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Inflation? You aint seen nothing yet!

Thursday, November 20th, 2008

I ran across this in today’s Daily Reckoning.  It’s a snip from Bill Bonner’s article titled

The Fall of Wall Street: Innocent Frauds and Armed Robberies

It’s good stuff!  Please take a minute to read it because it explains a lot in just a few paragraphs.

gk

From the day of its founding in 1913, the Fed’s assets – the foundation capital of the U.S. banking system – grew, reaching $1 trillion on the 24th of September, 2008. But then, something extraordinary happened. Something breathtaking. And for a classical economist – something incredibly reckless. In the next six weeks, the Fed added another trillion. And the head of the Dallas Branch of the Fed said that he expected to add another trillion before the end of the year.

How does the Fed get these “assets?” Simple. It buys them. Where does it get the money to buy them? Simple again: it creates it. It makes it up. It conjures it out of nothing.

“If it comes from nothing,” you might wonder, “what could it really be worth?” But we’re not going to answer that question. We don’t have time. Besides, it takes us in such a deep metaphysical swamp, we’re afraid we may never slosh our way out…or at least not get out in time for lunch. Instead, we’re going to answer this question:

“If it was that easy, how come the Fed didn’t do it before?”

The answer to that is simple: because when the Fed inflates the money supply it risks inflating consumer prices. People don’t like that. They like it when asset prices go up. But not when gasoline and milk increase.

But now, no one is worried about consumer prices. In fact, the Fed is worried about deflation…about falling prices. Bernanke knows what happens when consumer prices begin to fall. Consumers stop spending – knowing that they will be able to get a better deal in the future. That further depresses the economy…and pretty soon it’s the ‘90s again and you’re back in Tokyo. So the Fed has begun a huge program of monetary inflation, intended to offset Mr. Market’s price-cutting.

And now another question: Isn’t there some risk that the Fed will overdo it?

Oh, dear reader…that’s a puffball of a pitch. If we can’t hit that, you can take our laptop away…you can break our sword…and send us back to the dugout.

Remember what happened in the slump of the early 2000s? Alan Greenspan panicked…cut rates to 1%…and left them there for more than a year. He gave the market the wrong medicine at the wrong time…and then delivered such a horse-sized dose, it set off the biggest bubble in mankind’s whole bubbly history.

Now, it’s a different kind of slump…a credit slump. And once again, the Fed is on the scene, like a quack doctor at the side of a heart-attack victim. This time, he’s giving stronger medicine…not just a 1% lending rate, but actual monetary inflation. Trillions of dollars worth of it.

For the moment, Mr. Market is taking away dollars faster than the Bernanke Fed is replacing them. That could continue…for a few months…or even for several years. But it won’t continue forever.

And here, we affirm our unshakeable faith in the people who lead us. They are trying to cause inflation. Eventually, they will get the hang of it. They may shoot for 2% per year; but they are sure to overshoot. Money printers always do.

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How to blow $700 billion

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

I don’t know where to start….  Let me get this out of the way - I think the $700 billion bailout of Wall Street banks is a bad idea.  A very bad idea.  A very bad idea for many reasons.   I’ll try to explain some of them.

For starters, here’s what the Telegraph in the UK thinks of the bailout.  The headline reads: Bail-out enslaves US taxpayers Here is how the story starts:

“To preserve their [the people's] independence, we must not let our rulers load us with perpetual debt. We must make our selection between economy and liberty, or profusion and servitude” - Thomas Jefferson

There was a time, early in America’s history, when its leaders believed in financial discipline. No more. Perpetual debt, which Jefferson feared would enslave future generations, is clamped on Uncle Sam’s undercarriage like a ball and chain. US public borrowing is $9.8 trillion - and rising.

Jefferson, America’s third president (1801-09), is widely regarded as the White House’s most intellectually gifted occupant. He believed that “banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies“, and that “the principle of spending money to be paid by posterity … is but swindling futurity on a large scale.”

I couldn’t agree more.  But my opposition to the bailout goes deeper than simply agreeing with a long dead President about the dangers of debt.  It’s a philosophical disagreement that goes to the roots of the principals that our country was founded on.

I don’t think the Federal government should be involved in bailing out private companies - or homeowners.  We have not granted the Federal government the right to regulate executive pay, decide which companies get preferential treatment regarding loan rates and terms, or decide which group of citizens (or companies) receive direct government buyouts - or indirect preferential write offs of bad debt.

In other words, it’s unconstitutional.  I hope someone has the guts to file a suit and get the case heard in court.

So if this is such a bad idea, why do stocks rise whenever it looks like a deal is close?  That’s easy.  Stocks (especially financial stocks) stand to gain if the US taxpayer takes away their bad debt.  But we (the US taxpayer) are stuck bailing out companies (and people) who made stupid decisions.

Here’s my plan - let them go broke.  Let the companies that made (and sold) these stupid investments go broke and disappear.  Let the people (and companies) who bought these toxic investments go broke.  Kick their stupid, bought-more-house-than-they-could-afford-asses out of those houses.  Let the banks go broke and disappear.

Others - who have managed their money responsibly - will be here to buy up the houses and the toxic debt.  Yes, they will buy the houses and the debt at pennies on the dollar - so what?  Broke companies and people can’t buy stuff anymore - that’s a good thing!

We’ve been collectively living beyond our means for way too long. It’s time to get our budgets balanced - personal and government so we can pay off old debt and get moving forward again.

One other thing - the government doesn’t have $700 billion to use to bail out these stupid assholes.  We will have to borrow it.  That will increase the debt buy trillions by the time it’s paid off - and we already owe over $10 trillion at the federal level alone!

I’ve emailed my congressman and senators to let them know how I feel.  I encourage you to do the same.  Speak up - maybe we can stop this crap before it gets passed.  If you don’t email, call, or fax your representative - shut the fuck up and don’t bitch about the economy, congress, or Wall Street.  You’ve forfeited your right to complain.

gk

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Fed Plays Whack-A-Mole

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

Here’s the quote of the day from a story on MarketWatch.com

“The Fed is trying to provide liquidity as quickly as it can, but there seems to be an endless supply of ‘moles’ and only one mallet,” said Kevin Giddis, managing director, Morgan Keegan & Co. Inc.

Of course “provide liquidity” can also be read as “print money”, so inflation isn’t going away anytime soon.  And inflation while the economy has little or no growth is the definition of stagflation.  It’s 1977 all over again.  Get ready for the ride!

gk

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New Federal Reserve Chairman

Monday, July 21st, 2008

I ran across this tonight and just had to post it here.  I nominate Richard Fisher as the replacement for Helicopter Ben.  Finally, someone who can add!

