The Bernanke Bind


One problem with Central Banks is that too many people think they're all powerful. For years the Fed chairman was considered America's economic manager, and folks suggested that what the rest of the government did mattered little. So, in the 90's, we had adulation of Alan "the Maestro" Greenspan.

And it's true that central banks, and especially the Fed, are very powerful. Practically the first piece of investing advice I ever received was "don't fight the Fed." But the Fed, while powerful, is not all-powerful and the Fed's instruments are rather crude.

The Fed's main economic management tools all fall under what is known as "monetary policy." The Fed controls, to some extent, how much money there is in the economy and how much you have to pay for it. (Interest rates are the price of money.) It doesn't just have monetary powers, of course, it also has regulatory powers over banks, but mostly, if the Fed wants to accomplish something it does that by manipulating how easy, or how hard, it is for folks to get short term money (the supply of long term money is much less under Fed control). In addition to changing the price of money through changes in short term interest rates, the Fed can also engage in open market operations in which it buys or sells securities and it can also simply "print money."

For most of the recent decades the primary tool used by the Fed has been interest rate changes. It has manipulated the cost of money. Whenever you read about the Fed cutting or raising interest rates, that's what they're doing, changing how much money costs. Make money cheaper and more people will borrow, more activities will become profitable (because if you can make say an 8% profit not including capital costs and your cost of capital is 2% you're profitable. If your cost of capital is 8% and your profit is 8%, well, your profit is actually 0%).

So, if the Fed wants more economic activity it decreases interest rates and a lot more money gets borrowed, either for consumption or to create or grow businesses.

The Fed increases interest rates when it wants to reduce inflation. As the cost of money goes up, less economic activity occurs and economic actors (businesses and workers both, ideally) lose pricing power. Unable to pass on costs to consumer, to negotiate raises with employers and so on, price increases tend to halt. The most notable example of this in recent years would be the Volcker Fed, which raised interest rates to double digit numbers in order to reign in inflation. That, of course, also turned what would have probably been a mild recession into an absolutely awful one because a ton of businesses became unprofitable, borrowing for consumption was crazy expensive and business expansion became painfully expensive (and was crowded out by the fact that you could lend money for double digit percents, so why not do that rather than invest in yourself?)

So this is the Bernanke Bind. Bernanke can't simultaneously fight inflation and at the same time try and bail out an economy (or rather, a financial sector) which is collapsing around him. This is a classic policy bind, where no matter what you choose, there will be strong negative consequences.

Bernanke chose to lower interest rates. Which means that he has chosen to let inflation, already high in key sectors like energy and food, burgeon out of control. Last year I was predicting stagflation (high interest rates and high inflation, like in the late 70s) and that is now moving towards a consensus view.

Privatize the Profits, Socialize the Losses

But interest rate changes are only one tool the Fed has. There are other things it can do and it has chosen to do some of them. The most notable is that the Fed has agreed to swap banks (and starting soon, brokerages) treasuries in exchange for other types of securities - most notably Agencies, which is to say mortgage backed securities guaranteed by either Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae, the federal mortgage guarantee agencies.

At this point in time, even Agency backed securities are trading very far from face value, assuming you can even find someone who is willing to buy them, which you often can't. Treasuries, being issued by the federal government, on the other hand, are selling like hot cakes. They are liquid, and more to the point, they are effectively cash. You can borrow against treasuries at nearly 100% so if you need money to meet margin calls, or to meet reserve requirements, treasuries are effectively the same thing as having stacks of bills in your vault.

The problem with banks and brokerages right now is not a liquidity crisis - it isn't that there isn't enough money around, it's a solvency issue. People don't believe that various securities, of which mortgage backed securities are only one kind, are worth the face value. In fact they don't know what they're worth, and fear they're worth effectively nothing. So they won't buy them and they won't let them be used as collateral against other loans. Worse, when funds like the Carlyle Fund go bankrupt they have to sell off these securities. And then you do get a price. And then accounting rules force all the other banks, funds and brokerages holding the same securities to write them down. And billions of dollars just disappear overnight.

