Financial Skeptic Bulletin, November 2007
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"Economic history is a never-ending series of episodes based on
falsehoods and lies, not truths. It represents the path to big money.
The object is to recognize the trend whose premise is false, ride that
trend, and step off before it is discredited."
George Soros
|
“Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.”
- Aldous Huxley, English writer, 1894-1963 |
All the middle-class 401K frogs are welcomed
to the slowly warming stagflation pot. |
Is $8 billion in funds injected by Feds a drop in a bucket that goes into
subprime hole instead of holiday supply credit lines? Are American consumers finally
too loaded with debt to buy the next huge plasma-TV? Is NASDAQ slide is connected
with credit squeeze as tech. companies are more sensitive to credit conditions ?
Credit flowing to American companies is drying up at a pace not seen in decades,
threatening the creation of jobs and the expansion of businesses, while intensifying
worries that the economy may be headed for recession.
The combined value of two leading sources of credit — outstanding commercial
and industrial bank loans, and short-term loans known as commercial paper —
peaked at about $3.3 trillion in August, according to data from the Federal
Reserve. By mid-November, such credit was down to $3 trillion, a drop of nearly
9 percent.
Not once in the years since the Fed began tracking such numbers in 1973 has
this artery of finance constricted so rapidly. Smaller declines preceded three
recessions going back to 1975; at other times such declines tended to occur
in conjunction with an economic downturn.
... ... ...
Some of the drop reflects the subsiding in the run of mergers, diminishing
the demand for credit by companies buying other companies. Some can be explained
by what many economists view as a healthy return to the skeptical scrutinizing
of prospective borrowers by banks. But lenders and borrowers from northern Virginia
to southern Arizona confirm that the credit tightening has already begun to
cut money reaching healthy companies as well, affecting their spending and hiring.
The big question is: a crash, or a decade of malaise?
We have a lot of weak data, but only in a real book or a real recession all
data are in the same direction. this economy is in transition from decent growth
to slow growth.
The big issue is the spillover from the subprime to larger economy. The Florida
fund fiasco is one example that put fear in a lot of people in the country.
Still there is no recession looming; this is a slow growth looming. But credit
costs rise, financial instructions are hoarding cash and turbulence has returned.
Nice English humor...
How junk bonds will fare in this mess ? Will margin calls create a mad rush
for cash ?
However, having spent over a month in Brazil (Reis up 6% in a month) this year
and a month each in China and Turkey last year, I am just not so sure the USD
crisis is a reflection of an inferior economy or system, that some how Brazil
and China just clean Americans clocks.Rather, my theory holds that much of
the USD current weakness reflects the dishonest policy of American leadership
and apparatcheks in dealing with fundamental issues, such as serious inflation.
The US has been turned into a playground for hucksters, and lairs. Those Boyz
are starting to get canned and be exposed, a process that I believe will be
ongoing for several years. Exposing the perps of the American Plague is part
of the painful reconciliation process. It eventually restores some credibility.
Even as one who has been ripping my country a new one nearly daily on this blog,
I would hesitate in making very heavy bets against
the USD against the likes of say Brazil, Russia, India or China (BRIC).
In the short run a serious raid or run continues to precipitated by the 75
basis points in harmful blowback rate cuts of the last couple months, a huge
policy error. But when crises develop, policies and people shift. The fictitious
capital issue is a lost cause, restoring the USD is not.
The trade imbalances will correct organically, mostly
because the US consumer is shot. As the US consumer fades so
will the bid for resources that are so much a part of the current inflationary
spiral. The key to stopping the inflationary blowout is the USD itself.
Severe economic weakness will ultimately cause money
to flow to institutions and countries that are at least working on credibility
issues. I am gong to start reporting on signs of this. One could
sure argue that the US is just fundamentally corrupt, but crisis often lays
the seeds for change, even if painful. The corrupt free ride game may be about
to run it’s course, possibly forced by foreigners.
Is City really the most vulnerable of US banks involved in subprime mess? Is
this the light at the end of the tunnel or just another step in deterioration of
large banks positions ?
Questions Raised
- Is Citigroup prepared for the mortgage mess to get far worse?
- What about losses on the consumer side as we slide into a severe recession?
- What happens when commercial real estate tanks?
- What happens when Citigroup needs another $7.5 billion, then another
after that?
- When does the dividend get cut? (Citigroup denies that it will)
- Is Citigroup so bloated that it can afford another massive jobs cut?
- If not, then what business units have to be sold to downsize to the
new number of employees?
[Nov 23, 2007] Thanksgiving predictions for 2007 :-)
- Subprime concern are overblown but all the next year will still be consumed
by the subprime mess. Subprime is not a primary threat to US economy
: it is just manifestation of deeper problems. Contary to Roger Major
banks will get out relatively scattered -- they just does not look good as an
investment anymore. "We might have a better handle on the credit crisis
sometime on or around January 1, 2012 . That number was not plucked out of the
air. It is based on historical new home sales, historical starts, and mortgage
rate resets in conjunction with a consumer led recession."
- The cost of inflating (and now deflating) of real estate bubble are
enormous and current "gestimates" are widely off the mark:
- $400 billions estimate is at the low end.
- "if you factor in rising property taxes, insurance, gasoline
prices, etc, while real wages were sinking, even $10 trillion could
be conservative by the time all is said and done." See
Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis How Much Will The Credit Crunch
Cost
- $2 Trillion
Fallout On The Way Jan Hatzius, Chief US Economist for Goldman
Sachs, joins CNBC to discuss his latest analysis that predicts up to
$400 billion in losses in the financial markets related to the mortgage
debacle eventually reducing lending buy as much as $2 trillion over
the next few years. Hatzius now believes that there is a significant
risk of recession. { the question
is how large part of losses falls on 401K investors -- NNB }
- Commercial real estate is sliding into recession.
- Growth recession is in the cards. Fed's recent forecast is that growth
may slow next year to as low as 1.8 percent. That's below inflation and if we
assume the margin or error that does not exclude falling into negative territory.
- Dollar still have a space to plunge. That means falling
prestige that has indirect economic consequences
BBC NEWS Business
US woes prompt more dollar misery
- Decoupling might not materialize...
- Unemployment claims continue to creep up (30 basis points) with 50 basis
points significantly increases chances of the recession.
Is a view that the US will experience a lengthy period of sluggish growth, partially
offset by devaluation of currency and related improvement in net exports, a plausible
view of the future ? Like people from Wall Street like to say "money to be made,
sheep to be fleeced" as another wave of expropriation of 401K funds get strength...
...once there is a sharp growth slowdown in China the next victims of this
recoupling will be East Asia and commodity exporters.
Are we all subprime now ? Subprime is like the weather: when it rains,
everybody gets wet. Aren't not people with prime mortgages who took
loans to finance their lifestyle just another class of subprime borrowers? Welcome
to the Hotel California...
My new motto—“we are all subprime now”—is an attempt to keep reminding the
attention-impaired (that would include but isn’t limited to reporters and politicians)
that demonizing “subprime people” isn’t going to prevent you from going there
yourself.
The fact is that huge numbers of people who have “prime” mortgage loans couldn’t
refi or sell right now to—literally, for some of the uninsured—save their lives.
They may well still be making payments on the mortgage, but
they’re rapidly approaching upside-down if they’re
not there yet, they’ve spent the proceeds of the previous cash-outs that kept
up the lifestyle or just kept life together, and if the truth were known about
credit card balances, their current FICOs probably aren’t the envy of the neighborhood
either.
They are, in short, subprime.
They just don’t recognize themselves in the stereotype of the deadbeat serial
bankruptcy filer or the undocumented immigrant or the waitress in the McMansion
or whatever extreme case you can dredge up and label “typical” for subprime.
They are, increasingly, “us.”
The invisible subprimers will do okay if this blows
over and they don’t lose their jobs: if and when the RE market
recovers, anyone who hung onto the mortgage he has will come out “prime” again.
That’s the good news. The bad news is that attributing this solely to
your own prudence and good judgment and inherent worth as “not one of those
subprime people” is a form of delusion. Subprime is like the weather: when it
rains, everybody gets wet. The political pressure for “bailout” measures
has a little bit, in my view, to do with bleeding-heart sympathy for the poor
and a lot, a whole lot, to do with the dawning recognition
of too many middle-class homeowners that, well, we are all subprime now, but
nobody’s filling our orders.
I for one fail to understand how the American
economy can get by without subprime lenders. Sending everyone
with a problem directly to bankruptcy just won't work: that's a recipe for a
permanent credit crunch. Where I part company with those who fret that over-regulation
of the subprime industry will "hurt the poor" is precisely on the matter of
the subprime purchase money market. If people cannot
afford to own homes, then encouraging them to buy them anyway with impossible
loan terms is not solving that problem. And contracting the refinance
function of the subprime industry instead of its purchase function simply produces
the kind of situation we have now, where you can
be taken in but you can't be taken out.
What I think we should be most worried about is
that reaction to the "Home ATM" problem--overconsumption financed by a home
equity bubble--will create a long-term backlash against distressed loan take-out
financing, because it's cash-out as much as because it's "subprime."
Certainly a large number of the over-consumers will have to end up in BK and/or
foreclosure; too many people just won't live long
enough lifetimes to earn the income they've already spent. But
subprime refinancing can have a real utility for the rest of us in the job loss/illness/divorce/bender
category, especially when a large RE price correction makes us all upside down.
naked capitalism
An article in Business Week, "The
Coming Consumer Crunch," had a bit of information that was news to me. The
government, that is the Bureau of Labor Statistics, includes some rather large
items in consumer spending that many of us would not include:
The reason is that much of what the government counts as consumer spending
is not directly controlled by households. For
example, the $1.7 trillion in medical costs is counted as consumer spending,
but 85% of that is spent by the government and health insurers, not individuals.
And $1.5 trillion in "housing services" is listed as part of consumer spending,
but for homeowners it really just represents the value of living in a home
rather than any spending they can change. It's mainly a bookkeeping convention,
not a real outlay.
Most of us think of consumer spending as discretionary items. Yet from a macro
level, the way the BLS does it makes sense (although the article alludes to
the fact that the imputed rent calculation is of debatable validity), but when
people put on their stock jockey hats, they are likely to interpret government
announcements in the context of their own experience as consumers.
How does this matter? Per above, "consumer spending"
is more inclusive than most realize. So, as the article points
out a change in consumer spending, based on the official definition, is going
to represent a considerably larger percentage of discretionary spending that
the figures imply.
