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    Recent articles related to the financial crisis.

    Friday, October 31, 2008

     

    Lessons From Japan

    by Dollars and Sense

    Interesting Article in the International Herald Tribune on Japanese monetary policy (both yesterday's version and that the more longer-term variety stretching back to the serious deflation days). Here's the most pertinent point:


    "According to Jerram, of Macquarie, one lesson of Japan's experience with such indirect measures is that they work only if bankers are confident that they will remain in place until the economy actually revives. To make this clear, he said the bank should accompany such an easing with public commitments not to raise borrowing costs again until some target is met, such as a rebound by consumer prices."


    Not sure if our program, such as it is, is geared toward this sort of option--at least not yet.

    Bank of Japan cuts rates for the first time in 7 years


    By Martin Fackler
    Friday, October 31, 2008



    TOKYO: The Japanese central bank cut its benchmark interest rate for the first time in seven years on Friday, joining earlier moves by the U.S. Federal Reserve and other central banks to soften the brunt of a possible global recession.


    The Bank of Japan's policy board voted to lower the overnight lending rate between banks by 0.2 percentage point to 0.3 percent, reducing borrowing costs in order to rekindle growth in the country, which has the largest economy in Asia. The bank also seemed to confirm fears here that Japan was heading into a recession by lowering its forecasted growth rate for the current year to around zero percent, citing higher energy prices and weakening demand for Japanese exports.


    The loosening Friday was also aimed at easing a growing credit crunch in Japan, which had long seemed immune to the international financial contagion. As an additional credit-easing measure, the bank said it would start paying interest on some of the reserves that commercial banks keep at the central bank, a step that would provide more cash to lenders.


    This was the first interest rate cut during the current financial crisis by Japan, where short-term interest rates, already near zero, have constrained the central bank's room for maneuver.


    Read the rest of the article

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    10/31/2008 11:53:00 AM 0 comments

     

    Naomi Klein on US Recapitalization

    by Dollars and Sense

    I don't agree with all of this: Naomi seems to forget that there are no longer any Wall Street firms of the sort that could wreak so much havoc with the assets they conjured up and simply expect someone else to endure the liability. But she's always provocative, and her politics are spot on. From today's Guardian:



    The Bush gang's parting gift: a final, frantic looting of public wealth

    The US bail-out amounts to a strings-free, public-funded windfall for big business. Welcome to no-risk capitalism

    Naomi Klein
    The Guardian,
    Friday October 31, 2008



    In the final days of the election many Republicans seem to have given up the fight for power. But don't be fooled: that doesn't mean they are relaxing. If you want to see real Republican elbow grease, check out the energy going into chucking great chunks of the $700bn bail-out out the door. At a recent Senate banking committee hearing, the Republican Bob Corker was fixated on this task, and with a clear deadline in mind: inauguration. "How much of it do you think may be actually spent by January 20 or so?" Corker asked Neel Kashkari, the 35-year-old former banker in charge of the bail-out.


    When European colonialists realised that they had no choice but to hand over power to the indigenous citizens, they would often turn their attention to stripping the local treasury of its gold and grabbing valuable livestock. If they were really nasty, like the Portuguese in Mozambique in the mid-1970s, they poured concrete down the elevator shafts.


    Nothing so barbaric for the Bush gang. Rather than open plunder, it prefers bureaucratic instruments, such as "distressed asset" auctions and the "equity purchase program". But make no mistake: the goal is the same as it was for the defeated Portuguese - a final, frantic looting of the public wealth before they hand over the keys to the safe.

    Read the rest of the article

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    10/31/2008 11:39:00 AM 0 comments

     

    Demand from New Admin: Claw This Back!

    by Dollars and Sense

    From Reuters:

    U.S. banks owe billions in pay, pensions to executives: report

    Fri Oct 31, 2008 6:36am EST

    (Reuters) - Troubled financial giants getting cash infusions from the U.S. Federal Reserve owe their executives more than $40 billion for past year's pay and pensions as of the end of 2007, the Wall Street Journal said in an analysis.


    The sums owed are mostly for special executive pensions and deferred compensation, including bonuses, for prior years, said the paper.

    The Journal also cited investment banks Goldman Sachs Group Inc, which owes its executives $11.8 billion; JPMorgan Chase & Co, which has a payment of $8.5 billion pending; and Morgan Stanley, which owes between $10 billion and $12 billion to executives.


    Criticism of executive pay has gained momentum this election year with presidential candidates from both major parties lashing out over rich payouts for CEOs of companies that have suffered big losses in the U.S. housing market bust and ensuing credit crisis.


    As a result, the government has sought to rein in executive pay at banks getting federal money as part of the Bush administration's $700 billion bailout program.


    But overlooked in these efforts is the total size of debts that financial firms receiving taxpayer assistance previously incurred to their executives, which at some firms exceed what they owe in pensions to their entire work forces, the Journal said.


    For instance, nine banks paid out an estimated $50 billion of bonuses in 2007, based on the total compensation expense for the companies and assuming that for investment banks about 60 percent of total compensation was allocated for bonuses, and for commercial banks about 20 percent went to bonuses.


    Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and JP Morgan Chase did not immediately return calls seeking comment.


    (Reporting by Shradhha Sharma in Bangalore; Editing by Kim Coghill)

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    10/31/2008 11:27:00 AM 0 comments

     

    This Isn't Even Funny Anymore

    by Dollars and Sense

    From today's Financial Times:

    Thanks to Onet? A Polish website, for the link


    Wall Street 'made rod for own back'

    By Francesco Guerrera, Nicole Bullock and Julie MacIntosh in New York
    Published: October 30 2008 23:34 | Last updated: October 30 2008 23:34



    Wall Street unwittingly created one of the catalysts for the collapse of Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers and American International Group by backing new bankruptcy rules that were aimed at insulating banks from the failure of a big client, lawyers and bankers say.


    The 2005 changes made clear that certain derivatives and financial transactions were exempt from provisions in the bankruptcy code that freeze a failed company’s assets until a court decides how to apportion them among creditors.


    The new rules were intended to insulate financial companies from the collapse of a large counterparty, such as a hedge fund, by making it easier for them to unwind trades and retrieve collateral.


    However, experts say the new rules might have accelerated the demise of Bear, Lehman and AIG by removing legal obstacles for banks and hedge funds that wanted to close positions and demand extra collateral from the three companies.


    Read the rest of the article

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    10/31/2008 11:13:00 AM 0 comments

     

    Barney Frank's JP Morgan Chase Connection

    by Dollars and Sense

    From Bob Feldman:

    Since 1989, the corporation whose Political Action Committee [PAC] or executives have been the top source of campaign contributions for the House Financial Services Committee Chairman, Barney Frank, has been JP Morgan Chase & Company. A Democratic Congressional representative from Massachusetts, Frank has accepted over $70,000 in campaign contributions from JP Morgan Chase executives or its PAC since 1989, according to the Center for Responsive Politics web site data base at www.opensecrets.org. In 2007, for example, Rep. Frank accepted $6,000 in campaign contributions from JP Morgan Chase's PAC, according to the JP Morgan Chase web site.

    Coincidentally, Frank recently helped push through Congress a Wall Street corporate welfare bill which authorized the U.S. Treasury Department to invest $25 billion in JP Morgan Chase.

    In a January, 1996, I asked Rep. Frank, in a phone interview for the now-defunct Lower East Side alternative weekly, Downtown, why his campaign committee had accepted a $500 contribution from then J.P. Morgan vice-chairman Robert Mendoze in April 1995.

    "I'm surprised by the question," Frank replied in 1996. "There's no alternative to accepting such contributions, although I'm in favor of public financing of campaigns. I am on the banking committee and I accept contributions from many different contributors. But none of these contributors will determine how I vote on the banking committee."

    According to Frank, when he first ran for Congress he received no campaign contributions from banking industry executives. But apparently, after some banks saw that, as a House Banking Committee member, Frank favored allowing banks to again enter the securities business, he began to receive some campaign contributions from people in the banking industry.

    Asked in 1996 how he'd respond to the argument that the acceptance of a campaign contribution from a bank executive by a member of the House Banking Committee, which passes legislation that regulates banks, represents a conflict of interest, Frank replied in 1996: "That's nonsense." According to the Massachusetts representative, it was as ethical for him to accept campaign contributions from corporate special interest groups and JP Morgan's vice-chairman as it was for him to accept campaign contributions from public interest groups, labor union members or organizations that favor the legalized use of marijuana for medical purposes.

    Yet in the appendix of his 1992 book, Still The Best Congress Money Can Buy, Philip Stern defined "conflict-of-interest' receipts as "contributions given to, and accepted by, that lawmaker from groups having a particular interest in the decision of the legislative committee on which that lawmaker sits (e.g....gifts by banks and other financial PACs to members of the House Banking Committee)..." Stern also indicated in this same book that the "conflict-of-interest" receipts accepted by Rep. Frank between 1985 and 1990 exceeded $149,000.

    The chairman of the JP Morgan Chase board of directors' Risk Policy Committee and a member of the JP Morgan Chase corporate board's Public Responsibility Committee, General Dynamics board member James Crown, has also been a heavy campaign contributor to 2008 Democratic Presidential candidate Barack Obama's campaigns since 2003. On June 27, 2003, for example, JP Morgan Chase board member Crown gave a $10,000 campaign contribution to Obama's campaign committee, prior to Obama's 2004 election to the U.S. Senate. Coincidentally, U.S. Senator Obama also supported using U.S. Treasury Department money to help bail out JP Morgan Chase.

    Other members of the JP Morgan Chase board of directors besides James Crown include Exxon Mobil's retired chairman of the board and former CEO Lee Raymond and Comcast Cable Communications President Stephen Burke.

    --bob f.

