Archive for the ‘Depression’ Category
How Long Before You Wake Up, Politicos?
How Long Before You Wake Up, Politicos?
Posted by Karl Denninger
I’m going to write today about a very somber subject. It will be, as it usually is here in one form or another, about math.
First, some background. If you believe that we have “escaped” from the mess that gripped this nation in 2008 and 2009, or that said mess “suddenly appeared” and “nobody saw it coming”, stop reading now and have your Thorazine dosage checked. It’s way off.
Assuming you accept the truth – that this mess was 20 year or more in the making, that it involved creating credit (that is, debt) which the debtor could never pay, and that it still exists because our government policy has been to extend, pretend and allow lies that should be considered accounting fraud and result in prison sentences, then you’re on the right page to understand the rest of this missive. Again, if not, go check your Thorazine dosage.
Yes, I know all about the stock market rally from last March. I know all about the claimed GDP “improvement.” But I also know that we got both by adding more than $2 trillion in debt to the United States – or roughly 14% of GDP – over the space of the last 18 months. That’s about 10% of GDP annualized, and incidentally, a 10% GDP contraction is the common economist’s definition of an Economic Depression.
So let’s cut the crap – we are in a Depression right now. We are pretending we are not, just like you can pretend you didn’t really lose your job so long as your credit card does not reach its limit. We have been in that depression for about 18 months and there is no evidence that we will exit it, as we have yet to find a way to pull back the deficit spending without an instantaneous collapse in the economy.
Yet at some point we must and will stop. We will either do so of our own volition, or we will do so when the cost of borrowing skyrockets, as others get tired of funding our profligacy. If we attempt to “print” our way out of it the cost of petroleum products will shoot the moon and destroy our economy anyway.
You haven’t seen the half of what happened though – not yet. It appears that AIG – the company we have bailed out (thus far) to the tune of some $100 billion plus, in fact isn’t done. It appears they may have written credit protection on Greece. If this allegation by the German equivalent to The New York Times is true Americans are going to be asked to pay billions of dollars – or more likely, hundreds of billions (since Greece is almost certainly not the only place – try Spain, Portugal, Ireland, etc) to bail out a bunch of FOREIGN NATIONS.
Do you both think Americans can and will pay that bill? A bill that has been forced on us, and yet benefits not The United States economy, but foreigners?
Wars – big wars - start over much less, my friends.
Oh, and let’s not forget – some 30% of Greece’s workers went out on strike to protest their “austerity measures.” That’s right – one in three.
The Fed and our fabulous Treasury Secretary already gave tens of billions of our hard-earned money to foreign banks to prop them up via AIG. That was just a down payment; now we all get to – quite literally – buy all their houses over in Europe. They get to keep living in them.
If you do not believe it is going to get much worse than it is now, economically and otherwise, you once again need to go have that Thorazine dosage adjusted.
A recent Rasmussen poll disclosed that only 21% of the voters in this country believe that the government enjoys the consent of the governed. Put another way, only 21% of the voters in this nation consent to what Washington is doing.
More ominously, 61% say the government does NOT have consent. The remainder (18%) are not sure.
May I remind you that in 1776 less than that 21% of the population (19%, actually) were loyal to Britain?
If you do not believe this nation is wound tighter than a clock spring, you need to have that Thorazine dosage checked again.
You are in denial.
After denial comes anger, then bargaining, and finally acceptance.
Let’s not do anger on a mass scale in this country, ok?
Neither I or my daughter will appreciate it if it happens; shall we skip that and go right to “acceptance”?
Let’s assume your answer is “yes.”
Now let’s talk numbers.
There are approximately 150,000 federally-attached law enforcement personnel. Another 750,000, roughly, state and local cops are employed by our various government arms. Of those various officers well more than half sit behind a desk and haven’t left one gram of shoe leather on a street or in a cruiser in the last year. The majority of you fire your weapons for periodic qualification and they have never been warm or dirty besides. You’ve never faced death, you’ve never had a weapon pointed at you in anger, and you’ve never drawn your service weapon in the line of duty. Those are facts.
Now consider the “bad side” of America. The Justice Department estimates there are at least one million gang members – active gang members – in America. These people, mostly young males, have nearly all drawn or fired weapons in anger. They are responsible for more than three quarters of all crime in this country, and some eight out of ten violent crimes. Those gang members have families – younger males who are “coming up”, “friends” (if you can call a murderous thug a friend) and others. Between all of those “loosely attached” folks and the hard-core inner circle itself we probably have somewhere between 5 and 10 million people in this nation who, given the wrong sort of provocation, might decide that “Zombieland” wasn’t just a movie.