Add to that the fact that there is now considerable inflation in energy prices,
much of which is non-discretionary. So the impact of rising energy and food
prices alone push up nominal consumer spending without there being any unit
growth.
So if consumer spending is going to fall, as the story suggests, by 3%, the
impact on companies that live on consumer discretionary purchases will be much
worse hit. This alone explains the decline in sales at Starbucks reported earlier
in the week.
"...for all the bears out there, crack pipes to the ready, here is your latest
hit:" Is not there simply too much lack of transparency (aka "lying") in the financial
sector ? How can we avoid real Roosevelt-style reforms that restore checks and balances
dismantled by Sir Alan and friends ? Were not huge rewards dangled in
front of very smart people who sit in New York City office buildings and figure
out clever ways to evade banking laws and fool other people into buying ever-more-complex
paper constructs ? Will attention of investors focus on banks' capital ratios
?
November 21, 2007 |
FT Alphaville
“Gold is for optimists. I’m diversifying into canned goods.”
So said
one reader on Felix Salmon’s Market Movers blog, in response to a post on
crisis blogging.
The trouble with being the leading harbinger of doom is that, rather like
crack, you’re going to need to keep pushing the limits to keep achieving the
same highs. So Salmon notes that the über-bears, no longer satisfied with dire
predictions of a US recession, have now moved onto
heralding a full-blown financial crisis. Only an all-out, systemic meltdown
will do.
The bear in question, Nouriel Roubini, has long been positioned firmly on
the gloomy side of the outlook scale - but the past week’s batch of predictions
has been ominous even by his own dark standards. In fact, they’re nigh on apolcalyptic.
After all,
back in March, Roubini was clear - the US landing would be hard, or at best,
a growth recession.
Enjoy that sentiment. That’s the good old days.
In July Roubini wrote that the “financial fallout of the worst housing recession
in decades is only just beginning.”
In August, he noted that in his opinion the market turmoil was “much worst”
than the liquidity crisis following LTCM.
By September, he had a confession to make: he’d been far too optimistic
on housing. And last month,
he approvingly relayed a comment from a “senior professional in one of the
largest financial institutions in the world”, in whose opinion a “miracle is
needed to avoid recession.”
The trouble is that Roubini has a habit of being right - uncannily so in
his predictions on US housing.
And so to the latest batch of fun. On housing, the message is
largely unchanged - this housing recession will be “worse than any in US
history” and the “financial bloodbath” has only just started.
But
here’s the catch.
Roubini argues that the inevitability, or at least high likelihood, of a
US recession is now becoming more widely accepted. He notes the
Economist cover story, and that leading Wall Street analysts previously
in the soft landing camp have shifted their stance. The debate, says Roubini,
has now shifted from ‘if recession’, to ‘how deep, protracted and severe’ such
a recession will be.
So for all the bears out there, crack pipes to the ready, here is your latest
hit:
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. In this extreme
scenario whose likelihood is increasing we could see a generalized run on some
banks; and runs on a couple of weaker (non-bank) broker dealers that may go
bankrupt with severe and systemic ripple effects on a mass of highly leveraged
derivative instruments that will lead to a seizure of the derivatives markets
(think of LTCM to the power of three); a collapse of the ABCP
market and a disorderly collapse of the SIVs and conduits; massive losses on
money market funds with a run on both those sponsored by banks and those not
sponsored by banks (with the latter at even more severe risk as the recent effective
bailout of the formers’ losses by theirs sponsoring banks is not available to
those not being backed by banks); ever growing defaults and losses ($500 billion
plus) in subprime, near prime and prime mortgages with severe known-on effect
on the RMBS and CDOs market; massive losses in consumer
credit (auto loans, credit cards); severe problems and losses in commercial
real estate and related CMBS; the drying up of liquidity and
credit in a variety of asset backed securities putting the entire model of securitization
at risk; runs on hedge funds and other financial institutions
that do not have access to the Fed’s lender of last
resort support; a sharp increase in corporate defaults and credit spreads; and
a massive process of re-intermediation into the banking system of activities
that were until now altogether securitized.
Or in other words, a “generalized systemic financial meltdown.”
Is not the quote "Trust once lost, is not easily restored" weight of stocks
S&P500 financial companies ?
Will the lack of transparency promoted under Greenspan kill
Wall Street's international credibility ?
Very Expensive Lessons:
-
Don't chase yield
-
Don't buy something you do not understand
-
There is no free lunch
-
Rating agencies opinions are essentially worthless
because they are never timely enough and because their business model creates
enormous credibility as well as conflict of interest issues
-
Don't trust Citigroup, Bear Stearns, Merrill
Lynch or anyone else hawking debt
That last point is critical. Lack of trust will impact Citigroup, Bear Stearns,
and Merrill Lynch's credibility, as well as their ability to raise capital for
years to come. Trust once lost, is not easily restored.
Natural resources boom has strong reasons for existence but at what point boom
changed into a mania is unclear...
The scaremongers are not always wrong. The Trojans should have listened to
Cassandra. But history shows that the scaremongers are usually wrong.
Parson Malthus predicted mass starvation 250 years ago, as the population was
growing geometrically, doubling each generation, while agricultural production
was going arithmetically, by 2 percent or so a year. But today, with perhaps
1 percent of our population in full-time food production, we are the best-fed
and fattest 300 million people on Earth.
Is the second round of defaults coming ? At the same time the dollar's
decline already amounts to the biggest default in history, having wiped far more
off the value of foreigners' assets than any emerging market has ever done.
The credit crunch is returning in a virulent form ...
Morgan Stanley said that the recent jump in the benchmark London Interbank Offered
Rate, which yesterday rose to just under 6.45pc,
was ... a major warning sign of pain ahead ... it was Libor's
increase in August that signalled the initial impact of the credit crunch.
Is not ACA is to important to fail ?
NOVEMBER 19, 2007 |
Barron'sACA has long been a convenient dumping ground in which major
subprime securitizers like Bear Stearns (BSC), Citigroup (C), Merrill Lynch
(MER) and some 25 other prominent dealers could pitch billions of dollars of
risky obligations for modest premiums. That let them gussy up their balance
sheets and shift any potential mark-to-market hits to ACA.
If ACA Capital were to founder, more than $69 billion worth of CDOs, including
the $25 billion in subprime paper, would come rumbling back to the Wall Street
banks, and likely with heavy attendant losses.
That's why Wall Street has continued to do a brisk business with the beleaguered
firm. In the third quarter, ACA insured some $7 billion of subprime collateralized-debt
obligations. Even if the company survives for only another couple of quarters,
that would stave off the recognition of billions of dollars of losses.
Have Wall Street firms foreign offices staffers implicit tattoo "I participated
in subprime mortgages scam" on their foreheads ? Is not horrible smell that
this scam created weight on the Wall Street firms? Is not this skunk small
might threaten survival of some of the biggies ? Is not it interesting how
many scapegoats might be jailed as a result ?
Nov 12, 2007 |
MSN Money
But the stage has been set by the reckless policies pursued
by the Greenspan Fed in the past decade and a half. These have enabled the risks
to pile up while rewarding folks for ignoring them. The Fed's efforts to stave
off small forest fires have guaranteed a gigantic one.
... ... ...
That said, we have a very long way
to go in terms of Wall Street finding and
acknowledging the real damage from all of
this mortgage-related collateral and its
offspring. Also, the insurers of this mortgage paper
and other forms of credit insurance don't
have nearly enough capital, relative to
the policies they've written, so we can
expect the credit-rating agencies to issue
even more downgrades all across Bondland.
That's a recipe for lots of losses inside
the financial system.
We are at a moment in time when a crash
is far more likely to happen than at any
time in years. Does this mean it will happen?
No. But it'd be wrong for folks to think
a crash isn't possible.
Is not 2 billions loss on subprime mess the result of weak oversight ?
A senior official from Fannie Mae told a conference
in Boston that he expected prices to fall 4% next year before flattening out
in 2009.
What series of this soap opera are we watching ? How much leading
Wall Street firms were making from setting up mortgage securitization deals ?
How badly will their earnings be impacted now when fees has dried up? In not 30%
fall like in 2001 in the cards?
The golden child of the banking world has turned
on the prodigal son. Goldman Sachs - which will not,
repeat not, be making significant write-downs - has
had it with the cult of the disappearing dollars elsewhere
on Wall Street.
The bank’s analysts have slapped a sell order on
Citigroup, downgraded their estimates, and lowered their
target price to $33. US futures fell on the back of
the note. Citi were down 2.6 per cent at $33.11 a share
in premarket trading.
Citi’s down 40 per cent this year, and 28 per cent
over the past three months, but the team at Goldman
believe that the rudderless banking behemoth has further
to fall.
We see four factors driving underperformance:
(1) additional write-offs on its remaining $43 billion
of CDO exposure, (2) pressure on the firm to shore up
Tier-1 capital ratios which may need to come from an
equity infusion, asset sales, or a reduction in the
dividend, (3) deteriorating consumer credit trends and
higher corresponding provisions and charge-offs, and
(4) no clear leadership at the firm.
Citi
has already said that it will face $8 to $11bn of write-offs
on its CDO porfolio in the fourth quarter. Goldman think
that will come it at the top end of the range, with
a further $4bn to come in the first quarter of next
year.
With $84bn in SIVs and $73bn of ABCP facilities providing
ample material for additional nasties to emerge, Goldman
estimates that the bank could fall nearly $4bn short
on its pledge to meet 7.5 per cent Tier-1 capital ratio
by the end of the second quarter next year. Citi has
indicated that it will not take assets from the SIVs
it manages onto its balance sheet, notes Goldman, but
the bank has already provided $10bn in emergency funding
to the vehicles.
A Tier-1 shortfall would leave Citi facing some rather
unpalatable options to boost its ratio from their estimate
of 7.2 per cent to the desired level, including cutting
its dividend, issuing equity and asset sales. Which
of those is preferred will very much depend on who ends
up in Chuck Prince’s recently vacated hotseat.
The bad news for Citi isn’t contained to its CDO
and SIV exposure, argues Goldman’s William Tanona. With
the US consumer under pressure and housing metrics proving
increasingly dire, the bank faces pressure across its
businesses. And with an absence of leadership and the
impetus on getting the firm’s risk management under
control, Tanona adds that Citi may be unable to move
on new opportunities and put its meaty balance sheet
to good use as openings appear.
That, suggests Goldman, may prove debilitating into
late 2008 or even 2009.
Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it.
