Generalized Meltdown of Financial Institutions

Imploding Credit Bubble to Hit $1 Trillion

Imploding Credit Bubble to Hit $1 Trillion

<h4>Money Was Free For Banks Under Greenspan, Creating a Debt-Driven Economy</h4>


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By <a linkindex="15" href="/person/13391-crmorris">Charles R. Morris</a>

02/12/2008

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<div class="mini gray">Illustration by: Matt Mahurin</div><br><p>The current credit and financial crisis, unusually, is almost entirely the creation of the financial services industry.<br><br>Financial services now dominates American business to an astonishing degree. Though the industry accounted for only about 16 percent of corporate output in 2007, it racked up more than 40 percent of corporate profits. From 2000 through mid-2007, total American stock market value grew about 6 percent, while the value of financial services stocks grew by 78 percent. And though total corporate profits roughly doubled, business investment was almost flat.<br><br><img alt="Debt.jpg" src="/files/washingtonindependent/testing-icon-with/Debt.jpg" class="left" height="165" width="165"> Where did the profits go? Mostly to dividends and stock buybacks, much of which, in turn, poured into the hedge funds and private equity funds driving the company buyout boom. Martin Wolf, an economist and columnist for the London Financial Times, laments that America is turning into "a giant hedge fund."<br><br>From 2002 through 2005, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan kept banks’ own borrowing rates lower than the rate of inflation – in effect, for bankers, money was free. Bankers also began to package up their loans into new types of bonds that they could sell off to pension funds and other investors to free up their capital for more lending. When money is free, and banks can earn rich lending fees without tying up capital, the rational banker will lend to infinity.<br><br></p><blockquote class="pullquote" style=""><p>...in effect, for bankers, money was free…</p></blockquote><br>Countrywide Financial, one of the more notorious pushers of toxic mortgages, is a good example. Unusually easy money allowed it to employ extreme leverage, and incur heavy cash flow deficits – a total of $38 billion in operating cash deficits from 2003 through 2007. Not to worry. That was covered by $44 billion in low-rate borrowing from the Atlanta federal home loan bank. Angelo Mozilo, the Countrywide <span class="caps">CEO</span>, was paid $48 million in 2006, and made another $100 million-plus selling his Countrywide stock just before the subprime mortgage crash. Your taxpayer dollars at work.<br><br>Over the past few weeks, there has been a steep fall in the trading value of company-takeover loans. That is a huge market, and forced sales and rising delinquencies are ominously reminiscent of last summer’s subprime debacle. The unfolding consumer recession will only make it worse.<br><br>The total losses and writedowns from the imploding credit bubble – leveraged loans, mortgages of all kinds, credit cards and much else – (See <a set="yes" linkindex="17" href="http://www.washingtonindependent.com/view/part-one-facing-the">Part I </a>of this article) will be on the order of $1 trillion. About half of the losses will be absorbed by banks. They have already taken some $130 billion of writedowns, so they have some $250-350 billion to go.<br><br>Which brings us back to the Fed. The floods of easy money from chairman Ben Bernanke look like a doomed effort to paper over the inflated asset values, the phony triple-A ratings and the hidden liabilities marbled through American balance sheets.<br><br>There is a precedent for such behavior. In the late 1980s, Japan experienced an asset bubble much like our current one. The tight network of government and financial executives conspired to conceal it with cheap money. And the crisis dragged on for another 15 years.<br><br><blockquote class="pullquote" style=""><p>It is desperately important that we start the painful conversion from the recent debt-driven consumption circus to a more balanced, higher savings economy.</p></blockquote><br>It is desperately important that we start the painful conversion from the recent debt-driven consumption circus to a more balanced, higher savings economy. But that transition can’t start until the financial sector reprices assets down to real values – and the faster the better.<br><br>The scale of the required writedowns is scary. Bank capital will be decimated, necessitating perhaps $150-$200 billion in new capital raising. The tens of billions in new capital raised by banks last year almost all came from sovereign wealth funds – murky investment vehicles mostly under the control of Asian and Arab governments. It is not xenophobic to worry about the sale of yet another huge block of ownership to such entities.<br><br>Wall Street seems to be hoping that the federal government will simply take over its bad assets, much as we funded Countrywide; such ideas are floating around the Congress. The banks would doubtless garner big fees for helping the government manage its new financial garbage dump.<br><br>There is a better alternative. Instead of a government bail-out, or a fire sale to foreign governments, let the banks absorb their writedowns and then recapitalize by selling new debt and equity to the American government on private market terms. The securities would be deposited in the Social Security trust funds, doubtless improving their long-term returns. Contractual and legislative provisions could protect against political meddling.<br><br>But choices are narrowing fast. The Great Inflation of the 1970s was ended only when then Fed Chairman Paul Volcker restored financial stability by forcing a painful repricing of the American economy. It took more than two years, but laid the groundwork for the high-growth era of the 1980s and 1990s. Or we could temporize as Japan chose to do – and slide into the assisted-living limbo of nations that have run out of energy and ideas.<br><br><i><br><br>Charles R. Morris is the author of "The Trillion-Dollar Meltdown: Easy Money, High Rollers and the Great Credit Crash," due out next month. His earlier books include "The Tycoons: How Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, Jay Gould and J.P. Morgan Invented the American Supereconomy" and "Money, Greed and Risk."
 
