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Judgment Week on Wall Street
by Mike Whitney
It's a Bloodbath. Thats the only way to describe it. On Friday the Dow Jones took a 280 point nosedive on fears that that losses in the subprime market will spill over into the broader economy and cut into GDP.
Ever since the two Bears Sterns hedge funds folded a couple weeks ago the stock market has been writhing like a drug-addict in a detox-cell. Yesterdays sell-off added to last weeks plunge that wiped out $2.1 trillion in value from global equity markets. New York investment guru, Jim Rogers said that the real market is "one of the biggest bubbles weve ever had in credit" and that the subprime rout "has a long way to go."
We are now beginning to feel the first tremors from the massive credit expansion which began 6 years ago at the Federal Reserve.
The trillions of dollars which were pumped into the global
economy via low interest rates and increased money supply have raised
the nominal value of equities, but at great cost. Now, stocks will fall
sharply and businesses will fail as volatility increases and liquidity
dries up. Stagnant wages and a declining dollar have thrust the country
into a deflationary cycle which has up to this point been concealed
by Greenspans "cheap money" policy. Those days are over. Economic
fundamentals are taking hold. The market swings will get deeper and
more violent as the Feds massive credit bubble continues to unwind.
Trillions of dollars of market value will vanish overnight. The stock
market will go into a long-term swoon.
Ludwig von Mises summed it up like this:
"There
is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by
credit expansion. The question is only whether the crisis should come
sooner as a result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit
expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency
system involved." (Thanks to the Daily Reckoning)
It doesnt
matter if the "underlying economy is strong" (as Henry Paulson likes
to say). Thats nonsense. Trillions of dollars of over-leveraged bets
are quickly unraveling which has the same effect as taking a wrecking
ball down Wall Street.
This week a third Bear Stearns fund
shuttered its doors and stopped investors from withdrawing their money.
Bears CFO, Sam Molinaro, described the chaos in the credit market as
the worst he'd seen in 22 years. At the same time, American Home
Mortgage Investment Corp the 10th-largest mortgage lender in the U.S.
said that "it can't pay its creditors, potentially becoming the first
big lender outside the subprime mortgage business to go bust".
(MarketWatch)
This is big news, mainly because AHM is the first
major lender OUTSIDE THE SUBPRIME MORTGAGE BUSINESS to go belly-up. The
contagion has now spread through the entire mortgage industry,
piggyback, Interest Only, ARMs, Prime, 2-28, Jumbo,óthe whole range of
loans is now vulnerable. That means we should expect far more than the
estimated 2 million foreclosures by year-end. This is bound to wreak
havoc in the secondary market where $1.7 trillion in toxic CDOs have
already become the scourge of Wall Street.
Some of the countrys
biggest banks are going to take a beating when AHM goes under. Bank of
America is on the hook for $1.3 billion, Bear Stearns $2 billion and
Barclays $1 billion. All told, AHMs mortgage underwriting amounted to
a whopping $9.7 billion. (Apparently, AHM could not even come up with a
measly $300 million to cover existing deals on mortgages! Whered all
the money go?) This shows the downstream effects of these massive
mortgage-lending meltdowns. Everybody gets hurt.
AHMs stock
plunged 90% IN ONE DAY. Jittery investors are now bailing out at the
first sign of a downturn. Wall Street has become a bundle of nerves and
the problems in housing have only just begun. Inventory is still
building, prices are falling and defaults are steadily rising; all the
necessary components for a full-blown catastrophe.
AHM warned
investors on Tuesday that it had stopped buying loans from a variety of
originators. 2 other mortgage lenders announced they were going out of
business just hours later. The lending climate has gotten worse by the
day. Up to now, the banks have had no trouble bundling mortgages off to
Wall Street through collateralised debt obligations (CDOs). Now
everything has changed. The banks are buried under MORE THAN $300
BILLION worth of loans that no one wants. The mortgage CDO is going the
way of the Dodo. Unfortunately, it has attached itself to many of the
investment banks on its way to extinction.
And its not just the
banks that are in for a drubbing. The insurance companies and pension
funds are loaded with trillions of dollars in "toxic waste" CDOs. That
shoe hasnt even dropped yet. By the end of 2008, the economy will be
on life-support and Wall Street will look like the Baghdad morgue.
American biggest financials will be splayed out on a marble slab
peering blankly into the ether.
Think Im kidding?