House prices have 13% to 14% to fall from current level [Goldman Sachs,
Nov 19, 2007]
Dec. 20, 2005 | Houston
Chronicle
Enron's tumble from Wall Street darling to corporate deadbeat seemed precipitous.
Now, however, it's clear the fall was a long time coming.
While the company grew rapidly through the 1990s,
some of the worst manifestations of its culture -- obsessions with bonuses,
the stock price and exotic accounting -- were also growing, and out of control.
Though the corporation's character flaws can be traced to its earliest
days, they flourished under top executive Jeff Skilling.
He didn't act in a vacuum. Enron had a distracted, hands-off chairman, a
compliant board of directors and an impotent staff of accountants, auditors
and lawyers.
But it was Skilling's relentless push for creativity and competitiveness
that fostered a growth-at-any-cost culture, drowning
out voices of caution and overriding all checks and balances.
Skilling's attorney derides as "ridiculous" any suggestion his client allowed
internal controls to be overriden. But interviews with dozens of current and
former employees over the past year reveal that the creative aggressiveness
Skilling deemed essential to dominating new markets went untempered by good
business sense or fiscal discipline. The same decisions lauded as key to the
company's future were also key to its demise.
"It was all about taking profits now and worrying about the details later,"
said one former Enron deal maker. "The Enron system was just ripe for corruption."
Enron's culture wasn't spawned overnight. Its roots go back to the earliest
days of the company, before Skilling came aboard.
In 1987, company auditors learned of a billion-dollar oil-trading scandal
at the company's Valhalla, N.Y., offices. For years, traders there had falsified
transactions to boost volume -- and fatten their bonuses.
Instead of firing the traders and contacting authorities, Chairman Ken Lay
and his management team kept them on the payroll and tried to cover up the problems.
Lay said the company needed the revenue.
Six months later, however, the traders had dug the hole even deeper and competitors
were growing suspicious. If word got out, Enron's trading partners could have
demanded the company cover its positions with cash, which it didn't have.
Only then were the traders fired and charged with crimes. Enron narrowly
skirted insolvency by bluffing the markets, then slowly unwinding the trades.
The company later reported an $85 million loss, but sources say it was probably
at least $136 million.
How can profits of S&P 500 companies contune grow if financial
sector is in distress and it is almost a third of S&P 500 ?
With the third-quarter earnings season nearing a close, the year-over-year
profits for Standard & Poor's 500 companies declined 3%, according to
Thomson Financial. The drop marks the first quarter in five years that American
corporations have recorded an aggregate earnings decline. Thus far, 461 companies
in the S&P 500 have reported earnings.
The last time investors experienced a negative
quarter was in the first quarter of 2002, when the market logged
an 11.5% decline. Profit declines during the recession of 2001 included a third-quarter
drop of 21.6% and a 21.5% drop in the fourth quarter.
"Profit declines portend recession if they lead to cutbacks in capital spending
and labor," says John Lonski, chief economist at Moody's Investors Service.
Lonski believes there is about a 40% chance of recession
at this time, as the housing recession continues to spill over into the rest
of the economy
Is the road from subprime mortgages logically leads to subprime
currency ?
Small earthquake: few hurt. This is what the International Monetary
Fund is saying in its latest World Economic Outlook: world output grew 5.4 per
cent last year and will grow 5.2 per cent this year and 4.8 per cent in 2008,
only 0.4 percentage points less than expected last July. What conclusion, then,
are we to draw? Is a substantial financial shock at the core of the world economy
nigh on irrelevant? The answer is: maybe so, but there are also appreciable
risks.
According to the IMF, the world is in the midst of a period
of growth unrivalled since the early 1970s. Between 2004 and 2008, it forecasts,
global growth will average 5.1 per cent a year and the rate of growth of world
output per head will average 4 per cent (see chart). The driver of global growth
has been emerging economies in general and Asian emerging economies in particular.
Between 2004 and 2008, says the IMF, growth of emerging economies will average
7.8 per cent a year, while high-income countries will average only 2.7 per cent.
Never before has world growth been so much higher than that of high-income countries.
``That game is over,'' Stiglitz said. ``As house prices are going
down, people are not going to be able to take more money. We are looking at a major
slowdown. The impact of that is going to be a very major slowdown, maybe recession.''
Bloomberg.com
Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel-prize winning economist, said the U.S.
economy risks tumbling into recession because of the subprime crisis and a ``mess''
left by former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan.
``I'm very pessimistic,'' Stiglitz said in an interview in London
today. ``Alan Greenspan really made a mess of all this. He pushed out too much
liquidity at the wrong time. He supported the tax cut in 2001, which is the
beginning of these problems. He encouraged people to take out variable-rate
mortgages.''
Stiglitz said there is a 50 percent chance of a recession in
the U.S. and that growth will certainly slow to less than half its 3 percent
potential. A worldwide jump in credit costs following the collapse of the subprime
mortgage market is choking off finance to American consumers.
The comments add to criticism of Greenspan's 18 years in control
of the U.S. central bank. He stepped down in January 2006 after steering the
economy through a series of crises, pumping out money to help growth rebound
from market slumps in 1987 and 2001.
`Economic Mismanagement'
``The richest country in the world cannot live within its means,''
Stiglitz said. ``It's a real example of macro economic mismanagement. The working
out of this global imbalance will cause global problems. The depth of the conviction
on free markets in the United States is not very great. We have increased those
subsidies, doubled them, under President Bush.''
Lowering interest rates now will help the U.S. economy ``a little
bit, not very much,'' Stiglitz said, adding that easing terms on mortgage loans
would be like ``kicking the problem further down the road.''
Bush, he said, left ``the standing of America around the world
at the lowest it's been'' by refusing to sign up to the Kyoto treaty on global
warming and by fighting the war in Iraq.
``It's so important for there to be a global agreement to curtail
the use of oil, the use of carbon,'' Stiglitz said. ``The big failure is for
the United States not to go along.''
"libertarianism" is a belief-system that can only survive when "perpetually
subsidized by responsible citizens" of structured governments. It looks like "Conservative
economic policy is dead. It committed suicide. "
… Wherever modern humans, living outside the narrow social mores of the clan,
are allowed to pursue their genetic interests without constraint, they will
hurt other people. They will grab other people's resources, they will dump their
waste in other people's habitats, they will cheat, lie, steal and kill. And
if they have power and weapons, no one will be able to stop them except those
with more power and better weapons. Our genetic inheritance makes us smart enough
to see that when the old society breaks down, we should appease those who are
more powerful than ourselves, and exploit those who are less powerful.
The survival strategies which once ensured cooperation
among equals now ensure subservience to those who have broken the social contract.
The democratic challenge, which becomes ever more complex as the scale of
human interactions increases, is to mimic the governance system of the small
hominid troop. We need a state that rewards us for cooperating and punishes
us for cheating and stealing. At the same time we must ensure that the state
is also treated like a member of the hominid clan and punished when it acts
against the common good. Human welfare, just as it was a million years ago,
is guaranteed only by mutual scrutiny and regulation. …
Unless tax-payers' money and public services are available to repair the
destruction it causes, libertarianism destroys people's savings, wrecks their
lives and trashes their environment. It is the belief
system of the free-rider, who is perpetually subsidised by responsible citizens.
As biologists we both know what this means. Self-serving as governments might
be, the true social parasites are those who demand their dissolution
[Me:] It proves interesting to reread John Kenneth Galbraith's The Great
Crash 1929. It is as though history is being rewritten before our eyes.
Substitute hedge funds for "investment trusts" and it reads pretty much parallel.
Frightening! I keep hoping to see daylight beyond what I perceive to be a gathering
storm. Daylight will indeed be forthcoming [sometime after] a storm, but the
interim may be ugly.
The Great Crash 1929
Chapter II, "Something Should Be Done":
"…like all booms, it had to end. When prices stopped rising—when the supply
of people who were buying for an increase was exhausted—then ownership on
margin would become meaningless and everyone would want to sell. The market
wouldn't level out; it would fall precipitately.
"All this being so, the position of the people who had at least nominal
responsibility for what was going on was a complex one.
One of the oldest puzzles of politics is who
is to regulate the regulators. But and equally baffling problem, which has
never received the attention it deserves is who is to make wise those who
are required to have wisdom.
Some of those in positions of authority wanted the boom to continue. They
were making money out of it, and they may have had an intimation
of the personal disaster which awaited them when the boom came to an end.
"But there were also some who saw, however
dimly, that a wild speculation was in progress and that something should
be done. For these people, however, every proposal to act raised the same
intractable problem. The consequences of successful action seemed almost
as terrible as the consequences of inaction, and they could be more horrible
for those who took the action.
… "The real choice was between an immediate and deliberately engineered
collapse and a more serious disaster later on. Some one would certainly
be blamed for the ultimate collapse when it came.
"There was no question whatsoever as to who
would be blamed should the boom be deliberately deflated. …
… "Clearly the Federal Reserve was less interested in checking speculation
than in detaching itself from responsibility for the speculation.
Chapter III, "In Goldman, Sachs We Trust"
… ""The most notable piece of speculative architecture
of the late twenties, and the one by which, more than any other device,
the public demand for common stocks was satisfied,
"was the investment trust or company. The investment
trust did not promote new enterprises or enlarge old ones. It merely arranged
that people could own stock in old companies through the medium of new ones.
…
"Knowledge, manipulative skill, or financial
genius were not the only magic of the investment trust. There was also leverage.
… Leverage, it was later to develop, works both ways.”
Chapter IV, "The Twilight of Illusion"
… "To a few alarmed observers it seemed as
though Wall Street were by way of devouring all the money of the entire
world. However, in accordance with the cultural practice, as the
summer passed, the sound and responsible spokesmen
decried not the increase in brokers’ loans, but those who insisted on attaching
significance to this trend. There was a sharp criticism of the prophets
of doom." (empahsis added)
What changed if even bank/investment firms economists are beginning to acknowledge
that leverage has its downside ?
Here’s the outlook from Goldman Sachs’s chief
economist, Jan Hatzius,
released on Thursday:
The slump in global credit markets may force
banks, brokerages and hedge funds to cut lending
by $2 trillion and trigger a “substantial recession”.
Coming, especially, from Goldman, this makes
very grim reading.
On estimates of $200bn in writedowns on mortgage
linked securities, Hiatzus reckons that banks
will dramatically cut back their lending elsewhere
in the economy. Instead of providing loans to
corporations and stimulating growth, banks will
be too busy sheltering their SIVs, CDOs and
conduits.