Our politicians created most of these monsters so the “finest” would have something to do. A nearly-100-year obsession with what consenting adults put in their bodies is largely responsible for this, and an intentional policy of allowing an effective invasion of illegal aliens over our southern border provides some the most-violent core of this group. The illegal drug trade has fueled international wars, international gangs, and virtually all of the organized violent crime in this nation going back to Prohibition. Essentially every automatic weapon in the hands of criminals (and there are plenty of them) comes into the US through this same intentionally-left-open border as do the gangbangers, lies of this (and previous) administrations notwithstanding. Those of you in the Law Enforcement business may not want to accept these facts, but if you reflect on it you cannot escape reality: weapons, ammunition and other means of street thuggery all cost money, and without these drugs being illegal there would be no profit in it, and thus a huge part of the criminal gangland element would not exist. You’ve cheered on the War on Drugs as it has meant more cops being hired and more, better, fancier toys for you to play with, along with $200,000+ pensions (in some areas.) You’ve been fools and even self-destructive assholes for having done so. But that, today, is water over the dam – the bad guys are here, they’re not leaving, and there’s no evidence that the political class is going to suddenly legalize these substances tomorrow, cutting the source of funds for the thugs off at the knees – after all, you won’t rise up and demand it happen. So we must deal with reality on the ground as it is (and as you have cheered on the creation of), whether we like it or not.
As I’m sure you’re aware all of America sees some of our “finest”, not to mention our politicians, in various forms of misbehavior virtually on a daily basis. A girl beaten on a train platform while uniformed rail security stands and watches. A young man who appears to have been executed by a different rail security officer, even after he was subdued, face-down, without a weapon and easily able to be cuffed. The infamous Rodney King incident. The false accusations against the Duke Lacrosse team that threatened young men with many years behind bars for something that never happened. Our current Treasury Secretary who cheated on his taxes, not to mention the chair of the House Ways and Means Committee who did as well (that’s the committee that writes tax law, if you’re not up on your American Government.) And now, in the latest bit of ignobility we’re expected to swallow, we have accusations that a school district has been taking pictures of kids in their bedrooms using state-issued laptops that said kids were required to accept in order to pass their high school classes.
Here’s the problem: We the people increasingly don’t trust you, the law enforcement community, and we definitely don’t trust Washington. It’s not just beating a black man within an inch of his life, or shooting a prone, subdued suspect in the back.
Oh that’s bad enough, don’t get me wrong, but it gets worse.
Much worse.
See, our economy wasn’t ruined by accident. These crimes of economic activity were every bit as destructive, if not more so, than the bank robber, rapist or even murderer is. These economic offenses have literally dispossessed millions of Americans of everything they once owned. They have destroyed the hopes, dreams, and lifestyles of entire cities, sent tens of millions of jobs overseas into slave labor camps and stripped off the wealth of our nation through the issuance of securities that were worth nothing, just to add insult (and yet more profit for these banksters) to injury. Take a drive through Detroit if you doubt me, if you dare, and are appropriately armed to defend yourself (you’ll need the latter, especially if you’re white.)
As I noted above the bad news is nowhere near being over. We’re denying as a nation, as corporations, as politicians and as people. You’ve drank your coffee and eaten your donuts, but what you haven’t done is taken the initiative and marched down onto Wall Street and K Street (in DC), along with the myriad bankers, mortgage brokers and yes, even borrowers who were lying and cheating at the same time. You should have broke out the handcuffs by the crate-load and frog-marched these people into the dock en-masse over the last two decades, but you didn’t. You should do it today, but you won’t.
I know, you don’t make the laws and you just follow orders from above.
But you’re who we see. You’re “The Badge” or “The Squad.” And what we, the people don’t see is perp walks of those people who richly deserve it – who have in fact broken the law and destroyed our nation’s economic vitality for their own personal profit.
Remember, ladies and gentlemen, no matter what branch of law enforcement you hail from, your primary oath was not to a person. It is not to your commander, your captain or your squad.
Your oath is to The Constitution. You swore to defend that Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic. You swore to God and countryman alike, and your oath does not have a “use by” date at which point it expires.
Now consider this: the unspoken “social contract” says that the good guys go about their business without harming other people, and the occasional miscreant commits some offense, gets arrested and put in the dock by you. There they face their twelve, and in many cases subsequently do their time.
But what really inhibits the miscreant from his deed? Is it that you will show up and take a report after the stereo is stolen, the car burgled or the bank robbed, and attempt post-hoc to have them face the music?
No.
