Moving on to
Plan B
By Mike
Whitney
November 20,
2008 "Information
Clearinghouse"
-- - "The
Winter of
2008-2009
will prove
to be the
winter of
global
economic
discontent
that marks
the
rejection of
the flawed
ideology
that
unregulated
global
financial
markets
promote
financial
innovation,
market
efficiency,
unhampered
growth and
endless
prosperity
while
mitigating
risk by
spreading it
system
wide."
Economists
Paul
Davidson and
Henry C.K.
Liu "Open
Letter to
World
Leaders
attending
the November
15 White
House Summit
on Financial
Markets and
the World
Economy"
The global
economy is
being sucked
into a black
hole and
most
Americans
have no idea
why. The
whole
problem can
be narrowed
down to two
words;
"structured
finance".
Structured
finance is a
term that
designates a
sector of
finance
where risk
is
transferred
via complex
legal and
corporate
entities.
It's not as
confusing as
it sounds.
Take a
mortgage-backed
security (MBS),
for example.
The mortgage
is issued by
a bank (the
loan
originator)
which then
sells the
mortgage to
a brokerage
where it is
chopped up
into
tranches
(pieces of
the loan)
and sold in
a pool of
mortgages to
investors
that are
looking for
a rate that
is greater
than
Treasurys or
similar
investments.
The process
of
transforming
debt ("the
mortgage")
into a
security is
called
securitization.
At one time,
the MBS was
a reasonably
safe
investment
because the
housing
market was
stable and
there were
relatively
few
foreclosures.
Thus, the
chance of
losing one's
investment
was quite
small.
In the early
years of the
Bush
administration,
Wall Street
took
advantage of
the gigantic
flow of
capital
coming into
the country
($700
billion per
year via the
current
account
deficit) by
creating
more and
more MBSs
and selling
them to
foreign
banks, hedge
funds and
insurance
companies.
It was real
gold rush.
Because the
banks were
merely the
mortgage
originators,
they didn't
believe
their own
money was at
risk, so
they
gradually
lowered
lending
standards
and issued
millions of
loans to
unqualified
applicants
who had no
job, no
collateral
and a bad
credit
history.
Securitization
was such a
hit, that by
2005, nearly
80 percent
of all
mortgages
were
securitized
and the
traditional
criteria for
getting a
mortgage was
abandoned
altogether.
Subprimes,
Alt-As and
ARMs
flourished,
while the
"30 year
fixed" went
the way of
the Dodo.
Lenders were
no longer
constrained
by
"creditworthiness";
anyone with
a pulse and
a pen could
get
approved.
The
mortgages
were then
shipped off
to Wall
Street where
they were
sold to
credulous
investors.
The
disaggregation
of
risk--spreading
the risk to
many
investors
via
securitization--was
as much of a
factor in
the creation
of "the
largest
equity
bubble in
history", as
the banks
lax lending
standards or
Greenspan's
low interest
rates. By
spreading
risk
throughout
the system,
securitization
keeps
interest
rates
artificially
low because
the real
risks are
not properly
priced. The
low interest
rates, in
turn,
stimulate
speculation
which
results in
equity
bubbles.
Eventually,
credit
expansion
leads to
crisis when
borrowers
can no
longer make
the interest
payments on
their loans
and defaults
spiral out
of control.
This forces
massive
deleveraging
and the
fire-sale of
assets in
illiquid
markets. As
assets lose
value,
prices fall
and the
economy
enters a
deflationary
cycle.
There are
many types
of of
structured
instruments
including
asset-backed
securities
(ABS),
mortgage-backed
securities (MBS),
collateralized
debt
obligations
(CDOs) and
collateralized
loan
obligations
(CLOs) all
of which
provide a
revenue
stream from
loans that
were chopped
into
tranches and
turned into
securities.
There are
many
problems
with these
complex
securities,
the biggest
of which is
that there
is no way to
unravel the
individual
pools of
loans to
isolate the
bad paper.
That's why
subprime
mortgages
had such a
destructive
affect on
the
secondary
market,
because--even
though
subprimes
only
defaulted at
a rate of
roughly 5
percent--MBS
sales
slumped
nearly 90
percent.