Enter Joe Stiglitz - Nobel prize winning
former World Bank economist, who told Bloomberg
today that the US
was now faced with “a very major slowdown,
maybe recession” on the back of a “consumption
binge.”
No doubt Goldman will already be making money
from it.
Is not this "shadow of Enron" that descended on large banks. Is Greenspan's
Enron Prize for Distinguished Public Service looks now much more appropriate then
it initially looked ?
What were the signs? Consider
how banks make money. They pay
low rates on short-term deposits
and charge higher rates on long-term
loans. So they love what are
known as positively sloped yield
curves. And they like to see
big credit spreads, where risky
borrowers are charged much more
than safe ones. Put them together,
and banks should clean up.
By that light, nothing was going
right in 2006 and early this
year. The yield curve was inverted,
or at best flat. And credit
spreads were at historic lows.
Risky loans, whether to subprime
mortgage borrowers or junk-rated
corporations, were readily available
at rates that seemed to assume
there was only the slightest
risk of default.
And yet the bank stocks were
buoyant, and so were reported
profits.
“We should have been suspicious
from the get-go,” said Robert
A. Barbera, the chief economist
of ITG. “There was financial
alchemy at work.”
Instead of being suspicious,
many analysts believed that
banks had found a new way to
prosper. Making a loan and keeping
it on the balance sheet until
it was repaid was so old-fashioned.
It was far better to collect
fees for arranging transactions
and passing on the risk to others.
We did not ask why passing on
risks should be so profitable
to the risk-passers.
In reality, it was not.
In recent weeks, we have
learned of many risks the banks
kept. Not only did we not understand
them, but there is every indication
that senior managements did
not either.
Consider “liquidity puts.”
Don’t be embarrassed if you
have no idea what I am talking
about. In a fascinating
article in Fortune, Carol
Loomis quotes
Robert E. Rubin, now the
chairman of
Citigroup, as saying he
had never heard of them until
this summer.
What were they? Banks put
together collateralized debt
obligations, or C.D.O.’s, many
of which held subprime mortgage
loans as assets. The C.D.O.’s
were financed by issuing their
own securities, and the risk
of mortgage defaults seemed
to pass to the people who bought
the securities.
But we now learn that some
banks also handed out liquidity
puts, giving buyers of C.D.O.
securities the right to sell
them back to the bank if there
was no other market for them.
That risk may have seemed slight
when the securitization market
was booming. But now the banks
are being forced to buy back
securities for more than they
are worth.
With such a put in existence,
I don’t understand how the banks
could get the original loans
off their balance sheets. How
could they claim they had sold
something if they could be forced
to buy it back? It will be interesting
to see if the Securities and
Exchange Commission challenges
the accounting.
But even if the accounting
was completely proper, it was
not very informative. It does
not appear that any banks chose
to mention the puts to investors
before this month. Citigroup
had billions of dollars of them,
and in the new quarterly report
from
Bank of America, we learn
that it had $2.1 billion of
such puts on its books at the
end of 2006, a figure that rose
to $10 billion by the end of
September.
In other words, as the subprime
market was starting to falter
early this year, the bank stepped
up the issuance of such puts.
Presumably, that was necessary
to “sell” the paper. This week
Bank of America announced a
$3 billion write-off. A large
part of it came from those puts.
There were many other funny
ways to bolster profits, like
specialized investment vehicles,
or SIVs. These creatures bought
those C.D.O. securities, paying
for them with money borrowed
in the commercial paper market.
Just like banks, the SIVs
borrowed short and lent long.
The spreads might be thin, but
they could employ leverage to
make narrow margins go a long
way. The SIVs did not have much
capital, but so long as everyone
believed in C.D.O.’s, they did
not need it. The banks that
set up the vehicles swore they
had no continuing interest in
them, and so they also vanished
from any balance sheet that
investors could see. Now they
are costing banks money to prop
them up.
Jamie Dimon, the chief executive
of
JPMorgan Chase, told investors
this week that “SIVs don’t have
a business purpose” and “will
go the way of the dinosaur.”
Will they take the securitization
system with them? The answer
to that question may be crucial
in determining how soon the
financial system recovers.
The most important duty of
the Federal Reserve is to preserve
the health of the banking system.
In the early 1990s, after the
last big crisis, it engineered
a steep yield curve for years,
helping banks to recover. When
the smoke clears, the Fed will
try to do that again, even if
it means significantly higher
long-term interest rates.
Higher long-term rates are
not what either debt-laden consumers
or the depressed housing market
really need, of course. But
such trade-offs are what come
when big risks are taken, and
ignored, for too long.
Take an estimated $3.0 trillion in CDO outstandings. Apply a mere 25% loss to
them. That's $750 billion, roughly four times greater than mainstream estimates
of subprime losses.
And this casts the ratings into even further doubt. What does a triple A
mean if, as one wag put it, you can go to lunch and due to a downgrade, you
can come back and find that it is now junk? That simply doesn't occur with other
instruments in the absence of fraud. So the problem isn't simply that the rating
agencies might have come up with overly high ratings when the CDOs were issued
because they had overly optimistic estimated for likely defaults. You have the
further problem that any downgrade is likely to be dramatic. So even if you
believed that your CDOs AAA was really an AAA, you'd still value it less than
AAAs on other securities because the downgrade slope is so steep.
Now a fair question is whether the dim view of CDOs is overdone. According to
Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley
argued that case in a recent research note:
More than $350 billion of collateralized debt obligations comprising asset-backed
securities may become ``distressed'' because of credit rating downgrades,
Morgan Stanley said in a report today.
``The pace of ABS CDO downgrades will pick up significantly over the next
few weeks,'' wrote analysts led by Vishwanath Tirupattur in New York. ``Given
the degree of market dislocations and the potential size of the market,
there is clearly an opportunity for attentive investors.''...
Bonds are considered distressed when investors demand yields at least 10
percentage points above similar-maturity Treasuries. Morgan Stanley said
many of the CDOs of asset-backed securities sold in recent years are trading
on an interest-only basis, signaling investors expect to receive little
of their original principal back.
I for one would not try to catch that falling
safe. While the higher-rated tranches of many CDOs almost certainly
have some value, the problem is that these instruments were sold way beyond
their natural market due to misplaced confidence in their ratings. Consider
how small the market would be if the paper carried no rating.
Moreover, most fixed income investors are professional money managers subject
to performance pressure. Even if one of them thought certain CDOs were cheap,
he'd still hesitate to buy them out of concern that the prices would drop further
before they rallied, and he'd show losses on those positions (and worse, have
to explain to his boss and/or clients why he bought CDOs). Very few are going
to step in until the market appears to be improving, and between now and then,
we are likely to discover there is way too much CDO paper relative to who wants
to own it now.
And let's consider an ugly factoid. In its third quarter results, Merrill
wrote down its CDO holdings by an estimated 30% or more. These were reported
to be almost entirely AAA rated. This does not allow for either the
further deterioration, nor the fact that downgrades are proceeding, which will
impair value even more.
Take an estimated $3.0 trillion in CDO outstandings. Apply a mere 25% loss
to them. That's $750 billion, roughly four times greater than mainstream estimates
of subprime losses.
Now admittedly there is subprime paper included in those CDOs, so there is some
double counting, but the CDOs' subprime holdings reportedly contain mainly the
BBB/BBB- tranches, which is a portion of the value of the initial RMBS securitization.
Houston, we have a problem.
this article:
President Bush and the current administration have borrowed more money from
foreign governments and banks than the previous 42 presidents combined, a group
of conservative to moderate Democrats said Friday.
Blue Dog Coalition, which describes itself as a group "focused on fiscal responsibility,"
called the administration's borrowing practices "astounding."
According to the Treasury Department, from 1776-2000, the first 224 years of
U.S. history, 42 U.S. presidents borrowed a combined $1.01 trillion from foreign
governments and financial institutions, but in the
past four years alone, the Bush administration borrowed $1.05 trillion.
Are large bulk of subprime-related bonds facing severe downgraded in 2008 ?
Looks like classic story with typical end: more people with more money chase fewer
investment opportunities crowd into investments that seem to guarantee vast or sure
returns -- and get hammered. Houses can depreciate for years to come...
...28% of the mortgages underlying the 2006 vintage, reports Tim Bond of
Barclays Capital, are more than 30 days delinquent and 16% are already in bankruptcy,
foreclosure or owned by the mortgage company. In the 2007 vintage, between August
and September, there was a 27% jump in the number of loans that were 90 days
delinquent.
Angry Bear reader OldVet notes:
In the financial Blog world of traders and investment managers, there is
something known as a “contrarian signal.” That is, a sign that the tide is going
to turn in some market. The dollar has been falling steadily for several months,
and some 5% in the last month, against major currencies.
But one of the most popular “contrarian” signals is that
a cover story on the Dollar reaches the front page of the Economist , according
to many. A second, slightly more frivolous signal, was that Gisele, the
world’s top fashion model from Brazil , refuses to take Dollars for her jobs
any more. Plus Jim Rogers, commodities lover and dollar pessimist, has been
invited to talk on Bloomberg TV twice recently.
November 8, 2007 |
Economist.com
For now, the dollar nightmare is still unlikely. The currency's decline is neither
surprising nor, at least until this week, alarmingly rapid. The gaping current-account
deficit and interest-rate differentials between America and other big economies
point to a weaker currency. The Fed has cut short-term interest rates by 0.75
percentage points in the past two months. Given the scale of the credit mess
and rising fears of recession, expectations are
growing that the central bank will cut rates once again when its rate-setting
committee next meets on December 11th. Elsewhere, central bankers
have stood pat or tightened. The Reserve Bank of Australia raised short-term
rates to 6.75% on November 6th, citing inflationary pressure. The European Central
Bank and the Bank of England met as The Economist went to press on
November 8th. Both were expected to keep short-term rates on hold, at 4% and
5.75% respectively.
If cyclical considerations point to a weaker dollar, the most recent nervousness
seems to be driven more by structural worries. Judging by the dollar's slump
in the wake of the Chinese officials' comments, investors are fretting that
central banks in emerging economies will abandon the ailing greenback. In the
short term at least, that fear is easily exaggerated. The share of global foreign-exchange
reserves held in dollars has fallen in recent years, but only gradually.
Central banks are unlikely to accelerate a dollar rout by making dramatic changes
in their reserve portfolios. That said, many long-standing dollar
bulwarks are looking weaker. Many countries that link their currencies to the
dollar, from Arab oil exporters to China, face inflationary pressure. As the
greenback slumps, these countries have ever-stronger domestic reasons to allow
their currencies to rise.