It is the possibility that he will break into or attempt to rob a home or business that has an armed citizen in it who is prepared and willing to defend him or herself. Armed not only with the ability to fight back but the weapon of familiarity of surrounding, said homeowner or shopkeeper might well splatter the brain of said felonious thug all over the far wall - in righteous and perfectly-legal defense of one’s person (except in places like Chicago, of course.) The truth of this is clear on its face – those places where citizens are “restricted” (illegally, I might add, under the clear language of our Constitution) from mounting their own defense to rape, robbery or murder the bad guys pretty much take turns “at will”, as opposed to places like Kennesaw Georgia which mandate instead that every homeowner have a firearm and ammunition.
One last thing to consider, and I will leave you be, as I have others to address this fine day.
If it gets bad, and I believe both history and the math says it will, who’s going to help you? Do you really think the entirety of the 150,000 Federal Officers will come to your aid? Or will they sit in Washington DC and in their big black Suburbans (armored, of course) issuing orders for you to go into the streets in your (unarmored) Crown Vics and die in their place? Remember that the “bad guys” in such a circumstance outnumber you 10 or even 20:1 and not only are they probably armed as well as you are, they’ve actually shot – offensively – at other human beings. Unless you’re one of the “bad cops” you’ve never done that, and few of you have had to fire in self-defense. Your only realistic advantage in such a situation is that most of the gangbangers are pretty poor marksman.
What’s the outcome of such an event likely to be? Remember, we may distrust you, but the bad guys hate you to the core and would BBQ and eat you for dinner if they thought they could get away with it. If things get bad they might deduce – en-masse – that they can get away with it.
Let’s face facts: while today we all count on being able to pick up the phone and call “911″ if we need an officer to take a report on our stolen stereo, if the bad times come you will need us, not the other way around. We the people will, under such a circumstance, have the luxury of determining whether your oath of office has been faithfully discharged, or whether the only difference at that instant between you and the gangbanger is that you’ve got a fancy hat and a nicer car.
Most of us, should we determine that you’re just the thug with the fancy hat will hide under the desk. We won’t shoot at you – that’s not our way. We’re law-abiding citizens, for the most part, and while we will shoot back, we won’t shoot first. But what we won’t do is help you, because your time – your opportunity to help us prevent this catastrophe – will have expired. We will protect our neighbors, our friends, our fellow citizens.
But that’s all.
You will get to deal with Zombieland, and in the back of your mind as you’re literally consumed will ring that old saw you laid on us for the last two decades: “I just follow orders; I don’t make the rules.”
Be honest with yourselves: Is this where you want to be, or would changing things now be worthwhile? Would regaining the trust of the people be a good thing? Would replacing the large percentage of law-abiding citizens who now would spit on your shoes with those who will stand shoulder-to-shoulder with you, weapons facing the oncoming zombie hoard, be a good thing?
If so you have some work to do and there’s still time left to accomplish it.
To the politicians who are reading this, your Thorazine dosage needs adjustment as well. The math is irrefutable. If, in point of fact, AIG has entangled itself with the European Continent there is no escape from what is to come. There is only destruction, and our only two choices are to cause as much of it as we can to occur there, by pulling the plug on these clowns now, or risk a literal World War. We may get one anyway, but if we bring the bulk of the damage here we’ll be dealing with a civil collapse at the same time, and have no chance of being able to deal with the geopolitical implications. We must not allow that to happen. You must not allow that to happen.
We understand you give the orders to the people I’ve been talking to (mostly) up above. But you have less excuse than they, when it comes to oaths. You all took an oath to uphold The Constitution as well. You’ve used it as toilet paper, and that’s on a good day. The rest of the time we see you gleefully burning it in the Wells of the House and Senate, dancing around the smoke and fire like some odd pagan ritual.
It’s time to stop. Not because you want to, not because you fear us (even though you should – after all, we’re your employers and can fire you) but because if you don’t there won’t be a nation worth governing left. You know who the crooks are – including those among you.
Let’s talk taking this nation back.
It starts with declaring all CDS written against sovereign debt, directly or indirectly, void as contrary to public policy. Yes, that cuts Europe off from any prospect of a US bailout. So be it.
Next, all the banksters who were involved in these bogus securitizations need to be hauled into the dock. Now. William Black and his merry men sent over 1,000 people to the slammer in the S&L crisis. There are ten times that many who need to go this time.
Third, force all credit-default swaps onto a public exchange with published bids, offers, last trades, open interest and nightly margining. In public, where we all can see it. Either that or ban these obscenities outright. Choose one, and only one of those two options, and do it now. Yes, I know the banksters will howl. Too damn bad, and while you’re at it, make it unlawful for any institution that does business in this country to transact in any way in any instrument that does not comply with that rule. This monster, as I’ve been writing about for almost three years now, must be caged.
