The Fed�s $12.8 trillion of monetary stimulus has triggered
a six-week-long surge in the stock market. Think of it as Bernanke�s Bear
Market Rally, a torrent of capital gushing from every rusty pipe in the
financial system.
The Fed�s so-called �lending facilities� have gone far
beyond their original purpose which was to backstop a broken system. Now they�re
leaking liquidity into the equities markets and sending stocks soaring while
the �real� economy sinks to the bottom of the fish tank. That�s how the Fed
does business these days: plenty of tasty crepes for the Wall Street kingpins
and table scraps for the lumpen masses.
Bernanke has provided generous �100 cents on the dollar�
loans for Triple A mortgage-backed collateral that is now worth 30 cents on the
dollar. The Fed stands to lose trillions of dollars on these loans because the
assets will never regain their original value. Eventually, the taxpayer will
have to pony up the difference in higher taxes, fewer public services and a
weaker dollar.
Bernanke�s liquidity injections may have sparked a flurry of
speculation, but they won�t end the recession or slow the downward spiral. The
relentless system-wide contraction continues apace and all the leading economic
indicators point to a deepening slump that will last for two years or more.
Here�s a clip from a recent statement from the IMF: �Recessions
associated with financial crises have typically been severe and protracted.
Financial crises typically follow periods of rapid expansion in lending and
strong increases in asset prices. Recoveries from these recessions are often
held back by weak private demand and credit reflecting, in part, households�
attempts to increase saving rates to restore balance sheets. They are typically
led by improvements in net trade, following exchange rate depreciations and
falls in unit costs.
�Globally synchronized recessions are longer and deeper than
others. Excluding the present, there have been three episodes since 1960 during
which 10 or more of the 21 advanced economies in the sample were in recession
at the same time: 1975, 1980 and 1992 . . . Recoveries are usually sluggish,
owing to weak external demand . . .�
The recession will be a long uphill slog regardless of
developments in the stock market. Bernanke admitted as much last Thursday when
he said that the collapse of U.S. lending will cause �long-lasting� damage to
home prices, household wealth and borrowers� credit scores.
�One would be forgiven for concluding that the assumed
benefits of financial innovation are not all they were cracked up to be. . . . The
damage from this turn in the credit cycle -- in terms of lost wealth, lost
homes, and blemished credit histories -- is likely to be long-lasting.�
Unlike Treasury Secretary Geithner, Bernanke has been
surprisingly candid in his analysis of the crisis. That doesn�t mean that his
policies have been worker-friendly, far from it. But he has been a lot more
honest about the shortcomings of deregulation and financial innovation. So far,
the meltdown has wiped out more than $11 trillion of household wealth, sent
unemployment skyrocketing, and pushed millions of people from their homes. As
Bernanke admits, the country will not quickly bounce back.
Economists Kenneth Rogoff and Carmen Reinhart have conducted
a study on the last 18 international financial crises and compiled their
findings in a document, titled �Is the 2007 U.S. Subprime Financial Crisis So
Different?� What they discovered was that �rising public debt is a near
universal precursor of other post-war crises� and that countries that
experienced large capital inflows were particularly vulnerable to crises. By
2006, two-thirds of the world�s surplus capital was flowing into the United
States via its current account deficit. This flood of foreign capital kept
interest rates low, housing and equity prices high, and Wall Street flush with
money. Now foreign investment is drying up, housing prices are falling, the
secondary market is frozen, and deflation is setting in across all sectors of
the economy.
Rogoff and Reinhart believe that �recessions that follow in
the wake of big financial crises tend to last far longer than normal downturns,
and to cause considerably more damage. If the United States follows the norm of
recent crises, as it has until now, output may take four years to return to its
pre-crisis level. Unemployment will continue to rise for three more years,
reaching 11�12 percent in 2011.� (Newsweek, �Don�t Buy the Chirpy Forecasts�)
The proliferation of opaque, unregulated debt-instruments
(MBSs, CDOs, CDSs) also played a big role in the present crash by reducing
transparency and increasing systemic instability.
Here�s Rogoff and Reinhart in their Newsweek article �Don�t
Buy the Chirpy Forecasts: �Assuming the U.S. continues going down the tracks of
past financial crises, perhaps the scariest prospect is the likely evolution of
public debt, which tends to soar in the aftermath of a crisis. A base-line
forecast, using the benchmark of recent past crises, suggests that U.S.
national debt will rise by $8.5 trillion over the next three years. Debt rises
for a variety of reasons, including bailout costs and fiscal stimulus. But the No.
1 factor is the collapse in tax revenues that inevitably accompanies a deep
recession.�
Tax revenues are already falling sharply across the country
as the recession deepens. In fact, Bloomberg News reports, �State and local
sales-tax revenue fell more sharply in the fourth quarter of 2008 than at any
time in the past half century� . . . (Corporate and personal income taxes are
also declining at a record pace.) That makes it impossible to predict the
ultimate cost of the crisis. But what makes it even harder is that Treasury
Secretary Timothy Geithner refuses to remove toxic assets from the banks�
balance sheets using the usual �tried and true� methods.
A recent report from a congressional oversight committee
(The Warren Report) revealed that there are three ways to fix the banking
system: liquidation, reorganization and subsidization. Geithner has rejected
all three of these preferring to implement his own makeshift Public Private
Investment Program (PPIP) which is thoroughly untested, has no base of public
or political support, and is clearly designed to shift the toxic debts of the
banks onto the taxpayer through publicly funded non-recourse loans. (Geithner�s
plan will allow the banks to establish off-balance sheet operations so they can
buy their own bad assets from themselves using 94 percent public money) The
whole thing is an obvious swindle papered-over with gibberish.