It's an interesting idea: to pay for oil with subprime mortgages. It looks like
it Kazakhstan got into the mess...
Britain's national average gasoline price topped 1 pound per liter, or about
$8 a gallon, for the first time this week because of record oil prices.
... ... ...
But new oil wealth can trickle away even more easily than it comes. Last
month, Standard & Poor's downgraded
Kazakhstan's credit rating after the country's banks lost billions on purchases
of subprime mortgages.
From a Moody’s new release today:
“Moody’s Investors Service today took rating
actions on six Kazakh banks to reflect the negative
impact of the continued credit and liquidity
crisis on these banks’ credit risk profiles.
The affected banks are Kazkommertsbank, Bank
TuranAlem, Halyk Bank, Alliance Bank, Bank CenterCredit
and TemirBank.”
Past is not a good predictor of the future...
November 10, 2007 |
Bloomberg.com
The dollar's standing as the principle holding of central banks was undermined
after Xu Jian, a vice director of the People's Bank of China, said this week
the dollar is ``losing its status as the world currency.'' China has the world's
largest foreign-exchange reserves, totaling $1.4 trillion.
... ... ...
The dollar has stoked American exports amid the worst housing recession since
1991 and threats to consumer spending. The trade deficit unexpectedly narrowed
to the smallest since May 2005 in September, the Commerce Department said yesterday.
Adam Cole, head of currency strategy at RBC Capital Markets in London, said
officials are unlikely to intervene in the market and buy dollars because its
decline hasn't yet become ``disorderly.''
``The market will still assume it has the green light to sell dollars,''
said Cole, who noted the U.S. currency kept falling against the euro even after
Trichet's comments.
Buying on dips is dangerous in unstable situations. Cheap can be not so cheap
in retrospect.
...timely quote from John Kenneth Galbraith's classic book
The Great Crash 1929:
A common feature of all these earlier troubles was that having happened,
they were over. The worst was reasonably recognizable as such.
The singular feature of the great crash of 1929 was that the worst continued
to worsen. What looked one day like the end proved on the next day to have
been only the beginning. Nothing could have been more ingeniously designed
to maximize the suffering, and also to insure that as few as possible escaped
the common misfortune.
The fortunate speculator who had funds to answer the first margin call presently
got another and equally urgent one, and if he met that, there would be still
another. In the end, all the money he had was extracted from him and lost.
The man with
the smart money, who was safely out of the market when the first crash came,
naturally went back in to pick up bargains...
The bargains then suffered a ruinous fall. Even the man who waited out all
of October and all of November, who saw the volume of trading return to
normal and saw Wall Street become as placid as a produce market, and who
then bought common stocks, would see their value drop to a third or a fourth
of the purchase price in the next twenty-four months. The Coolidge bull
market was a remarkable phenomenon.
The ruthlessness of
its liquidation was, in its own way, equally remarkable...
The funding problems hurting SIVs are so acute that most managers now do
not expect the industry to survive the current crisis, according to Moody’s.
The inability of most vehicles to raise short-term debt led Moody’s late on
Wednesday to put the capital notes of a flood of SIVs on review for possible
downgrade. Moody’s also downgraded the capital note ratings on a number of weaker
SIVs that had been on review, including those for two SIVs run by WestLB, the
German bank. But the decision by the agency to put on review the ratings of
capital notes issued by some of the biggest bank-run SIVs is even more significant.
These include three run by Citi, two run by HSBC and one by MBIA, the US bond
insurer.
"Once again, the rule holds:
'Buy on the rumor. Sell on the news.' "
“The banks are in a situation eerily similar to the Japanese banks in 1992.
They are sitting on top of visibly bad loans, but they are allowed by bank regulators
to keep these bad loans on their books at face value. This lets them stay in the
lending business.”
Why should the FED care? Because the FED is the front for the banking cartel.
The banks have loaned money by the hundreds of billions to borrowers who then
put the money into arcane debt instruments that are now visibly unraveling.
The bankers have no clue as to how they can get their money back if these debt
instruments become insolvent. These instruments are part of the carry trade:
borrowed short and lent long. This is what brought down the savings and loan
industry in the 1980’s. It threatens to bring down the banks today.
So, Bernanke must talk
calmly to Congress in order not to spread panic. He must also take symbolic
steps to keep Jim Cramer from going on TV and throwing another tantrum. Why?
Because if Cramer is scared, his capital management peers are scared. If his
peers are scared, investors who bankroll these carry trade schemes will stop
putting in their money. This will end the trade. The banks will then get stiffed.
This almost happened
in 1998. The New York FED called in the major banks that had lent Long Term
Capital Management its money, which LTCM then had used as margin money in the
futures market. The FED strongly suggested that the banks pony up another $3.5
billion to keep LTCM from being forced to unload their positions at fire sale
prices. The banks did what was suggested.
This time, the FED is
not facing one lone company whose leveraged positions have gone south. The FED
is facing an entire segment of the U.S. capital market, which soon may not be
able to raise money to keep its CDO (collateralized debt obligation) projects
officially solvent. As long as these projects are solvent, the banks don’t have
to write off the loans.
The banks are in a situation
eerily similar to the Japanese banks in 1992. They are sitting on top of visibly
bad loans, but they are allowed by bank regulators to keep these bad loans on
their books at face value. This lets them stay in the lending business.
Is not Greenspan’s boom
turning into Bernanke’s bust ? Under Greenspan cycle used to work due to dollarization
of former USSR space and Eastern Europe. Now less people wants fresh from the prining
press dollars and shelf-life of the product cannot be extended indefinitely...
- Federal Reserve cuts interest rates
- Equity markets surge
- Dollar decline accelerates
- The price of oil and gold soar
- Treasury reiterates "strong dollar policy"
- Housing market problems get worse
- Credit market problems get worse
- Dollar decline accelerates
- The price of oil and gold soar
- Federal Reserve talks tough on inflation <-----
YESTERDAY
- Treasury reiterates "strong dollar policy"<-----
YESTERDAY
- Equity markets plunge <------------ YOU
ARE HERE
- Go to step 1
Is not this the shadow of Enron ?
...many of these WaMu mortgages were then sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac. They don't do their own due diligence, but they have gory provisions that,
among other things, let them return the mortgage to sender if there was fraud.
That means WaMu might have to eat a lot of mortgages
that probably had low to no equity at the time of issuance, and now that housing
is tanking, have good odds of having negative equity.
Death of consumers was predicted so many times that it's boring. I hope this
is not true this time too, but there is more facts in this article that in similar
publications year or two ago. Still I do not think millionaires are being squeezed
in any way and they are the dominant part of consumer spending not a small middle
class fish like those mentioned in the paper. Poor just don't matter. Like
Bill Clinton used to say: "It's the plutonomy, stupid" ;-).
Citigroup's Ajay Kapur applies the term "plutonomy" to, primarily, the United States,
although Britain, Canada and Australia also qualify. He notes that America's richest
1 percent of households own more than half of the nation's stocks and control more
wealth ($16 trillion) than the bottom 90 percent. When the richest 20 percent account
for almost 60 percent of consumption, you see why rising oil prices have had so
little effect on consumption.
From 2004 through 2006, Americans pulled about $840 billion a year out of
residential real estate, via sales, home equity lines of credit and refinanced
mortgages, according to data presented in an updated working paper by James
Kennedy, an economist, and
Alan Greenspan, the former Federal Reserve chairman. These so-called home
equity withdrawals financed as much as $310 billion a year in personal consumption
from 2004 to 2006, according to the data.
... ... ...
Much of the attention in the recent collapse of the
housing boom has focused on those in danger of losing
their home or facing higher monthly payments in their
adjustable mortgages. But the broader effect on the
economy is likely to come from the much larger group
of homeowners who can no longer count on rising home
values to bolster their wealth.
Consumer spending accounts for about 70 percent of
all economic activity in the United States, or about
$9.8 trillion, so even a slight dip in home borrowing
takes huge amounts of money out of the flow. The prospect
of a slowdown, combined with the squeeze on households
from higher oil costs, is sending shivers through the
retail world, as apparel merchants, furniture dealers
and electronics stores brace for the possibility that
the all-important holiday shopping season will disappoint.
Automakers are bemoaning sluggish sales.
“A fall of 2 percent in consumption would be big
enough to trigger a recession,” said Christian Menegatti,
lead analyst for RGE Monitor, a consulting firm in New
York.
Should not be this doom and gloom viewed with the grain of salt? Is not the
USA still has one of the most advanced economies in the world and, despite its multiple
problems, one of the most flexible financial system in the world ? And
as for corruption there are probably multiple countries that are able to teach the
USA a lesson or two in this area.
Those wishing to understand why systems
seemingly as corrupt as ours here in the
US seem so resilient and resistant to change,
ought to read or re-read John Kenneth Galbraith's
The Great Crash 1929 — as I have
recommended before. Yesterday, over
at Information Arbitrage, Roger
Ehrenberg suggested that
our financial system is badly in need of
governance both at the corporate and
government levels. Ehrenberg asked, then
answered this fundamental question:
"Who is at fault? Everybody." I
agreed, in follow-up comments, noting that:
...Here is a little added perspective
from Galbraith's The Great Crash 1929
that I left as a comment on James Hamilton's
Econbrowser early this year, responding
to his post,
The New Deal and the Great Depression:
[Me:] It proves interesting to reread
John Kenneth Galbraith's The Great
Crash 1929. It is as though history
is being rewritten before our eyes.
Substitute hedge funds for "investment
trusts" and it reads pretty much parallel.
Frightening! I keep hoping to see daylight
beyond what I perceive to be a gathering
storm. Daylight will indeed be forthcoming
[sometime after] a storm, but the interim
may be ugly.
The Great Crash 1929
Chapter II, "Something Should Be
Done":
"…like all booms, it had to end.
When prices stopped rising—when
the supply of people who were buying
for an increase was exhausted—then
ownership on margin would become
meaningless and everyone would want
to sell. The market wouldn't level
out; it would fall precipitately.
"All this being so, the position
of the people who had at least nominal
responsibility for what was going
on was a complex one.
One
of the oldest puzzles of politics
is who is to regulate the regulators.
But and equally baffling problem,
which has never received the attention
it deserves is who is to make wise
those who are required to have wisdom.
Some of those in positions of authority
wanted the boom to continue. They
were making money out of it,
and they may have had an intimation
of the personal disaster which awaited
them when the boom came to an end.
