Posts Tagged ‘financial’

The political left heads for the cliff

Saturday, December 12th, 2009

UPDATE: The Detroit News has a piece today on the Obama agenda and the possibility that a Depression could result. They make points similar to those I have been worried about.

The concerns of the majority of American citizens with out-of-control spending do not impress the left. They advise Obama and Congress to ignore those pesky voters.

MAJORITY STILL MISGUIDED ON ECONOMIC PRIORITIES…. The polling has been remarkably consistent on this all year. And it irks me every time.

Americans are more concerned with lowering the massive budget deficit than boosting the ailing economy, according to a new national poll.

Fifty-six percent of people questioned in a CNBC survey released Friday morning say President Barack Obama and Congress should worry more about keeping the budget deficit down even if that means delaying the economic recovery. That’s 23 points higher than the 33 percent who feel boosting the economy should be the top priority, even if that means larger deficits now and in the future.

This continues to be hopelessly backwards. Given the precarious state of the economy and widespread concerns about unemployment, common sense suggests concerns over the deficit should wane. But all of the recent polling suggests a majority of Americans really do care more about deficit reduction than growing the economy and creating jobs.

The left is still convinced of the efficacy of the command economy in spite of the collapse of the Soviet Union and the evolution of Communist China into a semi-capitalist economy.

They are convinced, in spite of all evidence to the contrary, that Roosevelt saved the country from the Depression by spending. The concept that the New Deal was the cause of the Depression is totally alien.

This is not just a repudiation of Amity Schlaes book, The Forgotten Man, but also new scholarship from serious academics.

Two UCLA economists say they have figured out why the Great Depression dragged on for almost 15 years, and they blame a suspect previously thought to be beyond reproach: President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

After scrutinizing Roosevelt’s record for four years, Harold L. Cole and Lee E. Ohanian conclude in a new study that New Deal policies signed into law 71 years ago thwarted economic recovery for seven long years.

“Why the Great Depression lasted so long has always been a great mystery, and because we never really knew the reason, we have always worried whether we would have another 10- to 15-year economic slump,” said Ohanian, vice chair of UCLA’s Department of Economics. “We found that a relapse isn’t likely unless lawmakers gum up a recovery with ill-conceived stimulus policies.”

In an article in the August issue of the Journal of Political Economy, Ohanian and Cole blame specific anti-competition and pro-labor measures that Roosevelt promoted and signed into law June 16, 1933.

“President Roosevelt believed that excessive competition was responsible for the Depression by reducing prices and wages, and by extension reducing employment and demand for goods and services,” said Cole, also a UCLA professor of economics. “So he came up with a recovery package that would be unimaginable today, allowing businesses in every industry to collude without the threat of antitrust prosecution and workers to demand salaries about 25 percent above where they ought to have been, given market forces. The economy was poised for a beautiful recovery, but that recovery was stalled by these misguided policies.”

“Today” was 2004 when the Congress was still in the hands of Republicans. There are many things that Congress, and the Bush Administration, did wrong but no one would have predicted that the exact same policies these scholars condemned would again be enacted only five years later.

Another example that is never discussed is the 1920 recession. The fact that this recession was as severe as the 1929 crash is almost never discussed.

The end of World War I caused the federal budget to decline from $18.5 billion in 1919 to $6.4 billion in 1920. Although this decline in budgetary stimulus required an increase in investment and spending by the private sector, Congress raised taxes on individuals and corporations, while the Federal Reserve Bank restricted credit by raising its discount rate for member banks from 4.75 percent to 7 percent by 1920. Unemployment rose from 4.0 percent in 1919 to 11.9 percent in 1921, but subsided to 7.6 percent in 1922 and 3.2 percent in 1923. The recession contributed to the failure or merger of 2,024 banks (6.5 percent of the total) by 1925.The economy’s industrial and commercial sectors revived after 1921, but agriculture did not. Farm prices dropped sharply as world output rose after the war, and US farmers responded by overproduction, which created surpluses that drove commodity prices progressively downward through the 1920s. Farm income dropped from 15 percent of national output in 1920 to 9 percent in 1928; 454,866 owner-managed farms disappeared in the 1920s, and the farm population decreased by 3,000,000. The agricultural depression led to the closure of 5,400 rural banks during the decade.

The agricultural depression is usually emphasized in any discussion of the 1920s. My own family were farmers but left the farm during that decade. The fact is that national prosperity was also contributing as agricultural productivity soared with mechanization of farming and new technology with fertilizers and the systems of crop rotation.

What is almost never discussed is why the 1920 recession ended so quickly. Thousands of banks failed yet, by 1923 employment was back to normal even though a million men had been demobilized as the war ended in 1918. What happened ?

There is a good deal of speculation in the economic literature but the conclusions vary. What is clear, though, is that President Harding and VP Coolidge did NOT do what Hoover and Roosevelt did after the 1929 crash.