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    10/31/2008 10:03:00 AM 1 comments

    Thursday, October 30, 2008

     

    Another Taxpayer Bailout Swindle

    by Dollars and Sense

    William Greider explains in The Nation what happens when we let the foxes guard the henhouse.

    The swindle of American taxpayers is proceeding more or less in broad daylight, as the unwitting voters are preoccupied with the national election. Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson agreed to invest $125 billion in the nine largest banks, including $10 billion for Goldman Sachs, his old firm. But, if you look more closely at Paulson's transaction, the taxpayers were taken for a ride--a very expensive ride. They paid $125 billion for bank stock that a private investor could purchase for $62.5 billion. That means half of the public's money was a straight-out gift to Wall Street, for which taxpayers got nothing in return.

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    10/30/2008 05:22:00 PM 0 comments

     

    U.S. Consumers Shop, Drop

    by Dollars and Sense

    The most recent Economic Snapshot from the Economic Policy Institute:

    American consumers shopped but have now dropped
    Bad signs for tomorrow's GDP report

    by L. Josh Bivens | October 29, 2008

    For two years, consumer spending has managed to grow even in the face of trillions of dollars of evaporating housing wealth. As consumption spending is 70% of total U.S. gross domestic product (GDP), this resilience kept the overall economy from shrinking. Two recent government reports indicate that the U.S. consumer has finally surrendered, and this augurs badly for tomorrow's Commerce Department report on third-quarter GDP growth.



    At the end of September, the Commerce Department reported no pickup in overall consumer spending in August, following a huge decline in July. A rough forecast based on these two months tells an ugly story: consumer spending probably fell by about 2.5% in the third quarter (see chart). If this happened, it will be the largest decline since 1990. (Note 1)

    Two weeks ago, the Census Bureau reported a large decline in retail sales for September, continuing a downturn that has now lasted an entire year. Retail sales are essentially a subset of overall consumption spending (and are the subset that fluctuate the most, falling more quickly than overall consumption in bad economic times). For the third quarter, inflation-adjusted retail sales fell more than 9%, the largest fall since the Census Bureau began tracking them consistently over time. (Note 2)

    The bursting of the housing bubble has forced what seemed impossible for so long—outright cutbacks from U.S. consumers. The result of these cutbacks will throw the entire U.S. economy into reverse in coming quarters, and the first sign of this will be tomorrow's GDP report.

    Notes
    1. The September number for overall consumption spending will be released tomorrow. Using the "two-month method" employed here tends to give very accurate results for the overall quarter.
    2. Retail sales are deflated using the overall personal consumption expenditures price index. The September value for this index is not yet available, so September prices were assumed to be unchanged from August—a conservative estimate. Further, the 9% decline is the quarter's decline expressed as an annualized rate; this makes it comparable to the overall consumption figures reported above and the overall GDP numbers that will be reported tomorrow. 1992 is the first year that detailed time-series data on retail sales are kept.

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    10/30/2008 01:40:00 PM 0 comments

     

    Banks Spend Cash On Dividends, Not Loans

    by Dollars and Sense

    Senator Charles Schumer (D-NY) and others are raising alarm bells at reports that banks are spending more than half of their bailout money on paying dividends to shareholders, rather than lending money to borrowers.

    According to today's Washington Post

    The Treasury plans to invest up to $250 billion in a wide swath of U.S. banks in return for ownership stakes, which the government will relinquish when it is repaid.

    Among other restrictions, participating institutions cannot increase dividend payments without government permission. They also are barred from repurchasing stock, which increases the value of outstanding shares.

    The 33 banks signed up so far plan to pay shareholders about $7 billion this quarter. Companies generally try to pay consistent dividends and, at the present pace, those dividends will consume 52 percent of the Treasury's investment over the initial three-year term.

    "The terms of our capital purchase program were set to encourage participation by a broad array of financial institutions so they strengthen their financial positions," Treasury spokeswoman Michele Davis said.

    The Treasury's approach contrasts with decisions by foreign governments, including Britain and Germany, to require banks that accept public investments to suspend dividend payments until the government is repaid. The U.S. government similarly required Chrysler to suspend its dividend payments as a condition of the government's 1979 bailout.

    The legislation passed by Congress authorizing the Treasury's current bailout program is silent on the issue.


    The Treasury Department defends the practice, claiming that otherwise banks would be dissuaded from applying for bailout funds in the first place.

    For their part, the banks are claiming that the dividends are coming from an entirely different stash of money, presumably the one that they have kept hidden from anyone as they pleaded for government support.

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    10/30/2008 12:49:00 PM 0 comments

     

    Humble Pie Chart

    by Dollars and Sense


    This is from a fantastic and hilarious site, Bubblewrapped, that we just discovered. It bills itself as offering "Financial tools, objective analysis and mixed metaphors to help you stay afloat in the crash." Besides Greenspan, this "humble pie chart" mostly skewers journalists from the British business press, including, alas, Anatole Kaletsky (sorry, Larry...).

    Alan Greenspan

    Chairman of the US Federal Reserve, 1987-2006; knighted by the Queen in 2002 for his "contribution to global economic stability"

    Before

    2003
    "What we have found over the years in the marketplace is that derivatives have been an extraordinarily useful vehicle to transfer risk from those who shouldn't be taking it to those who are willing to and are capable of doing so. We think it would be a mistake [to more deeply regulate the contracts]."

    2004
    "Not only have individual financial institutions become less vulnerable to shocks from underlying risk factors, but also the financial system as a whole has become more resilient."

    2007
    "I was aware that the loosening of mortgage credit terms for subprime borrowers increased financial risk … But I believed then, as now, that the benefits of broadened home ownership are worth the risk."

    "It seems superfluous to constrain trading in some of the newer derivatives and other innovative financial contracts of the past decade. The worst have failed; investors no longer fund them and are not likely to in the future."

    After

    2008
    US Congress hearing, 23 October 2008

    REPRESENTATIVE HENRY WAXMAN: [Mr Greenspan, you said:] "I do have an ideology. My judgment is that free, competitive markets are by far the unrivaled way to organize economies. We've tried regulation. None meaningfully worked." That was your quote.

    You had the authority to prevent irresponsible lending practices that led to the subprime mortgage crisis. You were advised to do so by many others. And now our whole economy is paying its price.

    Do you feel that your ideology pushed you to make decisions that you wish you had not made?

    GREENSPAN: Well, remember that what an ideology is, is a conceptual framework with the way people deal with reality. Everyone has one. You have to – to exist, you need an ideology. The question is whether it is accurate or not.

    And what I'm saying to you is, yes, I found a flaw. I don't know how significant or permanent it is, but I've been very distressed by that fact.

    WAXMAN: You found a flaw in the reality …

    GREENSPAN: Flaw in the model that I perceived is the critical functioning structure that defines how the world works, so to speak.

    WAXMAN: In other words, you found that your view of the world, your ideology, was not right, it was not working?

    GREENSPAN: That is … precisely the reason I was shocked, because I had been going for 40 years or more with very considerable evidence that it was working exceptionally well.

    Check out the rest of the site.

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    10/30/2008 12:35:00 PM 0 comments

     

    Singing for Our Salvation

    by Dollars and Sense

    This posting is from D&S collective member and frequent blogger Larry Peterson. To see more of his posts, click here.


    One of the reasons Mozart's Requiem is the sublime work it is is that the end of the "Kyrie" (or, "Lord Have Mercy") expresses such a powerful entreaty that it seems that a superhuman mercy will surely take pity on the petitioners. But the "Dies Irae" ("Day of Wrath") immediately following is so savage, and impresses on us the majesty of superhuman justice so effectively that the former is reduced to a pathetic display of pride that should, and must, be punished accordingly. It seems like the global economy is getting to this part of the record.

    At 12.15 PM Eastern time, US and European equity markets are still in positive territory--only just--despite large gains earlier in the morning. The rally has been powered by the Federal Reserve's .5 % rate cut yesterday, the likelihood that the Bank of Japan will cut by a quarter-point (to .25%), and a flurry of bottom-fishing among investors. The Japanese cut is noteworthy not only because Japanaese rates are already so low: instead, the recent Yen strength that developed out of the unwinding of carry trades (a lot carried out by hedge funds cashing out to fund huge redemptions in other trades) promises to choke off Japan's all-important export sector, and that will, in turn, affect Japanese shares, which will hammer the Japanese banks that hold a lot of the shares, thereby making the banks vulnerable to a global bank crunch that only weeks ago Japan's banks were thought to be immune from (remember the Japanese bank, Mitsubishi UFJ, buying a stake in Morgan Stanley a few weeks ago?). Well, the Fed move and hopes for a Japanese one (done by a Bank of Japan that is as spooked by deflation--it's dealt with nearly 2 decades of it-- as the European Central Bank is by inflation) to follow promised to reverse this unwinding, and investors have responded accordingly.


    Also, Federal Reserve has teamed up with the IMF to offer swap lines to some important emerging economies. And though this does not, as yet, address the really huge problems in places like Ukraine and Pakistan, which are enduring intense crises, but do not have the dollars to deal with them, it shows global authorities are at least not going to sit back and wait for something really bad to happen before doing something. And that has added to the return of confidence, if you can call it that. Until now.


    Today, US GDP figures for the third-quarter came in, and there was a decline of .3%. In addition, bad news about pension underfunding of major US companies and a potential $8 billion charge to hospitals as a result of bad derivatives trading has spoiled the party. But the gloom goes further than this. Ultimately, it is another breakout of extreme pessimism that keeps resurfacing and is founded on the thought that despite all the extraordinary measures--and that's putting it mildly--that authorities worldwide, sometimes even, unusually, working in relative concert, have initiated, the blow to corporate profits (especially for US multinationals as long as the dollars remains a haven of saferty) of the slowdown we're facing now, which is characterized by long wage-and savings poor consumers abruptly cut off from all credit and continuing to face high, if levelling prices, will be particularly severe, especially given the wildly optimistic forecasts of profitablility that held only months ago. Not to mention the wave of deleveraging that is sapping the world of capital, and will continue to do so for a while, at an advanced rate. And this already dire situation is only to be exacerbated by the fact that banks will be cutting back lending even more to shore up their books for the end of the year, and the retail sector will be in for a very, very black Christmas. A true double-whammy here.