Fourth, reinstate Glass-Steagall. Yeah, I know, the Senate doesn’t want to do it. The Senate wants a nation that’s worth governing though, right? We won’t have one if this crap isn’t stopped. Mssrs. Glass and Steagall had it right in the 1930s. Put it back.
Fifth, stop lying to the people – and this includes lies told through deficit spending. We don’t have the money and can’t keep borrowing it. If you don’t stop we will find the “knee point” the hard way, at which point once again, you won’t have a nation worth governing. Remember the four steps above – neither I or my daughter, nor most of the 330 million Americans in this country, want to see the “anger” phase. Our country is like a powder keg and every time you lie you’re playing with matches in the room. Stop it before you blow us all up.
Sixth, we’re in a Depression, like it or not, and we’re not going to get out of it until the bad debt is defaulted and cleared from the system. Your job is to make that happen and get it over with. That’s deflationary. Sorry; this is math, not politics. The housing bubble was a hyperinflationary event – one hidden from the people by bogus government statistics and outright lies. Deflation always follows hyperinflationary credit booms – it’s either that, or the destruction of the government, political system and currency. You choose, but if you do not decide, destruction it will be.
Seventh, close the damn border and declare all the illegal immigrants as what they are – invaders. Tell them to either leave or will expel them – and mean it. Declare “LaRaza” a terrorist organization and lock ‘em all up. Americans need the jobs and we cannot afford to have five or ten million thugs just waiting for opportunity in the smallest loss of civil order to swoop in and take advantage of us all. At the same time, drop your insane “War on Drugs” and replace it with a taxation, regulation and legalization structure. Yes, I said legalize – federally. While we still have time we must cut off the chief funding source for the murderous thugs who otherwise, given the opportunity, will feast on you after they BBQ the local and state law enforcement crowd in our major cities. Don’t BS me or anyone else with your claims that such isn’t a real risk – I don’t see you strolling around in your fancy suits through the bad parts of Washington DC sans security details. Gee, I wonder why not……
Finally, to President Obama. You can’t serve both the banksters and The American People. You took the oath of office too. Now you have to choose. Not only will you lose in 2012 (badly) if you don’t start locking up the jackasses that got us into this mess but if you don’t ram the above seven points down the throats of these banksters and others in the next couple of months your party will be decimated in the November elections. Some of your oldest allies in the Democratic Party are resigning; Senator Bayh, for example. Illinois’ State financial health is akin to someone with terminal pancreatic cancer, and that’s where you’re going home to in 2012 if you don’t quit being nice-nice with people who have played rape-rape to the American people and economy for the last two decades. You didn’t make the mess (you weren’t around long enough to do it) but you had damn well better clean it up, or what will be left of this nation is unlikely to be worth governing by the time your term expires.
Health care may be important but not until the above is taken care of. Fixing the financial system is the issue you must confront and fix in its entirety. Not half-way, not by compromise – you simply must fix it. The seven points above are not options, they’re not discussion points - they’re mandatory. All of them. Don’t believe me if you don’t want to - believe Charlie Munger, one of the wisest investment professionals ever to live, and, in my opinion, the smarter half of Berkshire Hathaway (with no disrespect intended to Warren.)
The choice is yours Mr. President, but the consequences will belong to all of us.
Choose wisely.
WE THE PEOPLE (Have Had Enough) – STARVE THE BEAST
WE THE PEOPLE (Have Had Enough)
STARVE THE BEAST!!!!!!!!
Posted by Karl Denninger
THE seminal question for this year – coming into the mid-term elections – is exactly that.
Have you had it?
Are you tired of being bent over the table with 29.9% credit card interest rates while these big banks borrow at zero from The Fed and use that money to speculate in the markets?
Are you tired of “too big to fail” – better stated as heads we (the banksters) win, tails you (the taxpayer) lose?
Are you enraged beyond words with the fact that this economic mess was not an accident – it was an intentional act of willful blindness and perhaps even fraud?
Do you feel helpless to do anything about the fact that Government has willfully and intentionally refused to both clean up the mess and prevent it from happening again due to the presence of huge lobbying interests in Washington DC – paid for by the very same banksters who nearly destroyed this nation?
Do you realize that we have fixed nothing – the bad loans are still there, they are still bad, that millions of Americans have lost their jobs, that the economy is not actually recovering (despite what they say) and that without resolving the actual problems odds are that within a few years, and perhaps within a few months, we will face another crash – this one likely bad enough to destroy our economy and perhaps our government?
Let’s look at the facts.
- The testimony being put before the FCIC – the investigatory panel charged with looking into how the housing and foreclosure mess came about, and how our economy was stripped clean by the vultures that infest the banking business in this nation is a matter of record. I, and others, have been documenting this for more than two years. READ THE MISSION STATEMENT AND TESTIMONY OF PEOPLE LIKE MIKE MAYO.