The 1920-21 deflation contains another striking feature. Not only was it sharp, it was large relative to the accompanying decline in real product. The ratio of the percentage decline in the GNP deflator for 1920-21 to the percentage decline in real GNP is 2.6 using the Department of Commerce figures, 3.7 using the Balke and Gordon data, and 6.3 using the Romer data. By contrast, during 1929-30, the first year of the Great Depression, the GNP deflator declined by 2.7 percent and real GNP by 9.4 percent, for a ratio of 0.3. The ratios of the percentage decline in GNP prices to the percentage decline in real GNP for 1930-31, 1931-32, 1932-33, and 1937-38, the other Great Depression years in which real GNP declined, were 1.0, 0.9, 1.2, and 0.3, respectively, all well below the 1920-21 figures.

The 1920 recession was more severe than the 1929 crash in its effect on prices and wages.

The contraction then became severe. By the year’s end, industrial production had fallen 25.6 percent below its January 1920 peak and bottomed out at 32.6 percent below its January 1920 level in July 1921, the general business trough. Wholesale prices were 42.9 percent below their May 1920 peak by July 1921. Industrial production had fallen by 32.6 percent in eighteen months, wholesale prices by 42.9 percent in fourteen months. The deflation eliminated more than 70 percent of the rise in wholesale prices associated with World War I.

In one year, 70% of the inflation of WWI was eliminated !

Friedman and Schwartz [1963, 205-39] attribute the severe phase of the 1920-21 recession and its attending deflation to monetary restraint. Monetary policy was expansive throughout World War I, including the period of U.S. neutrality. Policy remained expansive during most of 1919, even though by summer an inflationary boom was underway. The Federal Reserve was pegging interest rates at a low level using its loan discount rate in order to accommodate the Treasury’s funding of the war debt. The Fed also had an interest in protecting commercial bank portfolios, which contained substantial quantities of war bonds and loans secured by war bonds.

Monetary policy began to shift in December 1919, then changed markedly in January 1920.

What happened in 1920 ? There was an election.

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s discount rate, which had been pegged at 4 percent since April 1919, was raised to 4.75 percent in December 1919, to 6 percent in January 1920, and to 7 percent in June 1920. Similar discount rate increases were made at the other Federal Reserve Banks.

This was still Wilson’s Progressive administration but Wilson was disabled by a stroke. Colonel House and Mrs Wilson were basically running the administration. The 1918 election returned control of the Senate to Republicans, who picked up seven seats. The war ended with the Armistice a week later. The Republican Senate is often blamed for the failure to ratify the League of Nations although Wilson’s failure to compromise on some issues is also to blame. Its influence on monetary policy is usually ignored.

There is much speculation about why the recession was so severe but little about why it ended so quickly.

Austrian School economists and historians argue that the 1921 recession was a necessary market correction, required to engineer the massive realignments required of private business and industry following the end of the War. Historian Thomas Woods argues that President Harding’s laissez-faire economic policies during the 1920/21 recession, combined with a coordinated aggressive policy of rapid government downsizing, had a direct influence (mostly through intentional non-influence) on the rapid and widespread private-sector recovery.[11] Woods argued that, as there existed massive distortions in private markets due to government economic influence related to World War I, an equally massive “correction” to the distortions needed to occur as quickly as possible to realign investment and consumption with the new peace-time economic environment.

That is the last paragraph of the article. It may be the most important. Harding cut government spending and let the private economy alone to recover. It did so completely in one year. Ten years later, Hoover, followed by Roosevelt, enacted progressive prescriptions and the Great Depression followed. Now, we seem to be on the same path.

Cui Bono ?

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

There is an ancient Roman proverb, Cui Bono ? This means, “Who benefits ? The meaning also implies that there may be subterfuge in the situation.

L. Cassius ille quem populus Romanus verissimum et sapientissimum iudicem putabat identidem in causis quaerere solebat ‘cui bono’ fuisset.
The famous Lucius Cassius, whom the Roman people used to regard as a very honest and wise judge, was in the habit of asking, time and again, ‘To whose benefit?’

Who is George Soros ?

To read his foundation web page, he is a benefactor of mankind. His superficial biography is one of a young man who sought freedom in the west.

Soros was born in Budapest, Hungary, in 1930. His father was taken prisoner during World War I and eventually fled from captivity in Russia to reunite with his family in Budapest. Soros was thirteen years old when Hitler’s Wehrmacht seized Hungary and began deporting the country’s Jews to extermination camps. In 1946, as the Soviet Union was taking control of the country, Soros attended a conference in the West and defected. He emigrated in 1947 to England, supported himself by working as a railroad porter and a restaurant waiter, graduated in 1952 from the London School of Economics, and obtained an entry-level position with an investment bank.

How did he make his fortune ? The foundation web site doesn’t say. We know, though.

He attacked the currency of the country which gave him refuge.

George Soros gained international notoriety when, in September of 1992, he risked $10 billion on a single currency speculation when he shorted the British pound. He turned out to be right, and in a single day the trade generated a profit of $1 billion – ultimately, it was reported that his profit on the transaction almost reached $2 billion. As a result, he is famously known as the “the man who broke the Bank of England.

Soros is also famous for running the Quantum Fund, which generated an average annual return of more than 30% while he was at the helm. Along with the famous pound trade, Soros was also cited by some as the “trigger” behind the Asian financial crisis in 1997, as he had a large bet against the Thai baht.

