Financial Armageddon
I wrote six months ago and then two months ago of the lies that this administration and wall street would telling us about the health of the economy. I’m not an economist, lawyer or Washington know it all; but I”ve lived through the mild recessions since the 50′s, I remember the gas lines of 73-74 and the price america paid for voting Carter into office. Now hear it from an economist that knows what he is talking about. I’m posting his complete email below.
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The Great Lie of 2009
If you missed our grand finale video, Solving The Timing Mystery Part Two, you’re running out of time to watch it — for two reasons: It’s dated material that we must take offline this week. And more importantly, a new whirlwind of dramatic market moves is about to begin, opening up a series of unprecedented profit opportunities. Indeed, just as the authorities were touting the “end of the financial crisis,” all heck has broken loose again … We have a new surge in unemployment, and even without counting those who are excluded from the official numbers, 14.7 million are now jobless, the most since records dating back to 1948. Worse, for the first time since the Great Depression, every single job created after the prior recession has been wiped out. We have industrial production falling at the same pace as it did in the early 1930s …. and global trade falling at twice the pace of the early 1930s. We have California — the nation’s most populous state, with the largest GDP and the greatest impact on the entire U.S. economy — collapsing. We have consumers slashing their spending, small businesses laying off their workers, cities and states forced to gut their budgets. We see the most radical government countermeasures in a 100 years, the biggest federal deficits in 200 years, plus the swiftest swings — from greed to fear and fear to greed — ever. Yet, for the past four months, virtually every policymaker in Washington and every pundit on Wall Street has been telling you … The Great Lie of 2009: On March 15, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke told CBS News’ “60 Minutes” that he detected “green shoots” in the economy. And every day since, economic soothsayers have been surveying the landscape, sifting through crops of weeds, trying to find those green shoots.
By late April, famous Wall Street gurus were lining up to declare “the end of the bear market,” and every day since, brokers have been cajoling you to buy the very same stocks they want to sell.
In early June, Obama labor officials declared “a big turnaround in nation’s job market,” proudly announcing that “only” 345,000 jobs were eliminated in May.
One week ago, California officials publicly declared that they would never default on their obligations, directly refuting the forecast of default I made in this column on June 22: According to the BussinessJournal, Tom Dresslar, a spokesman for state Treasurer Bill Lockyer told the press “Mr. Weiss’ analysis and recommendation, to put it kindly, is misinformed.”
These examples barely scratch the surface of the misconceptions, distortions and outright deceptions that are being perpetrated by high authorities, flooded through the media and used to permeate the American psyche — all the while ignoring the elephant in the room … The Giant Accumulation of High-Risk The nation’s mountain of derivatives is not a mirage on the future horizon. Nor is it merely a phenomenon of our distant past. It’s real. It’s here. And it’s huge. Just ten months ago, it reared its ugly head and shoved the U.S. and Europe to the brink of a global meltdown. And just last week, the U.S. Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) issued its latest report showing that, despite all the talk of reducing risk and reforming the financial system, U.S. commercial banks still hold record amounts. The latest tally: $202 TRILLION in notional value derivatives. And even that pales in comparison to the global tally by the Bank of International Settlements, now at $592 trillion. Yes, there have been some liquidations. But the totals are still massive. And yes, notional values may overstate the magnitude of the problem. But the OCC’s measure of credit risk does not: Despite some shedding of risk here and there, every single one of the five largest derivatives players is still grossly overexposed to defaults by trading partners:
Bank of America has total credit risk in this sector to the tune 169 percent of its capital; Citibank, 216 percent; JPMorgan Chase, 323 percent; HSBC Bank USA, 475 percent; Goldman Sachs, a whopping 1,048 percent, or over TEN times its capital. If we were back in early 2007 … before the collapse of Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch … before the implosion of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac … or before the near-collapse of AIG and Citigroup … then, maybe, folks could get away with ignoring this sword of Damocles hanging over the financial markets. If we were back in a bygone pre-Bernanke, pre-Geithner era … before TARP (Troubled Asset Relief Program), before PPIP (Public-Private Investment Program), before TALF (Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility), before