- THE FBI has been warning of an “epidemic” of mortgage fraud since 2004. The banks knew this. Indeed, in 2004 their lobbyists convinced The Bush Administration to SUE to prevent state regulators from protecting YOU, THE CONSUMER, from predatory and unfair loans.
- Since 2006 there have been published stories that stated income loans were laced through-and-through with fraud:
One lender recently compared 100 stated-income loans with the borrowers’ tax returns and found that only 10 of the borrowers were telling the truth about their wages, according to Mortgage Asset Research Institute, a division of data firm ChoicePoint Inc. (September 2006)
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The Wall Street and large commercial banks did not include these disclosures in their offering circulars for securitized debt.
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Wall Street entities knew they were at risk but bought “protection” (CDS, or “credit default swaps”) from firms who they knew or should have known could not pay, including but not limited to AIG. This “allowed” them to consider assets they knew or should have known were rife with fraud as “money good”.
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Wall Street and “big lender” loan programs in the housing market during the years 2000-2007 all “assumed” that house prices would rise forever at a rate higher than inflation. The key point is that even if they had, which is mathematically impossible, it doesn’t change the fact that the borrower, that is you the citizen, still was going to lose their house when they reached the limit of their borrowing capacity. The bank’s only concern was designing a program that they would be protected by – not whether it was suitable for you nor whether you would have (or continue to have) a home.
None of this was a “mistake” or an “accident”. It was not an “unforseen event.”
Government agencies were aware of and sounded the alarm as early as 2004. Brooksley Born, chair of a federal regulatory agency (the CFTC) raised hell on complex derivatives (“CDS” and similar instruments) in 1999. She was attacked by everyone in the banking industry including Alan Greenspan and literally run out of town. She was right.
The banking and Wall Street institutions, through a combination of the above, “made” billions of profits that never really existed. They then paid that money – money that didn’t actually exist AND NEVER WOULD – out in bonuses, dividends and stock price appreciation.
Starting in 2007, it all came apart, first with two hedge funds at Bear Stearns, then Bear Stearns itself, then Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Lehman Brothers and AIG.
In the fall of 2008 Ben Bernanke and Henry Paulson, Chairman of The Fed and Treasury Secretary (who had refused to heed the warnings of the FBI and others for the previous four years) corralled a bunch of Representatives and Senators in The Capitol. We were told that the government “had to bail out the banks” to prevent the financial system from collapsing. By anywhere from 100:1 to 300:1, the American People said “let ‘em burn.” The government refused once again to listen, and together with The Federal Reserve propped up the banks instead of forcing them to eat their own cooking. Rather than use the money appropriated to force these institutions through bankruptcy and shut them down, paying off the depositors that were insured, these failed institutions were instead mish-mashed together into even bigger financial companies and then given government backstops.
Nothing has been fixed.
The bad debt is still there.
Unemployment has skyrocketed, the banks have cranked up credit card interest rates to 29.9% and are feasting on zero interest Federal Reserve money which they use to speculate in the financial markets, paying out well over $100 billion in aggregate in bonuses for the last year.
We are told this is and was “necessary.”
I might accept that – if it came with the closing of all of these institutions. Each and every one of them. If it came with the permanent barring of every executive involved from ever serving as so much as a janitor in any financial institution – worldwide – ever again. If it came with a full forensic audit of each and every one of these institutions and officials by the FBI, with every instance of fraud that was uncovered presented to a grand jury.
But it has not.
Instead, firms like Countrywide Financial and Washington Mutual were absorbed into Bank of America and JP Morgan/Chase. Those who were “too big to fail” not only were not dismantled, they were made bigger and more powerful.
Wall Street may effectively own Washington DC and the politicians but they do not own us.
WE THE PEOPLE ARE UNDER NO OBLIGATION TO ACCEPT THIS.
WE HAVE RIGHTS.
WE THE PEOPLE have the freedom to associate – or not.
WE THE PEOPLE have the right to demand legal tender in payment of debts owed us.
WE THE PEOPLE have the right to demand that these institutions eat their own cooking on each and every one of the loans they securitized and peddled during these years without fair and full disclosure to the buyers that these loans were rife with fraud.
WE THE PEOPLE have the right – and the ability – to take personal, lawful action with specific, lawful political and business-oriented goals, including permanent structural changes that will end “too big to fail” and “rip off the consumer on demand” policies, including the full reinstatement of Glass-Steagall which will END financial speculation and dealing in all of its forms by firms that have access to Federal Reserve credit and/or any sort of public backstop.