Already
the big investment banks are taking on water. Merrill Lynch has fallen
22% since the start of the year. Citigroup is down 16% and Lehman Bros
Holdings has dropped 22%. According to Bloomberg News: "The highest
level of defaults in 10 years on subprime mortgages and a $33 billion
pileup of unsold bonds and loans for funding acquisitions are driving
investors away from debt of the New York-based securities firms.
Concerns about credit quality may get worse because banks promised to
provide $300 billion in debt for leveraged buyouts announced this year
Bear Stearns Cos., Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., Merrill Lynch &
Co. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc., are as good as junk."
Thats right "junk".
Weve
never seen an economic tsunami like this before. The dollar is falling,
employment and manufacturing are weakening, new car sales are off for
the seventh straight month, consumer spending is down to a paltry 1.3%,
and oil is hitting new highs every day as it marches inexorably towards
a $100 per barrel.
So, wheres the silver lining?
Apart
from the 2 million-plus foreclosures, and the 80 or so mortgage lenders
who have filed for bankruptcy; a growing number of investment firms are
feeling the pinch from the turmoil in real estate. Bear Stearns; Basis
Capital Funds Management, Absolute Capital, IKB Deutsche Industrial
Bank AG, Commerzbank AG, Sowood Capital Management, C-Bass, UBS-AG,
Caliber Global Investment and Nomura Holdings Inc. are all either going
under or have taken a major hit from the troubles in subprime. The list
will only grow as the weeks go by. ( Check out these graphs to
understand whats really going on in the housing market .) The problems
in real estate are not limited to residential housing either. The
credit crunch is now affecting deals in commercial real estate, too.
Low-cost, low-documentation, "covenant lite" loans are a thing of the
past. Banks are finally stiffening their lending requirements even
though the horse has already left the barn. Commercial mortgage-backed
securities are now nearly as tainted as their evil-twin, residential
mortgage-backed securities (RMBS). Theres no market for these turkeys.
The banks are returning to traditional lending standards and simply dont want to take the risk anymore.
Bataan Death March?
Leveraged
Buy Outs (LBOs) have been a dependable source of market liquidity. But,
not any more. In the last quarter, there was $57 billion in LBOs. In
the first month of this quarter that amount dropped to less than $2
billion. Thats quite a tumble. The Wall Street Journals Dennis Berman
summed it up like this: "the Street is scrambling to finance some $220
billion of leveraged buy out deals" (but) the "mood has gone from
Nantucket holiday to Bataan Death March".
Berman nailed it. The
investment banks took great pleasure in their profligate lending;
raking in the lavish fees for joining mega-corporations together in
conjugal bliss. Then someone took the punch bowl. Now the banking
giants are scratching their heads wondering how they can unload
$220B of toxic-debt onto wary investors. It wont be easy.
"The
banks and brokers are in the bulls eye," said Kevin Murphy. "Theres
article after article not only on subprime, but also banks sitting on
leveraged buy out loans." (WSJ) Credit protection on bank debt is
soaring just as investor confidence is on the wane. In fact, the VIX
index (The "fear gauge") which measures market volatility has surged
60% in the last week alone. The increased volatility means that more
and more investors will probably ditch the stock market altogether and
head for the safety of US Treasuries.
But, that just presents a
different set of problems. After all, what good are US Treasuries if
the dollar continues to plummet? No one will put up with 5% or 6%
return on their investment if the dollar keeps sliding 10% to 15% per
year. It would be wiser to ones move money into foreign investments
where the currency is stable.
And, that is (presumably) why
Treasury Secretary Paulson is in China today to sweet talk our
Communist bankers into buying more USTs to prop up the flaccid
greenback. (Note: The Chinese are currently holding $103 billion in
toxic US-CDOs and are not at all happy about their decline in value.)
If the Chinese dont purchase more US debt, then panicky US investors
will start moving their dollars into gold, foreign currencies and
German state bonds as a hedge against inflation.
This will
further accelerate the flight of foreign capital from American markets
and trigger a massive blow-off in the stock and bond markets. In fact,
this process is already underway. (although it has been largely
concealed in the business media) In truth, the big money has been
fleeing the US for the last 3 years. What passes as "trading" on Wall
Street today is just the endless expansion of credit via newer and more
opaque debt-instruments. Its all a sham. America s hard assets are
being sold off to at an unprecedented pace.
Credit Crunch: Whose ox gets gored?
When
money gets tight; anyone who is "over-extended" is apt to get hurt.