When that happens highly leveraged institutions (and many are leveraged at 30:1 or more) find that they no longer have the collateral against their outstanding loans (including margin). To meet those requirements they too potentially have to sell. That pushes down the price of these issues even more, provides prices (bad prices) for more of them, and that itself causes a self reinforcing downward spiral.

The end result of all that could be that a number of banks, brokerage houses and government backed agencies would go bankrupt. (In fact, my guess is that many are already bankrupt and just refuse to know it.)

All of this assuming that banks and other credit grantors don't simply yank loans come renewal time, even if your assets haven't been forced into a revaluation, because they're betting they will be. They've got this junk on their books, they know they can't move it, and they know you can't move yours either. Why would they loan you money you probably can't pay back? And if they do loan it to you, they'll charge higher interest rates than they would otherwise. The ability of brokerages and banks to borrow from each other has been drying up as each of them individually tries to protect themselves.

So what the Fed has done is say that it will accept these dubious financial instruments at face value, or near face value, and in exchange give the banks and brokerages securities that are actually worth something, which can be used as collateral, and which are liquid.

Strictly speaking these exchanges are for 30 days only, but in practice they are likely to continue in perpetuity or until the crisis is over. If the Fed, after all, doesn't keep rolling them over, then all the problems the Fed was trying to avoid will occur, plus a confidence crisis caused by the Fed pulling back.

Likewise it should be noted that there's a very good chance of the Fed getting caught with these junk securities. If a bank or brokerage goes under anyway, the Fed will be stuck with securities that are worth cents on the dollar. So what the Fed has done is socialize the risk because ultimately, you the taxpayer are on the hook for Fed losses, either directly or through inflation if they print money to cover them. It's a nice game if you think about it. Wall Street has been giving away record bonuses for years. Heck, bonuses paid for 2006 were greater than the raises of 80 million Americans. Bonuses given for 2007, in 2008, after everyone knew that large chunks of Wall Street were probably insolvent, were even larger! These guys privatized the profits, making themselves into millionaires. And now the government is picking up the losses.

The Fed's balance sheet at this point is approximately 800 billion. This may not seem large, but it is real unleveraged money, known as the monetary base. The Fed has currently committed about half of that to various facilities which are or will accept crap paper for treasuries. This means that the Fed has about 400 billion of maneuvering room left before it runs out of the ability to just swap paper around and pretend it's all the same sort of paper.

Four hundred billion seems very unlikely to be enough. Neither does eight hundred billion. The terrible beauty of reverse leverage means that banks and Wall Street are exposed to much more than 800 billion of downside risk. Normally that doesn't matter, but when people start insisting on real money, not leveraged money, it does. Bernanke is betting that markets will settle on a reasonable price for distressed securities; a price that is lower than par, but not so low that the sector collapses. And he's betting that the markets will do it before he runs out of willingness to push inflation through the roof. (Central bankers never run out of money, though they can run out of money worth anything.)

So what happens if the Fed pushes up to 800 billion, and finds out that isn't enough? Well, at that point it has to create new assets, on its own. It has the power to do so, but doing so is effectively the same as running the printing presses. Running them hot.

Which leads us back to Bernanke's bind. Doing that would put into play significant inflationary pressures. Printing money when the economy isn't expanding at the same rate as you're printing it inevitably leads to inflation. Since the US economy is actually contracting, printing money will almost certainly cause even more inflation.

The Bernanke Bind: the central bank can't do two things at once. It can't fight inflation and prop up financial markets and the economy at the same time. It is simply not possible. And, sadly, while the Fed can usually have any one thing it wants, in this case, because this is not a liquidity crisis but a crisis of confidence and a solvency crisis (i.e. a question of whether banks and other financial institutions are bankrupt or not) it's questionable if the Fed can even have that one thing, short of the Fed just throwing up its hands and running the presses hot. In which case the US could have a solvent financial sector worth nothing because the US dollar would be worth nothing.

