It worked. The credit markets have begun to thaw. Overnight LIBOR
(London Interbank Offered Rate) dropped 27 basis points to 1.67 percent, the
lowest level since September 2004. Three month LIBOR shed 40 basis points last
week to 4.42 percent. The LIBOR-OIS spread and TED spread are edging downward,
too.
The VIX, the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index
-- also known as the “fear index” -- has skyrocketed to 80, a new record. But
that is to be expected; after all, Wall Street is in a panic. The truth is,
interbank lending is beginning to ease and the financial system has begun to
function a bit more like it should.
That doesn’t mean we’re out of the woods by a long shot. The
stock market will probably lose another 15 to 20 percent, unemployment will
soar, real estate will continue to crash, and consumer spending will dry up. That’s
all part of the hard landing ahead. But at the end of the day, some part of the
credit-distribution system will still continue to function. That wasn’t always
a certainty.
Before the EU finance ministers announced their plan to recapitalize
the banking system, by injecting capital and guaranteeing deposits and
interbank lending, the world was on its way to a complete financial meltdown.
The EU, led by British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, pulled the world back from
the brink of annihilation. It may be the greatest story of our generation, and
very few people even know what really happened.
The system was completely frozen in place. Interbank lending
had stopped, major corporations were unable to meet payroll because they couldn’t
roll over their short-term debt. Cargo ships were stuck in ports around the
world because buyers couldn’t get letters of credit.
As analyst John Mauldin said, “Just as the business world is
dependent upon commercial paper as its life blood, the world of global trade
depends on letters of credit (LOC). If you are a manufacturer of a product and
want to sell to someone outside your borders, you typically require a letter of
credit from the buyer before you load any cargo at a port. A letter of credit
from a prime bank is considered to be proof of your ability to pay. . . . There
are buyers’ and sellers’ agents who make sure these things happen seamlessly,
and world commerce had grown because of it. . . . If you think the problems
stemming from a meltdown with the commercial paper markets are threatening to
the world economy, they are small potatoes when compared to a seizure in the
letter of credit markets.”
The European initiative forced Secretary of the Treasury
Henry Paulson to do the right thing. It is 100 percent certain now that his
plan to use the $700 billion bailout to buy-back the non-performing loans and
bad mortgage-backed securities from the banks would have failed and led to
disaster. Paulson stuck by his wacko plan even though more than 200 economists
opposed him and the stock market tumbled eight straight days in a row, losing
more than 15 percent of its value. The EU had to put a gun to his head to force
him to do the right thing. Paulson’s Wall Street bias is so great that he would
have driven the country off the cliff just to reward his dodgy friends with
lavish cash giveaways from the US taxpayer.
In fact, right after the European plan was announced,
Paulson convened a meeting of the country’s largest banks so he could hand out
$125 billion of freshly-minted, taxpayer-generated loot to shore up their
flimsy balance sheets. Citigroup got $25 billion, as did JPMorgan Chase and
Bank of America. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley both netted $10 billion each.
None of these banks had to submit to any type of regulatory investigation to
see how much of their asset-base was held in worthless mortgage-backed slop or
other structured garbage. Paulson never even tried to find out if they are even
solvent! On top of that, taxpayers get no voting rights, no position on the
board of directors, and no limits on executive compensation for the $125
billion contribution to Wall Street’s biggest white-collar criminals.
Last Thursday, all of the aforementioned banks reported
horrendous quarterly losses, multi-billion dollar write-downs, and more grim
warnings on future profits. It’s clear that Paulson wanted to deliver the
bailout money before the public discovered the extent of the carnage.
There are no assurances that the newly-capitalized banks
will use their windfall to increase lending to consumers and businesses as
Paulson hopes. The banks know that they’ll be facing some stiff headwinds in
the near future as the economy contracts and as deleveraging continues. It is
just as likely that they will hoard their reserves or buy distressed hard assets
rather than expand their dreary loan portfolios. That means credit will
continue to tighten and the widely anticipated slowdown will only get worse.
Currently, the nation is in the grip of a deflationary
downturn. Oil and gold have fallen precipitously as have the other commodities
which are being dumped on the market in one massive fire sale. The hedge funds
are liquidating at an unprecedented pace which is causing steady price erosion
while strengthening the dollar. This giant institutional margin call is what is
at the heart of the recent wild gyrations in the stock market. Investors are
withdrawing their money which is forcing the hedgies to sell their liquid
assets to reinforce their balance sheets. It’s all about “demand destruction.”
Adding to the turmoil, is the fact that many of the hedge
fund managers are “moving to cash” to avoid the equities crash ahead. In Susan
Pullim’s article in the Wall Street Journal, “Smart Money stays on the Sides,”
she says, “Some hedge-fund titans have yanked most of their money out of the
stock market, a bearish sign amid Monday’s euphoria and an indication of how
the hedge-fund business is changing amid chaos.
“In recent days, Steven Cohen, the hedge-fund manager who
runs the $14 billion SAC Capital Advisors, moved about half his funds, or about
$7 billion, into money-market and other short-term securities, eliminating much
of his fund’s exposure to the stock market, says a person close to the fund.
Mr. Cohen plans on sitting on the sidelines for the rest of the year -- trading
a small portfolio himself but keeping shuttered most of the stock portfolios of
his other managers.
“Meanwhile, John Paulson, manager of $35 billion Paulson
& Co. -- who made a spectacularly successful bet against the housing market
last year -- has much of his fund in cash equivalents.
