Bernanke's Latest Scheme No Remedy
Just A Lifeboat For The 'Worthy'
by Mike Whitney, March 18, 2008
Bernenke, the Zionist
The
point is, Bernanke's latest scheme is not a
remedy for the tribulations of the dollar and
the unwinding of bad bets. It is merely a
quick-fix to avoid a bloody stock market crash
brought on by prevailing conditions in the
credit markets.
Bernanke coordinated the action with the other
members of the global banking cartel-The Bank of
Canada, the Bank of England, the European
Central Bank, the Federal Reserve, and the Swiss
National Bank-and cobbled together the new Term
Securities Lending Facility (TSLF), which "will
lend up to $200 billion of Treasury securities
to primary dealers secured for a term of 28 days
(rather than overnight, as in the existing
program) by a pledge of other securities,
including federal agency debt, federal agency
residential-mortgage-backed securities (MBS),
and non-agency AAA/Aaa-rated private-label
residential MBS. The TSLF is intended to promote
liquidity in the financing markets for Treasury
and other collateral and thus to foster the
functioning of financial markets more
generally." (Fed statement)
The plan, of course, is wildly inflationary and
will put additional downward pressure on the
anemic dollar. No matter. All of the Fed's tools
are implicitly inflationary anyway, but they'll
all be put to use before the current crisis is
over.
The Fed's statement continues: "The Federal Open
Market Committee has authorized increases in its
existing temporary reciprocal currency
arrangements (swap lines) with the European
Central Bank (ECB) and the Swiss National Bank (SNB).
These arrangements will now provide dollars in
amounts of up to $30 billion and $6 billion to
the ECB and the SNB, respectively, representing
increases of $10 billion and $2 billion. The
FOMC extended the term of these swap lines
through September 30, 2008."
So, why is the Fed issuing loans to foreign
banks? Isn't that a tacit admission of its guilt
in the trillion dollar subprime swindle? Or is
it simply a way of warding off litigation from
angry foreign investors who know they were
cheated with worthless toxic bonds? In any
event, the Fed's largess proves that the G-10
operates as de facto cartel determining monetary
policy for much of the world. (The G-10
represents roughly 85% of global GDP)
As for Bernanke's Term Securities Lending
Facility (TSLF) it is intentionally designed to
circumvent the Fed's mandate to only take
top-grade collateral in exchange for loans. No
one believes that these triple A mortgage-backed
securities are worth more than $.70 on the
dollar. In fact, according to a report in
Bloomberg News yesterday: "AAA debt fell as low
as 61 cents on the dollar after record home
foreclosures and a decline to AA may push the
value of the debt to 26 cents, according to
Credit Suisse Group.
"The fact that they've kept those ratings where
they are is laughable," said Kyle Bass, chief
executive officer of Hayman Capital Partners, a
Dallas-based hedge fund that made $500 million
last year betting lower-rated subprime-mortgage
bonds would decline in value. "Downgrades of AAA
and AA bonds are imminent, and they're going to
be significant." Bass estimates most of AAA
subprime bonds in the ABX indexes will be cut by
an average of six or seven levels within six
weeks." (Bloomberg News) The Fed is accepting
these garbage bonds at nearly full-value.
Another gift from Santa Bernanke.
Additionally, the Fed is offering 28 day repos
which - if this auction works like the Fed's
other facility, the TAF - the loans can be
rolled over free of charge for another 28 days.
Yippee. The Fed found a way to recapitalize the
banks with permanent rotating loans and the
public is none the wiser. The capital-starved
banksters at Citi and Merrill must feel like
they just won the lottery. Unfortunately,
Bernanke's move effectively nationalizes the
banks and makes them entirely dependent on the
Fed's fickle generosity.
The New York Times` Floyd Norris sums up
Bernanke's efforts like this:
The Fed's moves today and last Friday are a
direct effort to counter a loss of liquidity in
mortgage-backed securities, including those
backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Given the
implied government guarantee of Freddie and
Fannie, rising yields in their paper served as a
warning sign that the crunch was worsening and
investor confidence was waning. On Oct. 30, the
day before the Fed cut the Fed funds rate from
4.75 percent to 4.5 percent, the yield on Fannie
Mae securities was 5.75 percent. Today the Fed
Funds rate is 3 percent, and the Fannie Mae rate
is 5.71 percent, virtually the same as in
October A sign of the Fed's success, or lack of
same, will be visible in that rate. It needs to
come down sharply, in line with Treasury bond
rates. Today, the rate was up for most of the
day, but it did fall back at the end of the day.
Watch that rate for the rest of the week to see
indications of whether the Fed's move is really
working to restore confidence.
