Black Friday?
By Mike
Whitney
10/10/08
"ICH" -- -Panic
has spread
to stock
markets
around the
world.
A massive
sell-off,
which began
when Henry
Paulson
announced a
$700 billion
bailout for
the banking
system, has
turned into
a global
stampede.
Shares fell
sharply
across
Europe and
Asia for
fifth
straight day
following a
679 drop on
the Dow
Jones.
Nearly $900
billion was
wiped off
the value of
U.S.
equities in
just one
trading day.
The Chicago
Board
Options
Exchange
Volatility
Index, the
"fear
index",
soared to a
record 64.
Credit
markets
remain
frozen.
Libor,
London
interbank
offered
rate, nudged
up slightly
on Thursday
night,
signaling
even greater
resistance
to lending
between the
banks. Until
there is
relief in
the credit
markets,
stocks will
continue to
slide. But
trust has
vanished.
The 50 basis
points rate
cut that was
coordinated
with foreign
central
banks has
had no
effect. The
market is
being driven
by fear and
pessimism.
Friday is
shaping up
to be a
bloodbath on
Wall Street.
White
House press
secretary,
Dana Perino
said
yesterday
that
President
Bush will
address the
country on
Friday
morning:
"He will
assure the
American
people that
they should
be confident
that
economic
officials
are
aggressively
taking every
action to
stabilize
our
financial
system. The
Treasury
Department
is moving
quickly to
use new
tools to
improve
liquidity,
which is the
root cause
of this
problem."
Bush still
believes
that the
problem is
"liquidity"
rather than
"insolvency".
When
liabilities
vastly
exceed
assets,
liquidity
does not
help. The
bad
banks need
to be closed
so the good
ones can be
strengthened
with capital
injections.
New York
Times
columnist
Paul Krugman
said, "Last
month, when
the U.S.
Treasury
Department
allowed
Lehman
Brothers to
fail, I
wrote that
Henry
Paulson, the
Treasury
Secretary,
was playing
financial
Russian
roulette.
Sure enough,
there was a
bullet in
that
chamber:
Lehman’s
failure
caused the
world
financial
crisis,
already
severe, to
get much,
much worse."
Lehman's
credit
default
swaps, (the
derivatives
which Warren
Buffett
calls
"financial
weapons of
mass
destruction")
will be
"unwound" on
Friday. It
could be a
"non event"
or it could
trigger
another sell
off; it is
impossible
to know. If
tens of
billions of
dollars are
drained from
already
weakened
balance
sheets in
counterparty
deals that
have turned
sour, the
market will
react
violently.
Wall
Street is on
tenterhooks
waiting for
the news
from Lehman.
There is
general
agreement
among
economists
about what
needs to be
done to
stabilize
the
financial
system. The
banks have
to be
recapitalized,
deposits
have to be
guaranteed
(beyond the
$100,000
FDIC limit)
and
additional
stimulus has
to be
provided to
increase
consumer demand.
Otherwise
the United
States will
face another
Great
Depression.
Too much
time has
been wasted
on Paulson's
failed
bailout for
G-Sax and
his friends
on Wall
Street.
Buying the
bad assets
of
underwater
banks does
not fix the
problem. The
banks need
capital so
they can
resume
lending and
transmit
credit to
consumers
and
businesses.
Former head
of the FDIC,
William
Isaac summed
it up like
this:
"I was
opposed to
the bailout
bill, mostly
because I
don't think
it will
work. The
banks --
taking $700
billion of
bad loans
out of the
banks
doesn't help
get banks
lending
again. It
just solves
some
problems in
some banks.
And it
doesn't have
any leverage
to it. If
the Treasury
were to put
that same
$700 billion
and used
that to
invest in
bank
capital, the
banks can
loan $10 for
every dollar
of capital,
roughly,
which means
that the
Treasury
would be
creating $7
trillion of
new lending
capacity in
the banks.
And that is
vastly
superior to
buying $700
billion of
problem
loans. It
just -- it
will really
give some
punch to the
economy. It
will get
banks back
into the
lending
business.....
And to do
that we need
to get some
capital back
in there."
Isaac
added:
"The other
major thing
they really
need to
do... They
really need
to have the
FDIC declare
that there
is a
financial
emergency.
