Thursday, December 20, 2007

The Collapse Of The Modern Day Banking System

Staring into the Abyss

The Collapse Of The Modern Day Banking System

By Mike Whitney

“In past financial crises... the Fed has been able to wave its magic wand and make market turmoil disappear. But this time the magic isn’t working. Why not? Because the problem with the markets isn’t just a lack of liquidity — there’s also a fundamental problem of solvency.” Paul Krugman

12/17/07 "ICH" -- -- -Stocks fell sharply last week on news of accelerating inflation which will limit the Federal Reserves ability to continue cutting interest rates. On Tuesday the Dow Jones Industrials tumbled 294 points following the Fed's announcement of a quarter point cut to the Fed Funds rate. On Friday, the Dow dipped another 178 points when government figures showed consumer prices had risen 0.8% last month after a 0.3% gain in October. The stock market is now lurching downward into a “primary bear market”. There has been a steady deterioration in retail sales, commercial real estate, and the transports. The financial industry is going through a major retrenchment losing more than 25% in aggregate capitalization since July. The real estate market is collapsing. California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger announced on Friday that he will declare a "fiscal emergency" in January and ask for more power to deal with the $14 billion budget shortfall from the meltdown in subprime lending. Economists are beginning to publicly acknowledge what many market analysts have suspected for months; the nation's economy is going into a tailspin which will inevitably end in a hard landing.

Morgan Stanley's Asia Chairman, Stephen Roach, made this observation in a New York Times op-ed on Sunday:

“This recession will be deeper than the shallow contraction earlier in this decade. The dot-com-led downturn was set off by a collapse in business capital spending, which at its peak in 2000 accounted for only 13 percent of the country’s gross domestic product. The current recession is all about the coming capitulation of the American consumer — whose spending now accounts for a record 72 percent of G.D.P.”

Most people have no idea how grave the present situation is or the disaster the country will face if trillions of dollars of over-leveraged bonds and equities begin to unwind. There's a widespread belief that the stewards of the system—Bernanke and Paulson—can somehow steer the economy through this “rough patch” into calm waters. But they cannot, and the presumption shows a basic misunderstanding of how markets work. The Fed has no magical powers and will it allow itself to be crushed by standing in the path of a market-avalanche. As foreclosures and bankruptcies increase; stocks will crash and the fed will step aside to safety. That much is certain.

In the last few weeks, Bernanke and Paulson have tried a number of strategies that have failed miserably. Paulson concocted a plan to help the major investment banks consolidate and repackage their nonperforming mortgage-backed junk into a “Super SIV” to give them another chance to unload their bad investments on the public. The plan was nothing more than a public relations ploy which has already been abandoned by most of the key participants. Paulson's involvement is a real black eye for the Dept of the Treasury. It makes it look like he's willing to dupe investors as long as it helps his well-heeled Wall Street buddies.

Paulson also put together an “industry friendly” rate freeze that is supposed to help struggling homeowners avoid foreclosure. But the plan falls well short of providing any meaningful aid to the estimated 3.5 million homeowners who are facing the prospect of defaulting on their loans if they don't get government assistance. Recent estimates by industry experts say that Paulson's plan will only help a meager 140,000 mortgage holders, leaving millions of others to fend for themselves. Paulson has proved over and over that he is just not up to the task of confronting an economic challenge of this magnitude head-on.

Fed chief Bernanke hasn't done much better than Paulson. His three-quarter point cut to the Fed's Funds rate hasn't lowered interest rates on mortgages, stimulated greater home sales, stabilized the stock market or helped banks deal with their massive debt-load. It's been a flop from start to finish. All its done is weaken the dollar and trigger a wave of inflation. In fact, government figures now show energy prices are rising at a whopping 18.1% annually. Bernanke is apparently following Lenin's injunction that “The best way to destroy the Capitalist System is to debauch the currency.”

On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve initiated a “coordinated effort” with the Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, the European Central Bank, the and the Swiss National Bank to address the “elevated pressures in short-term funding of the markets.” The Fed issued a statement that “it will make up to $24 billion available to the European Central Bank (ECB) and Swiss National Bank to increase the supply of dollars in Europe.” (Bloomberg) The Fed will also add as much as $40 billion, via auctions, to increase cash in the U.S. Bernanke is trying to loosen the knot that has tightened Libor rates in England and reduced lending between banks. The slowdown is hobbling growth and could send the world into a recessionary spiral. Bernanke's “master plan” is little more than a cash giveaway to sinking banks. It has no chance of succeeding. The Fed is offering $.85 on the dollar for mortgage-backed securities (MBSs) and collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) that sold last week in the E*Trade liquidation for $.27 on the dollar. At the same time, the Fed has promised to keep the identities of the banks that are borrowing these emergency funds secret from the public. Thus, accountability and transparency have been both been shattered by one shortsighted action. The Fed is conducting its business like a bookie.