    Anatole Kaletsky of The Times had a interesting piece in the paper today, in which he mused over the steps that absolutely need to be taken if really, really serious pain is to be spared the US, and the world. His list of proposals includes: "emergency economic measures, which should be quickly implemented. Such measures could include a six-month moratorium on home foreclosures; a compulsory programme for reducing unsustainable mortgage debts; an urgent review of international monetary relations to protect emerging markets from the financial meltdown; and emergency tax cuts to support consumption, paid for by long-term revenues from a large-scale energy or carbon tax."


    So far, so good, and, from the point of view of a leftist (unlike the mainstream Kaletsky), a mere beginning. But the politically keen Kaletsky also notes that this stage of the crisis could exert so much of an adverse impact on the economy that the constitutional provisions regarding transfer of power between the incoming Obama (if it's McCain, by some miracle of American stupidity or fraud, we can just forget about it) may make even bold initiatives taken in the first hundred days rather moot in effect. He's hopeful that American politicians will be up to the challenge of speeding up the transition somehow to do something before the nominal transfer of power, something actively involving the presiodent-elect and the incoming administration. I think he's right. But I also believe, rather than sitting around waiting for the politicians, we must get out and agitate, and try like hell to force them, for once, to respond, now, to our concerns. Rather than chanting Kyries under our breath, we need to be chanting slogans, loudly and in unison, on the streets. Now.

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    10/30/2008 11:10:00 AM 0 comments

    Wednesday, October 29, 2008

     

    Swap Lines Extended To At-Risk Countries

    by Dollars and Sense

    As we expected (see blog post of October 22nd, "Not a Slow News Day"), the Fed has extended a lifeline facility to a number of pivotal, mainly emerging economies (Brazil, South Korea, Mexico and Singapore), whose currencies have been falling through the floor as a result of mass-repatriations under the impetus of the rush to safety in the US dollar. As usual, Yves Smith was on the ball:

    Wednesday, October 29, 2008

    Fed Establishes New IMF Facility. Dollar Swap Lines with Brazil, South Korea, Mexico, and Singapore


    ...


    Today, the Fed provided Brazil, South Korea, Mexico, and Singapore with dollar swap lines of $30 billion each (hat tip readers Robertm, Dwight). From the Fed's press release:


    Today, the Federal Reserve, the Banco Central do Brasil, the Banco de Mexico, the Bank of Korea, and the Monetary Authority of Singapore are announcing the establishment of temporary reciprocal currency arrangements (swap lines). These facilities, like those already established with other central banks, are designed to help improve liquidity conditions in global financial markets and to mitigate the spread of difficulties in obtaining U.S. dollar funding in fundamentally sound and well managed economies.


    Federal Reserve Actions
    In response to the heightened stress associated with the global financial turmoil, which has broadened to emerging market economies, the Federal Reserve has authorized the establishment of temporary liquidity swap facilities with the central banks of these four large and systemically important economies. These new facilities will support the provision of U.S. dollar liquidity in amounts of up to $30 billion each by the Banco Central do Brasil, the Banco de Mexico, the Bank of Korea, and the Monetary Authority of Singapore.


    These reciprocal currency arrangements have been authorized through April 30, 2009.


    The FOMC previously authorized temporary reciprocal currency arrangements with ten other central banks: the Reserve Bank of Australia, the Bank of Canada, Danmarks Nationalbank, the Bank of England, the European Central Bank, the Bank of Japan, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand, the Norges Bank, the Sveriges Riksbank, and the Swiss National Bank.

    Read the rest of the post

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    10/29/2008 05:12:00 PM 0 comments

     

    Commercial Paper (Max Fraad Wolff)

    by Dollars and Sense

    A primer on commercial paper by the wonderful Max Fraad Wolff, special to the D&S website:

    Financialization's (Latest) Weak Link

    There may be no better illustration of the staggering pain emanating from financial market turbulence than the carnage experienced recently in commercial paper markets worldwide. Commercial paper (often abbreviated as "CP" in the financial press) is not a synonym for trade journals or advertising-heavy publications of little intellectual value. "Commercial paper" is the term used for short-term loans—for less than 35 weeks— that are made without needing (in the United States) to be registered at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Companies raise money by selling repayment promises—IOUs—below the full value at the time of repayment. The difference between the price received by firms in the commercial paper market and the amount they pledge to pay is referred to as the "discount." You may find large household name firms selling $1000 repayments in 90 days for between $960 and $980 today. A few months ago, firms were selling $1000 in 90 days for $990 or more. The discount has risen, as money has become hard to get. Most loans are for far less than 270 days, and loans average around one month's duration. Trusted firms with good credit ratings can borrow—nearly at will—for low cost when markets function well. So commercial paper markets allow corporations fast and easy access to cash for operations, near-term expenses, and even payrolls. Consequently, commercial paper markets grew to a size of about $2 trillion, and this market became essential to the basic functioning of many firms—and hence to the whole economy.

    Read the rest of the article.

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    10/29/2008 03:04:00 PM 0 comments

     

    Movement on the Bailout Front

    by Dollars and Sense

    This could be pretty big news. From Reuters:

    Bair says FDIC's powers could extend to insurers


    Wed Oct 29, 2008 11:34am EDT

    By Karey Wutkowski



    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp's powers could be expanded if Congress decides to shift insurance companies from state regulation to federal regulation, FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair said on Wednesday.


    The FDIC could start providing guarantees for insurance companies, much like it already guarantees the deposits of most U.S. banks, if the insurance industry comes under federal regulation, Bair said. Insurance companies are currently regulated by individual states.


    "Our authorities would be expanded," Bair said at the annual conference of the International Association of Deposit Insurers.


    Read the rest of the article

    Many people know about this already, but remember the pressure on the automakers. They want to get a (subsidized) deal done before the election next week, so an incoming government won't be able to tamper with it. But the deal is so complex it'll be extremely difficult to pull off. Sounds a bit like Bear Stearns, but in the non-financial, real-economy sector. From the Financial Times:


    GM and Cerberus race to finalise Chrysler deal

    By Bernard Simon in Toronto, Julie MacIntosh in New York James Politi in Washington, John Reed in London.
    Tuesday Oct 28 2008 19:20



    General Motors (NYSE:GM) and Cerberus Capital Management are racing to finalise a deal for the carmaker to acquire the private equity group's stake in Chrysler before next week's US election.


    While many motor industry experts question the benefits of a tie-up between Detroit's number one and number three carmakers, they increasingly recognise that the companies have few other options. Both are bleeding cash and in danger of running out of liquidity some time next year as sales fall in their core US market.


    Read the rest of the article

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    10/29/2008 11:31:00 AM 1 comments

     

    Explaining Yesterday's Mega-Rally

    by Dollars and Sense

    Many people may still be a little puzzled by the impressive surge on Wall Street yesterday, despite the clear preopnderance of gloomy news (though taking into account the near-certainty of a big Fed cut today). The answer involves the yen carry trade, about which we posted a couple of items last weekend. Today's Financial Times takes up yesterday's story:

    Overview: Relief-rally but worldwide uncertainties persist

    By Dave Shellock in London and Michael Mackenziein New York
    Tuesday Oct 28 2008 16:30



    Global equities staged a big rebound led by Asian and US markets as a sharp fall in the Japanese yen infused bargain-hunting for risky assets and offset grim US economic data.


    The improvement in investor risk appetite also extended to emerging market assets - which have come under severe pressure lately - as the yen registered sharp declines against its leading rivals amid talk of currency intervention and even a possible rate cut by the Bank of Japan. Ashraf Laidi, chief currency strategist at CMC Markets, said: "Yen-selling intervention would not be successful as long as Japan does not cut interest rates."

    Read the rest of the article

    Trying to jumpstart carry trades when a lot of emerging markets are still experiencing exceptional currency volatility is risky. Accordingly, the FT noted a just today:


    Yen rallies as growth fears return

    By Peter Garnham
    Wednesday Oct 29 2008 06:45



    The turmoil on global currency markets continued on Wednesday as the yen advanced amid fears over a global economic slowdown.


    The yen's rally erased some of its losses during a volatile trading session on Tuesday.


    Maurice Pomery at IDEAGlobal said predicting moves on the currency market was close to impossible amid a lack of liquidity and increasingly volatile price action.

    Read the rest of the article

    Right now, Wall Street is pretty much flat. The Fed will cut later in the day, and China has already done so, so there may be a continued upside. But, to quote the latter article again, from Maurice Pomery, "Expect the unexpected and we see wild swings through this week continuing,"

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    10/29/2008 11:12:00 AM 0 comments

     

    Was Wall Street's Banking Crisis Predictable?

    by Dollars and Sense

    This is from former D&S collective member Bob Feldman:

    If you check out back issues of D&S and books like The Trouble With Capitalism: An Enquiry Into The Causes of Global Economic Failure by Henry Shutt, Origins of the Crash by Roger Lowenstein and American Theocracy by Kevin Phillips, you can see that Wall Street's banking crisis and crash of 2008 was a predictable one.

    Of course Clinton Administration Treasury Secretary, Robert Rubin (who's apparently been advising the 2008 Democratic Party presidential candidate on how to solve the current crisis), played a big role in pushing for more U.S. banking industry deregulation in the 1990s. As Roger Lowenstein observed in his 2004 book, Origins of the Crash:
    "In the spring of 1998, when...the Commodity Futures Trading Commission proposed a study...to revisit the question of whether to regulate derivatives, Greenspan, along with Rubin, quashed the idea...