So what should Bernanke do?

Wrong question. Bernanke's in a bind. He can choose his poison, which he's done, but he can't fix the bind by himself. The Fed, powerful as it is, just doesn't have the tools. Monetary policy alone will not get the US out of this.

A solution requires fiscal policy, and that means Congress and the President. Which means nothing useful will will be done at least till 2009, and maybe not even then.

Assuming, however, Congress and the President did actually want to take action and were willing to do what it takes, there are options. I'll discuss some of those options in upcoming posts.


Ian Welsh March 17, 2008 - 7:00am
( categories: Economics )

America was conned - who will pay?

The South Sea Bubble ended in riots as trust was lost. Wall Street also duped the public

* Larry Elliott, economics editor
* The Guardian,
* Monday March 17 2008

Bear Stearns marks the moment when the global financial crisis went critical. Up until last Friday, it had been possible - just about - to believe that the worst was over and that things were about to get better. That pretence was stripped away when JP Morgan, at the behest of the Federal Reserve, stepped in when the hedge funds pulled the plug on the fifth-biggest US investment bank.

It is now clear that no end is in sight to the turmoil, and the reason for that is that the Fed and the US treasury are no closer to solving the underlying problem than they were eight months ago. The crisis will only end when house prices stop falling and banks stop racking up huge losses on their loans. Doing that, however, will require the US government to intervene directly in the real estate market to end the wave of foreclosures. Ideologically, it is ill-equipped to take that step and, as a result, property prices will fall and the financial meltdown will go on and on.

Ultimately, though, action will be taken because there will be political pressure for it. Indeed, it is somewhat surprising that there is not already rioting in the streets, given the gigantic fraud perpetrated by the financial elite at the expense of ordinary Americans.

The US has just had its weakest period of expansion since the 1950s. Consumption growth has been poor. Investment growth has been modest. Exports have been sluggish. But if you are at the top of the tree, the years since the last recession in 2001 has been a veritable golden age. Salaries for executives have rocketed and profits have soared, because the productivity gains from a growing economy have been disproportionately skewed towards capital.

Patriotic

For ordinary Americans, though, it has been a different story. Real wages have been growing slowly; at just 1.6% a year on average over the latest upswing, well down on the experience of earlier decades. Business, of course, needs consumers to carry on spending in order to make money, so a way had to be found to persuade households to do their patriotic duty. The method chosen was simple. Whip up a colossal housing bubble, convince consumers that it makes sense to borrow money against the rising value of their homes to supplement their meagre real wage growth and watch the profits roll in.

As they did - for a while. Now it's payback time and the mood could get very ugly. Americans, to put it bluntly, have been conned. They have been duped by a bunch of serpent-tongued hucksters who packed up the wagon and made it across the county line before a lynch mob could be formed.

The debate now is not about whether the US is in recession but how deep and long that recession will be. Super-bears have started to say that this is perhaps "The Big One", by which they mean the onset of a new Great Depression. The need to rescue Bear Stearns has done little to still those voices.

As the economics team at HSBC recently pointed out, there has been a "catastrophic breakdown" of trust, and when that has happened in the past - the US in the 1930s, Japan in the 1990s - chucking extra money at the banks in the hope that they will start lending again proves ineffective.

It's not hard to see why trust has become such a rare commodity: Wall Street at the height of the securitisation mania had, in effect, become London at the time of the South Sea Bubble crisis in 1720. Vast quantities of funny paper were changing hands even though those involved in the deals had no idea of their true worth. Nor did they care. Inevitably, now the bubble has burst and the huge Ponzi securitisation scam has been exposed, there has been a reaction. The securitisation market is dead, there is less money sloshing round the system, banks are hoarding their cash.