He seems to do quite well by attacking national financial stability. Why should this concern us ?

His other biographical information tells us he is a “philanthropist.” What does that mean ?

The effort or inclination to increase the well-being of humankind, as by charitable aid or donations.

Where does attacking the national currencies of peaceful countries fall under that definition ? Philos is the Greek root for love and Anthropos is another root for man. Maybe we should call him a Philosoros.

Why does this matter ? Well, he is a major funder of the Democratic party and, especially, the left wing of the Democratic party. Some people are worried.

Why would a plutocrat with a history of currency manipulation be supporting left wing activists ?

One aspect of the Democrats’ policy positions is really puzzling. Why are they so adamantly opposed to domestic oil and gas production ? I know they are devoted to the global warming theory but they have not made any attempt to seek alternatives, like nuclear power. What is George Soros’ position on carbon dioxide and global warming ?

Well, he is on record supporting the Democrats’ position, even offering to donate a billion dollars and “I will also insist that the investments make a real contribution to solving the problem of climate change.” So there he is, on record.

Why then, is he the largest investor in Brazil’s massive offshore oil program ?

Petrobras, which until recently was little known outside oil circles, has launched a five-year, $174 billion project to provide platforms, rigs, support vessels and drilling systems to develop tens of billions of barrels of oil. Energy officials here project that Brazil — still an oil importer five years ago — will in the next decade have one of the world’s biggest oil reserves.

“It’s going to change the role of Brazil in the geopolitics of oil,” Petrobras’s president, José Sergio Gabrielli, said in an interview at the company’s headquarters in Rio de Janeiro. “We are going to become a much bigger producer.”

So, Brazil, unlike the US, is planning a massive drilling operation offshore. In fact, even if we belatedly decided to “drill, baby, drill” in our offshore oil fields, we could not do so as Brazil has long term leases on all the deep sea drill rigs for the next 10 years.

Who is the largest investor in this massive project ?

With a market capitalization of more than $220 billion, Petrobras is one of the world’s 10 biggest companies. Over the past two years, it has been the most frequently traded foreign company on the New York Stock Exchange, trade data show. Among investors bullish on Petrobras is George Soros, who last year made the oil company the largest single holding in his investment fund, according to Bloomberg.

Is this another of George’s ventures where he sells his country short, makes yet another fortune and retires to some small country that is safe and secure ? Are the Democrats that stupid ?

A pretty good statement of what I think

Monday, December 7th, 2009

My personal philosophy is pretty simple and I am not one to spend time ruminating about it. Today, I discovered a piece that sounds like something I would have written if I were to try to put down my philosophy. It also states pretty much my own opinion about politics in this country rght now. I just wish I were as optimistic as the writer.

Way back in the depths of time, Greek philosophers ended up with two basic and incompatible ways of looking at the universe. One way was materialism, which says that there is a material universe which behaves in a consistent way, and if you study it you can learn the way it works.

That’s the world view of engineers and scientists — and businessmen, for that matter. It’s the world view of people who understand and use mathematics, and statistics. It is a place where cause leads to effect. It’s the place that game theory studies. It isn’t necessarily inherently atheistic; a lot of religious people live in the materialist world.

But there are people who don’t. A different epistemological view is teleology, which says that the universe is an ideal place. More or less, it
exists so that we humans can live in it. And human thought is a fundamental force in the universe. Teleology says that if a mental model is esthetically pleasing then it must be true. Teleology implies that if you truly believe in something, it’ll happen.

This is pretty much it for me.

Another piece that I have previously referred to is appropriate to quote again here. This was a comparison of Gorbachev and Obama.

they do have one major thing in common, and that is the belief that, regardless of what the ruler does, the polity he rules must necessarily continue. This is perhaps the most essential, if seldom acknowledged, insight of the post-modern “liberal” mind: that if you take the pillars away, the roof will continue to hover in the air.

Gorbachev seemed to assume, right up to the fall of the Berlin Wall and then beyond it, that his Communist Party would recover from any temporary setbacks, and that the long-term effects of his glasnost and perestroika could only be to make it bigger and stronger.

There is a corollary of this largely unspoken assumption: that no matter what you do to one part of a machine, the rest of the machine will continue to function normally.

A variant of this is the frequently expressed denial of the law of unintended consequences: the belief that, if the effect you intend is good, the actual effect must be similarly happy.

Very small children, the mad, and certain extinct primitive tribes, have shared in this belief system, but only the fully college-educated liberal has the vocabulary to make it sound plausible.

I think these two excerpts say much the same thing. Consequences derive from wishes. If we want something, it will happen. I even remember a movie with that theme. I will add a final quote that is also pertinent.

“Throughout history, poverty is the normal condition of man. Advances which permit this norm to be exceeded—here and there, now and then—are the work of an extremely small minority, frequently despised, often condemned, and almost always opposed by all right-thinking people. Whenever this tiny minority is kept from creating, or (as sometimes happens) is driven out of a society, the people then slip back into abject poverty.
This is known as ‘bad luck’.”