    "The Greenspan-Rubin duo pushed deregulation on numerous fronts. Glass-Steagall, the Depression-era law that separated banking, insurance, and underwriting was erased at the particular urging of Rubin...After burying Glass-Steagall, Rubin left the government to become a senior official at Citicorp--a financial superconglomerate made possible only by Glass-Steagall's repeal..."

    Coincidentally, under the recent bipartisan corporate welfare bailout plan that both the Republican and the Democratic presidential candidates endorsed, $25 billion of U.S. Treasury tax dollars is to be invested in Citicorp stock. And, coincidentally, the fourth-largest source of 2008 campaign contributions ($499,598) for even the Democratic Obama presidential campaign came from executives of Rubin's failing Citicorp firm.

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    10/29/2008 10:34:00 AM 0 comments

     

    A Financial Meltdown 30 Years in the Making

    by Dollars and Sense

    This is from the fantastic Labor Notes:

    By Mark Brenner

    They break it, and we're stuck with the bill.

    In less than two weeks Congress lined up $700 billion to bail out the nation's bankers, leaving millions of homeowners on the sidelines, facing foreclosure, bankruptcy, or both.

    Somehow the argument that "it may seem unfair, but it was necessary" just doesn't cut it. It’s no wonder that the most popular sign at labor's September 25 protest on Wall Street said "Bailout = Bullsh*t."

    For union members, it sounds all too familiar. Management's perennial argument for concessions—take the cuts or say goodbye to your job—hasn't exactly saved U.S. manufacturing, whether in the 1980s or today.

    In past recessions, it's been each union for itself, and the companies always came out ahead. Corporations are already using the deep hole they've dug for themselves to demand even more from workers. Teamsters at the Minneapolis Star Tribune bucked the trend, refusing mid-contract concessions on September 10 and prompting newspaper executives to suspend a $9 million payment to their creditors.

    "The company is asking us to slash our own throats to save their profits," said Kevin Bialon, a 27-year pressman who served on the bargaining committee. "Management made the mistakes and they want workers to pay for it."

    Read the rest of the article.

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    10/29/2008 10:22:00 AM 0 comments

    Tuesday, October 28, 2008

     

    Closures & Layoffs (Oct. 19-25)

    by Dollars and Sense

    Hat-tip to Bob Feldman for letting us know about the excellent regular updates on layoffs and closures from Mark Heschmeyer of Co-Star Group. We hope to link to this every week, starting this week.

    Closures & Layoffs (Oct. 19-25):
    Canning Plants: We're Not Talkin' Vegetables


    A Weekly Report on Future Corporate Downsizings

    In this week's issue:

    * Pepsico to can six plants.

    * Tesla Motors is pulling the plug in Michigan.

    * Lear to cut costs through next year.

    * Plus we report on company closures and layoffs in: Alabama, Connecticut, Iowa, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, Ohio, Virginia, Washington and Wisconsin, which includes BuildersFirst exiting New Jersey.

    Read the whole report.

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    10/28/2008 12:35:00 PM 0 comments

     

    Something Has To Give

    by Dollars and Sense

    This posting is from D&S collective member and frequent blogger Larry Peterson. To see more of his posts, click here.

    Last week global markets sold off big-time on Friday, and observers of the financial scene were puzzled due to the fact that no specific event seemed to set off such panic. Today, on the contrary, as of one PM Eastern time, stocks remain in positive terrritory, despite huge gyrations in the US, UK and Europe. And this in spite of these headlines, which I've just taken off Reuters:

    Consumers gloomiest ever as home prices plunge

    Iceland hikes rates massively

    W.House: Autos may be eligible for rescue package

    Emerging Europe scrambles to contain crisis threat

    OPEC officials say ready to act again to boost oil

    Industry bailouts risk unfair trade challenge

    And though shares are being boosted by a long-awaited stretch of bargain hunting (fuelled also by the certainty of a one-half percentage point interest rate cut by the Fed this week) the bad news does not end there. Trade expert Dani Rodrick published this salutary thought on his website on 26 October: "I have a feeling that this will be the make-it-or-break-it week for emerging markets. I hope the IMF will make an announcement in time to make a difference." Let's hope (against hope?) the news settles down a little before then. Or maybe not?

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    10/28/2008 11:39:00 AM 0 comments

     

    Bank of England Doubles Bailout Estimate

    by Dollars and Sense

    Apologies for the error in the first sentence (they had a US dollar figure in the original article, which is contradicted by the title). From The Independent:

    BoE warns credit crisis losses could hit 2.8trn Pounds

    By Sean O'Grady, Economics Editor
    Tuesday, 28 October 2008



    Global bank losses as a result of write-offs on mortgage-backed and other badly devalued securities will spiral to $2.8 trillion before the credit crunch is over, according to the latest estimates produced by the Bank of England.



    The figure is around double the Bank's previous estimates and calculations by the IMF. It suggests that, while the recent injections of bank capital by governments may help stabilise the financial system, it is far from fully over the ravages of the credit crisis.


    The Bank says that the losses for the UK's banks will run to 122.6bn pounds, against a forecast of 62.7bn pounds made in April. For the US and the euro area, it gives figures of $1,577.3bn (was $738.8bn) and 784.6bn (previously 344.1bn euros) respectively.


    Read the rest of the article

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    10/28/2008 09:01:00 AM 0 comments

     

    Letters of Credit and Trade Finance Freeze

    by Dollars and Sense

    From Naked Capitalism, another excellent, sobering post. Gives you an idea of the increasingly all-embracing extent of the crisis:


    Confirmation of the Role of Financing Difficulties in Collapsing Trade Volumes


    One of our pet themes in recent weeks is that the fall in trade traffic, indicated and possibly overstated by a dramatic fall in the Baltic Dry Index, is due at least in part to difficulties in arranging and getting other banks to accept buyers' letters of credit.


    For those new to this topic, international trade depends to a large degree on letters of credit. While they can help finance shipments, an even more fundamental role is that they assure the shipper that he will be paid for the cargo sent. Without banks using letters of credit as the means to send payment to exporters, parties that are new to each other or conduct business with each other infrequently could never trade with each other (one type, a documentary letter of credit, requires that forms, often a very long and elaborate set of them, verifying that the goods have been inspected and certified, that customs, have been cleared and all relevant charges and duties paid, be presented and vetted before payment is released).


    Some readers scoffed at the idea that a fundamental element of trade could be breaking down and yet attract more notice; a few argued that the L/Cs were being used as an excuse for buyers to break commodities deals struck when prices were higher.


    However, as has been discussed in gruesome detail, banks are reluctant to take credit exposures to other banks on the most plain vanilla. short term exposures, namely interbank lending. It has been a struggle for central banks to get banks to lend to each other for longer than overnight. Trade financing is a backwater, operationally intensive, low profit area that simply does not register on senior managements' or regulators' radars. And problems in this area would have virtually no impact on banks, so even acute problems here would simply not register, particularly in comparison to all the other fires that central banks are struggling to smother.


    Read the rest of the post

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    10/28/2008 08:47:00 AM 1 comments

     

    The Alchemy of Finance

    by Dollars and Sense

    A truly wacky story, from today's Financial Times:

    VW vies for title of world's biggest company
    By Richard Milne in London
    Published: October 28 2008 09:34 | Last updated: October 28 2008 11:02


    Volkswagen briefly became the world's largest company by market capitalisation on Tuesday as panic-buying by hedge funds desperate to cover losses caused its value to shoot up by up to 150bn euros.


    Shares in Europe's largest carmaker soared as high as 1,005 euros in early trading, having closed at about 210 euros on Friday. That gave it a market capitalisation of around 296bn euros ($369bn), higher than that of ExxonMobil, the oil company that closed on Monday with a value of $343bn.

    Read the rest of the article

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    10/28/2008 07:54:00 AM 0 comments

     

    Dumb (Ideology) and Dumber (Modelling)

    by Dollars and Sense

    Fine piece by the Financial Times' exceptional Gillian Tett:

    Insight: Volatility returns with a vengeance

    By Gillian Tett
    Monday Oct 27 2008 11:25



    A couple of years ago - or before banks started to go bust - economists sometimes liked to talk about a phenomenon they christened The Great Moderation.

    This was the idea that the 21st-century financial system and global economy had become so stable and sophisticated that dramatic swings in activity had seemingly disappeared. Volatility, in other words, was supposed to be an issue of the past.

    These days a new phrase is needed to describe these Not-So-Moderate-After-All times (the Great Panic, perhaps?). On Friday, the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index, the Vix, rocketed 32.1 per cent to 89.53, as equity markets suffered another dramatic sell-off. The gyrations of the yen, euro, sterling and dollar have also been wild, pushing levels of currency volatility to heights barely seen in decades.

    Read the rest of the article

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    10/28/2008 07:44:00 AM 0 comments

    Monday, October 27, 2008

     

    Asia and the Meltdown of American Finance

    by Dollars and Sense

    From the fine MRZine site, Japan scholar R. Taggart Murphy provides a breezy, accessible discussion of some important history:

    Asia and the Meltdown of American Finance
    by R. Taggart Murphy


    The boardrooms and finance ministries of Seoul, Bangkok, Jakarta, and Kuala Lumpur are today filled with a fair degree of schadenfreude at America's troubles. Schadenfreude is not a very nice emotion; Theodor Adorno once defined it as "unanticipated delight in the sufferings of another." But asking Asia's business and governing elites to repress shivers of pleasure at the meltdown of the American financial system is probably demanding more than flesh and blood can bear. The spectacle of the politicians, pundits, and academics of Washington and Chicago thrashing about in attempts to justify the vast amounts of money being shoveled at their, um, cronies on Wall Street is just a little too rich. Particularly since much of the money will have to be borrowed from the very people who a decade ago at the time of the so-called Asian Financial Crisis were being pooh-poohed for their "crony capitalism," "opaque" banking systems, "incestuous" government-business relations, not to mention their supposed absence of transparent financial reporting, good corporate governance, or accountable executives and regulators.