Having allowed the housing boom to rage out of control for too long and then delaying cuts in interest rates until the housing market was gripped by recessionary forces, the Fed is now trying to make up for lost time with a burst of hyperactivity. It will cut interest rates on Wednesday and keep cutting them: financial markets expect the Fed funds rate to be 1% by the summer, and they are probably right. In most downturns, easier monetary policy does the trick. Lower interest rates make it cheaper to borrow and also change the trade-off between saving and spending. This may not be the usual sort of downturn, however, with consumers going through a period of debt revulsion after the excesses of recent years, even so the consensus is that after two or three quarters of falling output, a slow and sluggish recovery will be under way.

Deflation

These hopes are likely to be dashed, unless there is intervention at home and internationally to tackle the crisis. Domestically, the priority should be to stop homes that have been foreclosed being auctioned on the open market, since by selling them at a 50% discount property prices are driven down. The US does not seem to have learned the lessons from Japan, which encouraged a fire sale of property in the 1990s and was sucked into a classic debt deflation trap as a result. Those who argue, with some force, that it would be counter-productive to intervene in the market because the US needs to work the rottenness out of its system must recognise that the cold turkey option will be very long and painful.

The second form of intervention should be to shore up the dollar, the collapse of which is worrying countries that rely heavily on exports and is the main reason for the surge in commodity prices. Co-ordinated intervention by the major central banks needs to be at the top of the agenda at next month's G7 meeting in Washington, and there could be action even sooner if the dollar continues to tank.

In the longer term, lessons must be learnt from the turmoil. One is that you don't solve the problems of a collapsing bubble by blowing up another, which is what Alan Greenspan did after the dotcom fiasco in 2001 - the most irresponsible behaviour of any central banker in living memory.

The second lesson is that there has to be far stricter regulation not just of the US real estate market but of Wall Street, to prevent the return of irresponsible lending as soon as the recovery is firmly under way. If this is, heaven help us, The Big One, one of the only consolations will be that the repugnance at the orgy of speculation that has sapped the strength of the US economy will put a new New Deal on the political agenda.

But for this to happen there has to be a political response and even though this year's presidential election will be held in the shadow of recession, there appears not to be a potential FDR among the contenders for the White House. Yet if this crisis really does get as bad as some are forecasting, the public will rightly demand more than a slap on the wrist for Wall Street.
larry.elliott@guardian.co.uk

Tina March 17, 2008 - 9:46am

Footsie plunges in fall-out from US crisis

Related Articles

* Bear Stearns - what does it mean for you?
* Banking giants in the spotlight as confidence drains from Wall Street
* Rival snaps up Bear Stearns

By Russell Lynch, PA
Monday, 17 March 2008

The UK's biggest companies plunged into the red today as the fall-out from the cash crisis at troubled US investment bank Bear Stearns shook world markets.

London's FTSE 100 Index fell 2 per cent in early trading as investor nerves over the latest signs of the credit crunch sparked the sell-off. The index was down more than 140 points soon after 9am.

Bear Stearn's bail-out and acquisition by rival JP Morgan Chase also hit Asian markets, with Hong Kong's Hang Seng down 5 per cent and Japan's Nikkei 225 index off 3.7 per cent.

Terry Smith, chief executive of specialist inter-bank broker Tullett Prebon, said on BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "It does scare me. I have been working in finance in the City and worldwide for 34 years and I have never seen anything like this.

"I don't think anybody alive has seen events of this seriousness and magnitude affecting the financial markets."

Mr Smith said that, with banks increasingly reluctant to lend to one another, it was becoming more difficult for individuals and businesses on either side of the Atlantic to obtain loans and mortgages.

"The cuts in interest rates are unlikely to have any effect," he warned.