“The retrenchment by Wall Street’s “smart money” crowd is
part of a larger effort by hedge funds that have put a total of as much as $400
billion into cash equivalents recently, according to David Kostin, an analyst
at Goldman Sachs Group Inc.” (Wall Street Journal)
The vultures are collecting on the telephone wires waiting
for the first bloodied antelope to plop to the ground. As the stock market rout
continues, they shouldn’t have to wait too long. Many pundits are predicting
the greatest slump since the 1930s. Already, manufacturing has slowed faster
than any time in the last 20 years, jobless claims jumped 461,000 to 3.7 million,
housing starts are at a 17-year low, and consumer confidence fell through the
floor. Even worse, Paulson’s bailout does nothing to stop the hemorrhaging of
foreclosures which is the source of the disequilibrium in the financial
markets. Congress needs to pass emergency legislation to write down the face value
of distressed mortgages (and provide low interest “fixed rate” loans for the
first 25 percent of the revised value) to create an incentive for homeowners to
stay put. This massive relief effort will have the added benefit of stabilizing
the financial markets by putting a floor under housing prices. Struggling
homeowners should be given a helping hand before the banks.
As the former chairman of Goldman Sachs, Henry Paulson’s
motives have been suspect from the very beginning of this fiasco. He made sure
that the US taxpayer got a shellacking on the purchase of preferred shares in
the banks. And, he even pretended he was forcing the banks to take the capital
they needed to stay afloat. (“Please, don’t make me take that $25 billion Mr.
Secretary.” What a complete farce!) These are his best buddies and he treats
them well. He hasn’t demanded that they bring their off-book operations back
onto their balance sheets, or limit their derivatives exposure, or reduce their
leverage to 12 to 1, or come clean with the amount they are holding in Level 3
assets (illiquid, complex mortgage-backed securities).
Wall Street veteran Pam Marten summed it up like this: “What
most Americans do not understand, because mainstream media rarely explains it,
is the incestuous relationship between the U.S. Treasury and this small band of
financial marauders who busted the entire financial system with insane levels
of leveraged derivative bets.” Amen.
Author F. William Engdahl sees a more nefarious motive
behind Paulson’s maneuvering and he lays it out in his article, Behind the
Panic: Financial Warfare and the Future of Global Bank Power: “It now would
appear that the Paulson strategy was to use a crisis . . . to panic the more
conservative European Union governments into rushing to the rescue of US toxic
waste assets.
“Were that to have happened, it would in the process destroy
what was left of sound EU banking and financial institutions, bringing the
world one step closer to a global money market controlled by Paulson’s cronies
-- US-style Crony Capitalism. Crony Capitalism is certainly appropriate here.
Paulson’s predecessor at both Goldman Sachs and at Treasury, Robert Rubin,
liked to accuse the Asian bankers of Thailand, Indonesia and other lands hit
with the speculative attacks of US-financed hedge funds in 1997 of ‘crony
capitalism,’ leaving the impression the crisis was home grown in Asia and not
the result of a deliberate executed attack by US-financed financial
institutions to eliminate the Asia Tiger model among other goals, and turn Asia
into the funder of US debt.
“Interesting to note is that Rubin is now a Director of Citigroup,
obviously one of Paulson’s crony bank ‘survivors,’ and the bank which to date
has had to write off the largest sum in toxic waste securitized assets.
“The Paulson plan is now clearly part of a project to create
three colossal global financial giants -- Citigroup, JP Morgan Chase and, of
course, Paulson’s own Goldman Sachs, now conveniently enough a bank. Having
successfully used fear and panic to wrestle a $700 billion bailout from the US
taxpayers, now the big three will try to use their unprecedented muscle to
ravage European banks in the years ahead. So long as the world’s largest
financial credit rating agencies -- Moody’s and Standard & Poors -- are
untouched by the scandals and Congressional hearings, the reorganized US
financial power of Goldman Sachs, Citigroup and JP Morgan Chase could
potentially regroup and advance their global agenda over the coming several
years, walking over the ashes of a bankrupt American economy made bankrupt by
their follies. . . . This is a fight for the survival of the American Century
which has been built since 1939 on the twin pillars of American financial
dominance and American military dominance -- Full Spectrum, Dominance.”
Engdahl may be on to something here. Not only will the
present crisis lead to further consolidation in the US by crushing local and
regional banks which do not have an umbilical cord connecting them directly to
the vault at the US Treasury; it could also throw the European financial system
into an “every man for himself” frenzy, ultimately leading to the breakup of
the EU (a prospect that is now widely considered), which would allow the US
banking cartel to extend its tentacles to the continent as it has with its
equities markets.
The damage that the investment banks and their non-bank counterparts
(hedge funds, broker dealers, SIVs etc) have done to the broader economy and
the lives of hundreds of millions of people around the world is incalculable.
Still, the remedy is simple and straightforward. The banks in question should
be forced to establish their solvency according to “mark to market” evaluations
(Triple A MBS=$.22 on the dollar) and if they cannot meet minimal capital
standards; they should be taken into receivership, their equity shareholders
wiped out, their leading executives removed, and they should be transformed
into public utilities under the supervision of the Congress of the United
States. Once the banks are entrusted to our elected officials, we can move on
to the Federal Reserve. The “price fixing” and manipulation of interest rates
by privately owned banks is a failed experiment. It’s time to move on. Abolish
the Fed.
Mike
Whitney lives in Washington state. He can be reached at fergiewhitney@msn.com.