    But the glee in seeing the United States hoisted by its own petard must surely be mixed with a good deal of apprehension. Not only because Asia cannot escape this crisis unmarked. But because the crisis could conceivably force Asia's elites to engage in the open political discussions they have largely avoided until now -- discussions about the kinds of economies they expect to shape in the wake of the American debacle; discussions that carry with them all kinds of risks.


    Read the rest of this post

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    10/27/2008 01:20:00 PM 0 comments

     

    Related Post on Fed Balance Sheet

    by Dollars and Sense

    From Brad Setser:


    One easy thing China could do to help stabilize global markets: buy Agencies!
    Posted on Saturday, October 25th, 2008 by bsetser


    There is constant talk -- too much, in my view -- about whether sovereign funds will come to the rescue of western financial institutions.


    Qatar did put a large sum of money into Credit Suisse recently, but in general the Gulf funds are reeling from large losses on their existing portfolio even as they are facing increased domestic demands (see Mufson and Pan of the Washington Post and Steven Johnson of Reuters) . "Rescuing*" US banks but not your own countries' markets -- and our own countries financial institutions -- is hard. And some Gulf countries' ability to carry out their ambitious local development plans will hinge on the availability of financing from their sovereign funds is oil stays at its current levels.


    China is still cash rich. But the CIC has yet to prove that it can manage a $100 billion balance sheet (its "frozen" investment in the Reserve Primary Fund is the latest case in point) let alone manage a US or European financial institution with a far larger balance sheet. Moreover, it would seem a bit bizarre -- at least to me --for the US taxpayer to guarantee the liabilities (and thus be on the hook for most future losses) of an institution that is effectively owned by China's government. As Uwe Reinhardt notes, US taxpayers are already on the hook for most of the downside -- and handing over both the upside and control to another country's government (typically a non-democratic government) hardly achieves the goal of keeping major financial institutions in private hands.

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    10/27/2008 11:43:00 AM 0 comments

     

    Fed Balance Sheet and Inflation

    by Dollars and Sense

    Good piece on Econobrowser --thank you, Yves Smith--on how the Fed is trying to square what is, to many people, an apparent circle. May be tough going for some, but it's worth it

    October 25, 2008
    The Federal Reserve's balance sheet


    On Thursday, the Federal Reserve issued its weekly H.4.1 report, which provides details of the Fed's balance sheet. Once upon a time, this was one of the least interesting of the government's many releases of data. These days, it's become one of the most exciting.


    The essence of the Fed's balance sheet used to be quite simple. The Fed's primary operations would consist of either buying outstanding Treasury securities or issuing loans to banks through its discount window. It paid for these transactions by creating credits in accounts that banks hold with the Federal Reserve, known as reserve deposits. Banks can turn those reserves into green cash any time they desire, so the process is sometimes loosely summarized as saying that the Fed pays for the Treasury bills it buys or loans it extends by "printing money". Before the excitement began, the Fed's assets consisted primarily of the Treasury securities it had acquired over time (about $800 billion as of August 2007) plus its discount loans (an insignificant number at that time). Its liabilities consisted primarily of cash held by the public (about $800 billion a year ago) plus the reserve deposits held by banks (which again used to be a very small number).


    Bernanke's overriding goal since then has been to extend a huge volume of short-term loans to financial institutions. If he'd done that in the usual way, just creating new reserve deposits with each new loan, the supply of cash would have ballooned, bringing worries of inflation. The Fed didn't want to do that, and in fact there was no shortage of funds available for overnight interbank lending. The fed funds rate, an average overnight lending rate between banks, is already quite low, and further reductions seem unlikely to accomplish much. But longer term interbank lending rates remain quite high relative to the overnight rate.


    Bernanke's first approach to this challenge was to "sterilize" the new loans from the Fed...


    Read the rest of the post

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    10/27/2008 11:13:00 AM 0 comments

     

    Safe Haven Musical Chairs...

    by Dollars and Sense

    ...in a room with no furniture (or roof)?

    This is going to really complicate attempts to stop the bloodletting.


    From Marketwatch

    LONDON (MarketWatch) -- The U.S. dollar surged against the euro and the British pound Monday, but lost ground against ever-resilient Japanese currency as safe-haven flows trumped a G7 warning over "excessive" yen volatility.

    "Fear continues to grip global markets and traders are piling into whatever safe havens they can find," said James Hughes, analyst at CMC Markets.
    The dollar slipped to 93.30 yen in recent trade after touching a low of 92.02 earlier in the day. That's down from 94.18 late Friday.
    The dollar fell as low as 90.90 yen on Friday, the yen's strongest level versus the dollar since August 1995.

    "We are concerned about the recent excessive volatility in the exchange rate of the yen and its possible adverse implications for economic and financial stability," the G-7 said in a joint statement issued Monday morning.

    "We continue to monitor markets closely, and cooperate as appropriate," they said.

    Strategists said the statement shows high potential for coordinated intervention aimed at arresting the yen's strong rise.

    Meanwhile, the dollar lost ground against the Swiss franc, a traditional safe-haven, to change hands at 1.1590 francs, a loss of 0.7%.

    The dollar, however, has enjoyed safe-haven status of its own, boosted in part by repatriation as U.S. investors flee emerging markets and other overseas investments.

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    10/27/2008 08:09:00 AM 0 comments

     

    Here We Go Again

    by Dollars and Sense

    From today's International Herald Tribune

    Stocks hammered again in Europe and Asia

    By David Jolly and Bettina Wassener

    Monday, October 27, 2008

    PARIS: Stock markets shuddered Monday in Europe and Asia, with Japanese stocks falling to their lowest level since 1982, as the sell-off that has erased more than 51 percent of the value of global equities this year showed no signs of abating.


    Currency market traders were keeping nervous watch for central bank intervention, after Group of 7 finance and monetary officials expressed noted concern about the strength of the yen.


    "We are concerned about the recent excessive volatility in the exchange rate of the yen and its possible adverse implications for economic and financial stability," the G-7 statement said. "We continue to monitor markets closely, and cooperate as appropriate."


    Bilal Hafeez, global head of currency strategy at Deutsche Bank in London, said any intervention would probably take the form of central banks selling yen and buying dollars and euros.


    "The yen is the real standout currency at the moment," Hafeez said, "and that's what the authorities want to address."


    In early trading, the DJ Euro Stoxx 50 index, a barometer of euro zone blue chips, fell 5.9 percent, while the FTSE 100 index in London fell 5.4 percent. The CAC 40 in Paris fell 5.9 percent, and the DAX in Frankfurt fell 4.7 percent.


    Trading in U.S. index futures suggested Wall Street stocks would fall about 4 percent at the start of trading in New York.

    Read the rest of the article

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    10/27/2008 07:36:00 AM 0 comments

    Sunday, October 26, 2008

     

    Desperate Measures

    by Dollars and Sense

    FT.com on what it refers to as "dramatic example of the secret manoeuvring that preceded the government bail-out of the financial sector."

    Goldman chief sought tie-up talks with Citi


    By Henny Sender in Tokyo and Francesco Guerrera in New York
    Sunday Oct 26 2008 17:35



    Lloyd Blankfein, Goldman Sachs' chief executive, called Vikram Pandit, his Citigroup (NYSE:C) counterpart, last month to discuss a merger, in a dramatic example of the secret manoeuvring that preceded the government bail-out of the financial sector.


    The call, which was made at the tentative suggestion of the regulatory authorities or at least with their blessing, was made shortly after Goldman had won surprise approval to convert itself from a securities firm into a commercial bank on September 21, according to several people familiar with the events.


    They added that the conversation was brief as Mr Pandit rejected the proposal at once.

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    10/26/2008 07:19:00 PM 0 comments

     

    Good Basic Article on Leverage and the Crisis

    by Dollars and Sense

    From James Saft of Reuters:

    October 24th, 2008


    Distortion is the new normal for markets



    Posted by: James Saft
    Tags: Uncategorized, Credit crisis


    (James Saft is a Reuters columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.)



    LONDON (Reuters) - The evaporation of borrowed money has fundamentally changed the way markets function, and what look like crazy anomalies may end up being closer to the new reality.


    Across financial markets, especially in fixed income, strange things are happening. Take two examples:


    The U.S. government takes Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac into conservatorship, essentially guaranteeing their debts. Investors first narrow the premium they demand to lend to the two mortgage giants, then stage a strike and send these premiums to all-time highs.


    Treasury inflation-protected securities (TIPs) hugely underperform standard Treasuries, and are factoring in precious little inflation in comparison to market expectations.


    And while fundamental explanations and official policy errors may explain some such moves, they probably don't account for all of them.


    The common denominator is the rapid disappearance from the market of leverage, money borrowed by investors to magnify what they can buy.

    Read the rest of the article

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    10/26/2008 06:31:00 PM 0 comments

     

    Crisis Focus Turn: To Currencies, and Europe

    by Dollars and Sense

    Yves Smith posted yet another absolutely essential entry on how the focus on the crisis is rapidly turning to currencies, and on what some of the responses might be as the crisis becomes acute. Reuters indicates S&P futures are trading up in early Monday Asian trading. From the post:


    Stephen Jen, currency chief at Morgan Stanley, says the emerging market crash is a vastly underestimated risk. It threatens to become "the second epicentre of the global financial crisis", this time unfolding in Europe rather than America.

    ...