– Robert A. Heinlein

I think that says it.

Just for Tim

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

I have added this post just for Tim who thinks he knows how the financial meltdown started.

crisisgreed

How is that, Tim ? Does that make you fell better ?

Revisiting the history of the collapse

Sunday, October 25th, 2009

Last year, I posted a lengthy piece on the origins of the mortgage industry collapse and the role Congress played. I have since closed the post to comments to reduce spam. A reader found it and sent me an e-mail about a Frontline piece that is apparently full of lies. UPDATE: I should change this to say that it is not lying that is the problem but the inability of the writers to see the merits of a free market and a determination that only regulation, and by extension a command economy, can safely run the financial markets. Derivatives were not the problem. The problem was the inability to estimate risk because the GSEs, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, were pushing the envelope with government guarantees to their risky loans. Every step which should have warned of the risk was failing because the parties saw huge profits and, at the end of the day, a guarantee by the Treasury that nobody could lose. Moral hazard was rampant.

Typically, it blames the Bush people (actually Greenspan and shows Bush giving him a medal) even though the problems were begun under Clinton and Congress was the chief villain. Here is an example of Congress on the job. Note the tactic of hiding incriminating videos by claiming copyright violation. At least one is still visible.

Rush Limbaugh discussed it on his show and there is a link to the PBS show.

Ladies and gentlemen, they had to do what they were told. The federal government created policies that made them make these loans to people who couldn’t pay them. That’s what the subprime mortgage crisis is all about. The architects of that are Bill Clinton, Barney Frank, Chris Dodd, and a whole bunch of other minor bit players. ACORN’s involved, ACORN’s running around hassling banks if they don’t make loans to people. So now, after following mandated policy, federal law, the Community Redevelopment Act under Carter, it was put on steroids in the late nineties with Clinton and the bunch and that thing forced the banks to make these loans. And so these banks, after following orders, are now being blamed for the problem.

My point in my post was that both parties contributed and those who tried to warn or to rein in the out-of-control Fannie and Freddie were punished or warned of punishment. Ms Born was warning but she did not see that the real risk was government intervention in markets (Fannie/Freddie) not deregulation.

Or consider the experience of Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, one of the GOP’s bright young lights who decided in the 1990s that Fan and Fred needed more supervision. As he held town hall meetings in his district, he soon noticed a man in a well-tailored suit hanging out amid the John Deere caps and street clothes. Mr. Ryan was being stalked by a Fannie lobbyist monitoring his every word.

On another occasion, he was invited to a meeting with the Democratic mayor of Racine, which is in his district, though he wasn’t sure why. When he arrived, Mr. Ryan discovered that both he and the mayor had been invited separately — not by each other, but by a Fannie lobbyist who proceeded to tell them about the great things Fannie did for home ownership in Racine.

When none of that deterred Mr. Ryan, Fannie played rougher. It called every mortgage holder in his district, claiming (falsely) that Mr. Ryan wanted to raise the cost of their mortgage and asking if Fannie could tell the congressman to stop on their behalf. He received some 6,000 telegrams. When Mr. Ryan finally left Financial Services for a seat on Ways and Means, which doesn’t oversee Fannie, he received a personal note from Mr. Raines congratulating him. “He meant good riddance,” says Mr. Ryan.

Yes, this was a bipartisan scandal and PBS (government funded, of course) tries to avoid the truth and blame Bush and Greenspan. Why not ? Everyone else that is government funded does. Greenspan missed the impending crisis but the PBS program missed it too.

The pay czar

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

UPDATE: I told you so.

‘‘I can see a situation, subject to funding constraints, of senior bankers moving en masse as a team or possibly setting up a boutique themselves,’’ Nick Hellen, a partner at Executive Access, an executive search firm based in Hong Kong, told Reuters.

The financial crisis wiped out many hedge funds around the world, and the industry is expected to shrink this year to 2005 levels, but those making money have plenty of pulling power.

Most hedge funds function on a 2-and-20 model, meaning employees earn 2 percent of assets they manage, regardless of the firm’s success or failure. They also get to keep 20 percent of profits if the fund is making money and is above a minimum level of investment returns known as the high-water mark.

For example, Artradis’s two main funds have combined assets under management of about $3.5 billion and returned 27 percent and 35 percent, respectively, last year, according to the company. That means a potential return of more than $200 million for the two funds in a firm of fewer than a dozen fund managers.

So while President Obama wants to set up a $500,000 cap on top executive pay at companies receiving taxpayer money, executives working for successful hedge funds can still earn several million dollars a year.

Obama has announced that the income of executives from bailed-out companies will be cut as much as 90%.

Responding to the furor over executive pay at companies bailed out with taxpayer money, the Obama administration will order the firms that received the most aid to slash compensation to their highest-paid employees, an official involved in the decision said on Wednesday.

The plan, for the 25 top earners at seven companies that received exceptional help, will on average cut total compensation this year by about 50 percent. The companies are Citigroup, Bank of America, American International Group, General Motors, Chrysler and the financing arms of the two automakers.