"But
there were also some who saw, however
dimly, that a wild speculation was
in progress and that something should
be done. For these people, however,
every proposal to act raised the
same intractable problem. The consequences
of successful action seemed almost
as terrible as the consequences
of inaction, and they could be more
horrible for those who took the
action.
… "The real choice was between an
immediate and deliberately engineered
collapse and a more serious disaster
later on. Some one would certainly
be blamed for the ultimate collapse
when it came.
"There
was no question whatsoever as to
who would be blamed should the boom
be deliberately deflated. …
… "Clearly the Federal Reserve was
less interested in checking speculation
than in detaching itself from responsibility
for the speculation.
Chapter III, "In Goldman, Sachs
We Trust"
…
""The
most notable piece of speculative
architecture of the late twenties,
and the one by which, more than
any other device, the public demand
for common stocks was satisfied,
"was
the investment trust or company.
The investment trust did not promote
new enterprises or enlarge old ones.
It merely arranged that people could
own stock in old companies through
the medium of new ones. …
"Knowledge,
manipulative skill, or financial
genius were not the only magic of
the investment trust. There was
also leverage. … Leverage, it was
later to develop, works both ways.”
Chapter IV, "The Twilight of Illusion"
… "To
a few alarmed observers it seemed
as though Wall Street were by way
of devouring all the money of the
entire world. However, in
accordance with the cultural practice,
as the summer passed, the
sound
and responsible spokesmen decried
not the increase in brokers’ loans,
but those who insisted on attaching
significance to this trend. There
was a sharp criticism of the prophets
of doom." (empahsis added)
If this is a real Greenspan legacy ? Was he just an agent of big
banks ? Or this is a polemical simplification of the situation ? Is not a
typical down cycle for residential real estate five to seven years ?
Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas: "The best way
I could describe the problems that we face here in this country, as well as
the problem the Federal Reserve faces, is that we
are indeed between a rock and a hard place because we have a serious problem
but we don't talk about how we got here. We talk about how we're
going to "patch it up". The bubble has been burst - we saw what happened after
the Nasdaq bubble burst and we don't ask how it was created and then we had
a housing bubble and it's deflating and it's spreading.
Yet nobody says, "Where does it come from?" and what is the advice that you
generally get? Inflate the currency.
They don't say "inflate the currency",
they don't say "debase the currency",
they don't say "devalue the currency",
they don't say "cheat the people who
have saved", they say "lower the interest rates". But they never ask you and
I never hear you say, "the only way I can lower interest rates is I have to
create more money".
...
Unless we get down to the bottom of it and define what inflation is and not
look at only prices... this was taught by the free market economists all through
the 20th century, they said, "Beware, they will
increase the money supply but they will make you concentrate on prices and they
will give you CPIs and PPIs and they'll fudge those figures and they'll talk
about wage and price controls to solve our problems".
We ignore the fundamental flaw and that is that not only have we had a subprime
market in housing, the
whole economic system is subprime
in that we have artificially low interest rates. And it wasn't
under your tenure in office - it's been going on for ten years or longer and
now we're bearing the fruits of that policy.
A one percent interest rate and that's not
a distortion? Instead of looking at consumer prices, that nobody in this
country really believes, we need to talk about the
distortion, the malinvestment, the misdirection, the bad information that is
gotten from artificially low interest rates."
We now return to our regular programming...
``Be careful what you wish for...''
Washington Mutual, Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Citigroup
Inc. spent $25 million in 2004 and 2005 lobbying for a legislative agenda that
included changes in bankruptcy laws to protect credit card profits, according
to the Center for Responsive Politics, a non-partisan Washington group that
tracks political donations.
The banks are still paying for that decision. The surge in foreclosures has
cut the value of securities backed by mortgages and led to more than $40 billion
of writedowns for U.S. financial institutions....
I do not believe in recession but the economy might be slow pretty close to
zero growth. Like Bernanke "Economy is likely to slow noticeably in the months
ahead."
A number of analysts predicted that the economic
growth would grind to a full stop by the end of this
year, which would force the Fed’s hand.
Paul Ashworth, an economist at Capital Economics
in London, predicted that the economy will be “stagnant
at best” in the final quarter of this year, adding that
surging oil prices could lead to an actual contraction
of the economy.
Nov 08, 2007
Analysts are losing faith in US companies’ ability to rekindle profit growth
before the end of the year, raising the prospect of the first “earnings
recession” - two consecutive quarters of falling profits - in more than
five years.
"CreditSights, in a
note to clients on Wednesday, current pricing levels reflect fundamentals, even
for the most highly-rated debt. Mortgage securities across the board are overrated
and overvalued"
But,
said
CreditSights,
in a
note
to clients
on Wednesday,
current
pricing
levels
reflect
fundamentals,
even
for
the
most
highly-rated
debt.
Mortgage
securities
across
the
board
are
overrated
and
overvalued:
The harsh truth about the outlook for the AAA tranches - necessary downgrades, if not defaults - should put the lie to the argument that current low prices in AAA RMBS tranches - let alone AAA tranches of mezzanine RMBS CDOs - are somehow the victim of poor liquidity conditions, and do not reflect the true fundamentals of the situation.
CreditSights publish the
results of a survey they have
conducted on “188 individual
relatively large RMBS deals”.
The outlook, by all accounts,
is grim.
At root, CreditSights calculate
a severity loss ratio for lenders
on individual defaulting subprime
mortgages based on mortgage
market data collected over the
past few weeks. The survey results
indicate that such loss severity
rates on mortgages are “painfully
high”. They range from 24 per
cent to 55 per cent - with a
weighted average at 35 per cent.
And they’re expected to rise.
For second-lien mortgages -
that is, second mortgages on
a property, the loss severity
rates average 94 per cent.
... ... ...
Adding the foreclosure and delinquancy rates takes
us close to 20 per cent. Both are set to increase. Then
there’s those painfully low severity loss ratios. Add
it all together and that AAA debt is far, far, far from
safe.
And we haven’t even mentioned prime tranches lower
down the structure.
Far from mispricing RMBS, CreditSights even go so
far as to suggest that actually, the ABX indices (which
list AAA RMBS debt at around 80 cents in the dollar)
are throwing up some pretty appropriate figures.
The credit markets are not going to see a recovery,
despite the cumulative 75 basis point cut in US interest
rates: the possibility of improvement is being quashed
on several fronts. A leader
in today’s FT likens the continued pain inflicted
on the credit markets to an aching tooth. The choices
available are:
1) Action — going to the dentist — promises immediate
pain
2) Delay — waiting for an abscess — promises deferred
agony
Institutions knee deep in the credit markets are
choosing to take the latter option, biting down and
making the squeeze more painful than necessary, as a
result further aggravating the factors that will keep
the credit markets constricted, says the FT.
First, subprime mortgage collateral,
and far more important, the outlook for a wide range
of US loan collateral, has deteriorated further. That
has hurt the value and trading liquidity of instruments
backed by such loans. From mid-September there was a
sharp second leg down in indices tracking subprime mortgage
bonds; the amount of asset-backed commercial paper continues
to decline; and interbank lending rates remain unusually
high.
Second, it has become clear that
the statistical assumptions used to value some structured
bonds such as collateralised debt obligations were wrong.
That has not only created the risk of fire sales as
those bonds go into default but means it will be hard
to restore confidence to the CDO market in either the
short or medium-term. CDOs appear to be quite fundamentally
broken.
And thirdly, says the FT, the banks have effectively
shot themselves in the foot. Banks’ disclosure on the
affected holdings has been slapdash; in part because
they themselves can’t fully identify the extent of their
own exposure. However, by announcing massive losses
and then having to revisit and up the numbers, it is
unsurprising that they have effectively crushed any
remaining faith in the strength of their balance sheets.
In order to resolve this everyone involved, commercial
banks, insurers and asset managers, not just investment
banks, need to be explicit about their exposure and
deal with it in real terms.
Rather than just a dollar writedown, they should
offer a breakdown of their holdings, so analysts can
forecast their ultimate losses.
To help restore confidence in structured finance,
the rating agencies should open their methodologies
to public scrutiny and debate.
And failing that, it may be time to call in the regulators,
says the FT:
If none of this happens then
regulators — co-ordinating themselves across borders,
if necessary — may have to start pushing. It is time
to pull some teeth.
Politicians, it seems, are already
thinking that way.
Is spending binge over ? Are retailers in the soup ? In this a silver
lining of suprime mess ?
The housing turmoil has indeed cut a chunk out of investment – residential
investment has fallen by $81bn in the three quarters during which the current
account deficit declined, and even more compared with the peak of the housing
boom earlier last year. Hence a good part of the current account reduction
can be directly attributed to the decline in residential investment.
Moreover, the decline in housing prices is starting to increase the personal
saving rate, as home equity loans are drying up and people are recognising that
their housing wealth is not as large as they had expected. When asset prices
were rising, households could spend what they earned and still see an increase
in their net worth. Sometimes spending even exceeded income. Now, consumption
is falling relative to income, so there is more household saving.
... ... ...
The nature of this adjustment has implications for future policy. First,
since we cannot rely on the housing slump to reduce the current account without
limit, it is important to continue with the three-pronged strategy, which would
be good economics even if there were no current account deficits. Second, the
decrease in the current account deficit in the US means that other countries
will be exporting less and importing more from the US. Unless other components
of demand in these countries increase, there will be negative spillovers on
the world economy.
... ... ...
To the degree that the improvement in the current
account is caused by the housing turmoil, further depreciation of the dollar
is less likely. But it is best to let the market decide that.
From Readers feedback
Back around 1990, I did think that we in the West should have rounded up
the communist sympathisers and agents in our midst, and hanged the lot of them.
Quite soon I expect to find myself recommending some vigorous and punitive action
against the cadre of crooks who seem to run so many corporations these days.
=====
Corporate executives are communist sympathizers?!?
In a backhanded way, you're probably half right. They do seem to be for the
socialization of risk, but staunchly for the privatization of profit.
Is fake capital collapsing deflationary? Is multi-quarter deleveraging
process just started ?
Rather, my theory holds that much of the USD current weakness reflects the
dishonest policy of American leadership and apparatcheks in dealing with fundamental
issues, such as serious inflation. The US has been turned into a playground
for hucksters, and lairs. Those Boyz are starting to get canned and be exposed,
a process that I believe will be ongoing for several years. Exposing the perps
of the American Plague is part of the painful reconciliation process. It eventually
restores some credibility.