    Yves again. Now the meltdown may resume Monday, but another scenario may play out. Recall 40 nations (EU and Asian) met in Beijing over the weekend, endorsing Nicolas Sarkozy's call for a revamping of international banking regulations and more coordinated, tougher supervision. None of this directly addresses the looming currency crisis, but the markets sold off badly Friday, and if there is any stabilization or reversion on Monday, the backing away from the abyss plus the hope that the next phase of meetings, scheduled for November 15 in Washington DC, might ameliorate the situation, may put the currency crisis in abeyance for a couple of weeks.

    ...

    In this fraught environment, for China visibly (and the key is visibly) to start buying other currencies would have a disproportionate effect on psychology (and be rewarding to China, since it would profit from the rally it helped engineer). That might stem the panicked capital flight, and while it is probably insufficient to restore real stability, it could keep a necessary (and painful) revauluation/readjustment process from morphing into a rout.


    Read the post

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    10/26/2008 06:06:00 PM 0 comments

     

    View from UK: US Joins UK on Recession Brink

    by Dollars and Sense

    I don't know which specific government figures the authors are referring to.

    From today's Observer:

    America joins UK on brink of recession


    Fed expected to lower interest rates to 1 per cent
    Heather Stewart and Richard Wachman
    The Observer,
    Sunday October 26 2008


    Federal reserve chairman Ben Bernanke is poised to slash American interest rates to just 1 per cent this week, the lowest level since the depths of the dotcom crash, as government figures reveal the US has joined Britain on the cusp of recession.


    World investors were focused on Britain last week after Bank of England governor Mervyn King and Prime Minister Gordon Brown confirmed recession was looming, and it emerged that the economy had shrunk by a worse-than-expected 0.5 per cent in the third quarter of the year. But all eyes will now turn to the US, as the Fed meets to set borrowing costs and government figures reveal the full scale of the deterioration in the economy over the past three months.

    Read the rest of the article

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    10/26/2008 05:49:00 PM 0 comments

    Saturday, October 25, 2008

     

    Wall Street and the Return of the Repressed

    by Dollars and Sense

    From TomDispatch.com; hat-tip to Claire for this one.

    The Specter of Wall Street
    Wall Street's Comeback as the Place Americans Love to Hate
    By Steve Fraser

    Wall Street sits at the eye of a political hurricane. Its enemies converge from every point on the compass. What a stunning turn of events.

    For well more than half a century Wall Street has enjoyed a remarkable political immunity, but matters were not always like that. Now, with history marching forward in seven league boots, we are about to revisit a time when the Street functioned as the country's lightning rod, attracting its deepest animosities and most passionate desires for economic justice and democracy.

    For the better part of a century, from the 1870s through the tumultuous years of the Great Depression and the New Deal, the specter of Wall Street haunted the popular political imagination. For Populists it was the "Great Satan," its stranglehold over the country's credit system being held responsible for driving the family farmer to the edge of extinction and beyond.

    Read the rest of the article.

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    10/25/2008 06:18:00 PM 0 comments

     

    Bailedout Cash for Acquisition, Not Loans

    by Dollars and Sense

    Joe Nocera, New York Times business columnist, has a particularly interesting piece today. We all suspect that the money being injected by the Treasury Department in order to recapitalize banks is more likely to fund acquisitions than to ease the credit crisis by getting banks to lend again. In fact, we suspect that was part of the plan all along--to encourage (further) consolidation in the banking industry. Nocera helps confirm these suspicions, first by pointing us to the fine print in the bailout bill, which gives a tax break to banks that acquire other banks:
    In fact, Treasury wants banks to acquire each other and is using its power to inject capital to force a new and wrenching round of bank consolidation. As Mark Landler reported in The New York Times earlier this week, "the government wants not only to stabilize the industry, but also to reshape it." Now they tell us.

    Indeed, Mr. Landler’s story noted that Treasury would even funnel some of the bailout money to help banks buy other banks. And, in an almost unnoticed move, it recently put in place a new tax break, worth billions to the banking industry, that has only one purpose: to encourage bank mergers. As a tax expert, Robert Willens, put it: "It couldn’t be clearer if they had taken out an ad."

    Nocera also managed to listen in on an employee-only phone conference over at JPMorgan-Chase, in which an executive tipped his hand on how the $25 billion injection the bank just took might be used. When someone asked the obvious question: "Chase recently received $25 billion in federal funding. What effect will that have on the business side and will it change our strategic lending policy?", here's how the executive responded:
    "Twenty-five billion dollars is obviously going to help the folks who are struggling more than Chase," he began. "What we do think it will help us do is perhaps be a little bit more active on the acquisition side or opportunistic side for some banks who are still struggling. And I would not assume that we are done on the acquisition side just because of the Washington Mutual and Bear Stearns mergers. I think there are going to be some great opportunities for us to grow in this environment, and I think we have an opportunity to use that $25 billion in that way and obviously depending on whether recession turns into depression or what happens in the future, you know, we have that as a backstop."

    Joe the journalist observes:
    Read that answer as many times as you want — you are not going to find a single word in there about making loans to help the American economy. On the contrary: at another point in the conference call, the same executive (who I'm not naming because he didn’t know I would be listening in) explained that "loan dollars are down significantly." He added, "We would think that loan volume will continue to go down as we continue to tighten credit to fully reflect the high cost of pricing on the loan side." In other words JPMorgan has no intention of turning on the lending spigot.

    It is starting to appear as if one of Treasury's key rationales for the recapitalization program — namely, that it will cause banks to start lending again — is a fig leaf, Treasury's version of the weapons of mass destruction.

    Read the full article.

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    10/25/2008 06:03:00 PM 0 comments

     

    Recapitalization: A Sisyphean Task

    by Dollars and Sense

    The indispensable Yves Smith rightly directs attention to this FT Alphaville post. Here's the last sentence of the post:

    "Which is an admission, basically, that the Fed lost control of the Federal Funds Rate."


    Happy reading.

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    10/25/2008 11:27:00 AM 0 comments

     

    Carry Trade: Key To Understanding Crisis Turn

    by Dollars and Sense

    A fine piece by the Financial Times' John Authurs on the unwinding of this trade, and the impact it has been having on the recent, otherwise partially inexplicable, US dollar strength. Understanding this trade is absolutely essential to understanding the turn the crisis has taken. Apologies for the image: it's the only link I can find to this article.

    Read the article "Chaos Carries a Risk for Emerging Markets"

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    10/25/2008 11:16:00 AM 2 comments

     

    Interpreting Friday's Craziness

    by Dollars and Sense

    Some snippets from today's Financial Times lead piece. All are horrific.


    Looming recession batters stocks

    By Michael Mackenzie in New York and Michiyo Nakamoto in Tokyo and Song Jung-a in Seoul
    Friday Oct 24 2008 12:10



    Traders said the massive reversal of currency positions in favour of the yen, reflected further liquidation of the so-called "carry trade", in which investors had borrowed at low Japanese interest rates to fund risky global investments.


    . . .


    The sharp rise in the yen forced further sales of risky assets, with equities, commodities and emerging markets suffering sharp declines while investors sought the safety of owning short-term government paper. Redemption requests from investors in mutual and hedge funds intensified the wave of forced selling.

    . . .


    "The magnitude of such historical market moves in currencies could only be the result of imploding hedge funds leading to massive liquidations," said Ashraf Laidi, chief currency strategist at CMC Markets.

    . . .

    Kazuyuki Sugimoto, vice finance minister, warned that rapid and excessive currency moves were not desirable for the economy, prompting speculation that the government might intervene in the currency markets or that the Bank of Japan might cut interest rates. However, analysts said neither move would be effective.

    . . .

    But one thing from the print version of the same article really caught my eye:


    Jack McDonald, president of Conifer Securities, a prime brokerage for small and medium-sized hedge funds said:


    "Funds will only have a good idea about the actual size of redemptions towards the end of November."


    That will be something to look forward to, indeed. If we make it that far.



    Read the rest of the online edition article

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    10/25/2008 10:52:00 AM 0 comments

     

    Capitalism with American Characteristics

    by Dollars and Sense

    Creeping socialism continues. Of the costs, anyway....From today's Financial Times:


    Treasury urged to aid car and insurance sectors


    By James Politi in Washington and Joanna Chung in New York
    Friday Oct 24 2008 17:50




    The US Treasury is coming under increasing pressure to expand its financial rescue plan beyond banks to include direct assistance to the ailing car and insurance sectors.


    In recent days, lawmakers and interest groups have stepped up their efforts to persuade the administration of George W. Bush, US president, to divert part of the $700bn authorised by Congress to a range of companies that were not originally expected to be helped.


    The emergency legislation enacted this month gives the Treasury broad authority to buy any assets that are important for the stability of the US financial system.

    Read the rest of the article

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    10/25/2008 10:29:00 AM 0 comments

    Friday, October 24, 2008

     

    It Wasn't Just an Overreaction

    by Dollars and Sense

    Stock markets got hammered today, but it was nowhere near as bad as some (including me) had feared it might (might, mind you) be. Still, things are by no means peachy. I leave you with the wise words from Across the Curve:

    The next two weeks have the potential to be watershed events for the markets. There is a veritable tsunami of data and events which will shape views and mold opinions.

    Three events dominate the landscape. The FOMC meets this coning week and the market has priced in a 50 basis point ease. I am confident that they will do that and I am also strong in the belief that the statement at the conclusion of the meeting will encourage the belief that another rate cut is not far behind. The Committee will acknowledge the debilitated condition of the domestic economy and the similarly dire state of the global economy.

    During this period the Treasury will announce the refunding package for November. They should return the 3 year note to the flock and given their absolutely gargantuan appetite they will give the market some guideposts regarding the methods they will employ to raise those funds.

    Finally, the results of the election could signal the end of an era of laissez faire capitalism and usher in an era of unaccustomed regulation and government control. It certainly seems as though Senator Obama is on track to be the next President. If the Democrats can sweep the Senate they will have a clear field to change the nature of the debate as Ronald Reagan did in 1980. We will know on the morning after.

