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Due to my unique service, I have numerous sophisticated and savvy investors
among my subscribers. Some have become friends and supporters of my work.
Recently, Arnold Bock, a Canadian living in Mendoza, Argentina and Lorimer
Wilson of Toronto, Canada, have agreed to become part of my editorial staff
at Precious Metals Warrants and will be providing content from time to time.
The article below, admittedly lengthy, is a must read by all interested in
understanding the reasons for and the why's of our current financial mess.
It was written by Arnold Bock. Arnold also was the author of some of our previous
articles, "Crazy Like A Fox", which are available on our website.
Dudley Baker
Publisher, Precious Metals
Warrants
The Current Global Financial and Economic Crisis
Preface:
During the past several weeks of October and November 2008, I have been showered
with questions from friends and acquaintances who are genuinely concerned about
the current financial crisis. What they see on television and read in the print
media has riveted their attention and created a considerable degree of unease.
The evolving crisis has also become a frequent topic of conversation among
those with whom they associate.
I invariably provide my perspective when asked, but I am frequently left frustrated
because a few brief comments never come close to a complete answer. Moreover,
I always experience an overwhelming need to provide context for anything. "Why" is
the most important word in my vocabulary, which means I suspect others too
might share that personal quirk. By writing this piece I have attempted to
give a fuller and more comprehensive answer, which gives context and which
tries to answer "why."
Background to the Crisis:
I have been a serious student of political, economic and financial issues
over the years. Therefore, I frequently wondered why there was so little interest
and concern exhibited about financial excesses I found increasingly troubling.
However, a sudden and deep concern, even fear, has replaced the relative indifference
of the past. What is particularly apparent is that much of this elevated concern
stems from the fact that so many people had apparently come to believe that
their good life and high standard of living was somehow a normal condition
of the developed countries of the western world in the new millennium. Most
subscribed and had become paid up members of the Goldilocks Society.
The current financial hurricane is now an undeniable reality. However the
breakneck speed with which it arrived has surprised almost everyone. It
did me, in spite of my substantial interest in and awareness of economic
and political issues. I can say with absolute certainty that no one predicted
the sudden emergence and magnitude of the current unraveling of financial
markets and global economy. As proof I recall how the US Congress was suddenly
summoned into emergency session, with only four weeks remaining in the election
campaign, in order to provide a $700 Billion bailout to the financial sector.
Believe me, the stock and trade of all politicians leading up to elections
is to assure a feel good attitude among voters. How else does one explain the
$160 Billion worth of $300 and $600 economic stimulus cheques mailed out to
most US citizens during the summer of 2008? Yes, these cheques were merely
bipartisan bribes to voters in advance of the election, using borrowed money
on which those same taxpayers will pay interest for the indefinite future.
But as usual, that kind of inconvenient truth is ignored, but will emerge as
another problem sometime down the road.
The fact that the financial system became unglued before the November 4th
election is proof of how serious the problem was and is. A favourite
game at the start of each calendar year is to predict the nature of the economy
and the financial markets in the twelve months ahead. For example, what level
will the DOW, NASDAQ and S&P stock indexes be at the end the year? Most
everyone points to historical data to demonstrate that politicians always
try to do what is necessary to make the financial markets and the broader
economy positive leading up to elections. Consequently, at the beginning
of 2008 we quite naturally heard similar prognostications. My personal prediction
while less optimistic, was only moderately so.
Knowing the desires and habits of politicians, I too said that the growing
excesses of the financial markets did not bode well in the period ahead, but
suggested that all levers would be employed to assure a kind of feel good,
muddle through approach until after the November elections. I suggested all
bets were off from that point forward and that a financial malaise would become
apparent thereafter. Why so much pessimism? Simply because of the rampant excesses
built up in much of the financial markets and economy during the past several
years.
Characteristics and Causes of the Crisis:
Too many countries and people have been living above their means for too
long. Family savings used to be about ten percent or more of income,
whereas in recent years savings have dwindled to the neighbourhood of zero.
Our society has gone from one that creates and produces wealth to one which
consumes it. As proof, the US consumer has now become responsible for fully
70 percent of the nation's Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Without the gorging
consumer coupled with Chinese manufacturing and financing, this level of
consumption would not have been possible.