He correctly called housing crisis in 2006. Is he right now ? Is overdebted
consumer a wild card for 2008 ?
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Billionaire investor George Soros forecast on Monday
that the U.S. economy is "on the verge of a very serious economic correction"
after decades of overspending.
"We have borrowed an awful lot of money and now
the bill is coming to us," he said during a lecture at the New
York University, also adding that the war on terror "has thrown America out
of the rails."
Asked whether a recession was inevitable, Soros said: "I think we are definitely
in for a slowdown that I think will be a bigger slowdown than (Fed Chairman
Ben) Bernanke is seeing."
Were Enron-style "make-money-fast" crimes pervasive in the mortgage industry?
Should Maestro Greenspan be fined for negligence ?
November 2, 2007 | SF Chronicle
Cuomo said fraudulent appraisal practices were pervasive in the industry.
At a news conference announcing the lawsuit, he said lenders, mortgage brokers,
real estate agents and others frequently pressured appraisers to "come in with
the right number, the number that justifies the transaction" so that everyone
in the chain would receive commissions.
"The independence of the appraiser is essential to
maintaining the integrity of the mortgage industry," Cuomo said. "First American
and eAppraiseIT violated that independence when Washington Mutual strong-armed
them into a system designed to rip off homeowners and investors alike. ... By
allowing Washington Mutual to hand-pick appraisers who inflated home values,
First American helped set the current mortgage crisis in motion."
... ... ...
The lawsuit said lenders do have an incentive to
demand inflated appraisals.The more loans a lender makes, the more profit
it generates. Therefore, companies are motivated "to pressure appraisers
to reach values that will allow the loan to close," the suit said. Mortgage
brokers and lenders' in-house loan originators work on commission so they
have "strong personal incentives" to pressure appraisers for high appraisals,
the suit said.
... ... ...
Because nearly everyone in real estate is paid on commission, it's in nearly
everyone's interest to get a deal done. When an appraisal doesn't "hit the
number" - match the agreed-upon price - the deal falls through, and nobody
gets paid. But when an appraisal is inflated:
- Home buyers can get hurt because they are overpaying.
- Investors who buy mortgages can get hurt because they have insufficient
collateral on those mortgages, which becomes a problem if there is a
foreclosure.
- The overall market is hurt because inflated appraisals create artificially
high market values.
Ask any real estate appraiser: Being badgered to overstate home prices is a
fact of life, they'll say.
"We get pressured every single day to inflate our values," said Dan Tosh, principal
at Tosh & Associates, an appraisal firm in Brentwood. "We get people telling
us we'll never work again, or they won't pay us because we won't play ball."
"This makes things such as Enron and WorldCom look small by comparison," said
Ted Faravelli, executive director of the California Association of Real Estate
Appraisers and principal at San Jose's T.E. Faravelli & Associates, an appraisal
firm. "It was an epidemic."
In a nationwide survey released early this year, 90 percent of 1,200 appraisers
said they had felt "uncomfortable pressure" to adjust property values. Mortgage
brokers were named as the most common culprits, followed by real estate agents,
consumers, lenders and appraisal management companies. The increase in pressure
was dramatic compared with that found in a similar survey in 2003, when 55 percent
of appraisers reported feeling pressured.
"Pressure on appraisers reaches pandemic proportions," said David Hutton, senior
editor at October Research Corp., the Ohio company that conducted the study.
"The New York lawsuit ... may be just the tip of the iceberg."
S&P500 investors can face steep losses due to the weight of financial stocks
in the index.
Nov. 7 | Bloomberg
U.S. banks and brokers face as much as $100 billion of writedowns because
of Level 3 accounting rules, in addition to the losses caused by the subprime
credit slump, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc.
... ... ...
Banks may be forced to write down as much as $64 billion on collateralized debt
obligations of securities backed by subprime assets, from about $15 billion
so far, Citigroup analysts led by Matt King in London wrote in a report e-mailed
today. The data exclude Citigroup's own projected writedowns.
Under FASB terminology, Level 1 means mark-to-market, where an asset's worth
is based on a real price. Level 2 is mark-to-model, an estimate based on observable
inputs which is used when no quoted prices are available. Level 3 values are
based on ``unobservable'' inputs reflecting companies' ``own assumptions'' about
the way assets would be priced.
ABX indexes, which investors use to track the subprime-bond market, are showing
``observable levels'' that would wipe out institutions' capital if the benchmark's
prices were used to value their Level 3 assets, according to Janjuah.
The indexes have tumbled this year because investors expected rising numbers
of borrowers to default on home loans, cutting the cash flowing to the bonds
that package the mortgages.
Lehman has the equivalent of 159% of its equity in Level 3 assets, and Bear
Stearns has 154%, according to Janjuah's note, titled ``Bob's World: Feast and
Famine.''
In this new reality banks are not very attractive investment....
Real-world lending has been artificially inflated for
years and now the brakes are on — if not by the banks themselves, then by the
regulators. Forget talk about the credit markets getting back to normal. This
could be the new reality.
Citi announced on Sunday night it was currently facing writedowns of between
$8bn and $11bn, on top of the dismal numbers already reported in its Q3 statement.
What is truly shocking, however, is the speed at which these losses have
been realised.
Is not 2 millions of foreclosures a conservative estimate ? Alt-A and prime
mortgages can also be affected. And 2 trillion is the figure similar to dot-com
bubble burst related losses. A lot of 401K owners were affected...
The congressional report bases its economic calculations on an estimate of
1.3 million upcoming foreclosures among loans made to people with weak, or subprime,
credit. But it also says the number of foreclosures
is likely to hit 2 million by the end of 2009, and that a 10%
drop in home prices would lead to broader economic losses of $2.3 trillion.
About 70 % of the
$100 billion in housing losses will come from
declines in the value of properties that are
sold off in foreclosure auctions, the report
said. The remainder is pegged to declining property
values in neighborhoods where foreclosure rates
are skyrocketing.
For the vast majority
of U.S. households, homes are the largest financial
asset, and homeowners' sense of prosperity plummets
if housing prices decline. Homeowners in recent
years drove the economy by tapping into credit
lines tied to the value of their houses to make
home improvements, buy flat-screen televisions
or cars.
The Democrats' report
also says states will lose more than $900 million
in property taxes as foreclosures surge. Expected
to be hit especially hard are California, Florida,
Ohio, New York and Michigan _ states that either
had a dramatic surge in housing prices or are
coping with especially difficult economic times.
Foreclosure filings
across the U.S. nearly doubled last month compared
with a year earlier. A total of 223,538 foreclosure
filings were reported in September, up from
112,210 in the same month a year ago
"How would the stock market respond were "reality" presented instead of the
Big Lie, i.e. 60,000 jobs were created, 90,000 less than required by population
growth? Do you reckon the markets would be soaring on that report?"
Here is astute contributor
Roger's comment:
Did you see the employment (+166K) jobs for October? Happy days are here
again!
Statistically created jobs were ONLY 103K. So they may have found evidence
that 63K bona fide jobs were created. And construction and financial services
jobs grew, even with massive layoffs and firings in mortgage finance jobs.
Happy days are here again! Maybe I can get one of those statistically created
jobs so I can get paid but not actually have to work!
/sarcasm off (My first job was shoveling this crap. Some things never change)
These completely bogus jobs reports are proof that propaganda is being
willfully generated and passed off as "the truth." How would the stock market
respond were "reality" presented instead of the Big Lie, i.e. 60,000 jobs were
created, 90,000 less than required by population growth? Do you reckon the markets
would be soaring on that report?
I have drawn inspiration today from two frequent contributors, Harun I. and
Riley T. Here is Harun's commentary:
The Propaganda Ministry has waged a successful campaign. It has convinced
people that apathy is concern, liabilities are assets, inflation doesn’t
exist, debt is money and growth, peace is war, terror will be ended by war,
and any news is good for stocks. The Prop Min has gotten people to accept
that the only way to support soldiers is to keep them in harms way and to
suggest otherwise is unpatriotic.
Apparently people also believe that recessions are evil, destruction of
purchasing power creates a strong currency, discouraged workers are not
unemployed, and that people in this country illegally are entitled to the
rights and privileges of legal citizens. All but a few believe the Fed is
both omnipotent and omniscient, and craven morons have Ph.D’s or Nobel Prizes
so they must be smart and capable of governing effectively.
Now the Prop Min is working on getting us to accept that worthless assets
are worth what ever mythical value assumed so long as the assets are never
subjected to price discovery in an open market.
How do fundamentals have meaning in an environment where reality and truth
have little or no value? How does one prosper and protect that prosperity?
Welcome to the world of the market technician.
Can banks start to inflate already inflated commodities bubble trying to protect
valuations and in the process driving inflation higher ? Did O'Neal fell near the
top (of banking stocks valuation) ?
...Nevertheless, investment bankers at Deutsche and Credit Suisse have relied
on the banks' “stable” businesses, such as wealth management and private banking,
to keep them afloat. The challenge facing them and
their brethren is where next to find the juicy returns that they enjoyed before
the credit bubble burst. There is already a lot of talk about commodities and
currencies. Investments in distressed assets may also provide
ironic comfort. Lehman has just launched a $3 billion fund that will buy discounted
leveraged loans.
In America, credit-card defaults are ticking
up, which will further hurt asset-backed securities. Many subprime-linked
instruments have become prohibitively expensive to hedge.
Mr O'Neal fell in a falling market, but perhaps
nearer the top than the bottom.
Is replay of 2001 in the cards ?
...More turbulence, in other words, is a distinct possibility. And, collectively,
investors are heading into this uncertain period with highly aggressive portfolios.
Employees in 401(k) plans recently held nearly
70% of their accounts in stocks, marking their biggest bet on equities since
July 2001, according to Hewitt Associates. And, many of those
portfolios have gravitated toward some of the riskiest types of stocks.
Can the wave of credit card delinquencies be the next act of this financial
drama ? Is this a new form of debt slavery ?
.. the reforms had an unintended effect, contends Michelle J. White in
Bankruptcy Reform and Credit Cards (NBER Working Paper No.
13265). While bankruptcy
filings dropped, financial distress increased. How did this happen?....by
making it harder for consumers to escape their debts, the new law dramatically
reduced lenders' losses from default and bankruptcy. As a result, they started
lending more, even to consumers with bad credit.
Credit card debt increased more quickly during the past two years than at
any time during the previous five years.
Consumers should have responded to the new harsher bankruptcy law by borrowing
less, which would have lowered their risk of getting into financial distress.