And when the
FDIC does
that, the
FDIC should
announce
that during
this period
of crisis,
all general
creditors,
all
depositors,
insured and
uninsured,
bondholders
in our
banking
system, will
be protected
if a bank
fails. And
that, I
think, will
get the
inter -- the
financial
markets
working
again and
get banks
willing to
loan to each
other
again."
Nearly one
third of all
deposits
($2.5
trillion)
are not
insured
under
present FDIC
guidelines.
If these
deposits are
not insured,
as Isaac
says, there
will
continue to
be a slow
run on the
banks which
is why the
credit
markets are
paralyzed.
Much of this
week's
volatility
in the
market is
the result
of program
trading
(many sell
orders were
automatically
executed
when the Dow
hit 9,000)
and massive
deleveraging
in the hedge
funds, the
secretive
$1.7
trillion
industry. As
credit gets
tighter, the
funds are
unable to
roll over
their short
term debt
and have
been forced
to dump
their assets
in an
illiquid
market at
firesale
prices. This
explains the
recent
see-saw
motion in
the stock
market; the
huge 2 to 3
percent
intraday
swings
(positive/negative)
This has
added to the
fear of
smaller
investors
who have
left the
market in
droves for
the safety
of US
Treasuries
or cash.
That's why
the dollar
has
strengthened
even though
the Federal
Reserve is
printing
money at
a furious
pace. The
inflationary
effects will
not be
apparent
until the
destruction
of credit
abates.
The biggest
danger we
face in the
short term,
is a run on
the
financial
system. Calm
must be
restored if
we want to
avoid
another
depression.
Investors
have already
pulled a
record $72
billion from
stock and
mutual
funds, and
put the
money in US
Treasurys
and
government-insured
bank
deposits. If
the trend
continues,
the
financial
system will
collapse.
This is
where
leadership
and
credibility
really
matter. The
Bush
administration's
record on
these issues
is dismal.
If the
government
overreacts
and limits
bank
withdrawals
or closes
the stock
market; the
sense of
desperation
and panic
will only
grow. That
increases
the
likelihood
of rioting
and
violence,
which is
what took
place in
China just
this week.
The
falling
stock market
reflects the
mood of the
country as a
whole.
Confidence
in the
system is at
an all-time
low. The
government
has lost the
moral
authority to
rule. People
have lost
faith in
everything.
Bush has
created a
tinder box
which could
explode in
flames at
any time. It
is a
dangerous
situation.
BLACK
FRIDAY:
False alarm
or
Armageddon?
The
econo-blogs
were abuzz
all night
Thursday.
The
prevailing
feeling is
that Wall
Street will
suffer
historic
losses on
Friday and
that this
will mark
the end of
America's
dominance as
the lone
superpower.
As always,
economist
Nouriel
Roubini
provided a
chilling
analysis of
the present
financial
malaise:
Nouriel
Roubini:
"The US and
advanced
economies’
financial
system is
now headed
towards a
near-term
systemic
financial
meltdown as
day after
day stock
markets are
in free
fall, money
markets have
shut down
while their
spreads are
skyrocketing,
and credit
spreads are
surging
through the
roof. There
is now the
beginning of
a
generalized
run on the
banking
system of
these
economies; a
collapse of
the shadow
banking
system...
and now a
roll-off of
the short
term
liabilities
of the
corporate
sectors that
may lead to
widespread
bankruptcies
of solvent
but illiquid
financial
and
non-financial
firms.
At this
point the
risk of an
imminent
stock market
crash – like
the one-day
collapse of
20% plus in
US stock
prices in
1987 –
cannot be
ruled out as
the
financial
system is
breaking
down, panic
and lack of
confidence
in any
counterparty
is sharply
rising and
the
investors
have totally
lost faith
in the
ability of
policy
authorities
to control
this
meltdown....
When...
even the
most radical
policy
actions
don’t
provide
rallies or
relief to
market
participants,
you know
that you are
one step
away from a
market crack
and a
systemic
financial
sector and
corporate
sector
collapse. A
vicious
circle of
deleveraging,
asset
collapses,
margin
calls,
cascading
falls in
asset prices
well below
falling
fundamentals
and panic is
now
underway." (Nouriel
Roubini's
Global
EconoMonitor)
There's a
way forward
but it will
take a lot
of digging
out and a
vision of
the future
that doesn't
center on
Wall Street.