TLGP (Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program), before CAP (Capital Assistance Program), before TIP (Targeted Investment Program), before HASP (Homeowners Affordability and Stability Plan), before CPFF (Commercial Paper Funding Facility), before AMLF (Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Fund Liquidity Facility), before MMIFF (Money Market Investor Funding Facility), or before the alphabet soup of all the other hastily-conceived government efforts to contain the giant elephant in the room … then … m! aybe we could make believe it’s not there. Or if all of our nation’s top officials were mute about this monster still in our midst, perhaps that, too, would justify the current aura of bliss that has temporarily shrouded Washington and Wall Street. But even that is no longer the case. Some officials are finally finding the courage to speak out, issuing some of the same warnings today that we issued years ago. Global Vesuvius Nearly three years ago, in our Safe Money Report of November 7, 2006, entitled “Global Vesuvius,” Associate Editor Mike Larson and I wrote:
Now, in the thirty months that have ensued, each of these events has come to pass: The world’s financial markets were thrown into turmoil. The largest banks in the U.S., the U.K., Germany, and even Switzerland were bankrupted. The world’s largest insurance company collapsed. The investments of hedge funds were trashed; the portfolios of average investors, slashed in half. But it’s not over. And the reasons are quite straightforward: The volcano is now far larger; its tectonic forces, more powerful. In our 2006 “Global Vesuvius” issue (download the pdf), we identified five major threats: Major threat #1. The sheer size of the derivatives market. At that time, the global market for derivatives was $285 trillion. Now it’s $592 trillion. Its six-year compound rate of growth: A shocking 34.5 percent per year! Major threat #2. The Lack of Transparency. We railed against over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives, representing 96 percent of all derivatives held by U.S. commercial banks. We warned about the lack of disclosure to investors, the lack of standard pricing and the fact that “two financial institutions can trade whatever the heck they want … and no one but the parties involved knows precisely what the contracts are, or what their value really is.” (Page 3) Now, in Senate Banking Testimony, SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro has admitted that
Also before the Senate Banking Committee, Henry T.C. Hu, Chair in the Law of Banking and Finance at the University of Texas, has testified that
Major threat #3. Too much in the hands of too few. In our 2006 “Global Vesuvius” report, we wrote:
Today, virtually nothing has changed. The five largest commercial banks still hold 95 percent of the total! And if you include the recent shotgun mergers and restructurings, such as Bank of America’s acquisition of Merrill Lynch, the concentration of risk today is even greater. In her recent testimony, the SEC Chairman puts it this way:
Also testifying before the Senate Banking Committee, Christopher Whalen, co-founder of Institutional Risk Analytics, points out that
Major threat #4. Shenanigans in Credit Default Swaps (CDS). In our 2006 “Global Vesuvius” report, Mike Larson and I also wrote …
Now, in his Senate testimony, Institutional Risk Analytics’ Whalen explains it this way:
Major threat #5. Outstanding derivatives dwarf the trading in the underlying securities. In our “Global Vesuvius” report, Mike and I wrote:
In his testimony, Whalen adds:
And he sums up all the threats nicely with this concluding comment:
Plus, I ask, how can any investor — whether a sophisticated money manager entrusted with billions of the public’s money or an average American seeking a respectable retirement — afford to believe the Great Lie of 2009? Watch our video. Then, take some simple steps to protect your money and convert surging volatility into profit opportunities. Good luck and God bless! Martin
Money and Markets (MaM) is published by Weiss Research, Inc. and written by Martin D. Weiss along with Nilus Mattive, Claus Vogt, Ron Rowland, Michael Larson and Bryan Rich. To avoid conflicts of interest, Weiss Research and its staff do not hold positions in companies recommended in MaM, nor do we accept any compensation for such recommendations. The comments, graphs, forecasts, and indices published in MaM are based upon data whose accuracy is deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Performance returns cited are derived from our best estimates but must be considered hypothetical in as much as we do not track the actual prices investors pay or receive. Regular contributors and staff include Kristen Adams, Andrea Baumwald, John Burke, Amber Dakar, Dinesh Kalera, Red Morgan, Maryellen Murphy, Jennifer Newman-Amos, Adam Shafer, Julie Trudeau, Jill Umiker, Leslie Underwood and Michelle Zausnig. Attention editors and publishers! Money and Markets issues can be republished. Republished issues MUST include attribution of the author(s) and the following short paragraph:
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