"High interest rates didn't cause this problem, so lowering interest rates isn't going to solve it. It is hard to see exactly what tools the authorities do have." more

Tina March 17, 2008 - 9:49am

A question I asked Numerian on another thread, does any of this trace back to Rubin created virtuous cycle of trying to grab back a significant portion of the oil outlays to the Arabs and the offshoring of labor to China, India etc. by creating enough American paper? Once the internet bubble burst which involved a lot of highly risky ventures but real business creation with increases in productivity and new products nonetheless we were left with no paper to suck up all of the oil and other import outlay profits. Hence the creation under Bush non-watch of magical paper creating little or nothing to suck up those profits. Had the Gore election been endorsed by the Supreme Court it seems likely that we would have replaced the internet bubble with a telecommunications and green energy bubble for the same reasons. This latter bubble would at least have had the positive consequences of replacing the primary cause of the need for paper bubbles - excess oil profits - with new energy creation. The Bush answer, first phase, was Enron or fake energy as opposed to housing markets - which got busted.

At any rate does this not suggest a way out of the present contretemps, i.e. government led creation of a massive alternative energy and telecom build out so there is no need for virtuous cycle?

By the way where does all of the oil money go now? I know that the short term answer is inflation in the Arab world, but what if there is a decision to invest in the productive capacity of China? Might that not shore up their markets, raise their standard of living and make them the world's biggest consumer market?

hvd March 17, 2008 - 10:24am

the big problem now would be that to finance it the U.S. would have to cut military spending by 50% or more. Not going to happen.

Tim March 17, 2008 - 11:00am

Bretton Woods established the dollar as the world's reserve currency, effectively replacing the gold standard with the dollar. Thus the amount of dollar relative to the value of the dollar became crucial as an arbiter of the world's economy. Too many dollars = excessive growth and inflation, too few = contraction and deflation. Plus, dislocations involving the dollar would lead to currency crises. For a history, see Wikipedia

The second factor was the agreement that oil would only be traded in dollars. This meant that everyone needed dollars for energy, and economies and militaries run on energy. So there was a skewed demand for dollars based on this exchange restriction.

Robert Rubin secured dollar hegemony by promoting the recycling of dollars, especially for oil, back into US treasuries, allowing for creation of a virtually endless supply of dollars to spur global growth while soaking up the excess dollars and keeping rates low. This made the US the repository for global savings.

The problem was however, that there were too many dollars created relative to real investment opportunities, so the savings were not put to productive use as capital investment. Moreover, Rubin is an economic liberal, not a social liberal and the Clinton era policies did not reverse the trend of wealth flowing to the top. Therefore, wages did not increase even with the so-called economic prosperity and government surplus.

Instead, especially under the Bush administration global savings that flowed into the US would be used to finance military adventures, debt-driven overconsumption in the US, and an appetite for speculation that was not restrained by proper assessment of risk.

Now the dollar is losing value and it's status as a reserve currency is questionable.

We are now in uncharted territory. It's probably premature to talk about new areas of investment when capital is in the process of being wiped out and with a dollar crisis looming.

The problem arose from centralization, which is needed for moving wealth to the top. When this shakes out, the antidote to business as usual is decentralization. If that doesn't happen, look for increasing tendency toward soft fascism (military-corporatist-financial-governmental revolving door) or even hard fascism if a right-wing populist demagogue rises to power.

tjfxh March 17, 2008 - 11:35am

CHAN AKYA
Trust goes down the drain

The acquisition of Bear Stearns by JPMorgan Chase at a knock-down price of $2 per share means investors cannot trust the reported book value of US financial firms any more. And if they cannot trust investment banks, can the trust of commercial banks be really all that higher? The Fed and other central banks should now understand that the bailers themselves may need to be bailed out in time.

Asian stocks plummeted on Monday after the weekend purchase of Bear Stearns by JPMorgan Chase (figures at market close):

Nikkei 225: -3.71%
Hang Seng Index: -5.18%
Shanghai Composite: -6.34%
Sensex 30 Index: -5.75%

Tina March 17, 2008 - 10:48am

Thanks for this, Ian.