That means that the maxed-out hedge fund industry will continue to get
clobbered. At current debt-to-investment ratios, the stock market only
has to fall about 10% for the average hedge fund to take a 50%
scalping. Thats more than enough to put most funds underwater for
good. The carnage in Hedgistan will likely persist into the foreseeable
future.
That might not bother the robber-baron fund-managers
whove already extracted their 2% "pound of flesh" on the front end.
But its a rotten deal for the working stiff who could lose his entire
retirement in a matter of hours. He didnt realize that his investment
portfolio was a crap-shoot. He probably thought there were laws to
protect him from Wall Street scam-artists and flim-flam men.
Itll
be even worse for the banks than the hedge funds. In fact, the banks
are more exposed than anytime in history. Consider this: the banks are
presently holding a half trillion dollars in debt (LBOs and CDOs) FOR
WHICH THERE IS NO MARKET. Most of this debt will be dramatically
downgraded since the CDOs have no true "mark to market" value. Its
clear now that the rating agencies were in bed with the investment
banks. In fact, Joshua Rosner admitted as much in a recent New York
Times editorial:
"The original models used to rate
collateralized debt obligations were created in close cooperation with
the investment banks that designed the securities"Ö.(The agencies)
"actively advise issuers of these securities on how to achieve their
desired ratings" (Joshua Rosner "Stopping the Subprime Crisis" NY Times)
Pretty cozy deal, eh? Just tell the agency the rating you want and they tell you how to get it. Now we know why $1.7 trillion in CDOs are headed for the landfill.
The
downgrading of CDOs has just begun and Wall Street is already in a
frenzy over what the effects will be. Once the ratings fall, the banks
will be required to increase their reserves to cover the additional
risk. For example, "As a recent issue of Grants explains, global
commercial banks are only required to set aside 56 cents ($0.56) for
every $100 worth of triple-A rated securities they hold. Thats roughly
178 to 1 ratio. Drop that down to double-B minus, and the requirement
skyrockets to $52 per $100 worth of securities held a margin increase
of more than 9,000%".
"56 cents ($0.56) for every $100 worth of triple-A rated securities"?!? Are you kidding me?
As Mugambo Guru says, "That is 1/18th of the 10% stock margin equity required in 1929"!! (Mugambo Guru; kitco.com)
The
high-risk game the banks have been playing of "securitizing" the
loans of applicants with shaky credit is falling apart fast. Theres
no market for chopped up loans from over-extended homeowners with bad
credit. The banks dont have the reserves to cover the loans they have
on the books and the CDOs have no fixed market value. End of story. The
music has stopped and the banks cant find a chair.
The public
doesnt know anything about this looming disaster yet. How will people
react when they drive up to their local bank and see plywood sheeting
covering the windows?
This will happen. There will be bank failures.
The
derivatives market is another area of concern. The notional value of
these relatively untested instruments has risen to $286 trillion in
2006 up from a meager $63 trillion in 2000. No one has any idea of
how these new "swaps and options" will hold up in a slumping market or
under the stress of increased volatility. Could they bring down the
whole market?
That depends on whether theyre backed-up by
sufficient collateral to meet their obligations. But that seems
unlikely. Weve seen over and over again that nothing in this new
deregulated market is "as it seems". Its all stardust mixed with snake
oil. What the Wall Street hucksters call the "new financial
architecture of investment" is really nothing more than one
overleveraged debt-bomb stacked atop another. Ironically, many of these
same swindles were used in the run-up to the Great Depression. Now
theyve resurfaced to do even more damage. When the crooks and con-men
write the laws (deregulation) and run the system; the results are
usually the same. The little guy always gets screwed. That much is
certain.
At present, the stock market is running on fumes.
Another 4 to 6 months of wild gyrations and itll be over. The NASDAQ
plunged 75% after the dot.com bust.
How low will it go this time?
Keep
an eye on the yen. The ongoing troubles in subprime and hedge funds are
pushing the yen upwards which will unwind trillions of dollars of low
interest, short term loans which are fueling the rise in stock prices.
If the yen strengthens, traders will be forced to sell their positions
and the market will tank. Its just that simple. The Dow Jones will be
a Dead Duck.
So far, Japan s monetary manipulations have been a
real boon for Wall Street enriching the investment bankers, the
big-time traders and the hedge fund managers.
Theyre the ones
who can take advantage of the interest rate spread and then maximize
their leverage in the stock market. It works like a charm in an
up-market, but things can unravel quickly when the market retreats or
starts to zigzag erratically.