Why? Former
Secretary of
the Treasury
Paul O'Neill
explained it
like this:
"It's like
you have 8
bottles of
water and
just one of
them has
arsenic in
it. It
becomes
impossible
to sell any
of the other
bottles
because no
one knows
which one
contains the
poison."
Exactly
right. So
why weren't
these
structured
debt-instruments
"stress
tested"
before the
markets were
reworked and
the
financial
system
became so
dependent on
them?
Greed.
Because the
real purpose
of these
exotic
investments
is not to
provide true
value to the
buyer, but
to maximize
profits for
the seller
by
increasing
leverage.
That is the
real purpose
of MBS, CDOs
and all the
other
bizarre-sounding
derivatives;
higher
profits with
less
capital.
It's a scam.
Here's how
it works: A
mortgage
applicant
buys a house
for $400,000
and puts 10
percent
down. His
mortgage is
sold to Wall
Street,
chopped into
pieces, and
stitched
together in
a pool of
similar
loans. Now
the
brokerage
can use the
debt as if
it were an
asset,
borrowing at
ratios of 20
or 30 to 1
to fatten
the bottom
line. When
Fannie Mae
and Freddie
Mac were
taken into
conservatorship
by the
government,
they were
leveraged at
an
eye-popping
100 to 1.
This shows
that nearly
an infinite
amount of
debt can be
precariously
balanced
atop a
paltry
amount of
capital.
This
explains why
the $4
trillion
aggregate
value of the
5 big
investment
banks and
the $1.7
trillion
value of the
hedge funds
is now
vanishing
more quickly
than it was
created.
Once the
mighty gears
of
structured
finance
shift into
reverse,
deleveraging
begins with
a vengeance
pulling
trillions
into a
credit
vacuum.
It all
started when
two Bear
Stearns
hedge funds
defaulted in
July 2006
and there
were no
offers for
their MBS
and other
structured
investments.
Panic
quickly
spread to
every corner
of Wall
Street as
the
alchemists
of modern
finance
began to see
that their
worst
nightmare
might be
realized,
that
trillions of
dollars of
Frankenstein
investments
could be
worth
nothing at
all.
Since the
Bear Stearns
funds
fiasco,
there have
been huge
explosions
in the
financial
markets.
Fannie Mae,
Freddie Mac,
Wachovia,
Washington
Mutual,
Indybank,
AIG, Lehman
Bros and
other
industry
giants have
either gone
under or
been forced
into shotgun
weddings by
the FDIC.
The stock
market has
plunged over
40 percent
and suffered
wild
gyrations
not seen
since the
1930s. The
entire Wall
Street
landscape
has changed
completely.
Investment
banking is
no longer a
viable
business
model; the
Big 5 have
either
vanished or
transformed
themselves
into holding
companies to
escape short
sellers. The
hedge funds
have been
deleveraging
with a
ferocity
that has
sent sent
stocks and
commodities
crashing. In
one day last
week, the
stock market
plunged 300
points in
the morning
only to
bounce back
550 points a
few hours
later; a
whopping 850
point-spread
in one
trading day!
No one but a
madman would
dabble in
this market.
Cautious
investors
have pulled
up stakes
and moved to
the safety
of Treasurys.
Meanwhile,
the
financial
tsunami is
roaring
through the
real economy
where
consumer
confidence
has
plummeted,
unemployment
is soaring
and retail
sales have
fallen to
historic
lows. The
downdraft
from the
financial
markets has
flattened
Main Street
and set the
stage for a
humongous
$500 billion
stimulus
package to
be delivered
in the first
few months
of the Obama
administration.
The meltdown
appears to
be playing
out much
like Henry
Paulson
anticipated.
According to
Bloomberg
News :
"Shortly
after
leaving Wall
Street as
Goldman
Sachs' CEO,
Henry
Paulson was
at Camp
David
warning the
president
and his
staff of
"over-the-counter
derivatives
as an
example of
financial
innovation
that could,
under
certain
circumstances,
blow up in
Wall
Street's
face and
affect the
whole
economy."
(PAUL B.