The US central bank (FED) Federal Reserve Board policies, encouraged by politicians,
set interest rates considerably below the rate of inflation and made
it easy for everyone to assume and carry debt. Moreover, easy money includes
both low interest rates and easy credit. Anyone with a pulse was able to
get credit to acquire all manner of things and lifestyle enhancements which
constitute the attributes of the good life. In fact it became so universal
that almost everyone assumed this was the natural order of things. Moreover,
this kind indulgent lifestyle was thought to be normal. I don't know how many
times I said that this kind of comfortable lifestyle was guaranteed to come
to an end when the downside of the current economic cycle again emerged. However,
I just did not know exactly when or what specifically would initiate the down
cycle or how severe the wake up call would be.
We now are getting the message. The global financial system turned on a
dime about the beginning of October 2008, four weeks before the US elections. It
took the form of a quick and forceful blind sided slap to the consumer's
head. Stock markets cratered followed by a stampeding horde of exploding
and imploding financial institutions...commercial banks, investment banks,
hedge funds and most other financial institutions on the fringe. The evolving
disaster has not stopped and continues to this day. In fact it moved from
the US and North America to Europe and beyond and continues to wreck its
havoc on the prices of commodities and assets of all kinds from houses to
stocks and pension funds. Less than two months ago most analysts were
concerned about the gathering storm of price inflation, now asset price deflation
is the overriding concern.
During the ten days leading to the $700 Billion Congressional bailout of financial
institutions, other countries took a perverse pleasure in slamming the US for
its irresponsible behaviour leading to the spiraling financial disaster which
was then thought to be limited to the US. Smug utterances oozing schadenfreude
prevailed. I remember watching the German Finance Minister on BBC sternly lecturing
the Americans in a most forceful manner, only to see him bailout two German
banks within days. The Argentine President did something similar on national
television and she also was told within days that her request for new loans
from the International Monetary Fund was denied because the country had not
repaid its European creditors for loans several years prior. Now, a mere
six weeks after the initial jolt, virtually all nations are affected to one
degree or another.
Excessive consumer buying over an extended period, facilitated by excessively
low interest rates and easy credit, are part of the cause. That is a
simple but only a partial answer. As noted above, we have become a consumer
society, not one of producers. Others call what we have become a Service
economy. Asian countries make things which we buy and consume. We don't save,
but we certainly consume like the power shopper in the mall who drives herself
at a frantic pace until her plastic cards are about to melt. Oh yes, consumer
debt which those cards created, as well as excessive government debt, is
financed by many of those same Asian countries which make the stuff. In business
a process like this is called vendor financing. Therefore what the consumers
receive seems almost cost free...until the inevitable happens and the bill
arrives...like now.
There are, however, more causes than excessive consumption. Those financial
institutions we hear about but don't much understand, are key players in this
crisis. It was the large Wall Street Investment Banks with names like
Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase and Lehman Brothers, along with a handful of
others, who are the real villains. Add to them the big Commercial
Banks like Citibank, Wells Fargo, Wachovia and others who threw investment
caution and risk to the winds.
To these more familiar names we must include many of the 9000 Hedge Funds.
This type of financial institution is not subject to the same supervision by
regulatory authorities, does not have the same visibility and even fewer reporting
requirements. Investors are usually very rich persons, pension funds and trusts
who have large pools of cash. They also like to preserve their privacy. Unfortunately
hedge funds also borrow much of the money they use to invest. For example,
they have borrowed vast amounts of money from Japan and elsewhere at very low
interest rates over the last several years. They then add this borrowed money
to their investor's money for what is called Leverage. For example, they may
invest one dollar of their own money and merge it with up to 30 dollars or
more of cheap borrowed money. While a 30 to 1 ratio can be extremely rewarding,
it also makes the fund highly vulnerable to even minor reductions in the value
of its investments.