    There is also a plethora of economic data on the immediate horizon. Among the reports which print next week are Consumer Confidence and Durable Goods . We will get our first glimpse of Q3 GDP and the quarterly employment cost index. The Chicago Purchasing Managers Index is on the docket as well as Personal Income and Spending data.

    In the following week there is the labor data for October as well as the ISM.

    When all of that data has been digested and absorbed, I think participants in the major markets will have a better idea on the near term course of the economy and interest rates.

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    10/24/2008 03:48:00 PM 0 comments

     

    AIG Keeps Sinking

    by Dollars and Sense

    AIG executives, back from their spa retreat and British hunting trips, are busily back at work throwing tax dollars into the furnace.

    In little over a month, the company has accessed $90.3 billion (nearly three-quarters) of the $122.8 billion in credit lines extended by the Fed in exchange for an 80% stake in the company.

    AIG chief Edward Liddy said that the company may soon have to ask for more money if the company is forced to post more collateral for bond holdings that it guaranteed but that are now being downgraded.

    Under extreme pressure from NY Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, AIG has agreed to put a hold on paying out performance bonuses to former and current executives.

    The impact of the AIG collapse is being felt far and wide. Thirty municipal transit agencies, including those in Atlanta, Chicago, DC, San Francisco, and Los Angeles, are facing the prospect of being forced to come up with hundreds of millions of dollars. The crisis is a result of complicated (but legal) tax dodges between the transit agencies and private banks (explained here in the Washington Post). Basically, the banks paid the agencies large sums upfront that would be repaid in installments over time. Exploiting a loophole in the tax code, the banks saved hundreds of millions in taxes, but split the profit with the transit agencies. The deals were guaranteed by AIG, but now that the insurer is on the skids and the federal government has declared an end to the tax dodge, the banks are demanding that cash-strapped transit agencies hand over hundreds of millions in cash in the next few weeks.

    The demands may actually be a bargaining tactic to force Congress to extend the tax breaks.

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    10/24/2008 03:01:00 PM 2 comments

     

    Dean Baker: Why Economists Get It Wrong

    by Dollars and Sense

    Another insightful commentary from the inestimable Dean Baker:

    Unlike custodians, cab drivers, or dishwashers, economists are not held accountable for their job performance. They can be wrong on everything they do every day of the week, and still be viewed as respected authorities by the Washington Post, and other media outlets, as well as members of Congress and others in policy positions.

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    10/24/2008 01:30:00 PM 0 comments

     

    Chrysler Slashes Workforce

    by Dollars and Sense

    Chrysler announced that it will cut 25% of its white-collar workforce of 17,300 by the end of the year through early retirements and buyouts. The announcement follows yesterday's news that it would lay off 6% of its hourly workforce by shuttering a plant in Delaware and slowing production at one in Ohio. Chrysler's sales are down 25% for the year.

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    10/24/2008 01:20:00 PM 0 comments

     

    A Chronology of Today's Events

    by Dollars and Sense

    US shares seem to be settling down at with losses at a level below five percent. But today has still been a very ominous day. Reuters provided the following timetable of various goings on initiated largely in repsonse to market falls from the opening of trading in New York at 9.30am EST to about half an hour ago:


    12.20 ET
    Bank of Canada injection through special purchase and resale agreements now totals C$1.285 bln - Reuters
    12:08 ET
    Venezuelan oil basket falls $6.91 to $61.09 per barrel: energy ministry - Reuters
    12:03 ET
    U.S. Treasury polling dealers on impact of recent govt interventions on credit markets, treasuries - Reuters
    11:52 ET
    U.S. Treasury exploring ways to aid insurance companies under financial rescue law: sources - Reuters
    11:46 ET
    U.S. govt to shortly announce a list of about 20 next banks to receive capital injections: source - Reuters
    11:33 ET
    Britain's FTSE 100 falls 5.6 pct, Germany's DAX falls 5.4 pct and France's CAC 40 falls 3.9 pct - Reuters
    11:16 ET
    Spain's Popular says mergers will not be forced by need to survive crisis, but opportunistic - Reuters
    11:14 ET
    Head of IMF Iceland mission says urgent challenge is for govt to stabilize Icelandic crown - Reuters
    11:07 ET
    Bank of Canada injects C$830 mln into market through special purchase and resale agreements - Reuters
    10:52 ET
    Iceland PM says if central bank needs to change monetary policy, it would be done after IMF deal - Reuters
    10:51 ET
    IMF liquidity plan still under discussion, not yet finalized, official says - Reuters
    10:49 ET
    Proposed emerging nation liquidity fund would lend up to 5 times of a country's IMF quota: Official - Reuters
    10:47 ET
    Iceland PM says inflation will go down rapidly over next 12 months - Reuters
    10:41 ET
    U.S. PGBC has 'sufficient funds' to pay obligations for 'number of years': director - Reuters
    10:32 ET
    Iceland PM says cabinet has agreed to request formal negotiations with IMF for $2 bln - Reuters
    10:29 ET
    Morgan Stanley says key risks for Boeing shares remain continued cyclical concerns, machinist strike, ability to finance aircraft, concerns over credit crisis fallout, erratic fuel prices, delays in 787 program - Reuters
    10:25 ET
    Chrysler to cut 25 percent of white collar jobs in November - Wall Street Journal
    10:22 ET
    PNC says was competitive bidding for National City, declines to comment on whether deal forced by government - Reuters
    10:19 ET
    PNC CEO says $19.9 bln of losses on National City portfolio will come in as writedowns at time of close of acquisition, but also as provisions over time - Reuters
    10:11 ET
    PNC Financial Services Group Inc CEO says planning to record $19.9 bln of writedowns on National City Corp loans - Reuters
    10:08 ET
    U.S. treasuries hit session lows as stocks pare losses, curb safe-haven bids - Reuters
    10:07 ET
    'You look at these markets, whether it is agricultural or industrial commodities-- we are not tradig on fundamentals, we are trading on money flow.': Bill O'Neill, Logic Advisors - Reuters
    10:01 ET
    'As trading gets underday and we're seeing the Dow extend its losses, so I would probably bet on a further decline in dollar/yen probably towards the lower end of it's ranges': Omer Esiner, Ruesch Int'l
    09:58 ET
    'You have the hedge fund audience preparing for redemption': Keith Wirtz, Fifth Third Asset Management
    09:49 ET
    White House says markets trying to digest lots of new information, will take time to settle - Reuters
    09:43 ET
    Iceland to receive some aid from Nordic countries as part of $6 bln deal, says official - Reuters
    09:41 ET
    Iceland to get $1 bln from IMF in total $6 bln aid package, says official with knowledge of Iceland-IMF discussions - Reuters
    09:38 ET
    S&P 500 down 23.52 points, or 2.59 percent, at 884.59 after market openS&P 500 down 23.52 points, or 2.59 percent, at 884.59 after market open - Reuters
    09:35 ET
    U.S. treasuries pare gains slightly after stock market opens sharply lower - Reuters
    09:34 ET
    U.S. dollar trims losses vs yen despite lower open for U.S. stocks - Reuters

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    10/24/2008 11:43:00 AM 0 comments

     

    In Defense of Low-Income Homeownership

    by Dollars and Sense

    For many years progressive community-development folks worked hard to make homeownership accessible to low-income households. This effort was based in significant part on their view that homeownership represented a critical opportunity for low-income households to build assets and move into the middle class.

    Now a new skepticism about low-income homeownership has emerged—including in these pages (see Howard Karger's The Homeownership Myth in D&S #270).

    But before we let the subprime crisis completely wash this whole effort away, we should revisit the argument for low-income homeownership and examine what is left of it after the subprime debacle and how to move forward.

    There are a number of avenues by which a higher rate of homeownership may benefit neighborhoods and communities as aggregates. But for the purposes of this discussion, let's leave those community-level benefits aside.

    At the level of individual households, the case for expanding low-income homeownership opportunities that fair-lending and community development activists began making perhaps 30 years ago took as its starting point the fact that all households must pay for a place to live. Many low-income households spend just as much on rent as their homebuyer neighbors spend on mortgage payments (or at least this was true prior to the recent housing bubble, which pushed house prices up much more than rents on average). For these households, what holds them back from homeownership is not the ability to make the monthly payments, but rather (1) enough savings to make a down payment; and (2) a lender willing to extend them credit.

    Households that have these two advantages and so can buy a home reap big benefits. Rent is like money down the drain, whereas mortgage payments build equity—i.e., you're paying yourself. As a result, over time renters actually pay far more to keep a square foot of roof over their heads than homeowners do. This is one of the biggest ways in which life is more expensive for the poor than for the nonpoor.

    If you can make mortgages available, then, along with either no/low down payment terms or the opportunity to borrow the down payment, then low-income households can jump the hurdle.

    This was the case for expanding low-income homeownership opportunities. So what went wrong? Why does it appear that so many low-income homebuyers in the most recent period were not able to keep their homes and reap the benefits of homeownership?

    One factor is no doubt the often-unpredictable ancillary costs of homeownership. What do you do when the water heater breaks? If you don't have the savings to suddenly put out $1,000 for a new one, you're in trouble.

    The variability of income over time is probably another factor. Income fluctuations that a middle-income household can manage can put a lower-income household into foreclosure. And income fluctuations have been getting larger for most Americans in recent decades, a fact that is obscured if you look only at population snapshots or at individuals' average earnings over time.

    But the factor that seems likely to have been the thousand-pound gorilla here is that the private financial services industry was never going to provide credit to low-income earners on the same terms as it did to middle- and high-income earners. Twenty and thirty years ago, did progressive low-income homeownership advocates take this little wrinkle into account? I don't know. But in any case, this fact turned out to invalidate the side-by-side comparison of a renter and a homebuyer paying out the same monthly sum for housing. Instead of getting the same 30-year fixed-rate mortgages at prime (i.e., relatively low) interest rates that middle-class white households had been getting en masse in the decades since World War II, the new lower-income and more often nonwhite entrants to the home purchase market got newfangled, deceptive, designed-to-fail mortgage products.