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Re: Imploding Credit Bubble to Hit $1 Trillion

The first time ever $500 billion military budget sure hasn't helped.
 
IMF Issues Global "Meltdown" Warning

BBC NEWS
IMF in global 'meltdown' warning

The world financial system is teetering on the "brink of systemic meltdown", the head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has warned in Washington.

Dominique Strauss-Kahn said rich nations had so far failed to restore confidence, but he endorsed a new action plan by the G7 group.

He also said the IMF was ready to lend to countries in dire need of capital.

The 15 eurozone leaders will meet in Paris later to try and establish a common approach to the markets crisis.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel said they would present a number of proposals at the summit to ease the credit freeze that has caused the collapse of several leading international banks.

But after meeting in Paris on Saturday, the two leaders said the summit would not result in a joint financial rescue fund for Europe, in the model of a $700bn rescue by the US government.

French Economy Minister Christine Lagarde said the eurozone leaders would discuss the possibility of guaranteeing interbank lending and put "meat" on the "skeleton" of a five-point plan by the G7 group of most industrialised nations to resolve the crisis.

Intensifying concerns

Mr Strauss-Kahn was speaking in Washington after talks with US President George W Bush, G7 finance ministers and the World Bank.

Earlier, G7 ministers had released the five-point plan to free up the flow of credit, back efforts by banks to raise money and revive the mortgage market.

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George Bush says the US will lead the response to the crisis

"Intensifying solvency concerns about a number of the largest US-based and European financial institutions have pushed the global financial system to the brink of systemic meltdown," said Mr Strauss-Kahn.

He later told a news conference: "The first co-ordination between advanced countries and the rest of the world is now on track."

The IMF chief's strong words reflect a belief that the global financial crisis can be contained, says the BBC's economics correspondent Andrew Walker in Washington.

Mr Strauss-Kahn was joined at the White House by finance ministers from the US, Canada, France, Germany, Britain, Italy and Japan, as well as World Bank President Robert Zoellick.

Following talks with the economic leaders, Mr Bush also pledged co-ordinated action, saying it was serious global crisis which demanded a serious global response.

Panic selling

The meeting came a day after Asian, European and US markets continued to panic sell despite rate cuts and cash injections by central banks, amid widespread fears of a global recession.

Late on Friday, US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said the US planned to invest directly in banks for the first since the 1930s, following a similar UK programme of partial bank nationalisation.

[We must] redirect the markets so that they serve the people, and not ruin them
Angela Merkel
German Chancellor

The G7 had earlier not ruled out adopting another part of the British plan - to guarantee borrowing between banks - as they issued their plan in Washington.

The G7 also left the door open to further reductions in interest rates, which six central banks this week jointly cut by half a percentage point.

But our correspondent says there is some disappointment that the G7 plan lacks detail.

Ahead of the emergency summit of eurozone leaders, UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown will hold talks with Mr Sarkozy.

Chancellor Merkel said governments must "redirect the markets so they serve the people, and not ruin them".

The heads of the EU's four biggest economies - Britain, France, Germany and Italy - held a first crisis summit last week, but were split over the need for a common plan.

Analysts say another week of plunging stock markets has focused minds and the real test of this weekend's scramble by world leaders to shore up the international financial system will come once markets reopen again on Monday.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/business/7665515.stm
 
Re: Imploding Credit Bubble to Hit $1 Trillion

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Wow!

Check the date of first post in this thread.

Prophetic ???

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