Unfortunately, the Fed bailout has achieved nothing. Libor rates---which are presently at seven-year highs---have not come down at all. This is causing growing concern among the leaders of the Central Banks around the world, but there's really nothing they can do about it. The banks are hoarding cash to meet their capital requirements. They are trying to compensate for the loss of value to their (mortgage-backed) assets by increasing their reserves. At the same time, the system is clogged with trillions of dollars of bad paper which has brought lending to a grinding halt. The massive injections of liquidity from the Fed have done nothing to improve lending or lower interbank rates. It's been a complete flop. Bernanke has lost control of the system. The market is driving interest rates now. If the situation persists, the stock market will crash.

STARING INTO THE ABYSS

One of Britain's leading economists, Peter Spencer, issued a warning on Saturday:

“The Government must suspend a set of key banking regulations at the heart of the current financial crisis or risk seeing the economy spiral towards a future that could make 1929 look like a walk in the park".

Spencer is right. The banks don't have the money to loan to businesses or consumers because they're desperately trying to raise more cash to meet their capital requirements on assets that continue to be downgraded. (The Fed may pay $.85 on the dollar, but investors are unwilling to pay anything at all.)Spencer correctly assumes that the reason the banks have stopped lending is not because they “distrust” other banks, but because they are capital-strapped from all their “off balance” sheets shenanigans. If the Basel regulations aren't modified, money markets will remain frozen, GDP will shrink, and there'll be a wave of bank closings.

Spencer said:

"The Bank is staring into the abyss. The Financial Services Authority must go round and check that all banks are solvent, and then it should cut the Basel capital requirement level from 8pc to about 6pc.” (“Call to Relax Basel Banking Rules, UK Telegraph)
Spencer confirms what we already knew; the banks are seriously under-capitalized and will come under growing pressure as hundreds of billions of dollars of mortgage-backed securities (MBSs) and collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) continue to lose value and have to be propped up with additional capital. The banks simply don't have the resources and there's going to be a day of reckoning.

Pimco's Bill Gross put it like this:

“What we are witnessing is essentially the breakdown of our modern day banking system.” Gross is right, but he only covers a small portion of the problem.

Economist Ludwig von Mises is more succinct in his analysis:

“There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought on by credit expansion. The question is only whether the crisis should come sooner as a result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved.”

The basic problem originated with the Federal Reserve when former Fed chief Alan Greenspan lowered interest rates below the rate of inflation for 31 months straight which pumped trillions of dollars of low interest credit into the financial system and ignited a speculative frenzy in real estate. Greenspan has spent a great deal of time lately trying to avoid any blame for the catastrophe he created. He is a first-rate “buck passer”. In Wednesday's Wall Street Journal, Greenspan scribbled out a 1,500 defense of his actions as head of the Federal Reserve pointing the finger at everything from China's “low cost workforce” to “the fall of the Berlin Wall”. The essay was typical Greenspan gibberish. In his trademark opaque language; Greenspan tiptoes through the well-documented facts of his tenure as Fed chief to absolve himself of any personal responsibility for the ensuing disaster.

Greenspan's polemic is a masterpiece of circuitous logic, deliberate evasion and utter denial of reality. He says:

“I do not doubt that a low U.S. federal-funds rate in response to the dot-com crash, and especially the 1% rate set in mid-2003 to counter potential deflation, lowered interest rates on adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) and may have contributed to the rise in U.S. home prices. In my judgment, however, the impact on demand for homes financed with ARMs was not major.”

“Not major”? 3.5 million potential foreclosures, 11 month inventory backlog, plummeting home prices, an entire industry in terminal distress pulling down the global economy is not major?

But Greenspan is partially correct. The troubles in housing cannot be entirely attributed to the Fed's “cheap credit” monetary policies. They were also nursed along by a Doctrine of Deregulation which has permeated US capital markets since the Reagan era. Greenspan's views on how markets should function were--to great extent--shaped by this non-interventionist/non-supervisory ideology which has created enormous equity bubbles and horrendous imbalances. The former-Fed chief's support for adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) and subprime lending; shows that Greenspan thought of himself as more as a cheerleader for the big market-players than an impartial referee whose job was to monitor reckless or unethical behavior.

Greenspan also adds this revealing bit of information in his article:

“The value of equities traded on the world's major stock exchanges has risen to more than $50 trillion, double what it was in 2002. Sharply rising home prices erupted into major housing bubbles world-wide, Japan and Germany (for differing reasons) being the only principal exceptions.” (“The Roots of the Mortgage Crisis”, Alan Greenspan, WS Journal)

This admission proves Greenspan's culpability. If he knew that stock prices had doubled their value in just 3 years, then he also knew that equities had not risen due to increases in productivity or demand.(market forces) The only reasonable explanation for the asset inflation, therefore, was monetary policy. As his own mentor, Milton Friedman famously stated, “Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon”. Any capable economist would have known that the explosion in housing and equities prices was a sign of uneven inflation. Now that the bubble has popped, inflation is spreading like mad through the entire economy.

Greenspan is a very sharp man. It is crazy to think he didn't know what was going on. This is basic economic theory. Of course he knew why stocks and housing prices were skyrocketing. He was the one who put the dominoes in motion with the help of his well-oiled printing press.

But Greenspan's low interest credit is only part of the equation. The other part has to do with way that the markets have been transformed by “structured finance”.