Some executives, like the top traders at A.I.G., will face tight limits on their pay. In addition, the top-paid employees at all the affected companies will face new limits on their perks.

The plan will also change the form of the pay to align the personal interests of the executives with the longer-term financial health of the companies. For instance, the cash portion of the executives’ salaries will be slashed on average by 90 percent, and the rest will be replaced by stock that cannot be sold for years.

I expect that this action will lead to an exodus of talented executives from these companies.

it would have no direct impact on firms that did not receive government bailouts or that have already repaid loans they received from Washington. Therefore, it is unclear how much effect, if any, the plan will have on the broader issues relating to executive compensation, income inequality and the populist animosity toward Wall Street and corporate America.

One thing it may do is to teach businessmen that getting in bed with government leaves a hangover. The threat of such an action goes back to last year and led to an early exit for many young traders who left for greener pastures. This part is hilarious:

the White House, which has come under attack from conservatives for giving the government what they consider too large and intrusive a role in the economy, has also made clear that it has no intention of seeking to impose any broad-based caps on executive pay.

Oh, OK. So they aren’t going to micromanage these firms, eh ?

The White House has proposed, for instance, giving shareholders a nonbinding vote on the pay of top executives.

It has also proposed that compensation committees of boards, as well as compensation consultants, be more independent.

And it will propose that the companies under review divide the function of chairman and chief executive between two executives. Many of these proposals have been introduced in legislation by Senator Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York.

Well, that certainly clears it up. Well, what could go wrong ? How about an exodus of the best talent?

Boutique investment firms and top hedge funds are slowly lapping up the cream of global banking talent as the financial crisis forces banks to cut staff and limit the pay of their top risk-takers, Reuters says.

From Singapore to New York, leading traders and sales chiefs are making the switch as government pressure piles on Wall Street and European banks to cut multimillion-dollar bonuses.

‘‘The firms that still have a lot of assets under management, the hedge funds that have not been hit by redemptions, they are still picking up some of the money-makers from the big banks,’’ Pernille Storm at Hudson, an executive search firm in Singapore, told Reuters.

Singapore’s largest hedge fund, Artradis, said this month that it had hired a high-profile risk trader from Royal Bank of Scotland Group and a Credit Suisse executive based in New York, while Fox-Pitt, Kelton, an investment advisory firm, recently picked up five people from banks including Merrill Lynch and HSBC to focus on Asia.

In London, UBS lost two senior European investment bankers last month to the boutique Close Brothers, another to Lazard and at least three energy bankers to Lexicon Partners.

In the United States, where the credit crisis led to the failure of Lehman Brothers, the fire sale of Bear Stearns and the takeover of Merrill Lynch, the trend is even more visible.

Earlier this month, Moelis, an investment banking boutique, said it had hired Chris Ryan, former global head of credit fixed-income at UBS, as a managing director in New York, its second high-profile hire in a month.

UBS, the world’s biggest wealth manager, has cut thousands of jobs globally but ‘‘continues to hire selectively,’’ a spokesman in Hong Kong told Reuters.

Boutiques have also been expanding their clout globally, highlighted this week in Asia when Evercore Partners, an American mergers-and-acquisitions boutique, announced a strategic partnership with Citic Securities of China.

‘‘It’s possible for boutiques to actually hire top talent, which was almost impossible for them while the market was going ballistic from 2005 to the middle of last year,’’ Thomas Hester, head of equity at Fox-Pitt, Kelton, told Reuters.

Yes, Obama sure knows how to be a capitalist, doesn’t he ? Well, maybe that isn’t his talent. I’ll grant you that top GM executives may have a problem finding new jobs but that is another problem altogether. That was years in the making and the unions killed those companies. The financial services industry will just kill off New York City and Schumer will never understand what he helped do.

The future of the dollar

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

UPDATE #2: The Chinese have noticed what the Fed is doing and are not happy about it. That is very bad news for the dollar.

UPDATE: There is also weirdness going on in the real estate market. Look at this piece on foreclosures and what is happening. Now the stock market began a swoon. Maybe this is the end of the bear market rally.

Several months ago I posted a chart of federal money creation. Where has this money been going ? This may explain it. Some went into the housing bubble, but much is going out of the country. Look at this:

BOPI_Max_630_378

Since 1995, capital has flowed into the US from other countries. Then came 2008.

Comparing this data with TIC releases, indicates that from January to May the total capital outflows from the U.S. amount to ($314) billion in assets, consisting of central bank purchases of $50 billion, however, matched with private investor dispositions of $364 billion.

Ignoring the implications of what this decline would mean for an economy that relies exclusively on credit growth in order to perpetuate the monetary Ponzi scheme that the US economy has been for years, the simple conclusion here is that a combination of declining consumer credit and foreign interest for US debt purchases has very negative implications for the credit bubble the Federal Reserve is trying to reflate. As for the consequences for the U.S. Dollar as a result of this activity, these have recently become all too clear.

The Treasury seems to be swapping bonds that are being repatriated and replacing them with Treasuries. This may make the foreign bond holders whole but what happens to us ?