FARRELL, "30
reasons for
Great
Depression 2
by 2011",
MarketWatch)
So far, the
Federal
Reserve has
provided
nearly $2
trillion
through its
lending
facilities
just to keep
the
financial
system
upright. The
Treasury is
currently
distributing
$700 billion
to key banks
and other
financial
institutions
that are
perceived to
be "too big
to fail". In
truth, the
"too big to
fail" mantra
is a just
public
relations
hoax to
conceal the
web of
counterparty
deals that
make it
impossible
for one
institution
to fail
without
dominoing
through the
rest of the
system and
wreaking
havoc.
That's why
AIG is still
on
life-support
with regular
injections
of taxpayer
money;
because it
had roughly
$4 trillion
of credit
default
swaps
(structured
"hedges"
that are not
traded on a
regulated
exchange)
for which
AIG does not
have
sufficient
capital
reserves. In
other words,
the taxpayer
is now
paying the
debts of an
insurance
company that
didn't set
aside the
money to pay
its claims.
(As yet, No
SEC
indictments
for
securities
fraud) In
fact, the
Fed and
Treasury are
now
providing a
backstop for
the entire
structured
finance
system which
is frozen
solid and
shows no
sign of
thawing any
time soon.
This is not
a normal
recession,
which is a
downturn in
the business
cycle and "a
period of
reduced
economic
activity"
usually
brought on
by a
mismatch
between
supply and
demand.
(that ends
in two
quarters of
negative
growth) The
present
situation is
much more
grave; it is
the utter
destruction
of a system
that was
developed
fairly
recently and
has proven
to be
thoroughly
dysfunctional.
It cannot
withstand
the effects
of tighter
credit or
adverse
market
conditions.
This is not
a cyclical
downturn;
the
structured
finance
system has
collapsed
leaving
behind a
multi-trillion
dollar
capital hole
that is
bringing the
broader
economy to
its knees.
One by one,
we have seen
the
structured
instruments
fail;
mortgage-backed
securities (MBS),
collateralized
debt
obligations
(CDOs),
credit
default
swaps (CDS),
commercial
paper (CP),
auction rate
securities.
Now we are
seeing
investors
boycott
anything
related to
structured
investments.
This is from
Mish's
Global
Economic
Trend
Analysis:
"There were
NO sales of
bonds backed
by
credit-card
payments in
October, the
first time
since 1993,
when the
asset-backed
securities
market was
in its
infancy.
Yields on
top-rated
credit card
bonds
relative to
benchmark
interest
rates
reached a
record high
of 525 basis
points more
than the
London
interbank
offered
rate, or
Libor, last
week,
according to
Bank of
America
Corp. data."
Wall Street
has turned
off the
faucet for
securitized
investments.
That market
is toast.
The only
reason that
Libor and
the other
gauges of
interbank
lending have
normalized
is because
the Fed
guaranteed
money
markets and
commercial
paper. It
has nothing
to do with
trust
between the
banks
themselves.
There is no
trust. Even
so, the
banks are
not capable
of making up
for the vast
amount of
credit which
was produced
by the
now-defunct
investment
banks and
hedge funds
which are
constrained
by losses of
nearly $3.5
trillion;
half of
their total
value. In
the best
case
scenario,
bank credit
will only
shrink 15 or
20 percent,
which will
put the US
on track for
a deep "18
month to 2
year"
recession
rather than
another
Great
Depression.
Paulson's
attempt to
divert $30
billion to
non-bank
financial
institutions
to revive
loan
securitization
when there
is no
appetite
among
investors
for such
structured
junk is pure
folly. More
troubling,
is that
neither
Paulson nor
Bernanke
have a Plan
B; an
alternate
scheme for
rebuilding
the
financial
markets on a
solid,
sustainable
foundation
rather than
low interest
rates and
pools of
debt.
Everything
they have
done so far,
suggests
that they
are focused
on one thing
alone;
inflating
another
equity
bubble.
"Inflate or
die", as the
saying goes;
and Bernanke
intends to
achieve this
objective
using the
same tools
that brought
us to the
brink of
catastrophe.