What's so destructive about structured finance is that it allows the banks to create credit “out of thin air”, stripping the Fed of its role as controller of the money supply. Author David Roache explains how this works in an excerpt from his book “New Monetarism” which appeared in the Wall Street Journal:

“The reason for the exponential growth in credit, but not in broad money, WAS SIMPLY THAT BANKS DIDN'T KEEP THEIR LOANS ON THEIR BOOKS ANY MORE—AND ONLY LOANS ON BANK BALANCE SHEETS GET COUNTED AS MONEY. Now, as soon as banks made a loan, they "securitized" it and moved it off their balance sheet.

There were two ways of doing this. One was to sell the securitized loan as a bond. The other was "synthetic" securitization: for example, using derivatives to get rid of the default risk (with credit default swaps) and lock in the interest rate due on the loan (with interest-rate swaps). Both forms of securitization meant that the lending bank was free to make new loans without using up any of its lending capacity once its existing loans had been "securitized."

So, to redefine liquidity under what I call New Monetarism, one must add, to the traditional definition of broad money, all the credit being created and moved off banks' balance sheets and onto the balance sheets of nonbank financial intermediaries. This new form of liquidity changed the very nature of the credit beast. What now determined credit growth was risk appetite: the readiness of companies and individuals to run their businesses with higher levels of debt.” (Wall Street Journal)

This is truly mind-boggling.

The banks have been creating trillions of dollars of credit (by originating mortgage-backed securities, collateralized debt obligations and asset-backed commercial paper) without maintaining the proportional capital reserves to back them up. That explains why the banks were so eager to provide mortgages to millions of loan applicants who had no documentation, no income, no collateral and a bad credit history. They believed their was no risk, because they were making enormous profits without tying up any of their capital. It was, quite literally, money for nothing.

Now, unfortunately, the mechanism for generating new loans (and fees) has broken down. The main sources of bank revenue have either been seriously curtailed or dried up entirely. (Mortgage-backed) Commercial paper (ABCP) one such source of revenue, has decreased by a full-third (or $400 billion) in just 17 weeks. Also, the securitization of mortgage-backed securities is DOA. The market for MBSs and CDOs and other complex bonds has followed the Pterodactyl into the history books. The same is true of structured investment vehicles (SIVs) and other “off balance-sheet” swindles which have either gone under entirely or are presently withering with every savage downgrade in mortgage-backed bonds. The mighty gear that was grinding out the hefty profits (“structured investments”) has suddenly reversed and---like a millstone that breaks free from its support-axle--is crushing everything in its path.

The banks don't have the reserves to cover their downgraded assets and the Federal Reserve cannot simply “monetize” their bad bets. There's no way out. There are bound to be bankruptcies and bank runs. “Structured finance” has usurped the Fed's authority to create new credit and handed it over to the banks. Now everyone will pay the price.

Wary investors have lost their appetite for risk and are steering-clear of anything connected to real estate or mortgage-backed bonds. That means that an estimated $3 trillion of securitized debt (CDOs, MBSs and ASCP) will come crashing to earth delivering a withering blow to the economy.

And it's not just the banks that will take a beating either. As Professor Nouriel Roubini points out, the broker dealers, the investment banks, money market funds, hedge funds and mortgage lenders are in the crosshairs as well.

Nouriel Roubini:

“Non-bank institutions do not have direct access to the Fed and other central banks liquidity support and they ARE NOW AT RISK OF A LIQUIDITY RUN as their liabilities are short term while many of their assets are longer term and illiquid; so the risk of something equivalent to a bank run for non-bank financial institutions is now rising. And there is no chance that depository institutions will re-lend to these to these non-banks the funds borrowed by central banks as these banks have severe liquidity problems themselves and they do not trust their non-bank counterparties. SO NOW MONETARY POLICY IS TOTALLY IMPOTENT IN DEALING WITH THE LIQUIDITY PROBLEMS AND THE RISKS OF RUNS ON LIQUID LIABILITIES OF A LARGE FRACTION OF THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM.” (Nouriel Roubini's Global EconoMonitor)

As the downgrades on CDOs and MBSs continue to accelerate, there'll likely be a frantic “flight to cash” by investors, just like the recent surge into US Treasuries. This will be followed by a series of spectacular bank and non-bank defaults. The trillions of dollars of “virtual capital” that was miraculously created through securitzation when the market was buoyed-along by optimism; will vanish in a flash when the market is driven by fear. In fact, the equity bubble has already been punctured and the process is well underway.

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Monbiot on the background to Bali climate inaction

Bush trashed the climate talks. But look what Gore did.

By George Monbiot. Published in the Guardian 17th December 2007

"After eleven days of negotiations, governments have come up with a compromise deal that could … even lead to emission increases. … The highly compromised political deal … is largely attributable to the position of the United States which was heavily influenced by fossil fuel and automobile industry interests. The failure to reach agreement led to the talks spilling over into an all night session …"(1)

These are extracts from a press release by Friends of the Earth. So what? Well it was published on December 11th - I mean to say, December 11th 1997. The US had just put a wrecking ball through the Kyoto Protocol. George W Bush was innocent; he was busy executing prisoners in Texas. Its climate negotiators were led by Albert Arnold Gore.

