“The only function of economic
forecasting is to make astrology look respectable.” --John Kenneth Galbraith
When George Soros recently said that the financial system
had “effectively disintegrated,” it caused quite a flap. But Soros was not
exaggerating. The financial system has disintegrated.
What we are experiencing now is just the fallout from that
event. This is easier to understand by using an analogy. Imagine watching the
demolition of a hundred-story skyscraper. After the explosives detonate and the
building implodes, the chunks of debris and the shattered glass begin to fall
to the ground below. That’s where we are right now. The financial
super-structure has already been blown to bits, but a thick shower of fragments
keeps raining down on earth. Rising unemployment, falling consumer confidence,
severe contraction of the economy, growing pessimism; these are all the
knock-on effects of a full-blown system collapse.
Take a look at this chart and you’ll see what I mean. The
chart explains in simple, graphic terms everything that one needs to know about
the financial crisis.

As you can see, the upper part of the graph disappears in
2008, as though it was surgically removed. That is because in 2008, the source
of funding for residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS), commercial
mortgage-backed securities (CMBS), consumer asset-backed securities (which
include everything from student loans and credit cards to auto loans) and home
equity loans have almost completely dried up. In fact, all that’s left of the
previously vibrant credit markets, is the agency mortgage-backed securities
sold through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac which rely exclusively on government
funding. Apart from government-sponsored GSEs, there is no mortgage credit.
What does it all mean? It means that Wall Street’s
credit-generating mechanism has disintegrated cutting off 40 percent of the blood-flow
to the economy. This is why the drop in spending has been so sudden and
precipitous. No economy, however strong, can reduce credit by 40 percent
without sliding into a depression. Every area of industry, trade, investment,
commerce and consumption has been battered. No sector has been spared. Look
closely at the chart and you will see why housing will continue to plummet,
because the primary funding mechanism for selling mortgages no longer exists;
all the applications are now shoveled over to Fannie and Freddie. Wall Street
has gone A.W.O.L.
The often repeated mantra “the banks aren’t lending” is a
myth. The banks are lending; it is the wholesale funding apparatus that’s
broken. That’s why the Fed’s low interest rates have had little effect, because
they don’t increase sales in the secondary market where MBS and other complex
investments are sold. Those markets are frozen due to investor angst. People
are scared out of their wits. Toxic subprime mortgages poisoned the well and
now investors have boycotted the entire market for structured debt-instruments.
Until there is some resolution on the true value of the underlying assets, the
market will remain paralyzed. Investors want price discovery, something that is
basic to every market.
Here’s what Bank of America’s CEO Ken Lewis said in the Wall
Street Journal on Monday, “The banks aren’t lending. This claim is simply not
true. Yes, banks have tightened lending standards after a period in which
standards were too lax. But, according to Federal Reserve data, bank credit has
actually increased over the course of this recession, and business lending is
trending up modestly so far in 2009. Also, mortgage finance volume is booming
as a result of low interest rates. What’s gone from the system is the easy credit
that got us into this mess, as unregulated nonbank lenders have disappeared,
and the market for many asset-backed securities has all but dried up. Most
banks are making as many loans as we responsibly can, given the recessionary
environment.”
The collapse of securitization (the bundling of pools of
loans into securities sold at market) has sucked more than $1.2 trillion from
the credit markets and forced a cycle of deleveraging throughout the financial
system. The idea that securities-based lending was viable was predicated on the
Radian belief that self-interested speculators could sustain the flow of credit
to the system. That notion turned out to be catastrophically wrong. Not only
did financial institutions increase their risk exposure by loading up on
long-term illiquid assets, (MBS, CDOs, CDSs) they also borrowed heavily on
those dodgy assets so they could skim the cream off the top and add to their seven-digit
incomes and lavish bonuses. For the better part of a decade, the only things
that worried the Wall Street oligarchs was whether the larder at the vacation
bungalow on the French Riviera needed restocking or if there were any early
morning tee times available at St Andrews.