It's always helpful to have someone neatly summarize, in easy to understand terms, the stuff those of us watching know but have difficulty verbalizing in a cohesive way. This is a good article I'll be pointing my friends towards.

rumor March 17, 2008 - 12:30pm

He's hoping to stop the meltdown with all these aggressive and unprecedented actions, and then when the financial system is stabilized he can ratchet up interest rates to protect the dollar and reestablish some credibility as an inflation fighter. I suppose also he believes he is choosing the lesser of two evils, since the credit crisis leads to deflation if left unchecked, and that's something central bankers really don't know how to turn around.

But there are two other gambles he has assumed, as Ian has pointed out. One is that his own balance sheet has already been half consumed by these shaky mortgage securities he has taken in collateral. This has exposed the Fed to market risk, which is never a good thing for a central bank. They barely know how to manage their gold reserves much less protect themselves against declining values in their collateral portfolio.

Second, his bailout of Wall Street is socially unpopular. At the moment it translates into satirical cartoons and editorials about socialism for the rich. It hasn't translated into an ugly social mood, but this could change if layoffs start to spread through the economy. Heaven help him if Goldman Sachs gets into trouble. They had a bonus pool in the billions for the past few years, and disgust could turn into real anger if Goldman were offered a rescue (as it is they can turn to the discount window directly now, and that's a first).

It is curious no one in Congress has yet questioned any of Bernanke's actions.

Numerian March 17, 2008 - 12:33pm

Monday March 17 2008 By BEN FELLER

Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush, trying to calm turmoil in financial markets, said Monday that his administration is ``on top of the situation'' in dealing with the slumping economy.

``One thing is for certain, we're in challenging times,'' the president said after meeting with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and other senior economic advisers. ``But another thing is for certain: We've taken strong, decisive action.''

The president commended the Fed for its urgent actions over the weekend. ``We've shown the country and the world that the United States is on top of the situation,'' he said.

Bush spoke on a day of turmoil and plunging prices on global financial markets. Oil prices hit a record in Asian trading, U.S. stock index futures fell sharply and the dollar hit record lows.

The White House moved quickly to raise Bush's public profile Monday, and he continued to send an upbeat message, even in acknowledging a downturn that keeps roiling the economy and the people as well.

``We agree upon the fact that our financial institutions are strong, and that our capital markets are functioning efficiently and effectively,'' Bush said with his economic aides.

Still, Bush said his administration is monitoring economic developments closely.

``When need be, we'll act decisively in a way that continues to bring order to financial markets,'' Bush said.

He did not indicate any other steps his government might take, or when.

``In the long run, our economy is going to be fine,'' Bush said. ``Right now we're dealing with a difficult situation.''

more

Tina March 17, 2008 - 12:33pm

Anyone else feel like they just moved to New Orleans with a nice, strong levee in your backyard? I can't wait to feel the pain a Bush bailout would inflict on anyone who works for a living. This is madness.

zot23 March 17, 2008 - 1:30pm

Mr. Sidam is on the job.

Tim March 17, 2008 - 1:34pm

Why is BSC trading at $4 when it is being bought out at $2? JPM did not just double!

Joaquin March 17, 2008 - 12:39pm

A few have already been quoted as saying they will vote against this purchase as it is a pure giveaway.

Numerian March 17, 2008 - 12:50pm

EOM

Joaquin March 17, 2008 - 12:52pm

The Fed is providing JPM with a $30 billion financing deal to hold the bank harmless for any losses it discovers in the Bear Stearns portfolio, and to assist in the takeover of Bear Stearns. At last night's conference call JPM said the costs of the takeover include severance payments as well as retention bonuses for key employees.

Are we the taxpayers, indirectly or directly, financing retention bonuses for these Bear Stearns bankers? If so, it stinks.

Numerian March 17, 2008 - 2:44pm

The B Word

If these numbers shock you, they should. But the big bailout is coming. The only question is how well it will be managed.

