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Welcome to the Weekly Report. This week we look at moral hazard and I show
you how it's about to unleash forces that no Central Bank or Government can
control and we look at next weeks trend indicators and targets.
I have spoken about moral hazard before, especially in relation to the current
actions carried out by the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England after the
bailouts of Bear Stearns and Northern Rock. To avoid moral
hazard arising, strict controls have to be placed upon the facilities that
are created and the use of the assets supplied from those facilities. A failure
to control the results of centralist intervention will encourage the very behaviour
that caused the original problem.
Let me be blunt. There is no risk to the financial sector that is so great
that could justify invoking a moral hazard. If a bunch of banks and investment
houses collapsed under the strain of unserviceable debt or losses so great
that creditors required compensation, so be it. The pain would be enormous
and the recession deep but the US economy and importantly the US financial
sector would re-emerge stronger, leaner and fitter than at any time since WW2.
As we know such an event will not be allowed to happen, the Fed and the US
Govt are working together to ensure that credit markets at least allow maturing
debt to be rolled over, giving time to the banks and investment houses to rebuild
their capital reserves. It is a 2 pronged attack, the Fed keeps the banks functioning
and the US Govt drops money directly onto consumers in an effort to encourage
spending or re-finance mortgages that have become too burdensome. These measures
have no time limit, they can be repeated and increased until the day occurs
when banks tell the regulators "all is well".
The groundwork for an episode of moral hazard is laid out but not yet constructed
as long as the facilities are controlled and the assets applied to the task
at hand.
What would initiate construction? The loosening of control, the allowance
of a facility to be used for a purpose other than its original intention would
see the foundations poured. That loosening has now occurred.

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Release Date: May 2, 2008
For immediate release
Central banks have continued to work together and to consult regularly
on liquidity conditions in financial markets. In view of the persistent
liquidity pressures in some term funding markets, the European Central
Bank, the Federal Reserve, and the Swiss National Bank are announcing
an expansion of their liquidity measures.
Federal Reserve Actions
The Federal Reserve announced today an increase in the amounts auctioned
to eligible depository institutions under its biweekly Term Auction Facility
(TAF) from $50 billion to $75 billion, beginning with the auction on
May 5. This increase will bring the amounts outstanding under the TAF
to $150 billion.
In conjunction with the increase in the size of the TAF, the Federal
Open Market Committee has authorized further increases in its existing
temporary reciprocal currency arrangements with the European Central
Bank (ECB) and the Swiss National Bank (SNB). These arrangements will
now provide dollars in amounts of up to $50 billion and $12 billion to
the ECB and the SNB, respectively, representing increases of $20 billion
and $6 billion. The FOMC extended the term of these reciprocal currency
arrangements through January 30, 2009.
In addition, the Federal Open Market Committee authorized an expansion
of the collateral that can be pledged in the Federal Reserve's Schedule
2 Term Securities Lending Facility (TSLF) auctions. Primary dealers may
now pledge AAA/Aaa-rated asset-backed securities, in addition to already
eligible residential- and commercial-mortgage-backed securities and agency
collateralized mortgage obligations, beginning with the Schedule 2 TSLF
auction to be announced on May 7, 2008, and to settle on May 9, 2008.
The wider pool of collateral should promote improved financing conditions
in a broader range of financial markets. Treasury securities, agency
securities, and agency mortgage-backed securities continue to be eligible
as collateral in Schedule 1 TSLF auctions.
The expansion of the Term Auction Facility comes as no surprise, it has been
stepped up since its inception and will probably increase further. However
the inevitable reaction to the Bear Stearns bailout has now occurred. The Term
Securities Lending Facility has been expanded to allow an increase of lower
rated asset backed debt beyond commercial and residential mortgage backed debt.
A reminder:
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The Term Securities Lending Facility is a 28-day lending facility that
offers Treasury general collateral to the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York's primary dealers in exchange for other program-eligible collateral.
It is intended to promote liquidity in the financing markets for Treasury
and other collateral and thus foster the functioning of financial markets
more generally.
What are the differences between the TSLF and other Federal Reserve
operations, like the TAF and term repo operations? The Term Auction
Facility ("TAF") offers term funding to depository institutions via
a bi-weekly competitive auction. In contrast, the TSLF will offer Treasury
GC to the FRBNY's primary dealers in exchange for other program-eligible
collateral. The FRBNY term repo operations are designed to temporarily
add reserves to the banking system via term repos with the primary
dealers. These agreements are cash-for-bond agreements and have an
impact on the aggregate level of reserves available in the banking
system. The bond-for-bond lending of the TSLF, however, will have no
impact on reserve levels.
Quite right too, the swapping of assets on a 1 to 1 basis if they had equal
price would not affect reserve levels. Ahh you see the hole in that argument
too? In fact there are 2 holes, firstly the assets swapped are not equally
priced, "program eligible collateral" is only swapped because it is useless.
With no one willing to accept it as collateral on lending there is no choice
but to use the TSLF. In other words assets that should be priced at zero (thus
lowering reserves) are swapped for fully priced assets. Only by refusing to
mark to market does the Fed assertion of no increase in reserves ring true.
Secondly it is this refusal to mark to market, allowing the TSLF to operate
as a Conduit /SIV where toxic debt is parked to take it off the balance sheet
that is allowing a moral hazard to occur.
The expansion of eligible collateral is a step into a minefield. "Primary
dealers may now pledge AAA/Aaa-rated asset-backed securities". The worry is
that this new collateral is not secured on a physical asset, ABS is a complex
structure of intertwined pools of debt and receivable payments, grouped together
and collateralized by cash flows from underlying assets. It is the mix and
match of the various debt that allows the ABS to receive a rating which is
normally higher than the underlying debt would achieve alone.
Security is a misnomer in the world of derivatives. We now face a situation
were Primary Dealers are expanding their borrowings using top rated debt that
has been swapped for debt that could (and is) reliant on credit card debt,
unsecured loans, auto loans and even private revenues from ventures. This will
now allow an expansion of Dealers activities beyond the rolling over of maturing
debt.
The TLSF was not "sold" to the financial world and the public as an investment
vehicle, it was advertised as a method to "promote liquidity in the financing
markets for Treasury and other collateral and thus foster the functioning of
financial markets more generally." Nowhere do I see the words expand, replace
or reinvigorate. This is an extraordinary facility introduced to allow the
market to function because of this:
To read the rest of the Weely Report go to A
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Mick P (Collection Agency)
About
Collection Agency
An Occasional Letter From The Collection Agency In association with Live
Charts UK.
For some years now I have written an ongoing letter, using macro-economics,
to try and peer into the economic future 6 to 18 months ahead. The letter was
posted on a financial bulletin board to allow others discuss its topic.The
letter contains no recommendations to buy or sell, indeed I leave that to all
the other letters out there and to the readers own judgement. The letter is
designed to make us all think about what may be coming, what macro trends are
occurring and how that will affect future trends and how those trends will
filter down to everyday life and help spot weak or strong areas to focus on
for trading or investing.
To contact Michael or discuss the letters topic E Mail mickp@livecharts.co.uk.
Copyright © 2006-2008 Mick P
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