PIMCO’s Bill Gross gave an apt summary of the shadow banking
system in a newsletter to his investors last year: “Our modern shadow banking
system craftily dodges the reserve requirements of traditional institutions and
promotes a chain letter, pyramid scheme of leverage, based in many cases on no
reserve cushion whatsoever. Financial derivatives of all descriptions are
involved but credit default swaps (CDS) are perhaps the most egregious
offenders. While margin does flow periodically to balance both party’s
accounts, the conduits that hold CDS contracts are in effect non-regulated
banks, much like their hedge fund brethren, with no requirements to hold
reserves against a significant “black swan” run that might break them. Jimmy
Stewart—they hardly knew ye! According to the Bank for International
Settlements (BIS), CDS totaling $43 trillion were outstanding at year end 2007,
more than half the size of the entire asset base of the global banking system.
Total derivatives amount to over $500 trillion, many of them finding their way
onto the balance sheets of SIVs, CDOs and other conduits of their ilk
comprising the Frankensteinian levered body of shadow banks.
Pyramid schemes and chain letters collapse because there is
no more credit to feed them. As the system of modern day levered shadow finance
slows to a crawl, or even contracts at the edges, its ability to systemically
fertilize economic growth must be called into question.”
The problem is not simply that securitization has blown up,
but that Geithner and pal Bernanke are determined to sift through through the
rubble to see if they can fit the pieces together again. It’s Humpty Dumpty
redux. This is what Bernanke’s Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility
(TALF) is really all about; another pointless attempt to fire-up Wall Street’s
failed credit assembly line, securitization. TALF is set to begin in the middle
of March and will ultimately get up to $1 trillion of Fed funding for
securitized loans made on credit cards, car loans and student loans. But the
plan ignores the fact that the wholesale credit markets already conked out
after their first big stress test and that consumers are no longer in a
position to increase their debt-load. Consumer debt is already at 100 percent
of GDP, and that’s before the recession slashed home equity values by 30
percent and 401ks by 40 percent. That is why personal savings have gone from
negative territory in 2006 to positive 5 percent in just two quarters.
Attitudes towards consumption have done an about-face almost overnight.
Bernanke’s TALF isn’t necessary; what’s needed is debt relief and a smaller
financial system that meets the new reality.
Besides, what’s the point of moving toxic assets from one
balance sheet to another or providing another handout to the scammers and flim
flam men at the hedge funds and private equity firms? They’re the ones who
drove the system into the ditch in the first place.
Peter Eavis of the Wall Street Journal explains, “The Fed
needs to lure investors back into the market for these asset-backed securities,
or ABS, where new issuance has almost disappeared This has led to a contraction
in lending to consumers, deepening the recession. In the fourth quarter of
2008, there wasn’t any issuance of U.S. credit-card ABS, compared with $23
billion a year before, according to Dealogic . . .
“The TALF ladles out that leverage, and it may well work in
kick-starting the moribund market. For instance, investors can borrow $92
million to buy $100 million of bonds backed with prime auto loans. An
investment firm would have levered its equity over 12 times, which could
provide annual returns of over 20 percent on prime-auto ABS assuming no credit
impairment.” (Wall Street Journal, The Fed goes for brokerage)
Sound familiar? What’s even worse than providing the
leverage for the hedge fund sharpies, is the fact that the Fed will not require
investors to post collateral (like a bank) and -- if the assets fall in value --
investors can just “walk away” leaving taxpayers to eat the losses. Such a
deal! It’s another shameless $1 trillion corporate welfare boondoggle disguised
as a financial rescue plan. This shows that the reprobate Fed and its
accomplices at Treasury are still committed to keeping the credit monopoly in
private hands whether it destroys the country or not. The best remedy would be
abandon the securitization model altogether (if only for the time being) so
resources could be devoted to more pressing issues like jobs programs and debt
relief. These would have an immediate stimulative effect on economy by revving
up consumer spending and restoring faith in government. Otherwise, we’re just
dumping more money into a dysfunctional system.
Whether the Obama administration fixes the credit markets or
not, it will still have to recapitalize the banking system. The most efficient
way would be to take over insolvent institutions, separate the bad assets,
protect the depositors and give management the “pink slip.” The problem with
removing the bad assets, however, is the sheer magnitude of the losses. There’s
enough red ink here to stretch from sea to shining sea.