So far, less than $10 billion has been transacted through
Giethner�s PPIP; a mere drop in the bucket. The IMF estimates that the banks
and other financial institutions may be holding up to $4 trillion in toxic
assets. At the current rate, Geithner�s strategy will take a century to
succeed. The Treasury secretary knows his plan won�t fix the banking system; he�s
just hoping that the economy rebounds before the government is forced to
nationalize the big banks. It�s just a stalling ploy, but, even so, there are
risks. As the economy worsens, the likelihood of another financial meltdown or
a run on the dollar increases. Foreign central banks and investors are getting
restless and want to see the Treasury take positive steps to fix the system. In
recent months China has slowed its purchases of US Treasuries, traded tens of
billions of US dollars in currency swaps, and gone on a spending spree for raw
materials; all to protect itself from weakness in the dollar.
According to Bloomberg: �People�s Bank of China Zhou
Xiaochuan called for the establishment of a �super-sovereign reserve currency�
last month after Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said he�s worried a weaker US
dollar may hurt China�s investments. Inflation and a depreciating dollar would
erode the value of US holdings owned by international investors.�
Again, Bloomberg: �China, Japan and Korea should establish a
routine mechanism to diversify the region�s reserve currencies away from the
dollar, the China Securities Journal reported, citing central bank adviser Fan
Gang. The Asian countries need to consider setting up a transitional
arrangement to help reduce reliance on the dollar before the problems in the
international financial system are resolved.�
Geithner�s foot-dragging could be extremely costly for
America�s long-term economic prospects. The Treasury secretary should be
tackling the toxic assets problem head-on and stop the dilly-dallying; there�s
no time to lose.
According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD): �The world economy is in the midst of its deepest and most
synchronized recession in our lifetimes, caused by a global financial crisis
and deepened by a collapse in world trade.�
The vicious contraction has spread to every sector without
exception -- industrial output, credit, private consumption, exports, retail,
residential investment, housing, equities prices and manufacturing -- all have
seen sharp cutbacks or plunging revenues. The spurious notion that �green
shoots� are beginning to sprout up is just more happy talk to divert attention
from the severity of the impending storm.
The Fed is in way over its head and Bernanke knows it.
Nothing is working; not the zero percent interest rates, nor the multitrillion
dollar lending facilities, nor monetizing the debt by purchasing long-term
Treasuries. It�s all been a flop. Financial institutions are deleveraging,
businesses are slashing inventory, and corporations are laying off workers in
droves. More than 40 percent of the credit that was sloshing around the economy
via low interest loans has dried up. The banks aren�t lending and Wall Street�s
credit-generating contraption -- securitization -- has broken down, bursting
the humongous equity bubble and precipitating a sudden decline in economic
activity. There are no quick fixes. It will take years to reassemble the broken
pieces or design a new financial architecture. It�s the end of an era.
As for housing, the situation is devolving beyond anyone�s
wildest expectations. It�s not a Depression; it�s bigger and more savage; an
Uber-Depression! Take a look at this chart
from Barry Ritholtz The Big Picture. We are in uncharted waters in a leaky
boat.
Housing is a millstone that�s dragging down the whole
economy. The Wall Street bulls can enjoy their �sucker�s rally� for now, but it�s
going to be short-lived. The fundamentals have never been this bad. It�s like a
chapter from Revelation. The banks are padding their earnings reports with
accounting trickery to hide their losses. The consumer is underwater and
worried about losing his job or getting evicted from his home. And the
government is trying to conceal the damage to the financial system through
trillion dollar stealth bailouts that never get congressional approval. It�s a
real mess, and the problem is that there�s just too much debt.
Martin Wolf of the Financial Times summed it up like this in
Monday�s article: �Consider the salient example of the US, on whose final
demand so much has for so long depended. Total private sector debt rose from
112 per cent of GDP in 1976 to 295 per cent at the end of 2008. Financial
sector debt alone jumped from 16 per cent to 121 per cent of GDP over this
period. How much of a reduction in these measures of leverage occurred in the
crisis year of 2008? None. On the contrary, leverage rose still further.
�The danger is that a turnaround, however shallow, will
convince the world things are soon going to be the way they were before. They
will not be. It will merely show that collapse does not last forever once
substantial stimulus is applied. The brutal truth is that the financial system
is still far from healthy, the deleveraging of the private sectors of highly
indebted countries has not begun, the needed rebalancing of global demand has
barely even started and, for all these reasons, a return to sustained,
private-sector-led growth probably remains a long way in the future.� (Martin
Wolf, Why the �green shoots� of recovery could yet wither, Financial Times)
Debt is at the very center of the current financial crisis.
The massive debt-overhang can only be resolved by writing down losses,
restructuring capital, and initiating debt-relief programs. The Fed and
Treasury�s task is to soften the effects of a hard landing not to stop the
process altogether. That would be pointless. Recessions are a necessary
purgative that cleanse the system of waste and excess. Wall Street�s
unprecedented credit expansion -- which ballooned to gigantic proportions from
fetid assets, off-balance sheet operations and mega-leveraging -- ensures that
this recession will be more agonizing than any before. But that just makes it
all the more important. The system has to exhale before the patient can be
revived.
Mike
Whitney lives in Washington state. He can be reached at fergiewhitney@msn.com.