I don’t have explicit permission to post this, so if Mr. Fisher objects I will remove it immediately - but this is very important, and I think it deserves the widest possible audience.  What follows is a direct copy and paste from the link above.  It’s long, but very readable - PLEASE take a few minutes and read it.

gk

Richard W. Fisher
Storms on the Horizon
Remarks before the Commonwealth Club of California
San Francisco, California
May 28, 2008

Thank you, Bruce [Ericson]. I am honored to be here this evening and am grateful for the invitation to speak to the Commonwealth Club of California.

Alan Greenspan and Paul Volcker, two of Ben Bernanke’s linear ancestors as chairmen of the Federal Reserve, have been in the news quite a bit lately. Yet, we rarely hear about William McChesney Martin, a magnificent public servant who was Fed chairman during five presidencies and to this day holds the record for the longest tenure: 19 years.

Chairman Martin had a way with words. And he had a twinkle in his eye. It was Bill Martin who wisely and succinctly defined the Federal Reserve as having the unenviable task “to take away the punchbowl just as the party gets going.” He did himself one up when he received the Alfalfa Club’s nomination for the presidency of the United States. I suspect many here tonight have been to the annual Alfalfa dinner. It is one of the great institutions in Washington, D.C. Once a year, it holds a dinner devoted solely to poking fun at the political pretensions of the day. Tongue firmly in cheek, the club nominates a candidate to run for the presidency on the Alfalfa Party ticket. Of course, none of them ever win. Nominees are thenceforth known for evermore as members of the Stassen Society, named for Harold Stassen, who ran for president nine times and lost every time, then ran a tenth time on the Alfalfa ticket and lost again. The motto of the group is Veni, Vidi, Defici—“I came, I saw, I lost.”

Bill Martin was nominated to run and lose on the Alfalfa Party ticket in 1966, while serving as Fed chairman during Lyndon Johnson’s term. In his acceptance speech,[1] he announced that, given his proclivities as a central banker, he would take his cues from the German philosopher Goethe, “who said that people could endure anything except continual prosperity.” Therefore, Martin declared, he would adopt a platform proclaiming that as a president he planned to “make life endurable again by stamping out prosperity.”

“I shall conduct the administration of the country,” he said, “exactly as I have so successfully conducted the affairs of the Federal Reserve. To that end, I shall assemble the best brains that can be found…ask their advice on all matters…and completely confound them by following all their conflicting counsel.”

It is true, Bruce, that as you said in your introduction, I am one of the 17 people who participate in Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) deliberations and provide Ben Bernanke with “conflicting counsel” as the committee cobbles together a monetary policy that seeks to promote America’s economic prosperity, Goethe to the contrary. But tonight I speak for neither the committee, nor the chairman, nor any of the other good people that serve the Federal Reserve System. I speak solely in my own capacity. I want to speak to you tonight about an economic problem that we must soon confront or else risk losing our primacy as the world’s most powerful and dynamic economy.

Forty-three years ago this Sunday, Bill Martin delivered a commencement address to Columbia University that was far more sober than his Alfalfa Club speech. The opening lines of that Columbia address [2] were as follows: “When economic prospects are at their brightest, the dangers of complacency and recklessness are greatest. As our prosperity proceeds on its record-breaking path, it behooves every one of us to scan the horizon of our national and international economy for danger signals so as to be ready for any storm.”

Today, our fellow citizens and financial markets are paying the price for falling victim to the complacency and recklessness Martin warned against. Few scanned the horizon for trouble brewing as we proceeded along a path of unparalleled prosperity fueled by an unsustainable housing bubble and unbridled credit markets. Armchair or Monday morning quarterbacks will long debate whether the Fed could have/should have/would have taken away the punchbowl that lubricated that blowout party. I have given my opinion on that matter elsewhere and won’t go near that subject tonight. What counts now is what we have done more recently and where we go from here. Whatever the sins of omission or commission committed by our predecessors, the Bernanke FOMC’s objective is to use a new set of tools to calm the tempest in the credit markets to get them back to functioning in a more orderly fashion. We trust that the various term credit facilities we have recently introduced are helping restore confidence while the credit markets undertake self-corrective initiatives and lawmakers consider new regulatory schemes.

I am also not going to engage in a discussion of present monetary policy tonight, except to say that if inflationary developments and, more important, inflation expectations, continue to worsen, I would expect a change of course in monetary policy to occur sooner rather than later, even in the face of an anemic economic scenario. Inflation is the most insidious enemy of capitalism. No central banker can countenance it, not least the men and women of the Federal Reserve.

Tonight, I want to talk about a different matter. In keeping with Bill Martin’s advice, I have been scanning the horizon for danger signals even as we continue working to recover from the recent turmoil. In the distance, I see a frightful storm brewing in the form of untethered government debt. I choose the words—“frightful storm”—deliberately to avoid hyperbole. Unless we take steps to deal with it, the long-term fiscal situation of the federal government will be unimaginably more devastating to our economic prosperity than the subprime debacle and the recent debauching of credit markets that we are now working so hard to correct.

You might wonder why a central banker would be concerned with fiscal matters. Fiscal policy is, after all, the responsibility of the Congress, not the Federal Reserve. Congress, and Congress alone, has the power to tax and spend. From this monetary policymaker’s point of view, though, deficits matter for what we do at the Fed. There are many reasons why. Economists have found that structural deficits raise long-run interest rates, complicating the Fed’s dual mandate to develop a monetary policy that promotes sustainable, noninflationary growth. The even more disturbing dark and dirty secret about deficits—especially when they careen out of control—is that they create political pressure on central bankers to adopt looser monetary policy down the road. I will return to that shortly. First, let me give you the unvarnished facts of our nation’s fiscal predicament.

Eight years ago, our federal budget, crafted by a Democratic president and enacted by a Republican Congress, produced a fiscal surplus of $236 billion, the first surplus in almost 40 years and the highest nominal-dollar surplus in American history. While the Fed is scrupulously nonpartisan and nonpolitical, I mention this to emphasize that the deficit/debt issue knows no party and can be solved only by both parties working together. For a brief time, with surpluses projected into the future as far as the eye could see, economists and policymakers alike began to contemplate a bucolic future in which interest payments would form an ever-declining share of federal outlays, a future where Treasury bonds and debt-ceiling legislation would become dusty relics of a long-forgotten past. The Fed even had concerns about how open market operations would be conducted in a marketplace short of Treasury debt.