The European Union had asked for greenhouse gas cuts of 15% by 2010. Gore's team drove them down to 5.2% by 2012. Then it did something worse: it destroyed the whole agreement.

Most of the other governments insisted that the cuts be made at home. But Gore demanded a series of loopholes big enough to drive a Hummer through. The rich nations, he said, should be allowed to buy their cuts from other countries(2). When he won, the protocol created an exuberant global market in fake emissions cuts. The western nations could buy "hot air" from the former Soviet Union. Because the cuts were made against emissions in 1990, and because industry in that bloc had subsequently collapsed, the FSU countries would pass well below the bar. Gore's scam allowed them to sell the gases they weren't producing to other nations. He also insisted that rich nations could buy nominal cuts from poor ones. Factories in India and China have made billions by raising their production of potent greenhouse gases, so that carbon traders in the rich world will pay to clean them up(3).

The result of this sabotage is that the market for low carbon technologies has remained moribund. Without an assured high value for carbon cuts, without any certainty that government policies will be sustained, companies have continued to invest in the safe commercial prospects offered by fossil fuels rather than gamble on a market without an obvious floor.

By ensuring that the rich nations would not make real cuts, Gore also guaranteed that the poor ones scoffed when we asked them to do as we don't. When George Bush announced, in 2001, that he would not ratify the protocol, the world cursed and stamped its feet. But his intransigence affected only the United States. Gore's team ruined it for everyone.

The destructive power of the US delegation is not the only thing that hasn't changed. After the Kyoto Protocol was agreed, the British environment secretary, John Prescott, announced that "this is a truly historic deal which will help curb the problems of climate change. For the first time it commits developed countries to make legally binding cuts in their emissions."(4) Ten years later the current environment secretary, Hilary Benn, told us that "this is an historic breakthrough and a huge step forward. For the first time ever all the world's nations have agreed to negotiate on a deal to tackle dangerous climate change."(5) Do these people have a chip inserted?

In both cases the United States demanded terms which appeared impossible for the other nations to accept. Before Kyoto, the other negotiators flatly rejected Gore's proposals for emissions trading. So his team threatened to sink the talks. The other nations capitulated, but the US still held out on technicalities until the very last moment, when it suddenly appeared to concede. In 1997 and in 2007 it got the best of both worlds: it wrecked the treaty and was praised for saving it.

Hilary Benn is an idiot. Our diplomats are suckers. United States negotiators have pulled the same trick twice and for the second time our governments have fallen for it.

There are still two years to go, but so far the new agreement is even worse than the Kyoto Protocol. It contains no targets and no dates. A new set of guidelines also agreed at Bali extend and strengthen the worst of Al Gore's trading scams, the clean development mechanism(6). Benn and the other dupes are cheering and waving their hats as the train leaves the station at last, having failed to notice that it is travelling in the wrong direction.

Though Gore does a better job of governing now that he is out of office, he was no George Bush. He wanted a strong, binding and meaningful protocol, but US politics had made it impossible. In July 1997 the Senate had voted 95-0 to sink any treaty which failed to treat developing countries in the same way as it treated the rich ones(7). Though they knew this was impossible for developing countries to accept, all the Democrats lined up with all the Republicans. The Clinton administration had proposed a compromise: instead of binding commitments for the developing nations, Gore would demand emissions trading(8). But even when he succeeded he announced that "we will not submit this agreement for ratification [in the Senate] until key developing nations participate"(9). Clinton could thus avoid an unwinnable war.

So why, regardless of the character of its leaders, does the United States act this way? Because, like several other modern democracies, it is subject to two great corrupting forces. I have written before about the role of the corporate media (particularly in the US) in downplaying the threat of climate change and demonising anyone who tries to address it(10). I won't bore you with it again, except to remark that at 3pm eastern standard time on Saturday there were 20 news items on the front page of the Fox News website. The climate deal came 20th, after "Bikini-wearing stewardesses sell calendar for charity" and "Florida store sells 'Santa Hates You' T-shirt"(11).

Let us consider instead the other great source of corruption: campaign finance. The Senate rejects effective action on climate change because its members are bought and bound by the companies which stand to lose. When you study the tables showing who gives what to whom, you are struck by two things(12).

One is the quantity. Since 1990, the energy and natural resources sector (mostly coal, oil, gas and electricity) has given $418m to federal politicians in the US(13). Transport companies have given $355m(14). The other is the width: the undiscriminating nature of this munificence. The big polluters favour the Republicans, but most of them also fund Democrats. During the 2000 presidential campaign, oil and gas companies lavished money on George Bush, but they also gave Al Gore $142,000(15), while transport companies gave him $347,000(16). The whole US political system is in hock to people who put their profits ahead of the biosphere.