In the coming days and weeks I will outline specific, lawful actions that I hope each and every financial blogger, writer and columnist will take up and push as the key item for the remainder of this year and, if necessary, beyond – all with the intent of accomplishing these goals.
I invite all financial bloggers, mainstream media writing or broadcasting on the financial markets and products and interested politicians to contact me at “karl <at> starve-the-beast <dot> org” with the explicit purpose of joining an effort to formulate cogent and real, tangible yet lawful actions that can effect positive and necessary change. Further posts to The Market Ticker will be made under the Category ”Starve The Beast” – so you can find them all in one place.
Make this message – this post – viral. Send it to your associates. Send it to the media. Send it to politicians. Get involved and do it now.
The opportunity is now and our responsibility is clear. We either accept that responsibility and act or we are consenting to serial asset bubbles and ever-larger detonations, with the very real risk that the next one destroys our political and economic system both in the United States and beyond.
A Paper You MUST Read
Posted by Karl Denninger
Buried in the smoke and furor yesterday was the second panel in the FCIC testimony – the one CNBC did not provide any meaningful coverage of.
And right up front is the one person’s testimony you need to read.
Mr. Mayo hits on the themes that I have been hammering for the last two and a half years, absent some of the pointed allegations of knowing deception (that’s otherwise called “fraud”.)
Mr. Mayo used to work at The Federal Reserve, and was there during the previous banking crisis. He points out, as has Bill Black, that we learned nothing from the S&L crisis when it came to lessons on control fraud and overextension of risk, and in fact we’re doing it again.
He calls out ten failures, and then puts forward three prescriptions. I will not reproduce them here, since I maintain that everyone who reads The Ticker owes it to themselves not to read my summary, but rather to read Mr. Mayo’s original work – every word of it.
I will capture a few points however:
- It is pointed out that it is difficult to recreate the reality of a balance sheet through analysis if the numbers are not reported on a similar basis. Exactly. I cannot, today, analyze a given bank’s balance sheet and tell you whether I believe they are in good health or bad, whether their cash flow is sufficient to service their debt, or the likelihood that their assets will perform. This obfuscation is intentional and in no small part a direct consequence of lobbying by the banks themselves for the ability to provide other than market prices for alleged assets!
- Mr. Mayo asserts that there is such a thing as “too big to fail.” I argue that if JP Morgan is too big to fail then anti-trust law says they’re too big to legally exist, as they continue in business with a de-facto unlawful “put” from the federal government, acquired through what amounts to extortion, that smaller institutions do not enjoy. This is the essence of anti-trust law – that some firms, when they control too much of a market, abuse that position to gain advantage and shut out competition through collusive action. This is what the “government PUT” for “too big to fail” entities comprises and the solution is simple: If you have to be bailed out in any way by the government you are broken up and your entire management team is permanently barred from ever serving as an officer of a public company again. No ifs, ands or buts.
- Mr. Mayo also talks about capital and the need to be certain that there is never a question as to whether there is enough. The simplest way to do this is to impose hard leverage limits and require that liquid and/or immediately-convertible capital be present at all times to cover any potential deficiency on carried assets. At the same time all off-balance sheet exposures and naked derivative positions must be absolutely barred. The simplest means to accomplish this is to restore Glass-Steagall, thereby removing the ability of commercial banks to play with levered instruments in the first place, limiting their leverage to their reserve ratio, and reinstate mark-to-market accounting performed nightly. Bingo: We know you have enough capital in each and every case, and if you get close to the line you’re forced to divest assets or convert some of your prearranged debt to equity.
Folks, these solutions are not technically difficult. They are politically difficult but the question we need ask ourselves in this country is this:
Are we willing to undergo another crash similar to 2008/2009? WE WILL if we don’t stop the insanity, and it will likely come sooner rather than later.
The bad debt on the balance sheets of the banks and others has not been removed, either by payment or default. It is being carried at values that suggest performance will occur even in instances where we know that is very unlikely, such as with second mortgage lines (HELOCs, etc) that are underwater. When, not if, the foreclosures occur on the senior (first) mortgages these lines will be exposed as worthless, triggering another problem.
Nor is the issue confined to second lines. Commercial Real Estate, OptionARMs and allegedly-”prime” loans that in fact were not all are deteriorating in record numbers. These losses have already occurred and are being hidden, but that charade can continue only so long as the cash flow permits.
This is why there are no meaningful numbers of permanent modifications on mortgages nor will there be – the program cannot succeed as for it to do so the losses embedded in these institutions must be admitted to and recognized, and our government refuses to force that to happen.
