
sales
prospects
and a
heightened
sense of
uncertainty
have begun
to weigh
more heavily
on
investment
spending as
well."
The US is
caught in a
deflationary
downdraft
that could
have
catastrophic
long term
effects.
That's why
Bernanke has
pulled out
all the
stops and
doubled the
Fed's loans
(via auction
facilities)
to banks to
$900 billion
while
allowing
financial
institutions
to use
mortgage-backed
securities
and other
dodgy
structured
investments
as
collateral.
The Fed has
also started
paying
interest on
reserve
balances
held at the
central
bank. This
helps to
push down
the
overnight
lending rate
below the
Fed Funds
rate which
helps to
reliquify
the banks.
John Ryding,
chief
economist of
RDQ
Economics
LLC in New
York, called
the
practice,
"stealth
easing",
another
attempt to
flood the
markets with
credit and
get the
economy
moving. Will
it work?
Bernanke has
a good idea
of the
nearly-insurmountable
challenges
in front of
him. Apart
from the
faltering
banking
system, the
collapse in
real estate,
and the
unwinding of
trillions of
dollars of
counterparty
bets via
derivatives
contracts;
Bernanke
faces the
sudden
capitulation
in consumer
spending.
The US
consumer is
tapped out
on credit
card debt,
student
loans, car
loans and
home
mortgages.
Retail
spending is
falling and
likely to
get worse.
Bernanke's
plan to
recapitalize
the banking
system
ignores the
larger issue
that less
people will
be applying
for loans
and that
less credit
will be
flowing
through the
system.
Slower
growth is
inevitable.
The sudden
change in
spending
patterns is
evident
everywhere.
Personal
savings are
increasing,
home equity
withdrawals
are down (to
nearly zero)
and the new
reality of
"living
within one's
means" is
becoming the
prevailing
ethos.
America is
hunkering
down.
“Big
discounts
fail to lure
shoppers,”
reports the
Wall Street
Journal .
Restaurants
are empty.
Shopping
malls are
not even
attracting
strollers
and gawkers
– let alone
people with
money to
spend. Auto
lots are so
quiet the
salesmen
take turns
pretending
to be
customers –
just to keep
their skills
at-the-ready.
Even the
private jet
business is
in a
tailspin."
(The Daily
Reckoning)
Personal
consumption
is down,
unemployment
is rising,
manufacturing
is slowing,
and
commodities
have taken a
record
plunge in
the last few
weeks. The
telltale
signs of
deflation
are
everywhere.
According to
economist
Asha
Bangalore at
Northern
Trust:
"The
July-August
data point
to a
possible
drop in
consumer
spending
during the
third
quarter. If
the forecast
is accurate,
it would be
the first
quarterly
decline
since fourth
quarter of
1991. Given
the
importance
of consumer
spending in
GDP, a drop
in consumer
spending in
the third
quarter
raises the
probability
of a
contraction
in real GDP
in the third
quarter."
9 out of 10
Americans
now believe
the country
is headed in
the "wrong
direction"
economically,
while,
according to
CNN/Opinion
Research
Corp. poll,
which
surveyed
more than
1,000
Americans
over the
weekend, a
majority of
people now
"believe
another
economic
depression
is likely"
and that we
will
experience
"25%
unemployment
rate,
widespread
bank
failures and
millions of
Americans
homeless and
unable to
feed their
families."
The good
news is that
inflationary
pressures
have eased.
The bad news
is...well...everything
else.
From the
Fed's 7 AM,
October 8,
2008, Press
Release,
"Joint
Statement by
Central
Banks":
"Incoming
economic
data suggest
that the
pace of
economic
activity has
slowed
markedly in
recent
months.
Moreover,
the
intensification
of financial
market
turmoil is
likely to
exert
additional
restraint on
spending,
partly by
further
reducing the
ability of
households
and
businesses
to obtain
credit.
Inflation
has been
high, but
the
Committee
believes
that the
decline in
energy and
other
commodity
prices and
the weaker
prospects
for economic
activity
have reduced
the upside
risks to
inflation."
The United
States is
headed into
another
Great
Depression
and has
probably
dragged the
rest of the
world along
with it. The
global
financial
system will
look very
different by
the time we
reach the
other end of
the tunnel.