More Financial Pitfalls Ahead - S&P
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America is the land of false choices and people who only know how to talk their book. The truth is Secretary Paulsen inadvertently said it right during a Congressional hearing: "We are all to blame" The truth is that the crisis originated back in 1977 during the Carter Administration. A series of actions - some well intentioned, some not, inept and corrupt - by Democratic and Republican members of Congress, central bankers, inept regulators with diminishing enforcement budgets, rating agencies, Fannie/Freddie management, mortgage brokers, greedy Wall Street participants who played with fire one time too many, toxic securities levered 8:1 relative to the face amount of the bonds and then levered 30:1 again via the balance sheets. It goes on and on including people taking mortgages they knew they couldn't afford. Congress continuing to pile on pork during a national crisis. A bail out that is ineffective and inept and generally characterized as behind the curve the entire time and still is A bailout that pulls Grand Theft Auto in public view to the tune of $1 trillion to favored players, Tax law changes for the banks of $150 billion (section 382 giveaway, SILO etc, one of which appears to be illegal). The Fed paying 1.5% on reserves (should they still do so with rates now at zero?). All these cash flows just given away - using our money - with no conditions attached. Don't you love Wall St saying that $ are fungible so they won't track whether taxpayer money was used to pay bonuses. Is anyone anywhere tracking what is happening to deferred comp plans where tax benefits were obtained in return for taking the firm's credit risk. You bet taxpayer money is being used for all of these purposes and maintaining dividend payments. Moral hazard is in full view and it's far worse than we ever imagined.
This is one sorry pathetic debacle that, despite disingenuous assertions to the contrary, was not a once in a century storm which implies random violence, not a Black Swan, but a White Swan as Taleb said. It was not rocket science. It was a known hype that depended on housing prices going up forever - which they never have - and the continuation of the low cost leverage party that started in 1982. Then we applaud as geniuses firms selling $2 billion in toxic securities in one room while they were betting $4 billion in the next room the thing would implode. Betting 2:1 against your own clients. And I should live so long as to witness a Congressional hearing in which members of Congress hold not only the other party responsible but also members of their own party when the blame is obvious. The hypocrisy has reached all time highs. And we the voters are responsible for the people we elect and don't hold accountable so I guess we deserve the country we have. There are very few statesmen left who think of their country first before the accumulation of political power and money.
And then the auto bailout. Just when maybe we might get something right, we turn victory into defeat. Instead of turning an industry around and preserving our manufacturing base, everybody goes back to feeding at the public trough, making sure that there will be either a public funds annuity for as far as the eye can see or an implosion that will turn a deep recession into something worse. And let's not forget the moral hazard associated with institutions too big to fail. By public policy we have now created institutions far larger - so hold on to your hats and your wallets for the next time or later this time. The party is over. The American consumer would have experienced a lower standard of living for the next decade just from the deleveraging effect. In a credit crisis and a financial crisis, this will be far worse. With the banks and credit card companies jacking up interest rates and cutting off home equity lines of credit even for responsible people, we will have a whole decade of people deemed unworthy of reasonable rates or any credit at all, Given that insurance companies now use credit scores for premium calculations, guess who else is licking their chops, By the time the banks and the insurance companies are finished with the American consumer who will be able to buy a car. Even now that market is going to be a 10-14 million unit market for the next 5 years. The demand destruction already going on is severe and picking up steam. There are even signs that we have scared enough people to not only cut back but also start saving. God help us. Deleveraging, a credit crisis, a financial crisis, a screwed up bailout and savers!!!! All at the same time. We are doomed! ( Do you think Wall St earnings projections will ever catch up?) Did I forget China, the financier to the U.S., is at risk with its growth rate falling below the 8% level the Government feels is necessary to keep the "through train" going moving the peasants from rural areas to urban locations that must have enough housing, jobs, infrastructure and growth to absorb them. The appearance of reverse migration back to the countryside and the pockets of social unrest starting to unfold has China scared to death.
Moreover, we have the spectacle of America, the land of free markets and capitalism and mucho advice to the rest of the world on how to responsibly resolve a financial crisis, resolving to get the benefits of restructuring America without actually restructuring America. This predictably will only make matters worse and more durable. Alice in Wonderland and Kafka sitting next to each other at the tea party beaming. Is this a great country or what! The inmates, bright as they may be and they are, were running the asylum.
LOTS of influential people predicted the danger (Gramlich, Buffett, Templeton, Roubeni etc.). According to the NY Times, even AIG - yes, that AIG - in 2005 yelled out loud "No, we are not going to write any more CDS on Merrill Lynch mortgage securities because of loosening underwriting standards". Maybe we should have a formal mechanism for this kind and quality of input to be vetted more thoroughly and a formal report issued to a broad spectrum of institutions. Instead all the warnings were just brushed aside and, in some cases, the people issuing the warnings terminated. The party was just too delicious.
It takes a long time to build a great country but a not so long to destroy it. As secretary Paulsen said "We are all to blame." Kudos to us all. If we continue to mismanage this crisis........