That utopian scenario did not last for long. Over the next seven years, federal spending grew at a 6.2 percent nominal annual rate while receipts grew at only 3.5 percent. Of course, certain areas of government, like national defense, had to spend more in the wake of 9/11. But nondefense discretionary spending actually rose 6.4 percent annually during this timeframe, outpacing the growth in total expenditures. Deficits soon returned, reaching an expected $410 billion for 2008—a $600 billion swing from where we were just eight years ago. This $410 billion estimate, by the way, was made before the recently passed farm bill and supplemental defense appropriation and without considering a proposed patch for the Alternative Minimum Tax—all measures that will lead to a further ballooning of government deficits.

In keeping with the tradition of rosy scenarios, official budget projections suggest this deficit will be relatively short-lived. They almost always do. According to the official calculus, following a second $400-billion-plus deficit in 2009, the red ink should fall to $160 billion in 2010 and $95 billion in 2011, and then the budget swings to a $48 billion surplus in 2012.

If you do the math, however, you might be forgiven for sensing that these felicitous projections look a tad dodgy. To reach the projected 2012 surplus, outlays are assumed to rise at a 2.4 percent nominal annual rate over the next four years—less than half as fast as they rose the previous seven years. Revenue is assumed to rise at a 6.7 percent nominal annual rate over the next four years—almost double the rate of the past seven years. Using spending and revenue growth rates that have actually prevailed in recent years, the 2012 surplus quickly evaporates and becomes a deficit, potentially of several hundred billion dollars.

Doing deficit math is always a sobering exercise. It becomes an outright painful one when you apply your calculator to the long-run fiscal challenge posed by entitlement programs. Were I not a taciturn central banker, I would say the mathematics of the long-term outlook for entitlements, left unchanged, is nothing short of catastrophic.

Typically, critics ranging from the Concord Coalition to Ross Perot begin by wringing their collective hands over the unfunded liabilities of Social Security. A little history gives you a view as to why. Franklin Roosevelt originally conceived a social security system in which individuals would fund their own retirements through payroll-tax contributions. But Congress quickly realized that such a system could not put much money into the pockets of indigent elderly citizens ravaged by the Great Depression. Instead, a pay-as-you-go funding system was embraced, making each generation’s retirement the responsibility of its children.

Now, fast forward 70 or so years and ask this question: What is the mathematical predicament of Social Security today? Answer: The amount of money the Social Security system would need today to cover all unfunded liabilities from now on—what fiscal economists call the “infinite horizon discounted value” of what has already been promised recipients but has no funding mechanism currently in place—is $13.6 trillion, an amount slightly less than the annual gross domestic product of the United States.

Demographics explain why this is so. Birthrates have fallen dramatically, reducing the worker–retiree ratio and leaving today’s workers pulling a bigger load than the system designers ever envisioned. Life spans have lengthened without a corresponding increase in the retirement age, leaving retirees in a position to receive benefits far longer than the system designers envisioned. Formulae for benefits and cost-of-living adjustments have also contributed to the growth in unfunded liabilities.

The good news is this Social Security shortfall might be manageable. While the issues regarding Social Security reform are complex, it is at least possible to imagine how Congress might find, within a $14 trillion economy, ways to wrestle with a $13 trillion unfunded liability. The bad news is that Social Security is the lesser of our entitlement worries. It is but the tip of the unfunded liability iceberg. The much bigger concern is Medicare, a program established in 1965, the same prosperous year that Bill Martin cautioned his Columbia University audience to be wary of complacency and storms on the horizon.

Medicare was a pay-as-you-go program from the very beginning, despite warnings from some congressional leaders—Wilbur Mills was the most credible of them before he succumbed to the pay-as-you-go wiles of Fanne Foxe, the Argentine Firecracker—who foresaw some of the long-term fiscal issues such a financing system could pose. Unfortunately, they were right.

Please sit tight while I walk you through the math of Medicare. As you may know, the program comes in three parts: Medicare Part A, which covers hospital stays; Medicare B, which covers doctor visits; and Medicare D, the drug benefit that went into effect just 29 months ago. The infinite-horizon present discounted value of the unfunded liability for Medicare A is $34.4 trillion. The unfunded liability of Medicare B is an additional $34 trillion. The shortfall for Medicare D adds another $17.2 trillion. The total? If you wanted to cover the unfunded liability of all three programs today, you would be stuck with an $85.6 trillion bill. That is more than six times as large as the bill for Social Security. It is more than six times the annual output of the entire U.S. economy.

Why is the Medicare figure so large? There is a mix of reasons, really. In part, it is due to the same birthrate and life-expectancy issues that affect Social Security. In part, it is due to ever-costlier advances in medical technology and the willingness of Medicare to pay for them. And in part, it is due to expanded benefits—the new drug benefit program’s unfunded liability is by itself one-third greater than all of Social Security’s.

Add together the unfunded liabilities from Medicare and Social Security, and it comes to $99.2 trillion over the infinite horizon. Traditional Medicare composes about 69 percent, the new drug benefit roughly 17 percent and Social Security the remaining 14 percent.

I want to remind you that I am only talking about the unfundedportions of Social Security and Medicare. It is what the current payment scheme of Social Security payroll taxes, Medicare payroll taxes, membership fees for Medicare B, copays, deductibles and all other revenue currently channeled to our entitlement system will not cover under current rules. These existing revenue streams must remain in place in perpetuity to handle the “funded” entitlement liabilities. Reduce or eliminate this income and the unfunded liability grows. Increase benefits and the liability grows as well.

Let’s say you and I and Bruce Ericson and every U.S. citizen who is alive today decided to fully address this unfunded liability through lump-sum payments from our own pocketbooks, so that all of us and all future generations could be secure in the knowledge that we and they would receive promised benefits in perpetuity. How much would we have to pay if we split the tab? Again, the math is painful. With a total population of 304 million, from infants to the elderly, the per-person payment to the federal treasury would come to $330,000. This comes to $1.3 million per family of four—over 25 times the average household’s income.

Clearly, once-and-for-all contributions would be an unbearable burden. Alternatively, we could address the entitlement shortfall through policy changes that would affect ourselves and future generations. For example, a permanent 68 percent increase in federal income tax revenue—from individual and corporate taxpayers—would suffice to fully fund our entitlement programs. Or we could instead divert 68 percent of current income-tax revenues from their intended uses to the entitlement system, which would accomplish the same thing.