The current attempt is to re-inflate house prices and thus pretend the crisis has past. But we have destroyed our wage base over the last 18 months, which has simply compounded more losses into what were doomed loans, rather than forcing the defaults out into the open and selling them off at whatever price they would fetch. By doing so we have literally added hundreds of billions of additional dollars in loss to what was already a horrible situation, and that loss has now been accrued and will not be able to be avoided either.
Within a few years time (before 2010) we will face a new problem – boomer retirements will go “over-center” and they will be net sellers of all asset classes to fund their retirements, while entitlement spending will ramp toward the moon. That problem is extremely serious but on the path we are on now we will not get there before what we believe avoided smacks us.
Our choice is to take our medicine now and be able to recover before this tectonic shift occurs with boomer retirements and entitlement spending, or walk straight into that mess in the midst of a decade-long depression.
America Slides Deeper Into Depression as Wall Street Revels
America Slides Deeper Into Depression as Wall Street Revels
December was the worst month for US unemployment since the Great Recession began.

The labour force contracted by 661,000. This did not show up in the headline jobless rate because so many Americans dropped out of the system. The broad U6 category of unemployment rose to 17.3pc. That is the one that matters.
Wall Street rallied. Bulls hope that weak jobs data will postpone monetary tightening: a silver lining in every catastrophe, or perhaps a further exhibit of market infantilism.
The home foreclosure guillotine usually drops a year or so after people lose their job, and exhaust their savings. The local sheriff will escort them out of the door, often with some sympathy –– just like the police in 1932, mostly Irish Catholics who tithed 1pc of their pay for soup kitchens.
Realtytrac says defaults and repossessions have been running at over 300,000 a month since February. One million American families lost their homes in the fourth quarter. Moody’s Economy.com expects another 2.4m homes to go this year. Taken together, this looks awfully like Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath.
Judges are finding ways to block evictions. One magistrate in Minnesota halted a case calling the creditor “harsh, repugnant, shocking and repulsive”. We are not far from a de facto moratorium in some areas.
This is how it ended between 1932 and 1934, when half the US states declared moratoria or “Farm Holidays”. Such flexibility innoculated America’s democracy against the appeal of Red Unions and Coughlin Fascists. The home siezures are occurring despite frantic efforts by the Obama administration to delay the process.
This policy is entirely justified given the scale of the social crisis. But it also masks the continued rot in the housing market, allows lenders to hide losses, and stores up an ever larger overhang of unsold properties. It takes heroic naivety to think the US housing market has turned the corner (apologies to Goldman Sachs, as always). The fuse has yet to detonate on the next mortgage bomb, $134bn (£83bn) of “option ARM” contracts due to reset violently upwards this year and next.
US house prices have eked out five months of gains on the Case-Shiller index, but momentum stalled in October in half the cities even before the latest surge of 40 basis points in mortgage rates. Karl Case (of the index) says prices may sink another 15pc. “If the 2008 and 2009 loans go bad, then we’re back where we were before – in a nightmare.”
David Rosenberg from Gluskin Sheff said it is remarkable how little traction has been achieved by zero rates and the greatest fiscal blitz of all time. The US economy grew at a 2.2pc rate in the third quarter (entirely due to Obama stimulus). This compares to an average of 7.3pc in the first quarter of every recovery since the Second World War.
Fed hawks are playing with fire by talking up about exit strategies, not for the first time. This is what they did in June 2008. We know what happened three months later. For the record, manufacturing capacity use at 67.2pc, and “auto-buying intentions” are the lowest ever.
The Fed’s own Monetary Multiplier crashed to an all-time low of 0.809 in mid-December. Commercial paper has shrunk by $280bn ($175bn) in since October. Bank credit has been racing down a hair-raising black run since June. It has dropped from $10.844 trillion to $9.013 trillion since November 25. The MZM money supply is contracting at a 3pc annual rate. Broad M3 money is contracting at over 5pc.
Professor Tim Congdon from International Monetary Research said the Fed is baking deflation into the pie later this year, and perhaps a double-dip recession. Europe is even worse.
This has not stopped an army of commentators is trying to bounce the Fed into early rate rises. They accuse Ben Bernanke of repeating the error of 2004 when the Fed waited too long. Sometimes you just want to scream. In 2004 there was no housing collapse, unemployment was 5.5pc, banks were in rude good health, and the Fed Multiplier was 1.73.
How anybody can see imminent inflation in the dying embers of core PCE, just 0.1pc in November, is beyond me.
Mr Rosenberg is asked by clients why Wall Street does not seem to agree with his grim analysis.
His answer is that this is the same Mr Market that bought stocks in October 1987 when they were 25pc overvalued on Shiller “10-year normalized earnings basis” – exactly as they are today – and bought them at even more overvalued prices in 2007, long after the property crash had begun, Bear Stearns funds had imploded, and credit had its August heart attack. The stock market has become a lagging indicator. Tear up the textbooks.