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America is the land of false choices and people who only know how to talk their book. The truth is Secretary Paulsen inadvertently said it right during a Congressional hearing: "We are all to blame" The truth is that the crisis originated back in 1977 during the Carter Administration. A series of actions - some well intentioned, some not, inept and corrupt - by Democratic and Republican members of Congress, central bankers, inept regulators with diminishing enforcement budgets, rating agencies, Fannie/Freddie management, mortgage brokers, greedy Wall Street participants who played with fire one time too many, toxic securities levered 8:1 relative to the face amount of the bonds and then levered 30:1 again via the balance sheets. It goes on and on including people taking mortgages they knew they couldn't afford. Congress continuing to pile on pork during a national crisis. A bail out that is ineffective and inept and generally characterized as behind the curve the entire time and still is A bailout that pulls Grand Theft Auto in public view to the tune of $1 trillion to favored players, Tax law changes for the banks of $150 billion (section 382 giveaway, SILO etc, one of which appears to be illegal). The Fed paying 1.5% on reserves (should they still do so with rates now at zero?). All these cash flows just given away - using our money - with no conditions attached. Don't you love Wall St saying that $ are fungible so they won't track whether taxpayer money was used to pay bonuses. Is anyone anywhere tracking what is happening to deferred comp plans where tax benefits were obtained in return for taking the firm's credit risk. You bet taxpayer money is being used for all of these purposes and maintaining dividend payments. Moral hazard is in full view and it's far worse than we ever imagined.
Dec 21 19:27 pm
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All Comments by M. Burke »More Financial Pitfalls Ahead - S&P [View article]
This is one sorry pathetic debacle that, despite disingenuous assertions to the contrary, was not a once in a century storm which implies random violence, not a Black Swan, but a White Swan as Taleb said. It was not rocket science. It was a known hype that depended on housing prices going up forever - which they never have - and the continuation of the low cost leverage party that started in 1982. Then we applaud as geniuses firms selling $2 billion in toxic securities in one room while they were betting $4 billion in the next room the thing would implode. Betting 2:1 against your own clients. And I should live so long as to witness a Congressional hearing in which members of Congress hold not only the other party responsible but also members of their own party when the blame is obvious. The hypocrisy has reached all time highs. And we the voters are responsible for the people we elect and don't hold accountable so I guess we deserve the country we have. There are very few statesmen left who think of their country first before the accumulation of political power and money.
And then the auto bailout. Just when maybe we might get something right, we turn victory into defeat. Instead of turning an industry around and preserving our manufacturing base, everybody goes back to feeding at the public trough, making sure that there will be either a public funds annuity for as far as the eye can see or an implosion that will turn a deep recession into something worse. And let's not forget the moral hazard associated with institutions too big to fail. By public policy we have now created institutions far larger - so hold on to your hats and your wallets for the next time or later this time. The party is over. The American consumer would have experienced a lower standard of living for the next decade just from the deleveraging effect. In a credit crisis and a financial crisis, this will be far worse. With the banks and credit card companies jacking up interest rates and cutting off home equity lines of credit even for responsible people, we will have a whole decade of people deemed unworthy of reasonable rates or any credit at all, Given that insurance companies now use credit scores for premium calculations, guess who else is licking their chops, By the time the banks and the insurance companies are finished with the American consumer who will be able to buy a car. Even now that market is going to be a 10-14 million unit market for the next 5 years. The demand destruction already going on is severe and picking up steam. There are even signs that we have scared enough people to not only cut back but also start saving. God help us. Deleveraging, a credit crisis, a financial crisis, a screwed up bailout and savers!!!! All at the same time. We are doomed! ( Do you think Wall St earnings projections will ever catch up?) Did I forget China, the financier to the U.S., is at risk with its growth rate falling below the 8% level the Government feels is necessary to keep the "through train" going moving the peasants from rural areas to urban locations that must have enough housing, jobs, infrastructure and growth to absorb them. The appearance of reverse migration back to the countryside and the pockets of social unrest starting to unfold has China scared to death.
Moreover, we have the spectacle of America, the land of free markets and capitalism and mucho advice to the rest of the world on how to responsibly resolve a financial crisis, resolving to get the benefits of restructuring America without actually restructuring America. This predictably will only make matters worse and more durable. Alice in Wonderland and Kafka sitting next to each other at the tea party beaming. Is this a great country or what! The inmates, bright as they may be and they are, were running the asylum.
LOTS of influential people predicted the danger (Gramlich, Buffett, Templeton, Roubeni etc.). According to the NY Times, even AIG - yes, that AIG - in 2005 yelled out loud "No, we are not going to write any more CDS on Merrill Lynch mortgage securities because of loosening underwriting standards". Maybe we should have a formal mechanism for this kind and quality of input to be vetted more thoroughly and a formal report issued to a broad spectrum of institutions. Instead all the warnings were just brushed aside and, in some cases, the people issuing the warnings terminated. The party was just too delicious.
It takes a long time to build a great country but a not so long to destroy it. As secretary Paulsen said "We are all to blame." Kudos to us all. If we continue to mismanage this crisis........