Suppose we decided to tackle the issue solely on the spending side. It turns out that total discretionary spending in the federal budget, if maintained at its current share of GDP in perpetuity, is 3 percent larger than the entitlement shortfall. So all we would have to do to fully fund our nation’s entitlement programs would be to cut discretionary spending by 97 percent. But hold on. That discretionary spending includes defense and national security, education, the environment and many other areas, not just those controversial earmarks that make the evening news. All of them would have to be cut—almost eliminated, really—to tackle this problem through discretionary spending.

I hope that gives you some idea of just how large the problem is. And just to drive an important point home, these spending cuts or tax increases would need to be made immediately and maintained in perpetuity to solve the entitlement deficit problem. Discretionary spending would have to be reduced by 97 percent not only for our generation, but for our children and their children and every generation of children to come. And similarly on the taxation side, income tax revenue would have to rise 68 percent and remain that high forever. Remember, though, I said tax revenue, not tax rates. Who knows how much individual and corporate tax rates would have to change to increase revenue by 68 percent?
 
If these possible solutions to the unfunded-liability problem seem draconian, it’s because they are draconian. But they do serve to give you a sense of the severity of the problem. To be sure, there are ways to lessen the reliance on any single policy and the burden borne by any particular set of citizens. Most proposals to address long-term entitlement debt, for example, rely on a combination of tax increases, benefit reductions and eligibility changes to find the trillions necessary to safeguard the system over the long term.

No combination of tax hikes and spending cuts, though, will change the total burden borne by current and future generations. For the existing unfunded liabilities to be covered in the end, someone must pay $99.2 trillion more or receive $99.2 trillion less than they have been currently promised. This is a cold, hard fact. The decision we must make is whether to shoulder a substantial portion of that burden today or compel future generations to bear its full weight.

Now that you are all thoroughly depressed, let me come back to monetary policy and the Fed.

It is only natural to cast about for a solution—any solution—to avoid the fiscal pain we know is necessary because we succumbed to complacency and put off dealing with this looming fiscal disaster. Throughout history, many nations, when confronted by sizable debts they were unable or unwilling to repay, have seized upon an apparently painless solution to this dilemma: monetization. Just have the monetary authority run cash off the printing presses until the debt is repaid, the story goes, then promise to be responsible from that point on and hope your sins will be forgiven by God and Milton Friedman and everyone else.

We know from centuries of evidence in countless economies, from ancient Rome to today’s Zimbabwe, that running the printing press to pay off today’s bills leads to much worse problems later on. The inflation that results from the flood of money into the economy turns out to be far worse than the fiscal pain those countries hoped to avoid.
 
Earlier I mentioned the Fed’s dual mandate to manage growth and inflation. In the long run, growth cannot be sustained if markets are undermined by inflation. Stable prices go hand in hand with achieving sustainable economic growth. I have said many, many times that inflation is a sinister beast that, if uncaged, devours savings, erodes consumers’ purchasing power, decimates returns on capital, undermines the reliability of financial accounting, distracts the attention of corporate management, undercuts employment growth and real wages, and debases the currency.

Purging rampant inflation and a debased currency requires administering a harsh medicine. We have been there, and we know the cure that was wrought by the FOMC under Paul Volcker. Even the perception that the Fed is pursuing a cheap-money strategy to accommodate fiscal burdens, should it take root, is a paramount risk to the long-term welfare of the U.S. economy. The Federal Reserve will never let this happen. It is not an option. Ever. Period.

The way we resolve these liabilities—and resolve them we must—will affect our own well-being as well as the prospects of future generations and the global economy. Failing to face up to our responsibility will produce the mother of all financial storms. The warning signals have been flashing for years, but we find it easier to ignore them than to take action. Will we take the painful fiscal steps necessary to prevent the storm by reducing and eventually eliminating our fiscal imbalances? That depends on you.

I mean “you” literally. This situation is of your own creation. When you berate your representatives or senators or presidents for the mess we are in, you are really berating yourself. You elect them. You are the ones who let them get away with burdening your children and grandchildren rather than yourselves with the bill for your entitlement programs.

This issue transcends political affiliation. When George Shultz, one of San Francisco’s greatest Republican public servants, was director of President Nixon’s Office of Management and Budget, he became worried about the amount of money Congress was proposing to spend. After some nights of tossing and turning, he called legendary staffer Sam Cohen into his office. Cohen had a long memory of budget matters and knew every zig and zag of budget history. “Sam,” Shultz asked, “tell me something just between you and me. Is there any difference between Republicans and Democrats when it comes to spending money?” Cohen looked at him, furrowed his brow and, after thinking about it, replied, “Mr. Shultz, there is only one difference: Democrats enjoy it more.”

Yet no one, Democrat or Republican, enjoys placing our children and grandchildren and their children and grandchildren in harm’s way. No one wants to see the frightful storm of unfunded long-term liabilities destroy our economy or threaten the independence and authority of our central bank or tear our currency asunder.

Of late, we have heard many complaints about the weakness of the dollar against the euro and other currencies. It was recently argued in the op-ed pages of the Financial Times [3] that one reason for the demise of the British pound was the need to liquidate England’s international reserves to pay off the costs of the Great Wars. In the end, the pound, it was essentially argued, was sunk by the kaiser’s army and Hitler’s bombs. Right now, we—you and I—are launching fiscal bombs against ourselves. You have it in your power as the electors of our fiscal authorities to prevent this destruction. Please do so.

About the Author

Richard W. Fisher is president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.

Notes

The views expressed by the author do not necessarily reflect official positions of the Federal Reserve System.

  1. William McChesney Martin, “Alfalfa Club Dinner Script,” delivered at the Alfalfa Club Dinner, Washington, D.C., Jan. 22, 1966, Box 163, William McChesney Martin Collection, Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library, Austin, Texas.
  2. “Does Monetary History Repeat Itself?” Commencement Day Luncheon of the Alumni Federation of Columbia University, June 1, 1965, New York City.
  3. “The Euro’s Success Could Also Be Its Downfall,” by Harold James, Financial Times, May 18, 2008.
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IndyMac is gone

Friday, July 11th, 2008

The Office of Thrift Supervision shuts down mortgage lender IndyMac and transfers the operations to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

That’s the headline from a CNN story dated 7:30pm today.  The story goes on to say “This institution failed today due to a liquidity crisis,” OTS Director John Reich said.

I just posted an article about inflation entitled “Sound Familiar” but does the quote above sound familiar?  It should, a liquidity crisis is what killed Bear Stearns, and that’s what’s caused hundreds of financial institutions to fail over the past year.

The next line of the story says IndyMac had $32.01 billion in assets as of March 31.

