The banks are currently holding (roughly) $300 billion in
collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) and another $225 billion in
collateralized loan obligations (CLOs) More than one-half trillion
dollars in debt which is essentially “illiquid” and has no clear market
value. It could be worthless for all we know.
That hasn’t
stopped the Fed riding to the rescue, buying up many of these toxic
CDOs and increasing banking reserves so the great fractional banking
con-game can continue unabated. This is what one astute observer called
“alchemy finance”.
Central banks around the world have opened
up the liquidity spigots to avoid a global credit meltdown. But their
efforts are bound to fail. The banks are sitting on huge losses from
assets that they can’t move through the pipeline and which have gobbled
up their reserves. Bloomberg News summed it up like this: “The $2
trillion market for mortgages not backed by government-sponsored
agencies is at a standstill”.The same is true of the corporate bond
market. As the Wall Street Journal reported last week:
“The
investment grade corporate bond market HAS GROUND TO A HALT, making it
difficult for companies to access capital and hard for investors to
find a place to put their money to work. ….The problems in the primary
market could, if they persist, throw a wrench in the workings of
corporate America, making it tougher for companies to finance, among
other things, investments, buyouts and equity buybacks….For July,
corporate bond issuance was down 77% from June.” (“Corporate Bond
Market has come to a Standstill”, Wall Street Journal)
The
mighty wheels of commerce have rusted in place. Nothing is moving.
Trillions of dollars poisonous CDOs need to unwind, but the banks
cannot put them up for bid for fear that they’ll only get pennies on
the dollar. It’s like watching a slow-motion train-wreck. The Fed’s
cheap credit won’t help either. At best, it’ll just buy a little time
before the true value of these bonds is established and trillions of
dollars in market capitalization vanish into cyber-space. Banks,
equities, hedge funds, insurance companies and pension funds are all in
line to suffer major losses.
Last week BNP Paribas suspended
three funds because they couldn’t get bids on the CDOs they own. When
securities have no fixed market-value; who is going to buy them?
No
one. Besides being complex and opaque, real estate CDOs have become the
global pariah — “leper equities” that no one will touch. That’s why no
transactions are taking place and the system is freezing up. If Paribas
shuttered its doors; there must be many other funds close behind.
The
Federal Reserve started this mess by lowering interest rates to 1% and
flushing trillions of dollars into the economy. That cheap money
created equity-bubbles in housing, credit, stocks and bonds which are
now beginning to unwind. Expanding the money-supply might be a good
short-term fix, but it’s dangerous, too. It just adds hyper-inflation
to the long-list of existing problems.
The volatility in the
stock market has diverted attention from the problems facing the
banking system. The banks have been originating loans and bundling them
off to Wall Street to avoid the normal reserve requirements. Now
they’ve been “caught short” and don’t have adequate funding to cover
their bets. If the Fed doesn’t help out, we’ll see at least one or two
major bank closures.
This is a story that won’t appear in the media. Bank-runs are the beginning of the end — financial Armageddon.
The
problems facing the stock market are serious but not catastrophic. If
the market corrects more than 10 or 15%, the massive overleveraged
hedge fund industry will cave in taking (potentially) $1.7 trillion
down a black hole. This may explain why the market has behaved so
erratically lately. There’ve several late-day rallies with no good news
to support the soaring equities prices. Is the market being
micro-managed behind the scenes to keep it above a certain level?
Many
people think so. A number of articles have been written recently about
the activities of the Plunge Protection Team; the secretive group
(comprised of the SEC, US Treasury, Federal Reserve, and Investment
Banks) which allegedly buys futures to forestall violent sell-offs in
the market. The Fed’s desperate infusions of credit into the banking
system will only reinforce growing suspicions of market manipulation.
DERIVATIVES DOWNDRAFT
Banks
routinely hedge against adverse moves in the market by purchasing
various types of insurance in the form of derivatives contracts.
Derivatives trading has skyrocketed in the last few years and the
“British Bankers Association estimated last fall that by the end of
2006, the market for all credit derivatives was $20 trillion and
expected to be $33 trillion by the end of 2008.”These relatively new
instruments are about to be put to the test by worsening market
conditions. “Hedge funds may account for as much as 30% of such credit
protection” but that is little solace for the banks “because hedge
funds that are losing money but also selling credit insurance may not
be able to honor their commitments, rendering the protection
worthless.” (“Insuring against Credit Risk can carry risks of its own”
Henny Sender, Wall Street Journal)
Credit insurance in the form
of credit default swaps have created a false sense of security that may
prove to be unfounded. In fact, the Credit insurance business has
probably encouraged lenders to make shakier and shakier loans believing
that they were protected from risk. But that doesn’t appear to be the
case. For example, Bear Stearns tried to soothe investor’s fears during
the collapse of its two hedge funds by pointing to its derivatives
coverage.
“Bear executives repeatedly referred to their
dependence on hedges, including credit derivatives, to offset their
losses on subprime mortgages and loans to poorly rated companies,
stating that such hedges would offset losses.” (Ibid, H. Sender, Wall
Street Journal)
We all know how that story ended up.
Derivatives
have been celebrated as a critical part of the “new architecture of the
financial markets”. Now we can see that they are poor-performers under
real-life conditions and liable to trigger an even greater disaster. If
the stock market stumbles, we can expect a major breakdown in credit
insurance-trading with trillions of dollars in derivatives disappearing
overnight.
The abstruse world of derivatives trading will suddenly explode onto the headlines of newspapers across the country.
HOUSING BRUSHFIRE SWEEPS THROUGH THE ECONOMY
The
contamination from the massive real estate bubble has now infected
nearly every area of the broader market. The swindle which began at the
Federal Reserve — with cheap, low interest credit — has spread through
the entire system and is threatening to wreak financial havoc across
the planet. The Fed’s multi-billion dollar bailout will do nothing to
contain the brushfire they started or avert the catastrophe that lies
ahead. Greenspan opened Pandora’s Box and we’ll all have to live with
the consequences.