But not all consumers behaved in this rational way.
Instead, many behaved shortsightedly and took advantage of the
greater availability of credit to borrow more than they could easily handle
--- ignoring the risk of financial distress. (Economists refer to this shortsighted
behavior as "hyperbolic discounting"
- consumers who are hyperbolic discounters intend to start paying off
their debts immediately, but each month they consume too much and end up postponing
repayment until the following month. So their debts steadily increase.)
The new bankruptcy law exacerbated the problem of shortsighted consumers borrowing
too much, because it prevented many of them from using bankruptcy to limit their
financial distress. Many consumers in financial
distress are unable to file for bankruptcy under the new law, because they cannot
afford the costs of filing, cannot meet the new paperwork requirements, or are
ineligible. This means that their debts will not be discharged
and they will remain vulnerable to creditors' collection calls and to wage garnishment
that may take funds they need for basic necessities. Because of the new bankruptcy
law, consumers can end up in deeper financial distress
than would have been possible before 2005.
Survey evidence presented by White supports the idea that most debtors get into
financial distress because of shortsighted behavior, rather than because they
behave rationally but experience adverse events. In one survey of bankruptcy
filers, 43% pointed to "high debt/misuse of credit cards" as their primary or
secondary reason for filing. Another survey in 2006
found that two-thirds of those who sought credit counseling before filing for
bankruptcy cited "poor money management/excessive spending" as the reason for
their predicament, compared to only 31% who pointed to loss of income or medical
bills.
At what stage is the correction, if such news start flowing ?
Yes, Chuck Prince is
expected to resign on Sunday. I'm surprised he lasted this long. He was
over when he made his
now-infamous remark:
When the music stops, in terms of liquidity, things will be complicated.
But as long as the music is playing, you’ve got to get up and dance. We’re
still dancing.
Mind you, this wasn't pre-March 2007, when everything looked rosy. This was
in July, when the cracks had started to appear and after the Bear hedge fund
crisis. That sort of comment is a hubristic death wish, a willful defiance of
the warnings. And the odds most assuredly caught up with Prince.
But for my money, the juicier bit in the
Wall Street Journal story on Prince's imminent departure is that Citi may
take further writedowns:
People familiar with the matter said the Securities and Exchange Commission
is looking into the bank's accounting for its off-balance sheet investment
funds that have recently attracted scrutiny.....
The board is expected to discuss whether Citigroup should update the amount
of write-downs that it has taken on certain securities to reflect their
deteriorating value, according to people familiar with the matter.
The issue has generated intense discussion in the bank's senior ranks in
recent days and could potentially result in a significant addition to the
$3.55 billion capital-markets hit to third-quarter earnings that Citigroup
announced just three weeks ago. The company is expected to file a quarterly
report with the SEC next week.
Citigroup is the largest player in the $350 billion SIV market, managing
seven of these off-balance sheet vehicles that hold a combined $80 billion
in assets. SIVs have issued short-term debt to investors such as money-market
funds while buying mortgage-backed securities and other assets that carry
a higher yield.
Was Greenspan a social parasite ? :-)
Libertarians are True Social Parasites,
George Monboit, Oct 23:
… Wherever modern humans, living outside
the narrow social mores of the clan, are
allowed to pursue their genetic interests
without constraint, they will hurt other
people. They will grab other people's resources,
they will dump their waste in other people's
habitats, they will cheat, lie, steal and
kill. And if they have power and weapons,
no one will be able to stop them except
those with more power and better weapons.
Our genetic inheritance makes us smart enough
to see that when the old society breaks
down, we should appease those who are more
powerful than ourselves, and exploit those
who are less powerful. The survival strategies
which once ensured cooperation among equals
now ensure subservience to those who have
broken the social contract.
The democratic challenge, which becomes
ever more complex as the scale of human
interactions increases, is to mimic the
governance system of the small hominid troop.
We need a state that rewards us for cooperating
and punishes us for cheating and stealing.
At the same time we must ensure that the
state is also treated like a member of the
hominid clan and punished when it acts against
the common good. Human welfare, just as
it was a million years ago, is guaranteed
only by mutual scrutiny and regulation.
…
Unless tax-payers' money and public services
are available to repair the destruction
it causes, libertarianism destroys people's
savings, wrecks their lives and trashes
their environment. It is the belief system
of the free-rider, who is perpetually subsidised
by responsible citizens. As biologists we
both know what this means. Self-serving
as governments might be, the true social
parasites are those who demand their dissolution.
Sometimes the fact that a particular question exists answers another
related questions.
November 01, 2007 |
The nightmare scenario
- where the market abruptly comes to recognize that the leveraged speculating
is hopelessly stuck in illiquid CDO, ABS, MBS, derivative and equities positions
- doesn’t seem all that outrageous
or distant this week. [emphasis added]
Don't even dream to succeed in this dangerous game :-)
...But what about my short on Citi? I didn't stay long enough.
Every time prices would fall they would mysteriously return,
sometimes higher. My high wire got too scary. But where was
the rest of the world? The vultures were still waiting.They
knew about the PPT team and would wait until the selling overwhelmed
any defence they could mount. One can keep the Dow looking sharp
by buying a few key shares in times of thin trading and the
team knew all the tricks.
It worked till this week. November 1 will be remembered as
the day they drove Wall Street down. For me, the game was not
worth the candle, but it taught me about risk and convinced
me that something a little more pure and eternal was the place
to be — so I joined the gold bugs.
Society
Groupthink :
Two Party System
as Polyarchy :
Corruption of Regulators :
Bureaucracies :
Understanding Micromanagers
and Control Freaks : Toxic Managers :
Harvard Mafia :
Diplomatic Communication
: Surviving a Bad Performance
Review : Insufficient Retirement Funds as
Immanent Problem of Neoliberal Regime : PseudoScience :
Who Rules America :
Neoliberalism
: The Iron
Law of Oligarchy :
Libertarian Philosophy
Quotes
War and Peace
: Skeptical
Finance : John
Kenneth Galbraith :Talleyrand :
Oscar Wilde :
Otto Von Bismarck :
Keynes :
George Carlin :
Skeptics :
Propaganda : SE
quotes : Language Design and Programming Quotes :
Random IT-related quotes :
Somerset Maugham :
Marcus Aurelius :
Kurt Vonnegut :
Eric Hoffer :
Winston Churchill :
Napoleon Bonaparte :
Ambrose Bierce :
Bernard Shaw :
Mark Twain Quotes
Bulletin:
Vol 25, No.12 (December, 2013) Rational Fools vs. Efficient Crooks The efficient
markets hypothesis :
Political Skeptic Bulletin, 2013 :
Unemployment Bulletin, 2010 :
Vol 23, No.10
(October, 2011) An observation about corporate security departments :
Slightly Skeptical Euromaydan Chronicles, June 2014 :
Greenspan legacy bulletin, 2008 :
Vol 25, No.10 (October, 2013) Cryptolocker Trojan
(Win32/Crilock.A) :
Vol 25, No.08 (August, 2013) Cloud providers
as intelligence collection hubs :
Financial Humor Bulletin, 2010 :
Inequality Bulletin, 2009 :
Financial Humor Bulletin, 2008 :
Copyleft Problems
Bulletin, 2004 :
Financial Humor Bulletin, 2011 :
Energy Bulletin, 2010 :
Malware Protection Bulletin, 2010 : Vol 26,
No.1 (January, 2013) Object-Oriented Cult :
Political Skeptic Bulletin, 2011 :
Vol 23, No.11 (November, 2011) Softpanorama classification
of sysadmin horror stories : Vol 25, No.05
(May, 2013) Corporate bullshit as a communication method :
Vol 25, No.06 (June, 2013) A Note on the Relationship of Brooks Law and Conway Law
History:
Fifty glorious years (1950-2000):
the triumph of the US computer engineering :
Donald Knuth : TAoCP
and its Influence of Computer Science : Richard Stallman
: Linus Torvalds :
Larry Wall :
John K. Ousterhout :
CTSS : Multix OS Unix
History : Unix shell history :
VI editor :
History of pipes concept :
Solaris : MS DOS
: Programming Languages History :
PL/1 : Simula 67 :
C :
History of GCC development :
Scripting Languages :
Perl history :
OS History : Mail :
DNS : SSH
: CPU Instruction Sets :
SPARC systems 1987-2006 :
Norton Commander :
Norton Utilities :
Norton Ghost :
Frontpage history :
Malware Defense History :
GNU Screen :
OSS early history
Classic books:
The Peter
Principle : Parkinson
Law : 1984 :
The Mythical Man-Month :
How to Solve It by George Polya :
The Art of Computer Programming :
The Elements of Programming Style :
The Unix Hater’s Handbook :
The Jargon file :
The True Believer :
Programming Pearls :
The Good Soldier Svejk :
The Power Elite
Most popular humor pages:
Manifest of the Softpanorama IT Slacker Society :
Ten Commandments
of the IT Slackers Society : Computer Humor Collection
: BSD Logo Story :
The Cuckoo's Egg :
IT Slang : C++ Humor
: ARE YOU A BBS ADDICT? :
The Perl Purity Test :
Object oriented programmers of all nations
: Financial Humor :
Financial Humor Bulletin,
2008 : Financial
Humor Bulletin, 2010 : The Most Comprehensive Collection of Editor-related
Humor : Programming Language Humor :
Goldman Sachs related humor :
Greenspan humor : C Humor :
Scripting Humor :
Real Programmers Humor :
Web Humor : GPL-related Humor
: OFM Humor :
Politically Incorrect Humor :
IDS Humor :
"Linux Sucks" Humor : Russian
Musical Humor : Best Russian Programmer
Humor : Microsoft plans to buy Catholic Church
: Richard Stallman Related Humor :
Admin Humor : Perl-related
Humor : Linus Torvalds Related
humor : PseudoScience Related Humor :
Networking Humor :
Shell Humor :
Financial Humor Bulletin,
2011 : Financial
Humor Bulletin, 2012 :
Financial Humor Bulletin,
2013 : Java Humor : Software
Engineering Humor : Sun Solaris Related Humor :
Education Humor : IBM
Humor : Assembler-related Humor :
VIM Humor : Computer
Viruses Humor : Bright tomorrow is rescheduled
to a day after tomorrow : Classic Computer
Humor
The Last but not Least Technology is dominated by
two types of people: those who understand what they do not manage and those who manage what they do not understand ~Archibald Putt.
Ph.D
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Last modified:
March 12, 2019