So don't believe all this nonsense about waiting for the next president to sort it out. This is a much bigger problem than George W Bush. Yes, he is viscerally opposed to tackling climate change. But viscera don't have much to do with it. Until the American people confront their political funding system, their politicians will keep speaking from the pocket, not the gut.

www.monbiot.com

References:

1. Friends of the Earth UK, 11th December 1997. Kyoto Deal Will Not Stop Global warming. Press release.

2. Through Emissions Trading, Joint Implementation and the Clean Development Mechanism.

3. See Dag Hammarskjöld Foundation, September 2006. Carbon Trading: A Critical Conversation on Climate Change, Privatisation and Power. Development Dialogue 2006, no 48. http://www.dhf.uu.se/pdffiler/DD2006_48_carbon_trading/carbon_trading_web.pdf

And:

Michael Wara, 8th February 2007. Is the global carbon market working? Nature vol 445. p 595.

4. Department of the Environment, Transport & The Regions, 11th December 1997. Historic Agreement Reached In Kyoto On Climate Change. Press release 509/Environment.

5. No author, 15th December 2007. Deal agreed in Bali climate talks.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2007/dec/15/bali.climatechange4

6. United Nations Climate Change Conference, 15th December 2007. Decision -/CMP.3
Further guidance relating to the clean development mechanism.
http://unfccc.int/files/meetings/cop_13/application/pdf/cmp_guid_cdm.pdf

7. You can read the Byrd-Hagel Resolution at http://www.nationalcenter.org/KyotoSenate.html

8. You can see how these two issues were played against each other in this statement by the Senate Republican Policy Committee: http://rpc.senate.gov/_files/ENVIROmw102197.pdf

9. CNN, 11th December 2007. Clinton Hails Global Warming Pact. http://edition.cnn.com/ALLPOLITICS/1997/12/11/kyoto/

10. See in particular George Monbiot, 2007. Heat: how to stop the planet burning. Chapter 2. Penguin, London.

11. http://www.foxnews.com/, viewed at 8.21pm UK time, 15th December 2007. Updated on the hour.

12. http://www.opensecrets.org/ gives an almost-comprehensive account.

13. http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/indus.asp?Ind=E

14. http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/indus.asp?Ind=M

15. http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/recips.asp?Ind=E01&Cycle=2000&recipdetail=A&Mem=N&sortorder=U

16. http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/recips.asp?Ind=M&Cycle=2000&recipdetail

__._,_.___

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Article - the real story is fraud

A couple of articles which highlight the fraud aspect which seems to be a cornerstone of the whole economic shambles unfolding.

MORTGAGE MELTDOWN Sean Olender, Sunday, December 9, 2007

Interest rate 'freeze' - the real story is fraud - Bankers pay lip service to families while scurrying to avert suits, prison.

“The sole goal of the freeze is to prevent owners of mortgage-backed securities, many of them foreigners, from suing U.S. banks and forcing them to buy back worthless mortgage securities at face value - right now almost 10 times their market worth.


and Kunstler about the announced Bail-out package and what a sham that is. (scroll down left of page) Dec 10, 2007 - SPIRIT OF THE SEASON "the Hope Now Alliance is just a political sham. The purpose of it is not to save the hapless occupants of over-leveraged houses, but first to buy a little more time so that the worker bees in the financial industry can justify awarding each other multi-million-dollar Christmas bonus packages, and second, to postpone the "workout" of all this bad investment as far into the future as possible.

CORRECTION

World Trade fell by 62% between 1929 and 1932 - not between 1929 and 1930 as stated in Issue 2 (My apologies for this inaccuracy)

62% !!!

I have just been looking at the founding photo for the school my kids go to - Aug 1929. I look at the faces of the Teachers, parents, grandparents and the kids and then back to the date at the bottom Aug 1929 - and it freaks me out

To prevent any possible inaccuracies I didn't use any quotes from the article (below) as there is debate as to what Julian Robertson actually said in this interview compared to what was reported by Al Martin, a self appointed commentator (where do these guys come from). It would seem Martin has a particular frothing at the mouth inclination but all the same I found this worth including here on the blog considering it was written 2 years ago and as we anticipate just how many foreclosures there might be in the US and what that might mean.
Friday, June 03, 2005 AL MARTIN of almartinraw.com has written an article about an interview on CNBC with the renowned funds manager Julian Robertson. (who owns properties here in NZ)

Julian Robertson formerly ran Tiger Management, the world's largest hedge fund.

Martin describes Julian Robertson as "One of the greatest of the old-timers. 53 years on the Street. He manages the Robertson group of funds. They used to call him, still do call him `Never Been Wrong' Robertson. He has predicted every economic cycle, every debacle, every bull market, and every bear market."

Martin says "Of course, he's a very old man now. But his reputation on the Street is like nothing you could imagine. When the segment of his interview was through, his comments alone took the Dow Jones down 50 points. Just on his comments alone. That's how powerful this man's reputation is."

Robertson said that he's worried about the speculative bubble in housing and the fact that more than 1/4 of all consumer spending is now sustained by that bubble, plus the fact that 20 million citizens could lose their homes in a collapse of the speculative bubble in housing, and that the Fed and, indeed, central banks world-wide would act in concert out of desperation to reinflate the global economy in the process, creating an inflationary spiral unheralded in the economic history of the planet.

"Where does it end?" Robertson was asked and he said, "Utter global collapse." Not simply economic collapse; complete disintegration of all infrastructure and of all public structures of governments. Utter, utter collapse. That the end is collapse of simply epic proportion.