For comparison, here’s what Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have according to a story on Bloomberg: Freddie Mac owed $5.2 billion more than its assets were worth in the first quarter, making it insolvent under fair value accounting rules. The fair value of Fannie Mae’s assets tumbled 66 percent to $12.2 billion and may be negative next quarter, Poole said.

The official line (in the same story) says Fannie Mae “has access to ample sources of liquidity, including access to the debt markets,” Chuck Greener, a spokesman for the Washington-based company said in a statement today. In a separate release, McLean, Virginia-based Freddie Mac said it’s “adequately capitalized, highly liquid and an essential part of the nation’s housing system.”

I know it’s getting overused by me tonight, but does that sound familiar?

Here’s a hint - the chairman of Bear Stearns said they had plenty of liquidity on a Wednesday.  The company no longer existed the next Monday.  We’ll find out in a couple of days, but I think something is going to happen with Fannie and Freddie over the weekend.  I wouldn’t be surprised to see them under some sort of special operations on Monday - with their stock basically worthless.

I wonder why the OTS waited until after the market closed to announce it?  Do you think they’re trying to bury things over a weekend and hope everyone forgets by Monday?  I know some people may be that stupid (hello Ben Stein!) but I would hope that most of us have the sense not to run back into the burning building.

In case anyone is wondering, I really don’t want the markets to crash.  I have most of my money in a 401K with very limited options.  I can’t short stocks or funds in it, and I only have about 10 funds to pick from, so I only make money when the market goes up. 

That being said, I do expect the markets to crash at some point.  Most of my 401K money is in a money market fund while I wait it out.  The longer the Fed drags this crap out, the longer I have to sit on the sidelines and watch inflation eat away at my savings. 

I want to get back into the market (I got out last year) but getting in right now would be the same as running into a burning building.  Or catching a falling knife.  Or beating my head against the wall.  It just doesn’t make sense at this time.

So if the Fed would stop delaying the inevitable, I could put my money back into the market after it crashes.  Except they keep stopping the crash, which simply drags it out and makes it more painful. 

Note to Helicopter Ben - let the fricking market weed out the bad institutions on its’ own.  The bad ones will disappear (266 and counting according to ml-implode.com) but the good ones will emerge with clean balance sheets, ready to make big profits again.  And I’ll be able to watch my money grow instead of slowly withering away into nothing because of the Feds’ inflation.

gk

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Sound Familiar?

Friday, July 11th, 2008

Stop me if you’ve heard this one before….  The dollar and financial stocks fall, while gold and oil rise.  Damn, you already heard that one somewhere else? 

It’s a familiar refrain that seems to keep repeating, just like an obnoxious Barry Manilow song or that annoying dog commercial that goes “there might be bugs on some of you mugs but there ain’t no bugs on me”.  (Ha - now you’ve got it stuck in your head too!)

The reason that oil and gold continue to trend higher while the dollar and financial stocks continue to trend lower is one and the same - the Federal Reserve. 

The Fed continues to flood the system with cheap and/or free money.  It’s simple supply and demand.  There are more and more dollars but there hasn’t been a corresponding increase in the demand for those dollars.  So the amount of stuff a dollar will purchase continues to fall.

It’s called inflation, and it’s always CAUSED by the same thing - too much money chasing too few goods.  The classic way to explain inflation is that inflation “is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon” (Milton Friedman) but it’s saying the same thing.

Even though this is nothing new, I’ve found that damn few people actually understand it.  And the more involved they are in the stock market, the less likely they are to understand it.  They blame inflation on rising wages, or rising oil prices, or the rising cost of (insert commodity here).  :-)

They don’t understand that rising prices are CAUSED by too much money.  When the Fed injects billions of dollars into the money supply (without a real demand for the money) prices HAVE to go up. 

Pretend I have a blog that lots of people read (we’re pretending!) and visit everyday.  Now I take the blog posts that I write and post them on 7 other sites as well.  Assuming more people don’t want to read what I have to say, the number of people visiting each site would go down - even though the total number may stay the same.

Ok, maybe that isn’t the best analogy…. Try this one.  8 people are standing around a barrel of oil.  They all need that barrel of oil, and they’ve all got about $5 to use to purchase it.  Guess what the price of that barrel of oil will be?  Yup, about $5.

Now imagine that Uncle Sam gives (or lets them borrow cheaply) each one of them another $5.  There’s still only one barrel of oil, and all of them still need it.  How much will that barrel cost now?

Does that help?  That’s what the Fed is doing with dollars.  Helicopter Ben is doing everything he can to keep the over-leveraged financial institutions afloat, but he’s simply buying time.  Borrowing money to pay off debt never works - it simply delays the inevitable.

As the dollar loses value (because there are more of them in circulation) the amount of “stuff” each dollar can buy MUST go down.  So things like oil and gold go up BECAUSE the dollar is worth less. 

This sometimes isn’t obvious because with commodities like oil and gold (and corn and soybeans and wheat and rice and pork bellies) demand can also fluctuate and cause price movements, but the underlying cause is the same.  Too many dollars in the system.

Anyhoo, the major financial institutions all owe waaay more than they own.  And they’re finding out that as the value of their assets (and the payments they receive from those assets) fall, they suddenly can’t make the payments on their debt anymore.  But then the Fed comes riding in and lets them borrow more money (using the same assets which are falling in value as collateral) and suddenly everything is supposed to be ok…. Brilliant! (Not!)

There was a report by Reuters today saying “Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told Freddie Mac chief Richard Syron that his company and Fannie Mae could take advantage of the emergency discount window, according to a source familiar with the conversation.” 

Since it’s pretty obvious to everyone that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are insolvent and going under unless someone steps in, this report was a catalyst for a huge rebound in the market today.  Investors were grasping at straws looking for something, anything to save the sinking financial ship.  They grabbed onto this report and stocks reversed course over 200 points and were even briefly into positive territory today.

Then they realized that even if the report was true, it didn’t change a damn thing.  So the market sold off again into the close. After the markets closed, the Fed denied the story - but I won’t be surprised if the Fed takes action over the weekend like they did with Bear Stearns. 

They know the companies are technically bankrupt, and they’ve got to act at some point.  I don’t know what they’ll do, but they won’t stand by while the ship sinks.  They’ll continue to bail water, only to eventually figure out that the water is coming in much faster than they can bail it out.  The ship will still sink, but they can drag out this soap opera for months. 

In my opinion, they should let it sink now so we can start building the new ship.

gk

 

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Can you say stagflation?

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

It was interesting watching the stock market go into a steep sell-off today after the Fed meeting minutes were released.  For some reason, most people are still underestimating the severity of the problems in the economy, and they’re stunned when they see something that doesn’t fit into the Goldilocks scenario they’re anticipating.