It would appear that foreign central banks have been swapping agency bonds for Treasury bonds, but that’s not how the markets work. First, they would have to sell those bonds, before they could use the proceeds to buy government debt. So to whom did they sell those Agency bonds in order to afford the Treasury bonds?

They sold them to the Treasury. If you do that on your tax return, it is called a “sham transaction.”


These are the three critical points to remember as you read further:
1. The US government has record amounts of Treasuries to sell.
2. Foreign central banks, which have a big pile of agency bonds in their custody account, would like to help but want to keep things somewhat under the radar to avoid scaring the debt markets.
3. The Federal Reserve does not want to be seen directly buying US government debt at auctions (and in fact is not permitted to, but many rules have been ‘bent’ worse during this crisis), because that could upset the whole illusion that there is unlimited demand for US government paper, but it also desperately wants to avoid a failed auction.
For various reasons, the Federal Reserve cannot just up and start buying all the Treasury paper that becomes available in record amounts, week after week, month after month.

Instead, it uses this three-step shell game to hide what it is doing under a layer of complexity:

Shell #1: Foreign central banks sell agency debt out of the custody account.

Shell #2: The Federal Reserve buys those agency bonds with money created out of thin air.

Shell #3: Foreign central banks use that very same money to buy Treasuries at the next government auction.

What is the purpose of this shell game ?


The Federal Reserve has effectively been monetizing far more US government debt than has openly been revealed, by cleverly enabling foreign central banks to swap their agency debt for Treasury debt. This is not a sign of strength and reveals a pattern of trading temporary relief for future difficulties.

This is very nearly the same path that Zimbabwe took, resulting in the complete abandonment of the Zimbabwe dollar as a unit of currency. The difference is in the complexity of the game being played, not the substance of the actions themselves.

The shell game that the Fed is currently playing does not change the basic equation: Money is being printed out of thin air so that it can be used to buy US government debt.

When the full scope of this program is more widely recognized, ever more pressure will fall upon the dollar, as more and more private investors shun the dollar and all dollar-denominated instruments as stores of value and wealth. This will further burden the efforts of the various central banks around the world as they endeavor to meet the vast borrowing desires of the US government.

This will not end well. I also still think the stock market rally is a bear market rally. Here is the full article.

Zimbabwe !

The Democrats call for full speed ahead

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

Today’s New York Times concludes, no doubt with input from the White House, that they will go it alone on health care. This was probably in the cards as the left will not accept compromise and the bill is so bad that Republicans would do better to defeat it and start over after the 2010 election.

Those who have analyzed the bill have concluded that it is a shell with no specifics. They will be filled in by the unelected bureaucrats that fill the 67 committees and commissions and boards established by the legislation.

The argument goes: Given that HR 3200 proposes to fundamentally transform our healthcare system – a vast system that influences the life and death of all American citizens, and that consumes 17 or 18% of our economy – then before our elected representatives vote yea or nay on such a vital bill, they should consider it their sacred obligation to read it first.

DrRich will admit to having originally shared this opinion. But then he spent a couple of days attempting to read selected sections of the bill himself, in order to answer specific questions he had about those sections. (For instance: Does Section 1233 actually mandate end-of-life consultations for old people, or merely arrange for the option? Does Section 122 allow DrRich to continue his self-pay, high-deductable, catastrophic health insurance plan, or does it declare such plans illegal?) Now that he has made this effort, DrRich’s advice to our legislators is – don’t waste your time. For, even if you spend months parsing the convoluted grammar, numererous cross-references, and ambiguous language of this bill, you will not be able to answer even the simplest of questions about what it “really” says.

This is not just because the bill is complex and difficult. The Federalist Papers, for instance, are complex and difficult, full of classical allusions, archaic constructions, and difficult concepts. But with a little time and effort one can readily discern their meaning, and one comes to appreciate the full depth and remarkable persuasiveness of the ideas Hamilton, Madison and Jay were espousing. This is because at their bottom, the Federalist Papers actually say something.

Not so HR 3200. It is complexity for complexity’s sake. When one parses out all the legalese, cross-references, and unnecessarily tortuous syntax, one is often (if not in each and every case) left with nothing concrete. To a great extent, the meanings of large sections of HR 3200 are not merely difficult to ascertain, but are fundamentally indeterminate. It has no definite meaning. It is designed for ambiguity.

There is no intention of disclosing what sort of system this bill (HR 3200) establishes because the provisions would never be accepted by the public.

This is legislation designed to create a legal framework under which huge cadres of unelected, politically-appointed policy mavens and bureaucrats will determine – by publishing hundreds of thousands of pages of regulations, rules, and guidelines – what our new healthcare system will look like. And until those regulations and guidelines are actually created – and this “creation” will be a never-ending process rather than an act – anybody claiming to know the precise nature of our new healthcare system under HR 3200 is engaging in one of the following: lying, projecting one’s own wishful thinking, or extrapolating on the perceived behaviors and beliefs of those who (one surmises) will finally get to make up all the rules.