In 10 years time, he said, whoever is still alive on the planet will be effectively starting again."

Bill Murphy of Letropolecafe.com says "As for Robertson’s comments as they relate to the gold price, we will most likely see the gold price somewhere between $3,000 and $5,000 US an ounce. Wait until the facts surface about how the central banks squandered 2/3 of all their bank reserves to foster a price manipulation scheme. There will be a frenzy to own the stuff like never seen before."

Julian Robertson blamed everything on what he calls ´the Bush-Cheney regime´.

He says "they have now consolidated power and money on the planet to the maximum extent possible. The planet´s net liquidity, that is its, net free cash flow. Is now a negative number. The planet is not simply sinking into a sea of red ink; it is already sunk. The people just don´t realise it yet."

Robertson says "the Bush-Cheney regime is preparing the nation for transition from democracy into dictatorship because a dictatorship will be necessary to control, in 5 years´ time, food and water riots."

He said "the federal government, that part of Patriot II Act, the internal exile, that the government is going to have to build now huge detention compounds on federal lands, probably in the West where the land is available, to potentially house 50 million or more citizens that will be in financial ruin."

Julian Robertson went on to say "Food production will fall. Any further effort to control environmental destruction will be abandoned. Inflation will run into the double and eventually triple digits. People will be carrying around U.S. dollars in wheelbarrows like Germany."

Robertson said there would be "total collapse of public infrastructure. Total collapse of medical care systems. All public pension plans, Social Security will collapse. All corporate pension plans will collapse."

Robertson backed up his comments with statistics in one statement he said "But, 14% of all real estate transactions now being interest-only mortgages, and another 14% of people now, that, when they bought their homes, originated more than 100% of the purchase price in the mortgage and then borrowed further."

He said "The American consumer is effectively now supporting the rest of the planet, consumption rates in all other nations are falling, have fallen to the point that the tax revenues to governments, that the business and industries those nation states are providing is now a net negative number relative to total debt service and public cost, that this exists in virtually every nation state on the planet now."

He said "More importantly, and I´m trying to think how we imply this or how we express this to the people, what extraordinary times we are living in and how the destruction of the planet has been engineered by the Bushonian Cabal from 1980 to 1992, and then from 2001 to present, which has effectively destroyed the economic liquidity of the planet."

When Ron Insana the interviewer said "you have sold all of your real estate and you are moving into one of the new super-secure compounds for wealthy Republicans for when the ´barbarians will be at the gate.´

Robertson replied, "Ron, those barbarians will be potentially a third of the American population."

Robertson ended his comments by saying that "he hopes that he is not alive to see this. The lucky ones are the ones who are my age now."

I would add to Julian Robertson comments, the lucky ones will be the ones who buy gold and silver coins now, at less than $500 an ounce before the price of gold sky rockets to $3000 then $5000 an ounce and the price of silver goes over $100 an ounce in the years ahead as Julian Robertson's predictions, made in his interview on CNBC, unfold.

Friday, December 14, 2007

ISSUE 2 - The Economy

Issue 2 THE ECONOMY - Going Down The American Way


“ IF IT LOOKS LIKE A DOG AND BARKS, ITS PROBABLY ..… A CAT?”


The amazing thing about the unfolding demise of the American economy is not that it is happening but the seeming lack of foresight of mainstream pundits.


“We could still be feeling a little pain from the sub prime sector for a few more weeks maybe even a few months” sang the business cheerleaders of many newsrooms up until recently, as they tried to foretell a more upbeat version of what is obviously the collapse of the American economy and possibly the empire.


For the past 12 – 24 months I have been reading commentators forecasting exactly the economic tragedies we are now seeing unfold, so what have our experts been reading – comics?


In the book The Road Less Travelled the reader is initiated in the first line “that life is difficult’ stating that a refusal to accept this hard truth leads to an unrealistic worldview which makes life so much more difficult than it needs to be.


Substitute the word life for The Future - The Future is going to be difficult”. Our refusal to accept this makes the challenges we face so much harder; physically, financially and psychologically.

Being positive is not about standing on a sinking Titanic and arguing the case that its half floating rather than half sunk. This is not helpful. Getting real is helpful. If there was ever a time to get real – this is it.

In 2004 the NZ Treasury predicted oil would be costing $26 a barrel today. This would be laughable except that profound long-term decisions are based on the advice of Treasury. Ignorance may be bliss but it can also be really expensive. Two months ago mainstream pundits and analysts in the US were saying Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac would dodge the mortgage problems. Now, those stocks have been cut in half!

The effects of US economic collapse are likely to be at least a major world recession possible an all out 1930’s style depression. Yet at best we can only hear a few officials talking in whispers – we’re just so hooked on talking up the future as an endless sea of even happier consumerism, “Our cell phones will make coffee and the cheeseburgers will give eternal youth ..at half the price”

In the last Great Depression - World trade fell by 62% between 1929 and 1930. It took 50 years for share markets to regain their pre-collapse value in real terms. 20% unemployment was not uncommon in many countries. Hollywood had to make musicals about happy homeless people, - it was that bad.