The recent rumblings suggest that
the volatility will continue which will push the yen upwards and cut
off the flow of cheap credit to the stock market. When that happens,
the end is nigh.
The American People: "Were not a dumb as you think."
Its
always refreshing to find out that the majority of Americans seem to
have a grasp of what is really going on behind the fake headlines. For
example, The Wall Street Journal/NBC conducted a poll this week which
shows that two-thirds of Americans believe that "the economy is either
in a recession now or will be in the next year." That matches up pretty
well with the 71% of Americans who now feel the Iraq War "was a
mistake". Americans are clearly downbeat in their outlook on the
economy and havent been taken in by the daily infusions of happy talk
about "low inflation" and "sustained growth" from toothy TV pundits. In
fact, the mood of the country regarding the economy is downright
gloomy. "Only 19% of Americans say things in the nation are headed in
the right direction, while 67% say the country is off on the wrong
track". Iraq , of course, is the number one reason for the pessimism,
but the dissatisfaction runs much deeper than just that.
"Only
16% expressed substantial confidence in the financial industry"ó"18% in
the energy or pharmaceutical industries"ó"17% in large corporations and
11% in health-insurance companies". Only 18% of the people have
confidence in the corporate media and only 16% in the federal
government.
These are encouraging numbers. They show that the
vast majority of people have lost confidence in the system and its
institutions. They also illustrate the limits of propaganda. People are
not as easily indoctrinated as many believe. Eventually the "bewildered
herd" catches on and sees through the lies and deception.
The
American people know intuitively that something is fundamentally wrong
with the economy. They just dont know the details or the extent of the
damage. Decades of neoliberal policies have inflated the currency,
broadened the wealth gap, and destroyed manufacturing. Workers can no
longer buy the things they produce because wages have stagnated through
a stealth campaign of inflation which originated at the Federal
Reserve. When wages shrink, prices eventually fall from overcapacity
and the economy slips into a deflationary cycle. This downward spiral
ultimately ends in depression. So far, that's been avoided because of
the Feds massive expansion of cheap credit. But that wont last.
Economic
policy is not "accidental". The Feds policies were designed to create
a crisis, and that crisis was intended to coincide with the activation
of a nation-wide police-state. It is foolish to think that Greenspan or
his fellows did not grasp the implications of the system they put in
place. These are very smart men and very shrewd economists. They knew
exactly what they were doing. They all understand the effects of low
interest rates and expanded money supply. And, theyre also all
familiar with Ludwig von Mises, who said:
"There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion."
A crash is unavoidable because the policies were designed to create a crash. Its that simple.
The
Federal Reserve is a central player in a carefully considered plan to
shift the nations wealth from one class to another. And they have
succeeded. Nearly 4 million American jobs have been sent overseas, the
country has increased the national debt by $3 trillion dollars, and
foreign investors own $4.5 trillion in US dollar-backed assets.
While
the Fed has been carrying out its economic strategy; the Bush
administration has deployed the military around the world to conduct a
global resource war. These are two wheels on the same axel.
The
goal is to maintain control of the global economic system by seizing
the remaining energy resources in Eurasia and the Middle East and by
integrating potential rivals into the American-led economic model under
the direction of the Central Bank.
All of the leading
candidates Democrat and Republican belong to secretive
organizations which ascribe to the same basic principles of global rule
(new world order) and permanent US hegemony. Theres no quantifiable
difference between any of them.
The impending economic crisis is
part of a much broader scheme to remake the political system from the
ground-up so it better meets the needs of ruling elite. After the
crash, public assets will be sold at firesale prices to the highest
bidder. Public lands will be auctioned off. Basic services will be
privatized. Democracy will be shelved.
The unsupervised
expansion of credit through interest rate manipulation is the
fast-track to tyranny. Thomas Jefferson fully understood this. He said:
"If
the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of
our currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and the
corporations that will grow up will deprive the people of all property
until their children wake up homeless on the continent their fathers
conquered."
We are now in the first phase of Greenspans
Depression. The stock market is headed for the doldrums and the economy
will quickly follow. Many more mortgage lenders, hedge funds and
investment banks will be carried out feet first.
As the disaster unfolds, we should try to focus on where the troubles began and keep in mind Jefferson s injunction:
"The issuing of power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people to whom it properly belongs."
Rep. Ron Paul is the only presidential candidate who supports abolishing the Federal Reserve.
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