Here’s David Smick in the Washington Post: “Here’s the
problem: Today’s true market value of the U.S. banks’ toxic assets (that ugly
stuff that needs to be removed from bank balance sheets before the economy can
recover) amounts to between 5 and 30 cents on the dollar. To remain solvent,
however, the banks say they need a valuation of 50 to 60 cents on the dollar.
Translation: as much as another $2 trillion taxpayer bailout.
“That kind of expensive solution could send the president’s
approval rating into a nose dive. Consider: $2 trillion is about two-thirds of
the tax revenue the federal government collects each year.” (Tim Geithner’s
Black Hole, David Smick, Washington Post)
And, it’s not just the expense that keeps Geithner from
taking swift action either. It’s also the prospect of systemic failure from
unregulated counterparty contracts, mainly credit default swaps, which have
tied all the major banks together in a lethal net of highly-leveraged bets. If
one of the financial giants sheds its mortal coil and keels over, the others
will follow like lemmings. This is why the government took over AIG and has
provided a $160 billion bailout, to stop the dominoes from tumbling through the
global system. Geithner has decided that it’s wiser to make excuses and try to
run out the clock, than stumble blindly through the derivatives minefield.
Unfortunately, the clock is ticking and the problems can’t wait. The loss of
wealth is already so huge that it has blown a gaping capital-hole in the
financial system triggering an unprecedented slowdown similar to the 1930s.
According to Bloomberg: “The value of global financial
assets including stocks, bonds and currencies probably fell by more than $50
trillion in 2008, equivalent to a year of world gross domestic product,
according to an Asian Development Bank report.” . . .
Blackstone’s CEO Stephen Schwarzman said on Tuesday, “Between
40 and 45 percent of the world’s wealth has been destroyed in little less than
a year and a half. This is absolutely unprecedented in our lifetime.”
As capital is destroyed and credit tightens, consumers have
gotten more defensive, inventories are bulging, unemployment is rising, retail
and housing have continued to nosedive, asset values are shrinking, profits are
dwindling and the economy has succumbed to the slow strangulation of a
credit-python. Deflation has spread across all sectors, strengthening the
dollar and pushing oil and commodities downward. Equities are in a deep slump
that will only get worse. The S&P has already dropped 56 percent from its
peak and is quickly somersaulting downward. Deflation is everywhere.
David Rosenberg, Economist at Merrill Lynch summed it up
like this in “Depression-Style Jobs Report”: “In addition to credit
contraction, asset deflation, profit compression and employment destruction, we
are also in a vicious inventory reduction phase in the manufacturing sector. If
our forecast is correct, this would then suggest that the capacity utilization
rate in manufacturing will make a new all-time low of 66.6 percent from 68
percent in January. The employment data also tell us that there is a very high
probability that wages and salaries deflated -0.3 percent in February as well.
How we end up getting any sustained inflation pressure, or backup in bond
yields for that matter, as the economy moves further and further away from any
semblance of ‘full employment’ in either the labor or product market, is
totally beyond us.
“The Fed’s balance sheet and the balance sheet of the
federal government are expanding at record rates. But these reflationary
efforts should be seen as a partial antidote, not a panacea, to the
deflationary effects brought on from the unprecedented contraction in the
largest balance sheet on the planet: The $55 trillion US household balance
sheet. Based on what house prices and equity valuation have been doing this
quarter, we are likely in for a total loss of household net worth approximating
$7 trillion this quarter alone, which would bring the cumulative decline in
consumer wealth to $20 trillion. This wealth loss exceeds the combined
expansion of the Fed’s and government balance sheet by a factor of ten. That
should put the reflation-deflation debate into perspective.” (David Rosenberg, Economist
at Merrill Lynch, “Depression-Style Jobs Report”: Mish’s Global Economic Trend
Analysis)
Clearly, the capital hole in the center of the US economy is
too humongous to be filled with Obama’s paltry $787 billion stimulus. (Most of
the stimulus is back-loaded anyway. Only $200 billion will be spent creating
jobs in 2009) When businesses and consumers stop spending; the government has
to pick up the slack or the economy gets hammered. Obama’s job is to “go big
and go long” and ignore the braying of the liquidationists and crybaby
Republicans in Congress. This is not the time for cold feet. Cinch up the
jockstrap, and do what’s needed. Dazzle the naysayers with footwork. If Obama
does not meet the challenge and accept the unavoidably huge deficits, thousands
of businesses will default, unemployment will skyrocket, and world trade will
grind to a halt.