Here in New Zealand we need some official discussion about how to prepare our society for the very dramatic consequences of a major world recession, (and for that matter Peak Oil and climate change). Luckily communities up and down the country are doing it from the ground up under the banner of Transition Towns, but it sure would help if central and local government could get there heads in the game too.

Naturally no one wants to be an alarmist but if no one is sounding the alarm
…….doesn’t that make us kind of vulnerable?

GOING DOWN THE AMERICAN WAY

“Every day, Wall Street says the news coming out of the real estate and mortgage industries couldn’t get worse ... And every day, the news does get worse!”

“The U.S. is probably in its worst economic condition since the Great Depression” Money & Markets

“By the end of 2008, the economy will be on life-support and Wall Street will look like the Baghdad morgue. America's biggest financials will be splayed out on a marble slab peering blankly into the ether.” Mike Whitney

Don’t get me wrong, there is no pleasure in considering the economic demise of America and I would dread the day it’s left to Russia or China to define the terms of democracy on this planet. My concern is best summed up in the old adage, that “When the United States sneezes the rest of the world gets the cold” To which has been recently added “…and since the United States is risking a serious case of protracted and severe pneumonia, the rest of the world should start to worry” Prof, Nouriel Roubini, Stern School of Business at New York University.

So what’s happening? - America’s economy has been riding high for sometime on artificial mechanisms that are now ending. The bursting of the US property bubble was always going to hit the US economy hard, but due to a range of factors, hard could mean catastrophic. Mainstream commentators seem unable to connect the obvious dots so I’ll give it a go…..“US debt, along with the price of oil are at all times high, while; the dollar sinks to all time lows, the credit is crunched, the accounting is crooked and the property bubble (that has upheld ¼ of all consumer spending and 30% of all new job growth since 2001) has now burst wide open. These are no small compounding factors so let’s have a look at them.

THE PROPERTY MARKET: The US property bubble has been the biggest in history and now is suffering the biggest falls in history. “Just in the past 12 months home sales are down nationally almost 24%. The prices were down 5.1% from a year ago, the biggest drop on record, - A Trillion dollars in Home Values VAPORIZED! Meanwhile, new home prices plunged an astounding 13%,” Money And Markets Fri, Nov 30, 2007.

But this is just the start. According to a Goldman Sachs economist “home prices nationally will decline 15% from their highs —and COULD DROP AS MUCH AS 30% if the economy slips into recession” Article here In California prices have already dropped roughly 12 per cent (‘off the cliff) state-wide and sales have plummeted 40 per cent for the last 2 months.

This would be unfortunate enough but the property bubble has been the lifeblood to the US economy for sometime disguising just how many US jobs (3 million) were outsourced (sent offshore), not just in manufacturing but also in the service industries, e.g. 360,000 Americans got their tax returns done in India last year. Article

Property inflation creates a lot of un-produced wealth – so everyone cranks up the spending; the new car, home appliances, landscaping projects, throw in a new wardrobe, overseas holidays and maybe a few investment properties too. Heck why not when you just made on paper 10 - 100% on your property’s value. With the collapse of the property market the consumer spending frenzy of past years will drop dramatically leading to all sorts of liquidations, cutbacks and layoffs in retail, construction, property services and off course finance – which in-turn will lead to more housing foreclosures as many other stretched mortgage holders fold, (and following the biggest credit bubble in history expect more than a few to be stretched). Promised bail out plans at this stage look to be false promises.

ITS CALLED DEBT: America has been running on credit - lots and lots of easy credit for everything: houses, consumer spending, government shortfalls, foreign wars etc. During the last five years, President Bush has borrowed more money abroad than all previous American presidents combined. The government paid $327 billion in interest in 2005 just to carry the national debt (owed by the US govt) which increases at a rate of more than $7.4 billion per day!

It is estimated that US pension and Medicare programs owe $35 trillion more than they will be able afford to pay.

“Relative to their incomes, household debt as a percent of disposable income in the U.S. is now 130%. That means the typical American household has $1.30 in debt for every one dollar of income. In the early 1990s they had 80 cents of debt for every dollar of income. There is NO way ... simply NO WAY ... that the average American household can survive that financial strain, especially with property values falling” http://www.moneyandmarkets.com

Hand in hand with the property bubble has been a huge credit bubble, All across the globe that credit bubble has now swung to a credit crunch and the effects will be very unkind. “As banks are forced to raise capital and stop lending, consumers find new credit hard to get or not available at all. The same goes for businesses. You then get system wide credit collapse, and the resultant collapse in economic growth. And if no recovery is made quickly, you get a depression. Not a recession, a depression, due to collapsing economic demand.” Christopher Laird Nov 15

Credit Crisis Meltdown Is a Prelude to Global Economic Depression

ITS CALLED FRAUD

Enron was an incredible story, one of the America’s largest corporations run in its last years as a big scam with the complicity of highly respected; business leaders, politicians, Wall St analysts and auditors. 22,000 people lost their jobs & pension plans & a whole bunch more lost their investment money – a couple of guys stood trial. The subprime mortgages and all its derivatives have being a much bigger scam, running systemically through the whole of the financial sector - but now the scam is up.

“We had to run false accounts because all our competitors were doing the same”

reported an accountant for one of the largest general finance companies in the US.