Here’s how CNN phrased the dilemma facing the Fed: The Fed lowered its economic growth forecast for the year. At the same time, it raised its projections for inflation and unemployment. The combination of slowing growth and rising prices [emphasis mine] created a difficult situation that made the Fed’s latest decision to cut rates on April 30 a “close call.”

Webster defines “stagflation” as persistent inflation combined with stagnant consumer demand and relatively high unemployment

Notice the similarity between the two preceding paragraphs?  Everyone remembers the stagflation we had in the Carter years.  Carter was a disaster for this country, and it took Reagan to turn things around, but Carter was an economic genius compared to Bush!

At least Carter took steps in the right direction by deregulating the oil and natural gas industries - Bush ain’t done squat except to print more money to try to inflate his way out of the mess he caused by creating cheap credit after 9/11.  

The problem wasn’t so much the easy money policy, it was that they kept the easy money policy in place for far too long.  This created the housing bubble, which led to our current credit crunch as all the mortgage backed security instruments lose value as home owners can’t make payments on houses that are worth less than the mortgage balance.

The “close call” CNN refers to is that the Fed is stuck now.  They want to lower rates to stimulate the economy, but that will just exacerbate the inflation problem which is caused by too many dollars in circulation.   That’s what happens when the Fed tries to manipulate the economy instead of following their mandate to ensure a stable monetary system.

From the website of the Federal Reserve: The Federal Reserve System is the central bank of the United States. It was founded by Congress in 1913 to provide the nation with a safer, more flexible, and more stable monetary and financial system.

The Fed has become too political to do its’ job - which is to provide for a stable currency.  The same easy money policy (which leads to inflation) has caused the value of the dollar to drop by about 50% since Bush took office.  Like it or not, a dollar today will only purchase about half of the “stuff” that it would 7 years ago.  Thanks GW…  NOT!

When you see the price of commodities such as oil, wheat, soybeans, corn, etc. (the “stuff” we use) double and you wonder why, that’s why.  Global demand plays a part, but the major reason is that we are paying for the “stuff” in a global marketplace with inflated dollars that people don’t want.

That concludes your economics lesson for today.  Any questions?

gk

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GE earnings miss isn’t a shocker

Friday, April 11th, 2008

Wow, lots of stories today about the “shocking” earnings miss (and lowered forecast) by GE.  MarketWatch saidGE’s warning pokes hole in recent sentiment that credit crunch has passed” and “The rebound had been fueled by renewed sentiment on Wall Street that the worst of the credit crisis — including the threat of spiraling financial bankruptcies — was past.”

A story on CNN said “My guess is that earnings forecasts for 2008 are still pretty high relative to the economic reality,” Davidson said.

I have one word for Mr. Davidson - Duh!

As I posted just yesterday, I don’t think we’re anywhere close to a bottom yet, and the earnings estimates for 2008 and 2009 are way too high.  Eventually, stock prices adjust to reflect earnings, and sometimes the adjustment process is long and painful - as we all learned in 2000 through 2003.

All the stories about Goldman Sachs’ and Lehman CEO’s saying that they can see the light at the end of the tunnel - while simultaneously upping their own writedowns - are crap.  If the CEO’s are so good at predicting the future, why couldn’t they tell us what losses their own companies were going to have?

Speaking of Goldman, I think the glitter is coming off.  This past week they announced that the amount of “Level 3 assets” increased from $69 billion to $96 billion during the first quarter.  If you haven’t been keeping score, “level 3″ assets are those for which there’s basically no market, no one wants them, so Goldman is stuck with them. 

Kinda like having a house that’s “worth” $1 million, but no one will buy it, so you’re stuck with the mortgage payments - but you can say you have a $1 million house.  At least until you have to sell it because you can’t make the payments any longer - then it suddenly becomes a $500k house - and you just lost $500k.

It also means that the value of those assets is a 100% guess.  In effect, Goldman is saying “we think we might have $96 billion in assets, but we really don’t know what they’d be worth if we tried to sell them.  They might be worth $96 billion (but we’re almost certain that that’s not right) but they might be worth 3 cents on the dollar.  We don’t have a clue, so we pulled that $96 billion number out of our butt.”

Level 3 assets are, by definition, “hard to value”.  In fact, they are impossible to value, because no one will buy them.  So companies use a “mark to model” method to come up with a number.  And since “mark to model” varies depending on the model used, we’re back where we started - no one has any idea what these assets are worth.

You may be asking why it’s a bad thing that the value of the assets rose so much in one quarter, and that’s a good question.  Wouldn’t it be a good thing if my $1 million house went up to $1.5 million in one quarter?   The answer to why it’s bad is that it’s a made up number.  I know that this is probably getting old but you need to understand it - NO ONE WILL BUY IT AT ANY PRICE RIGHT NOW!

Your next question is probably something like “why would they make up a higher number for these assets if that’s viewed as a negative?  Another good question, but the answer is easy.  You see, if you claim that your assets are worth more, you can use them as collateral so you can borrow more money.

Kinda neat isn’t it?  Goldman increased its’ ability to borrow by $27 billion in just one quarter.  But who would take these level 3 assets as collateral you ask?  You’re on your “A” game tonight dear reader - another good question.

The answer is that there’s only one place to go to borrow against these assets that no one will buy - the Fed.  You and me (via the government) are loaning Goldman billions of dollars by allowing them to give (I’m going to make up some numbers here - let’s call them “level 3″ numbers) the Fed $10 billion in level 3 assets.  In exchange, the Fed give Goldman $10 billion in Treasuries.

So you and I are now on the hook for $10 billion of basically worthless assets, while Goldman now has $10 billion of nice safe Treasuries.  Nice trick ain’t it?  That’s the Federal Reserve’s new Term Securities Lending Facility (TSLF) in a nutshell.

That’s one of the ways that the Fed is propping up the banks and brokerage houses right now - short of an indirect buyout like they did with Bear Stearns anyway.  But sooner or later, the losses from these made up level 3 assets need to be accounted for. 

The only question remaining is who will pay for the losses - the banks who made the risky loans, the investment houses that took the risky loans and leveraged them, or the taxpayer.  My best level 3 guess is that we’ll see a combination of the above, but taxpayers will eat a significant chunk of the losses.

As a result, the Fed will have to print more money to pay the bills, so the dollar will continue to fall, and the stock market will drop in inflation adjusted terms - and quite probably in real terms as well.  Within the next 12 months, Dow 9,000 is much more likely than Dow 15,000 in my opinion.

gk

 

 

 

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Who’s going to answer the phone?