Norris is right; it all depends on whether rates
go down and whether that will rev-up the
moribund housing market again. Of course, that
is predicated on the false assumption that
consumers are too stupid to know that housing is
in its biggest decline since the Great
Depression. This is just another slight
miscalculation by the blinkered Fed. Housing
will not be resuscitated anytime in the near
future, no matter what the conditions; and you
can bet on that. The last time Bernanke cut
interest rates by 75 basis points mortgage rates
on the 30-year fixed actually went up a full
percentage point. This had a negative affect on
refinancing as well as new home purchases. The
cuts were a total bust in terms of home sales.
Still, equities traders love Bernanke's antics
and, for the next 24 hours or so, he'll be
praised for acting decisively. But as more
people reflect on this latest manuver, they'll
see it for what it really is; a sign of panic.
Even more worrisome is the fact that Bernanke is
quickly using every arrow in his quiver. Despite
the mistaken belief that the Fed can print money
whenever it chooses; there are balance sheets
constraints; the Fed's largess is finite.
According to MarketWatch:
Counting the currency swaps with the foreign
central banks, the Fed has now committed more
than half of its combined securities and loan
portfolio of $832 billion, Lou Crandall, chief
economist for Wrightson ICAP noted. The Fed
won't have run completely out of ammunition
after these operations, but it is reaching
deeper into its balance sheet than before.
Steve Waldman at interfluidity draws the same
conclusion in his latest post:
"After the FAF expansion, repo program, and TSLF,
the Fed will have between $300B and $400B in
remaining sterilization capacity, unless it
issues bonds directly." (Calculated Risk)
So, Bernanke is running short of ammo and the
housing bust has just begun. That's bad. As the
wave of foreclosures, credit card defaults and
commercial real estate bankruptcies continue to
mount; Bernanke's bag o' tricks will be near
empty having frittered most of his capital away
on his Beluga-munching buddies at the investment
banks.
But that's only half the story. Bernanke and Co.
are already working on a new list of
hyper-inflationary remedies once the credit
troubles pop up again. According to the Wall
Street Journal, the Fed has other
economy-busting scams up its sleeve:
With worsening strains in credit market
threatening to deepen and prolong an incipient
recession, analysts are speculating that the
Federal Reserve may be forced to consider more
innovative responses - perhaps buying
mortgage-backed securities directly.
As credit stresses intensify, the possibility of
unconventional policy options by the Fed has
gained considerable interest, said Michael
Feroli of J.P. Morgan Chase. He said two options
are garnering particular attention on Wall
Street: Direct Fed lending to financial
institutions other than banks and direct Fed
purchases of debt of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
or mortgage-backed securities guaranteed by the
two shareholder-owned, government-sponsored
mortgage companies. ( "Rate Cuts may not be
Enough", David Wessel, Wall Street Journal)
Wonderful. So now the Fed is planning to expand
its mandate and bail out investment banks, hedge
funds, brokerage houses and probably every other
brandy-swilling Harvard grad who got
caught-short in the subprime mousetrap. Ain't
the "free market" great?
But none of Bernanke's bailout schemes will
succeed. In fact, all he's doing is destroying
the currency by trying to reflate the equity
bubble. And how much damage is he inflicting on
the dollar? According to Bloomberg, "the risk of
losses on US Treasury notes exceeded German
bunds for the first time ever amid investor
concern the subprime mortgage crisis is sapping
government reserves Support for troubled
financial institutions in the U.S. will be
perceived as a weakening of U.S. sovereign
credit."
America is going broke and the rest of the world
knows it. Bernanke is just speeding the country
along the ever-steepening downward trajectory.
Timothy Geithner, President of the New York Fed
put it like this:
The self-reinforcing dynamic within financial
markets has intensified the downside risks to
growth for an economy that is already
confronting a very substantial adjustment in
housing and the possibility of a significant
rise in household savings. The intensity of the
crisis is in part a function of the size of the
preceding financial boom, but also of the speed
of the deterioration in confidence about the
prospects for growth and in some of the basic
features of our financial markets. The damage to
confidence-confidence in ratings, in valuation
tools, in the capacity of investors to evaluate
risk-will prolong the process of adjustment in
markets. This process carries with it risks to
the broader economy.
Without a hint of irony, Geithner talks about
the importance of building confidence on a day
when the Fed has deliberately distorted the
market by injecting $200 billion in the banking
system and sending the flagging stock market
into a steroid-induced rapture. Astonishing.
The stock market was headed for a crash this
week, but Bernanke managed to swerve off the
road and avoid a head-on collision. But nothing
has changed. Foreclosures are still soaring, the
credit markets are still frozen, and capital is
being destroyed at a faster pace than any time
in history. The economic situation continues to
deteriorate and even unrelated parts of the
markets have now been infected with subprime
contagion. The massive deleveraging of the banks
and hedge funds is beginning to intensify and
will continue to accelerate until a bottom is
found. That's a long way off and the road ahead
is full of potholes.