    The private financial services industry is not the only way credit can be provided, however. Perhaps the solution is public mortgage lending—a quasi-governmental institution that does not merely expand liquidity via private for-profit lenders as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were designed to do, but actually makes direct loans to low-income homebuyers. The microlending phenomenon has demonstrated that low-income borrowers are not inherently worse credit risks than high-income borrowers. They just need a chance: access to credit on equitable terms.

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    10/24/2008 11:38:00 AM 1 comments

     

    This Could Save Us -- Today, Anyway

    by Dollars and Sense

    Also, oil is down another $5 a barrel today.

    From Reuters:

    Home sales gain biggest since July 2003

    Fri Oct 24, 2008 10:57am EDT
    By Patrick Rucker



    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Sales of previously owned U.S. homes rose 5.5 percent last month, the biggest gain since July 2003, and the inventory of unsold homes fell, a hopeful sign for a housing market mired in a long slump.

    The National Association of Realtors said on Friday that sales of existing homes rose to a 5.18 million-unit annual rate from the 4.91 million unit pace set in August. Economists had expected sales to rise to only a 4.93 million unit rate.
    It was the first time the sales pace had risen above its year ago level in three years, a sign the market could be stabilizing.


    The surprisingly large jump in sales pushed the inventory of unsold homes down by 1.6 percent to 4.27 million, or a 9.9 months' supply at the current pace. While the inventory is still uncomfortably high, the decline is welcome news for a housing market mired in a deep slump.


    Home prices, however, showed no signs of escaping their long, deep slide. The median national home price declined 9 percent from a year ago to $191,600, the lowest level since April 2004, the industry trade group said.


    The increase in sales was spurred by a rise in foreclosure and other 'distress sales' in regions of the country hard-hit by the ongoing housing downturn, said the Realtors' chief economist, Lawrence Yun.


    "n some regions, the lower prices are seeing buyers return to the marketplace," The said. "his was a nice jump and hopefully this trend can continue because the first step to stabilizing the market is an increase in home sales."


    Sales rose in three regions, with the West recording a 16.8 percent jump. The Midwest saw an increase of 4.4 percent and the South saw a 2.2 percent rise. In the Northeast, sales fell 1.2 percent.


    (Editing by Andrea Ricci

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    10/24/2008 10:02:00 AM 0 comments

     

    What To Expect Today?

    by Dollars and Sense

    From Nouriel Roubini

    ...I was accused yesterday of being alarmist arguing that policy makers may have to shut down financial markets. But today Friday Asian markets and in free fall and European markets are also in free fall. And US equties futures have fallen so much today before the US markets have opened that trading in the S&P futures index and the DJIA futures index has already been suspended in Europe as these indices reached their daily limits of a 5% drop. So it has taken only one day for my prediction that markets will be shut down to start to be realized. If - as possible -the free fall will continue today once US markets open then automatic circuit breakers on the S&P 500 may be triggered and trading may be stopped; and if - as likely - the capitulation panic continues today and in the next few days authorities may be forced - as I argued yesterday - to close down financial markets for a week or more in the next few days. We have reached the scary point where the dysfunctional behavior of financial markets has destructive effects on the financial system and - much worse - on the real economies. So it is time to think about more radical policy actions and government interventions of the type I discussed in my London talk yesterday (see the video below that may be worth to watch in its entirety of 48 minutes).

    Read the rest of the post

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    10/24/2008 07:56:00 AM 0 comments

     

    Black Friday?

    by Dollars and Sense

    Now we've got a particularly toxic mix of recession fear and possible reversal in interbank lending. This spells disaster. This post from Naked Capitalism sums it up pretty well:

    Friday, October 24, 2008

    Bloodbath


    I had warned readers against assuming that because we had a bounce in the equity markets, that life would soon return to normalcy ("It Isn't Over Until the Fat Lady Sings"). But I didn't expect a rout like this, particularly with no looming news trigger.

    The yen has gone to 91. The Nikkei was down over 9%, most other Asian markets down 7%, Continental markets down over 10%, but have reverted to down a mere 7% plus. A more aggressive than expected production cut by OPEC has done nothing to stem the fall of oil, down 5%. Gold has fallen below (and a reader who sometimes laments the fact that he runs a gold fund noted that he had been watching trading this week hawkishly, and it had withstood attempts to drive it below that level). US stock futures trading has been restricted because it has fallen below 6%, its daily limit.

    From the Wall Street Journal:

    European shares tumbled Friday as fears of a long and deep recession grew, with the auto sector slumping after profit warnings from Renault and Peugeot-Citroen as well as weak results from Swedish truck maker Volvo.

    The pan-European Dow Jones Stoxx 600 index dropped below 200 for the first time since mid 2003, falling 9.0% to 189.87. Among regional markets, the U.K. FTSE 100 Index dove 8.73% to 3730.78 and the German DAX 30 Index dropped 10% to 4068.43. The French CAC 40 index was down 10.2% at 2974.95, with Peugeot-Citroen among the biggest decliners, falling 14.1%.


    And the credit market news is taking a gloomy turn again. From Bloomberg:

    The cost of borrowing in dollars may rise as increasing prospects of a global recession prompts banks to hoard cash even after policy makers injected record amounts of the U.S. currency into financial markets.

    The London interbank offered rate, or Libor, that banks charge for overnight loans in dollars may climb 4 basis points to 1.25 percent today, according to Jan Misch, a money-market trader at Landesbank Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany's biggest state-owned bank. It increased for the first time in 10 days yesterday. The three-month lending rate for Hong Kong dollars, known as Hibor, rose for the second day, gaining 5 basis points to 3.29 percent.

    ``The level of activity in the money markets remains significantly below standard norms and subject to sporadic abnormalities that can only be a function of illiquidity,'' said Charles Diebel, head of European rates strategy at Nomura International Plc in London.


    Now I want to know how Nouriel Roubini saw this coming. He went into what reader Dwight called Defcon One yesterday.

    Marshall Auerbach e-mailed, saying (as we have) that the Fed is making matters worse:

    All that's left is the Fed buying longer-term Treasury securities to attempt to flatten the curve, get mortgage rates down, and add reserves. This will flood the market with reserves that now pay interest. so they can do this without a zero interest rate policy.

    Their theory is that with more reserves bank will lend more, which is not the case, both in theory and in practice, as Japan proved not long ago.

    Instead of the Fed buying longer term securities, the Treasury should simply stop issuing them and issue more bills. The Treasury not issuing longer term securities is functionally the same as the Treasury issuing them and then the Fed buying them, but with a lot fewer transactional costs.

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    10/24/2008 07:23:00 AM 0 comments

    Thursday, October 23, 2008

     

    Notes on the Financial Crisis (Tom Weisskopf)

    by Dollars and Sense

    We've posted three web-only articles drawing on notes on the financial crisis by Tom Weisskopf, professor of economics at the University of Michigan. He sent out the notes on Oct. 1st, Oct. 5th, and Oct. 15th, but we only just received them. We'll continue to post Tom's notes as he sends them along.

    We've also posted the most recent Ask Dr. Dollar column (a preview of our November/December issue), by Arthur MacEwan, professor emeritus of economics at UMass-Boston.

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    10/23/2008 08:25:00 PM 0 comments

     

    Automakers Ditch Jobs, 401Ks, and NASCAR

    by Dollars and Sense

    A quick gloom and doom update on the US auto industry today.

    Chrysler announced that it was cutting 1,825 jobs. The cuts are about 6% of the company's hourly workforce of 33,000.

    General Motors announced that it is indefinitely suspending company matching contributions to employee 401K retirement accounts.

    The Washington Post reports that Detroit automakers are pulling out of NASCAR:

    GM's annual investment alone was rumored to be $120 million-$140 million at the peak of its involvement in NASCAR. But it severed sponsorships with Bristol Motor Speedway and New Hampshire Motor Speedway this summer, and deeper cuts are promised as part of GM's $10 billion cost-savings program.

    Ford officials announced yesterday that while they were extending their contract with Roush Fenway Racing -- its most decorated team in the elite Sprint Cup ranks -- they were also ending all direct financial support to teams in NASCAR's Nationwide and Truck series, considered developmental leagues. Dodge took a similar step in pulling out of the truck series, which also is losing Sears's Craftsman brand as its title sponsor at season's end.

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    10/23/2008 12:14:00 PM 0 comments

     

    On the More Serious (Only Just) Side

    by Dollars and Sense

    Interesting article from the International Herald Tribune on Paulson's kicking-and-screaming acceptance of his "inner statist."

    The last line is worth the price of admission



    Struggling to keep up as crisis raced on

    By Joe Nocera and Edmund L. Andrews Published: October 23, 2008

    "I felt like Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Who are these guys who just keep coming at us?" -- Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson Jr.


    It was the weekend of Sept. 13, and the moment Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson Jr. had feared for months was finally upon him: Lehman Brothers was hurtling toward bankruptcy -- fast.



    Knowing that Lehman had billions of dollars in bad investments on its books, Paulson had long urged Lehman's chief executive, Richard Fuld Jr., to find a solution for his firm's problems. "He was asked to aggressively look for a buyer," Paulson recalled in an interview.



    But Lehman could not -- despite what Paulson described as personal pleas to other firms to buy some of Lehman's toxic assets and efforts to persuade another bank to acquire Lehman. With all options closed, he said, the government's hands were tied. Although the Federal Reserve had helped bail out Bear Stearns -- and was within days of bailing out the giant insurer American International Group -- it could not help Lehman, even as its default threatened to wreak havoc on financial markets.


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    10/23/2008 11:54:00 AM 0 comments