There Is NO Economic Recovery Happening
There Is NO Economic Recovery Happening
Posted by Karl Denninger
Look folks, this is really quite simple.
Economic Stability and Recovery = Credit Expansion.
We cannot recover until we purge the excess debt from the system, and the longer we take to do that, the longer the pain will last and the worse it will be.
President Obama and Tim Geithner know this – that’s why they are constantly harping on banks to “lend more.”
Well, they may want banks to lend more but the people are fed up with being debt slaves and are borrowing less.
Today, we got the latest from The Fed on this subject:
Consumer credit decreased at an annual rate of 8-1/2 percent in November. Revolving credit decreased at an annual rate of 18-1/2 percent, and nonrevolving credit decreased at an annual rate of 3 percent.
I have updated the charts, and this is where we are as of November:
Non-revolving debt (basically auto loans) has pretty much stabilized since mid-year. But consumer revolving debt – credit cards – continues to accelerate in its rate of decline.
The longer-term view looks like this:
These rates of decline are unprecedented and they are not slowing down.
The drop in credit card debt outstanding is on the largest on record since The Fed started keeping those records in 1943!
Consumer recovery?
There is none!
It is axiomatic that you can pump yourself full of speedballs (e.g. government spending) and stay up for days at a time. It is also true that if you do too many speedballs you will have a heart attack and die, and there is no way to know precisely which is the “one too many” until you shoot it – at which point it’s too late to change your mind!
The so-called “recovery” has been driven by pump-priming, which has had at its root one primary intent – to drive citizens into herd behavior and get them to spend more and more (that they don’t have!)
But at the same time this has been the message credit card rates have been ramped and lines slashed. So now Joe Six Pack is faced with a 30% interest rate on his credit card – if he has any open line left!
There is no possible way for this program to work, since the entire problem originally - what began this recession – was people that were unable to make their debt payments in the first place!
Small business will not hire until their debt load comes down to a reasonable level. This will take literal years if we don’t quit trying to prevent the contraction of both asset prices and credit levels. In the mean time millions of Americans will remain in destitution!
There is no way to avoid the bankruptcy of those firms and individuals who are over-levered. The best solution (take the pain now!) will not prevent the bankruptcies, but it will get them over with and let the nation begin to emerge from the morass within 12-18 months. For every month we keep trying to prevent the liquidation of insoluble debt we add months of additional time to that required to resolve the bust and deepen the amount of pain that must be suffered, since all we are doing is adding more debt upon existing debt.
It is time for Washington DC, including The Fed and Congress along with President Obama to embrace the facts – we must finish the de-leveraging that is necessary to return the citizens and corporations of this nation to fiscal health. At the same time the government must stop spending twice what it takes in in taxes.
We have consumed too many speedballs, our heart rate is now 160, and if we don’t cut it out the bond market is telling us that we are about to have a fatal heart attack.
Living on Nothing but Food Stamps
More on the economy from the NY Times – food stamp article:
By Daniel
“Living on Nothing but Food Stamps
By JASON DEPARLE and ROBERT M. GEBELOFF
Published: January 2, 2010CAPE CORAL, Fla. — After an improbable rise from the Bronx projects to a job selling Gulf Coast homes, Isabel Bermudez lost it all to an epic housing bust — the six-figure income, the house with the pool and the investment property.
…..“It’s the one thing I can count on every month — I know the children are going to have food.” ISABEL BERMUDEZ, who has two daughters and no cash income. More Photos
…..With millions of jobs lost and major industries on the ropes, America’s array of government aid — including unemployment insurance, food stamps and cash welfare — is being tested as never before. This series examines how the safety net is holding up under the worst economic crisis in decades.
…..Now, as she papers the county with résumés and girds herself for rejection, she is supporting two daughters on an income that inspires a double take: zero dollars in monthly cash and a few hundred dollars in food stamps.
…..With food-stamp use at a record high and surging by the day, Ms. Bermudez belongs to an overlooked subgroup that is growing especially fast: recipients with no cash income.
…..About six million Americans receiving food stamps report they have no other income, according to an analysis of state data collected by The New York Times. In declarations that states verify and the federal government audits, they described themselves as unemployed and receiving no cash aid — no welfare, no unemployment insurance, and no pensions, child support or disability pay.”
One of the other things I have been noting – 2.2 people per “household” on food stamps – looks like a lot of single parents, one of the scourges of our society. “No-fault” divorce is a joke, those having children out of wed-lock another moral issue – that society ends up PAYING for.
- irishscot2