"In the United States, a new tipping point will
translate into a collapse of the real economy,
final socio-economic stage of the serial
bursting of the housing and financial bubbles
and of the pursuance of the US dollar fall. The
collapse of US real economy means the virtual
freeze of the American economic machinery:
private and public bankruptcies in large
numbers, companies and public services closing
down massively." (Statement from The Global
Europe Anticipation Bulletin (GEAB)
Is that too gloomy? Then take a look at these
eye-popping charts which show the extent of the
Fed's lending operations via the Temporary
Auction Facility. The loans have helped to make
the insolvent banks look healthy, but at great
cost to the country's economic welfare.
The Fed established the TAF in the first place;
to put a floor under mortgage-backed securities
and other subprime junk so the banks wouldn't
have to try to sell them into an illiquid market
at fire-sale prices. But the plan has backfired
and now the Fed feels compelled to contribute
$200 billion to a losing cause. It's a waste of
time.
UBS puts the banks total losses from the
subprime fiasco at $600 billion. If that's true,
(and we expect it is) then the Fed is out of
luck because, at some point, Bernanke will have
to throw in the towel and let some of the bigger
banks fail. And when that happens, the stock
market will start lurching downward in 400 and
500 point increments. But what else can be done?
Solvency can only be feigned for so long.
Eventually, losses have to be accounted for and
businesses have to fail. It's that simple.
So far, the Fed's actions have had only a
marginal affect. The system is grinding to a
standstill. The country's two largest GSEs,
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which are presently
carrying $4.5 trillion of loans on their books,
are teetering towards bankruptcy. Both are
gravely under-capitalized and (as a recent
article in Barron's shows) Fannies equity is
mostly smoke and mirrors. No wonder investors
are shunning their bonds. Additionally, the cost
of corporate bond insurance is now higher than
anytime in history, which makes funding for
business expansion or new projects nearly
impossible. The wheels have come of the cart.
The debt markets are upside-down, consumer
confidence is drooping and, as the Financial
Times states, "A palpable sense of crisis
pervades global trading floors." It's all pretty
grim.
The banks are facing a "systemic margin call"
which is leaving them capital-depleted and
unwilling to lend. Thus, the credit markets are
shutting down and there's a stampede for the
exits by the big players. Bernanke's chances of
reversing the trend are nil. The cash-strapped
banks are calling in loans from the hedge funds
which is causing massive deleveraging. That, in
turn, is triggering a disorderly unwind of
trillions of dollars of credit default swaps and
other leveraged bets. Its a disaster. Economist
Nouriel Roubini predicted the whole sequence of
events six months before the credit markets
seized and the Great Unwind began". Here's a
sampling of his recent testimony before
Congress:
Roubini's Testimony before Congress:
There is now a rising probability of a
"catastrophic" financial and economic outcome; a
vicious circle where a deep recession makes the
financial losses more severe and where, in turn,
large and growing financial losses and a
financial meltdown make the recession even more
severe. The Fed is seriously worried about this
vicious circle and about the risks of a systemic
financial meltdown Capital reduction, credit
contraction, forced liquidation and fire sales
of assets at below fundamental prices will ensue
leading to a cascading and mounting cycle of
losses and further credit contraction. In
illiquid market actual market prices are now
even lower than the lower fundamental value that
they now have given the credit problems in the
economy. Market prices include a large
illiquidity discount on top of the discount due
to the credit and fundamental problems of the
underlying assets that are backing the
distressed financial assets. Capital losses will
lead to margin calls and further reduction of
risk taking by a variety of financial
institutions that are now forced to mark to
market their positions. Such a forced fire sale
of assets in illiquid markets will lead to
further losses that will further contract credit
and trigger further margin calls and
disintermediation of credit.
To understand the risks that the financial
system is facing today I present the "nightmare"
or "catastrophic" scenario that the Fed and
financial officials around the world are now
worried about. Such a scenario - however extreme
- has a rising and significant probability of
occurring. Thus, it does not describe a very low
probability event but rather an outcome that is
quite possible.
Roubini has been right from the very beginning,
and he is right again now. Bernanke can place
himself at the water's edge and lift his hands
in defiance, but the tide will come in and wash
him out to sea anyway. The market is correcting
and nothing is going to stop it.
Roubini's Nightmare Scenario: A Vicious Circle
Ending In A Systemic Financial Meltdown
Wes Penre is a
researcher, journalist, the owner of the domains
Illuminati News
and
Zionist Watch and is the publisher of the
same. He has been researching Globalization and the New World
Order and exposed the big players behind the scenes for more
than a decade now. He has published his research on the Internet
at the above domains, which are currently updated to keep people
informed what is going on. You can also find his articles linked
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