As I said, the important thing is to bail out the system, not the people who got us into this mess. That means cleaning out the shareholders in failed institutions, making bondholders take a haircut, and canceling the stock options of executives who got rich playing heads I win, tails you lose.

tjfxh March 17, 2008 - 3:13pm

about a bailout is doing it in a way that makes sure it isn't necessary again in 10 years.

Ian Welsh March 17, 2008 - 3:23pm

Does the purchase of Bear Stearns by JP Morgan constitute an event of default? If so, that would trigger dozens or maybe hundreds of credit default swaps written just for that purpose. For example, some Wall Street firms have an ownership position in Bear that has lost almost $300 million, so there is a lot at stake.

If not, since JP Morgan is by far the largest underwriter of credit default swaps, has this bank just avoided a very nasty drain on its resources?

Numerian March 17, 2008 - 2:56pm

The lawsuits are coming to determine this. Unwinding this (and the many like it) is going to be a bonanza for lawyers.

tjfxh March 17, 2008 - 3:15pm

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, International Business Editor
The Telegraph | March 17

As feared, foreign bond holders have begun to exercise a collective vote of no confidence in the devaluation policies of the US government. The Federal Reserve faces a potential veto of its rescue measures.

Asian, Mid East and European investors stood aside at last week's auction of 10-year US Treasury notes. "It was a disaster," said Ray Attrill from 4castweb. "We may be close to the point where the uglier consequences of benign neglect towards the currency are revealed."

The share of foreign buyers ("indirect bidders") plummeted to 5.8pc, from an average 25pc over the last eight weeks. On the Richter Scale of unfolding dramas, this matches the death of Bear Stearns.

Rightly or wrongly, a view has taken hold that Washington is cynically debasing the coinage, hoping to export its day of reckoning through beggar-thy-neighbour policies.

It is not my view. I believe the forces of debt deflation now engulfing America - and soon half the world - are so powerful that nobody will be worrying about inflation a year hence.

Yes, the Fed caused this mess by setting the price of credit too low for too long, feeding the cancer of debt dependency. But we are in the eye of the storm now. This is not a time for priggery.

The Fed's emergency actions are imperative. Last week's collapse of confidence in the creditworthiness of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac was life-threatening. These agencies underpin 60pc of the $11,000bn market for US home loans.

With the "financial accelerator" kicking into top gear - downwards - we may need everything that Ben Bernanke can offer....

Japanese investors and foreign funds are having to close their yen "carry trade" positions. A chunk of the $1,400bn trade built up over six years has been viciously unwound in weeks. The harder the dollar falls, the further this must go.

It is unsettling to watch the world's reserve currency disintegrate. Commodities from gold to oil and wheat are taking on the role of safe-haven "currencies". The monetary order is becoming unhinged.

I doubt the dollar can fall much further. What is it to fall against? The spreading credit contagion will cause large parts of the globe to downgrade in hot pursuit - starting with Europe....

The race to the bottom must soon begin. Half the world will be slashing rates this year to stave off credit contraction. The dollar will have a lot of company. Small comfort.

LJ March 17, 2008 - 3:10pm

Right now the DOW is even and the Nasdaq is down 1.5%

Joaquin March 17, 2008 - 3:21pm

Or a short squeeze.

tjfxh March 17, 2008 - 4:29pm

Around Lehman now.

The problem is not the financial structure - it's the greed and selfishness. The "everyone for themselves" attitude created by the Republicans will now bring us down, as all those players try to "get theirs" before the game is ended. BB simply CANNOT try to socialize all the losses - it's not going to work. People are PISSED - even people who know nothing about the financial markets.

Blood will be demanded from the rich, and they ought to be running very scared right now. Those bridge games aren't going to last. We're into Liar's Poker, and a lot of the players are going to go down hard.


“It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is the most adaptable to change.” ~ Charles Darwin

darwin March 17, 2008 - 3:26pm

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