If it is not voted down, it should be reversed by the new Congress after 2010. A likely strategy might be to pass the House bill, HR 3200, with the “public option” and the Senate bill (one of five) without it. This will take some of the heat off the Senators. Then, in the conference committee, the conference bill will restore the provisions thought too toxic for the Senate and they will pass the combined bill by reconciliation, if necessary.

I don’t think they can do it but that seems to be their strategy. I’m not sure I would call it evil but many will be very angry if this happens.

He doesn’t seem to be the only one worried about this.


I was not intimidated during J. Edgar Hoover’s FBI hunt for reporters like me who criticized him. I railed against the Bush-Cheney war on the Bill of Rights without blinking. But now I am finally scared of a White House administration. President Obama’s desired health care reform intends that a federal board (similar to the British model) — as in the Center for Health Outcomes Research and Evaluation in a current Democratic bill — decides whether your quality of life, regardless of your political party, merits government-controlled funds to keep you alive. Watch for that life-decider in the final bill. It’s already in the stimulus bill signed into law.

The members of that ultimate federal board will themselves not have examined or seen the patient in question. For another example of the growing, tumultuous resistance to “Dr. Obama,” particularly among seniors, there is a July 29 Washington Times editorial citing a line from a report written by a key adviser to Obama on cost-efficient health care, prominent bioethicist Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel (brother of White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel).

Emanuel writes about rationing health care for older Americans that “allocation (of medical care) by age is not invidious discrimination.” (The Lancet, January 2009) He calls this form of rationing — which is fundamental to Obamacare goals — “the complete lives system.” You see, at 65 or older, you’ve had more life years than a 25-year-old. As such, the latter can be more deserving of cost-efficient health care than older folks.

I have already posted on this topic but it bears repeating.

No matter what Congress does when it returns from its recess, rationing is a basic part of Obama’s eventual master health care plan. Here is what Obama said in an April 28 New York Times interview (quoted in Washington Times July 9 editorial) in which he describes a government end-of-life services guide for the citizenry as we get to a certain age, or are in a certain grave condition. Our government will undertake, he says, a “very difficult democratic conversation” about how “the chronically ill and those toward the end of their lives are accounting for potentially 80 percent of the total health care” costs.

This end-of-life consultation has been stripped from the Senate Finance Committee bill because of democracy-in-action town-hall outcries but remains in three House bills.

A specific end-of-life proposal is in draft Section 1233 of H.R. 3200, a House Democratic health care bill that is echoed in two others that also call for versions of “advance care planning consultation” every five years — or sooner if the patient is diagnosed with a progressive or terminal illness.

As the Washington Post’s Charles Lane penetratingly explains (Undue influence,” Aug. 8): the government would pay doctors to discuss with Medicare patients explanations of “living wills and durable powers of attorney … and (provide) a list of national and state-specific resources to assist consumers and their families” on making advance-care planning (read end-of-life) decisions.

Significantly, Lane adds that, “The doctor ‘shall’ (that’s an order) explain that Medicare pays for hospice care (hint, hint).”

But the Obama administration claims these fateful consultations are “purely voluntary.” In response, Lane — who learned a lot about reading between the lines while the Washington Post’s Supreme Court reporter — advises us:

“To me, ‘purely voluntary’ means ‘not unless the patient requests one.'”

But Obamas’ doctors will initiate these chats. “Patients,” notes Lane, “may refuse without penalty, but many will bow to white-coated authority.”

And who will these doctors be? What criteria will such Obama advisers as Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel set for conductors of end-of-life services?

I was alerted to Lanes’ crucial cautionary advice — for those of use who may be influenced to attend the Obamacare twilight consultations — by Wesley J. Smith, a continually invaluable reporter and analyst of, as he calls his most recent book, the “Culture of Death: The Assault on Medical Ethics in America” (Encounter Books).

As more Americans became increasingly troubled by this and other fearful elements of Dr. Obama’s cost-efficient health care regimen, Smith adds this vital advice, no matter what legislation Obama finally signs into law:

“Remember that legislation itself is only half the problem with Obamacare. Whatever bill passes, hundreds of bureaucrats in the federal agencies will have years to promulgate scores of regulations to govern the details of the law.

“This is where the real mischief could be done because most regulatory actions are effectuated beneath the public radar. It is thus essential, as just one example, that any end-of-life counseling provision in the final bill be specified to be purely voluntary … and that the counseling be required by law to be neutral as to outcome. Otherwise, even if the legislation doesn’t push in a specific direction — for instance, THE GOVERNMENT REFUSING TREATMENT — the regulations could.” (Emphasis added.)

The history of the “public option” is here in American Prospect and it has always been a sham and a Trojan horse for single payer.

A theory on the housing bubble

Friday, March 27th, 2009

It is pretty clear by now that the origin of the bubble was the push to increase home ownership among low income people. The first action in this direction was the Community Reinvestment Act passed in the Carter Administration. The role of the CRA has been disputed by left-leaning commentators including the oddly named “Businessweek, which represents the views of few businessmen I know. Still, you can learn a lot of history by reading between the lines of opposing views.

The Community Reinvestment Act, passed in 1977, requires banks to lend in the low-income neighborhoods where they take deposits. Just the idea that a lending crisis created from 2004 to 2007 was caused by a 1977 law is silly.