Consider this warning from economics professor Barry
Eichengreen in the San Francisco Chronicle: “We must keep Trade from falling
off a cliff.
“Americans may not realize it, but the biggest threat to
economic stability is not falling home prices and retail spending but
collapsing world trade. The value of global merchandise exports was down fully
45 percent in November 2008 from 12 months before. This is a terrifying number.
“Nothing remotely comparable has ever happened before -- not
even in the Great Depression of the 1930s.
“This is a body blow to an already staggering U.S. economy.
U.S. exports in the fourth quarter of last year fell by more than 25 percent in
constant dollars. California is being hit especially hard: outbound container
traffic from the Ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles was down 30 percent in
December 2008 from a year earlier.
“It’s not surprising that when global growth slows, trade
growth slows. But this trade implosion is unprecedented even for a major
recession. (Barry Eichengreen San Francisco Chronicle: “We must keep Trade from
falling off a cliff”)
Trade credit has dried up and reversed capital flows;
another casualty of the credit market crackup. Globalization has returned to
the realm of (corporate) wishful thinking; look for it in the “fiction” section
of the library. No sandal-clad, fist-waving anarchist put the torch to global
trade (regrettably) it was crushed by a poorly-designed financial system that
split into matchwood at the first strong breeze. So, how in the world are
Bernanke and Geithner going to recapitalize the banks and “keep them in private
hands” in the most hostile economic environment in memory?
The only hope is to do the unthinkable: dispatch the FDIC
storm troopers to the teetering banks on Friday night and shut down the biggest
offenders pronto. Don’t wait another minute. The real reason Geithner is
stalling is because he’s afraid that foreign bondholders will cut him off at
the knees and stop purchasing US debt. That’s a threat that has to be taken
seriously, but it shouldn’t stop him from doing his job.
John Hussman explains it all in his weekly comment “Buckle
Up”: “The misguided policy response from Washington has focused almost
exclusively on squandering public money and burdening our children with
indebtedness in order to defend the bondholders of mismanaged financial
institutions . . .
“Make no mistake. Buying up ‘troubled assets’ will not
materially ease this crisis, nor will it even improve the capital position of
financial institutions. Homeowners will continue to default because their
payment obligations have not been restructured to any meaningful extent. We are
simply protecting the bondholders of mismanaged financial institutions, even
though that bondholder capital is more than sufficient to cover the losses
without harm to customers. Institutions that cannot survive without continual
provision of public funds should be taken into receivership, their assets
should be restructured to better ensure repayment, their stockholders should be
wiped out, bondholders should take a major haircut, customer assets should (and
will) be fully protected, and these institutions should be re-issued to the
markets when the economy stabilizes.” (John P. Hussman Ph.D., Hussman Funds, Buckle Up.)
Bondholders own everything and they shouldn’t be trifled
with. They represent foreign banks, governments, sovereign wealth funds, and
industry giants. They can afford the losses better than the taxpayer, but they
won’t be happy about it. There’s bound to be retaliation and gnashing of teeth.
It will require a carefully executed strategy to avoid a bloodbath, a surprise
incision with a razor-sharp scalpel followed by an Obama-led public relations
campaign to placate the enraged bondholders. It won’t be easy, but it has to be
done, and fast. Unfortunately, we are nowhere near the point where anyone at
Treasury or the Fed will set aside the corporate agenda long enough to do the
people’s work. That’s why Geithner will have to go. Bernanke, too.
Mike
Whitney lives in Washington state. He can be reached at fergiewhitney@msn.com.