A big part of the reason why bank to bank lending in the world has seized up is because the players aren’t sure if they can trust each others financial statements. Some of the experts aren’t so much lying as they don’t have a handle on what they have been peddling – “The new "creatively-innovated" financial "derivatives" of recent years are now so divorced from any real activities or product that often the people trafficking in them don't understand what they're supposed to represent. I'd bet that more than half the people in the New York Stock exchange any given day could not explain the meaning of a credit default swap if a Taliban were holding their oldest child over a window ledge across Wall Street. Peak Money, Kunstler November 12, 2007

Actually if you want to try and understand CDS’s (credit default swaps) & CDO’s try to chew through these pages where you will also learn that the same financial mechanisms that have caused the subprime crisis have also been used in the much bigger arena of corporate credit – By implication, the problems that might ensue could make the subprime mortgage problem look like a walk in the park”. Ted Seides, Mon, Nov 26, 2007 John Mauldin’s Outside the Box

“In the end the invisible hand devoured its own fingers and became the invisble stump” W. A Jones

THE DOLLAR ON THE DOWN

The U.S. economy accounts for about one quarter of the world economy. The dollar is not just the currency of the U.S., it is the basis of the world financial system. The dollar is the leading currency in international trade, and dominates world financial transactions. By holding the position of the reserve currency of the world the US has enjoyed wealth well beyond its productivity through a variety of mechanisms, such as; world trade of oil into dollars, the purchasing power of America, the favourable set up of American companies in other countries, the desirability of rich nations to hold US dollars and the foreign investments into American stocks and bonds, and the ability to raise international loans.

But the US dollar is losing its value and its power. During the current administration the US dollar lost 60% of its value. (50% versus the Euro since 2002). “The reason the dollar has not completely collapsed is that there is no clear alternative as reserve currency” Impending Destruction of the US Economy by Dr. Paul Craig Roberts Global Research, December 1, 2007

If the Chinese and Saudis dumped their large US reserves the dollar would become a basket case but many feel confident that this will never happen because those nations wouldn’t want a) to devalue their US reserves or b) see a major reduction in their export sales through a US & world recession. Yes but all the same the US dollar's reserve currency status is increasingly looking very fragile and there are warnings that not everyone will play the game forever. “The dollar is losing its status as the world currency,” warned Chinese central bank director Xu Jian on Nov 7th and China should shift more of its $1.43 trillion of currency reserves into stronger currencies, such as the euro, to offset weak currencies like the dollar”, said Cheng Siwei, vice chairman of the Committee of the National People’s Congress. “They get our oil and give us a worthless piece of paper,” joked Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad recently.

OIL ON THE UP.

The lower value of the US dollar coupled with Peak Oil impacts are increasing the cost of imported oil for Americans at a time they can least afford it. Unlike the Europeans, Americans have created an ultra oil dependent nation based on mega sprawling suburbs full of big energy dependent houses, relying on fuel inefficient cars rather than good public transport.

THE US IS IN RECESSION NOW - Yep it’s a Dog

SO WHERE’S IT ALL HEADED?

"...I now see the risk of a severe and worsening liquidity and credit crunch leading to a generalized meltdown of the financial system of a severity and magnitude like we have never observed before. Professor Nouriel Roubini, Stern School of Business at New York University.

“The avalanche-like fall of US house prices will be closely followed by the same in linked economies worldwide, and presage a harsh and very different world than the one we have lived in. In short, the party is over. We are a civilisation in collapse” Stephen Biddulph, Sydney Morning Herald Thurs 29 Nov

“………credit paralysis has infected the entire euro banking system. German institutions have almost a trillion euros of covered bonds outstanding. The mechanism for converting covered bonds into cash has broken down” Mike Whitney A Generalized Meltdown of Financial Institutions Nov 24

So far, Central bank infusions (Over $1trillion worth in a few months since July!) have been the only thing that has stopped a massive bank liquidity crisis from shutting down commerce. Credit Crisis Meltdown Is a Prelude to Global Economic Depression Christopher Laird, Nov 15, 2007

“We are coming dangerously close to a money panic”

Martin D. Weiss Money & Markets 12/3/2007

Don’t feel silly if you still find yourself asking “But is it really a dog?” I do it every time I watch mainstream media cover the Dow jumping 100 points. Maybe I have it wrong? Maybe the dire state of the US economy along with the compounding issues of climate change, peak oil, environmental devastation & emerging world food shortages don’t need to concern me for a long-time to come.

And then I wake myself up look at the unsustainable wheels falling off the unsustainable cart - right now and ask myself the question that counts - HOW CAN WE MAKE NEW ZEALAND A MORE SUSTAINABLE, RESILIENT NATION IN LIGHT OF WHAT WE FACE? – and how do we do it today?

The answer of course is a whole lot and Next issue of TOMORROW TODAY

is dedicated to bringing you the solutions - advanced, fast moving, exciting … Solutions – Today!

TE KAHA!

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“…..you can go up on a steep hill in Las Vegas and look West, and with the right kind of eyes you can almost see the high-water mark

-- the place where the wave finally broke and rolled back." Hunter S Thompson