Read those two sentences and note which one is fact and which is opinion.

Now, let’s look at an official site and see what it says.

The CRA requires that each insured depository institution’s record in helping meet the credit needs of its entire community be evaluated periodically. That record is taken into account in considering an institution’s application for deposit facilities, including mergers and acquisitions.

Notice the steel fist through the velvet glove ?

Here is another opinion from a different perspective. The CRA was modified and expanded in 1995. Here is more history with comments on the Clinton Administration’s expansion of the law.

The CRA regulations were substantially revised again in 1995, in response to a directive to the agencies from President Clinton to review and revise the CRA regulations to make them more performance-based, and to make examinations more consistent, clarify performance standards, and reduce cost and compliance burden. This directive addressed criticisms that the regulations, and the agencies’ implementation of them through the examination process, were too process-oriented, burdensome, and not sufficiently focused on actual results. The agencies also changed the CRA examination process to incorporate these revisions.

That means quotas, of course.

The financial collapse had other causes, as well, and I don’t want to reargue the entire story. Bush allowed the Fed to keep interest rates too low in the mid-2000s. Investment banks got too enamored of exotic derivatives like credit default swaps, which was bad enough. What was worse was an informal market in trading derivatives of the derivatives.

What I am interested in is where this all began. I would like to suggest that Margaret Thatcher had something to do with it. In the late 1960s, a concept arose called The Right To Buy, which allowed council housing tenants to buy the home they were living in, with a discount for the rent they had paid for some period of time. This quickly became popular and the theory was that owners would take better care of the home they owned than a renter would. Labour, once she had passed form the scene, adopted the same policy and she is now being blamed for the British housing bubble in similar fashion.

The theory was probably right so long as the house being bought was modest and within the means of the buyer to maintain. Once housing prices began to rise, disaster followed.

What should have been done

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

UPDATE: Here is a pretty good primer on how the meltdown happened. It was those physics PhDs.

There is an interesting column today by Holman Jenkins that speculates on what might have been done about the financial crisis last year.

Letting the technical matter of keeping the banks afloat become a political football was a terrible idea. Letting our willingness to deploy giant sums of taxpayer money become the measure of credibility was a disaster. Letting all this be sold on Capitol Hill amid shrieks about the country collapsing into a Second Great Depression was a confidence killer across the economy, which until that point had held up well.

This was a crisis in bank liquidity, the consequences of another financial bubble like those described in A Random Walk Down Wall Street, now in its 9th edition. This has all happened before although few were as severe as this financial panic. Malkiel points out that many of these bubbles have been inflated by the supposed invention of “new technology” like the conglomerates on the 1960s and the LBOs of the 80s. This time we had astrophysicists inventing new derivatives that not even they understood.

A rational, not political, approach would also have latched on early to the striking fact that much of the subprime crisis stemmed from just a handful of fast-growing counties in four states where housing prices zoomed then plummeted.

Looking back, the biggest mistake was the original Troubled Asset Relief Program — not the idea itself, but because it required Congress’s participation. Giant appropriated sums were never necessary, except perhaps by the screwy reasoning that banks had to be made to lend again for anti-recession purposes.

The Fed and FDIC, formally or informally, had already guaranteed the deposits and other liabilities of the banks. Bank runs were off the table, so even if banks were technically insolvent, they could stay in business and have an opportunity to earn their way out of trouble. Withdrawal of investor support for the securitization of credit-card loans, auto loans and jumbo mortgages does present a big and somewhat related challenge (one the Fed is addressing), but otherwise the economy is not being starved for bank credit.

Jenkins points out that lending is not really the problem; it is demand.

the National Federation of Independent Business, the authoritative small business trade group, has reported deepening pessimism among its members — and yet no credit crunch. “Fewer loans are being made, but a substantial share of the decline is due to lower demand, not problems on the supply side,” the group reported along with its just-released January survey.

As this dynamic has developed, Obama and his assistants have continued to talk down the economy threatening a “depression” unless his pork-barrel spending bill was approved. The result has been the drying up of demand. Roosevelt punished businessmen with confiscatory taxes and changing regulations that paralyzed investing. The 1930s were a time of “capital strike.” Something similar could occur as huge amounts of money sits on the sidelines waiting to see if investing will become attractive again.

The ratio of cash on hand to U.S. market capitalization jumped 86 percent in the first 11 months of the year, the biggest increase since the Fed began keeping records in 1959, as the U.S., Europe and Japan fell into the first simultaneous recessions since World War II.

What will make the owners of this money decide to invest ? I don’t think the stimulus bill is the thing. Nor is a campaign to cancel contracts entered into freely and voluntarily. The present campaign to renegotiate mortgages in bankruptcy court is a terrible idea. Those of us who are current in our mortgages do not seem to be Obama’s favorites. The results of previous attempts at mortgage renegotiation have not done well with a 36% delinquency rate at 3 months and 60% at 8 months.

The crisis has become a political football and those rarely result in good outcomes.

Tony Blankley has some related thoughts on Obama’s governing style.