Thursday, March 27th, 2008

Reading this story on FoxNewsreminded me to post my thoughts on the growing cries for more government regulation of the mortgage and brokerage industries.  Basically, I think we need to stop the Fed interventions and roll back the regulations we have now.

That comes with a caveat though - no regulation and no intervention also implies no bailouts.  That means that Bear Stearns would have shut their doors last week. That means that Citi and JP Morgan wouldn’t be able to dip their hands into the Fed’s cookie jar to stay afloat.  That means that more home owners would be in foreclosure.  But I happen to think that those are all good things.

The trillions of dollars of CDO’s, CDS’s, and derivatives that are based on bad mortgages (and that are being propped up by the Fed’s intervention) need to reflect the losses they’re actually sustaining at some point.  You can’t carry a bad mortgage on the books as an asset at full face value forever, and the longer they delay writing off the losses, the longer it will take to sort through this mess.

Get it out there, get it over with, and move on. 

gk

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Taxes, Deficits, Inflation - Oh My!

Tuesday, March 25th, 2008

Read this.  Please.  It’s the annual report from the Social Security and Medicare trustees, and it has bad news for anyone who doesn’t already have one foot in the grave.

If you pay taxes, you will be paying more - a lot more - sometime soon.  The annual report contains all the numbers in black and white, and all that money has to come from somewhere. 

Medicare will pay out more than it brings in starting this year.  For 2008, Medicare is only projected to be $8 billion in the red, but that translates to a $16 billion increase in the deficit.  Why?  I’m glad you asked!

For years the government has been taking the “excess” revenues from Social Security and Medicare and “investing” them “in special non-marketable securities of the U.S. Government on which a market rate of interest is credited.” 

In other words, the government takes the money, writes an IOU (promising to pay it back with interest) to Social Security and Medicare, and spends it as part of general revenue.

That’s your trust fund.  There’s no money in a bank account drawing interest, there’s no gold in a vault, there’s no stock certificates.  There’s just a huge pile of government bonds (IOU’s) in the administration building.

Maybe that doesn’t make it clear so let me try explaining it this way….  You deposit $500 into an account (let’s call it a trust fund just for the hell of it) then - promising to pay yourself back - you transfer it to another account and spend it. 

You could even print out your IOU to yourself and stick it in a pretty box.  You do the same thing the next month.  And the next.  And the next….

After a year, how much money is in your trust fund?  Exactly nadda, nothing, zip, zilch, squat. 

You can’t take money out of one pocket, put it into the other pocket, and spend it.  Well, technically you can, but you haven’t saved anything.  And there’s no money left (you spent it on other things) to put back into the first pocket.

I hope that clears up the mystery of the Social Security and Medicare trust funds.  To put it bluntly, there’s no money in them.  Zip.

But the government stills owes that money to itself - or more accurately, they owe it to the designated recipients who have paid into the “trust fund.”  That’s you and me.

So where do they have to go to get the money they’ve promised to pay?  There are only three ways for the government to get money; taxes, borrowing, or printing more money - or a combination of these. 

Which one should they use?  Let’s take a quick look at the choices:

1) Taxes.  The government can raise taxes to cover their expenses.  Since we’ve run a deficit for years, I don’t think they’ll do this - which is actually the option which would cause the least pain for all. 

2) Borrow: This simply means they sell more bonds to foreigners.  We get to use their money and simply make payments on our national interest only loan.  Hey, it’s working out great for homeowners!  Right?

3)  Print more money:  Sounds, good - after all, the government makes a profit on each dollar they print.  It costs less than a cent to print a dollar bill, and it’s worth $1 - before inflation anyway.

See, there’s this little thing called supply and demand that refuses to go away.   When you make more of something without a corresponding rise in demand, each one of them is worth less.  Make too many, and each one is worthless.

That’s why we have inflation - we print dollars with nothing standing behind them.  The money supply (the supply part) rises faster than the economy grows - the demand side.   Rising prices for “real” stuff like oil, gold, wheat, and milk don’t cause inflation - they’re caused by inflation.

Read that paragraph again, it’s important.  Most people (even bankers and some of the fed board) don’t “get” this basic fact of life.

Anyway, the government will need to get the money to pay Social Security and Medicare benefits from somewhere, so my bet is that taxes, deficits, and inflation will all be a big part of the years to come. 

And if you think the deficit is big now, you ain’t seen nothing yet.  You can ignore those “pull the numbers out my ass” deficit projections from the government - because they actually assume that the money from the Social Security and Medicare trust funds are there!

I don’t know what “real” stuff will be worth in a week or a month, but gold, oil and silver will be a lot higher 10 years from now.  That’s where my money is.

gk

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What’s up with gold?

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

As regular readers know, I think that the price of “stuff” will go up long term as the dollar continues to fall - and the dollar will continue to fall long term, as our governemnt prints more pretty green pieces of paper.   So why have commodities (gold, silver, oil, wheat, etc.) dropped so much over the past 2 days?

The short answer is that I don’t know.  How’s that for sticking my neck out?  :-)

From what I’ve read and heard, it’s a combination of two distinct factors:

1) The market had priced in a 1% drop in interest rates, and the Fed only dropped 3/4%.  So traders think that the Fed is now hawkish on inflation.  (Yup, I think it’s weird too.)

2) The US is definitely going into a recession.  That means that demand for commodities will drop as consumers spend less. 

Of the two reason given for the drop, I’m inclined to think that #2 has more validity than #1.   Not that I think that’s a bad thing!  The US needs to spend less.  The average US consumer is in over their head with debt.  Collectively we need to stop spending more than we earn - and the same goes for the US Government.  If the dollar is to rise long term, we need to stop spending more than we make.

We need to pay off old debt and stop taking on new debt for awhile.  We need to accumulate capital so that our banks don’t have to drop their trousers and bend over for money from Sovereign Wealth Funds in order to stay in business.  A little actual capital would have prevented Bear Stearns from being bought out for $2/share.  Of course, that was us (the US) doing the “buying”, but now we’re all on the hook for $30 billion of Bear Stearns’ over-valued mortgages.

I don’t know what the next shoe to drop will be - or how the markets will react to it.  In spite of the fact that CIT Group (not to be confused with CitiGroup as I did at first!) today announced that they didn’t have any money on hand and needed to borrow $7.3 billion to stay afloat, the US stock markets all went up today.  And the commodities all dropped. 