Here's a
clip from a
recent
speech by
Bernanke
which shows
his
determination
to prop up
the broken
system:
"The ability
of financial
intermediaries
to sell the
mortgages
they
originate
into the
broader
capital
market by
means of the
securitization
process
serves two
important
purposes:
First, it
provides
originators
much wider
sources of
funding than
they could
obtain
through
conventional
sources,
such as
retail
deposits;
second, it
substantially
reduces the
originator's
exposure to
interest
rate,
credit,
prepayment,
and other
risks
associated
with holding
mortgages to
maturity,
thereby
reducing the
overall
costs of
providing
mortgage
credit."
Sorry, Ben,
the funding
has dried up
and the
banks have
shown no
interest in
going back
to the days
of
conventional
"30-year
fixed"
mortgages.
It's a dead
letter. The
Fed and
Treasury
need to stop
looking for
ways to
reflate the
bubble and
work to
restore
confidence
in the
markets by
increasing
regulation
and reducing
the amount
of leverage
that's
allowable to
12 to 1.
After all,
it's no
coincidence
that AIG,
Fannie and
Freddie,
Lehman Bros,
General
Motors,
General
Electric
have all
fallen off a
cliff at the
very same
time. They
are all
victims of
the same low
interest,
easy money
finance
swindle
which
allowed them
to roll over
huge amounts
of
short-term
debt at
artificially
low cost.
When Bear
blew up;
lending
tightened,
demand
weakened,
and credit
was flushed
from the
system at an
unprecedented
pace.
Borrowing
short for
long-term
investments
is not
feasible
when credit
becomes
scarce, but
it's not
because the
banks aren't
lending.
That's just
another myth
that keeps
the public
from seeing
what's
really going
on. As Jon
Hilsenrath
points out
in his Wall
Street
Journal
article,
"Banks Keep
Lending, but
that isn't
easing the
crisis",
that is not
the case:
"Banks
actually are
lending at
record
levels.
Their
commercial
and
industrial
loans, at
$1.6
trillion in
early
November,
were up 15%
from a year
earlier and
grew at a
25% annual
rate during
the past
three
months,
according to
weekly
Federal
Reserve
data.
Home-equity
loans, at
$578
billion,
were up 21%
from a year
ago and grew
at a 48%
annual rate
in three
months....The
numbers
point to one
of the great
challenges
of the
crisis. The
credit
crunch is
surely real,
but it is
complex and
not easily
managed.
Banks are
lending, but
they're also
under
serious
strain as
they act as
backstops to
a larger
problem --
the
breakdown of
securities
markets..The
worst of the
credit
crisis is
being felt
not in banks
but in
financial
markets..."
The banks
are not to
blame. There
is a
generalized
contraction
of credit in
the non-bank
financial
system where
structured
finance has
blown up and
taken half
of Wall
Street with
it. It's the
end of an
era. Here's
how
economist
Henry C. K.
Liu sums it
up in his
"Open Letter
to World
Leaders
attending
the November
15 White
House Summit
on Financial
Markets and
the World
Economy":
"Neoliberal
economists
in the last
three
decades have
denied the
possibility
of a replay
of the
worldwide
destructiveness
of the Great
Depression
that
followed the
collapse of
the
speculative
bubble
created by
unfettered
US financial
markets of
the 'Roaring
Twenties'.
They fooled
themselves
into
thinking
that false
prosperity
built on
debt could
be
sustainable
with
monetary
indulgence.
Now history
is repeating
itself, this
time with a
new, more
lethal virus
that has
infested
deregulated
global
financial
markets with
'innovative'
debt
securitization,
structured
finance and
maverick
banking
operations
flooded with
excess
liquidity
released by
accommodative
central
banks. A
massive
structure of
phantom
wealth was
built on the
quicksand of
debt
manipulation.
This debt
bubble
finally
imploded in
July 2007
and is now
threatening
to bring
down the
entire
global
financial
system to
cause an
economic
meltdown
unless
enlightened
political
leadership
adopts
coordinated
corrective
measures on
a global
scale."
Rome is
burning.
It's time to
stop
tinkering
with a
failed
system and
move on to
"Plan B"
before it's
too late.