Side note:  I like the headline on the CNN article I linked to - “CIT Borrows $7.3 Billion to Repay Debt“  I’m still trying to figure out how borrowing money to repay debt works….

Anyway, despite the news of yet another financial company having problems, the stock market shrugged it off and the DJIA soared 261 points.  XLF (an ETF that tracks all the financial stocks in the S&P 500) was up an astounding 6%!  But I think that we’ll see this sector plumet at some point as this mortgage inspired credit crisis unfolds.

Remember that very few of the ARM’s and Option ARM’s that were handed out at the peak of the housing bubble (2005 through 2007) have reset to higher rates yet.  A lot of those mortgage holders are making minimum payments on their interest only loans.  This is far from over, and I’m hanging on to my gold ETF.  I’m also buying silver when I find it cheap on eBay.

In other words, I’m using this drop in commodities as a buying opportunity.  I don’t know about oil, wheat, or corn (they depend too much on the economy) but I expect to see a big rebound in precious metals sometime soon.  And when that happens, I’m betting that the rebound in precious metals will coincide with a drop in the financials.

gk

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More on Bear Stearns

Sunday, March 16th, 2008

According to CNN, it appears that the deal bailing out Bear Stearns is costing JP Morgan a lot more than the $236.2 million that the $2 per share announcement would lead you to believe.   According to CNN:

The Fed also approved the financing arrangement announced Sunday in which JPMorgan Chase & Co. will acquire rival Bear Stearns Cos. The deal valued at $236.2 million, a stunning collapse for one of the world’s largest and most venerable investment banks. The Fed will provide special financing to JPMorgan Chase for the deal, JPMorgan Chase said. The central bank has agreed to fund up to $30 billion of Bear Stearns’ less liquid assets.

In other words, the Fed just printed another $30 billion in fresh money to loan to JP Morgan.  JP Morgan will use that money to buy up the Bear Stearns “assets” - and I use that term loosely - and give them to the Fed.  In other words, the US taxpayers are now on the hook for the defaults looming in Bear Stearns portfolio.

Hmmm….  How is JP Morgan going to make the payments on that $30 billion loan?  Think that has anything to do with the discount rate cut from 3.5% to 3.25%?  I wonder what interest rate that $30 billion loan carries…. 

Of course it doesn’t really matter, as when you always lose in the long run when you borrow money short term to pay back long term debt. 

Now the question is who’s next?  There’s a lot of chatter about Lehman, but there’s going to be bigger fish to fry soon.  JP Morgan may be safe for now, but I think we’re going to see some chinks in the venerable Goldman Sachs’ armor soon. 

I’m going to try to total up the amount of money the Fed has injected into the markets over the past 6 months or so;  regardless of the amount, it dwarfs the $160 billion stimulus package to taxpayers coming in a few months. 

If the hundreds of billions (it’s got to be over $500 billion) that the Fed has put into the economy hasn’t solved the crisis, do you really think another $160 billion is going to do it?

gk

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Dollar vs Euro

Friday, March 14th, 2008

Despite the news about Bear Stearns, this may be the news that is the most significant in the long run.  The EEC economy is now larger than the US economy. 

According to the story “Taking the gross domestic product of both economies in 2007, the combined GDP of the 15 countries which use the euro overtook that of the United States when the European currency surged to a record high of more than $1.56 per euro.”

It’s not that Europe is growing faster than the US, it’s that our government is inflating the dollar faster than the Europeans are inflating the Euro.  And with all the billions the Fed has created out of thin air in the past few months, I don’t see that trend reversing anytime soon.

gk

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The bad 2%

Monday, March 10th, 2008

I said most of this last week, but Paul Farrell probably says it better in this articleposted on MarketWatch tonight. 

I also talked about Warren Buffett a bit last week when he posted his annual letter to shareholders, but Mr. Farrell quotes both Buffett and PIMCO bond guru Bill Gross when he says “Buffett and Gross warn: $516 trillion bubble is a disaster waiting to happen“.

There are a lot of people saying that this is all overblown, that the Fed will handle it, that all we need is trust, etc.  But the more I learn about what’s going on, the more I’m convinced we’re in for a big crash.  Bigger than 2000, worse than Carter’s bungling in the late 70’s, worse than Johnson’s Great Society that wasted trillions of dollars.

Please read the article.  Earlier tonight I said that we’d be facing huge losses if just 10% of the mortgages defaulted.  According to this, I was way too optimistic.  Farrell says “There’s nothing intrinsically scary about derivatives, except when the bad 2% blow up.” Unfortunately, that “bad 2%” did blow up a few months afterwards, even as Bernanke and Paulson were assuring America that the subprime mess was “contained.”

Bottom line: Little things leverage a heck of a big wallop. It only takes a little spark from a “bad 2% deal” to ignite this $516 trillion weapon of mass destruction. Think of this entire unregulated derivatives market like an unsecured, unpredictable nuclear bomb in a Pakistan stockpile. It’s only a matter of time. “

AP is reporting that  “The Mortgage Bankers Association said Thursday the proportion of all mortgages that slipped into foreclosure set a record, 0.83 percent, from October through December. The previous high, 0.78 percent, came in the July-through-September period.”

We’re almost at 1%.  Watch what the foreclosure rate goes to over the next few months as all the ARM’s given out in 2005 start to reset.   Buffett’s view that “…derivatives are financial weapons of mass destruction, carrying dangers that, while now latent, are potentially lethal.”  will probably be proven right. 

gk

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Market Direction and Bond Insurers

Friday, February 1st, 2008

I have a “My Yahoo!” page setup with a couple of portfolio’s, one to view the funds I have available in my 401k.  The other has a few stocks that I own in various accounts, such as the kids college funds, a Roth IRA, and a small “play” account.  The second portfolio also has a few stocks that I’m interested in, plus the major indexes so I can tell at a glance what the market is doing whenever I’m interested.  So with one click on a favorites button, I can see what’s happening during the day.

With the Fed due to announce on Thursday, I was was curious to see how the markets would react, so I checked my custom Yahoo! page several times during the day.  It never fails, when the Fed does ANYTHING, the markets react big time - the only question is will they go up or down? 

All morning the market was down slightly, 30 to 40 points most of the day.  When the Fed announced at 2:15pm, there was an instant surge up, with the Dow up as much as 200 points very briefly.  Then the news hit about Financial Guaranty Insurance being downgraded from AAA to AA.  Stocks immediately took a nosedive, and ended the day right about where they’d been until the Fed announcement - down about 40 points.

In case anyone is wondering why a downgrade of a fairly insignificant bond insurer caused such a downturn, I’ll try to expl