Leverage of this kind is one of the root causes of the current financial
crisis. Yes, we often hear of the "Subprime Crisis" as the cause. The
housing sector was and is an abysmal sinkhole of bad judgment by both lenders
and purchasers. Greed prevailed throughout. It was not just low income purchasers
who made bad decisions and who got beyond their financial capability to make
their payments, it was most everyone in the process...realtors, mortgage
brokers, appraisers, lenders, lawyers, title guarantors and builders. Everyone
is culpable in some manner, at some time and to some degree. The entire
residential housing sector created a price bubble which now must bear significant
responsibility for the financial crisis.
The really egregious faults are present in the financing part of the housing
sector. Mortgages, dishonestly priced and marketed, are the principal cause
not only of the residential housing bubble, but of the unraveling financial
products called derivatives and the financial institutions which made and
marketed them. This is an undeniable fact. What made all of this nonsense
even more problematic was how the large investment banks, together with
the gigantic mortgage companies known as Fanny Mae and Freddy Mac, which
processed these mortgages into derivative financial products called Mortgage
Backed Securities (MBS's).
In addition, other derivative products were also made, packaged and sold globally.
Derivatives are generally called Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDO's). If
this isn't confusing enough, a form of insurance called Credit Default Swaps
(CDS's) totaling more than $50 Trillion, were also created and sold as insurance
on leveraged MBS's. Lastly, much of this financial alphabet soup of products
was sold to hedge funds and various other institutions like pension funds and
commercial banks around the world, many of whom borrowed much of the money
used to purchase these toxic concoctions.
Purchase Leverage at ridiculous levels of 30 to 1, on this financial cauldron
of crud, is the root cause of the current financial crisis. How could
any person or any company borrow so much money involving so much risk? Why
would anyone buy such overpriced and little understood investment products?
Primarily because risk was discounted and the products were formulated to
appear to be AAA investment grade by credit rating agencies such as Standard
and Poors, Fitch as well as others.
The biggest and most powerful on Wall Street including Henry Paulson, the
current Secretary of the US Treasury department and former Chief Executive
Officer of Goldman Sachs, is one of those who led the parade of leveraged derivative
destruction. He and other executives in the investment banks which created
fraudulent derivative financial products, should be charged, convicted and
jailed for the global financial damage they perpetrated. Instead, Mr. Paulson,
along with his investment bank colleague cronies, are put in charge of dispersing
Billions, perhaps Trillions, of government and taxpayer dollars to failing
financial institutions for the ostensible purpose of fixing the mess they created.
In other words, they get rewarded for their anti social behaviour. Incredible!
You may no doubt have surmised that when the price of these highly leveraged
financial products lose market value, it creates an immediate and serious problem.
For example, the lender of the borrowed money issues what is called a "margin
call." That means the borrower must come up with more cash...NOW. The cash
comes from the sale of anything which the borrower owns that has value and
which can be sold immediately. Since many of these MBS's had little or no market,
they had no discernable current value. That being the case, anything else which
has value is sold to realize cash.
This is the primary explanation for the recent rapid and precipitous drop
in commodity and stock prices in the financial markets around the world. Equities/stock
indexes have dropped over forty percent from their recent all time highs.
The commodities sector has dropped even more. Some individual stocks are
experiencing even greater declines. For example, the DOW index of the biggest
stocks has come down from its high of 14,000 to about 8,500. It will invariably
drop more before it bottoms out.
When are the markets and prices going to bottom out? Probably when all
the "forced selling" or liquidation, created by margin calls and other redemptions
as well as volitional selling based on fear, run their course. When will
that be? No one knows because most financial institutions and the Treasury
department will not say which institutions own what, how much of it nor its
current or original value. Why would that be?
One can only guess, but a likely answer is that the quantities of bad assets,
especially derivative products known as CDO's, is so great and the value so
uncertain that it would scare the public considerably beyond its current level
of concern. In other words, we mere mortals, known as taxpayers and voters,
just couldn't cope with the hard facts. We would no doubt go into shock, join
our fellow citizens to assault the barricades of power including government,
the Central Bank, investment and commercial banks and other financial institutions
as we rapidly lose our mental equilibrium.
Given that it is commonly agreed that the value of the world's entire derivatives
products are between $500 and $600 Trillion, one can see why there is a certain
reluctance to divulge factual details. The potential for this unfolding
financial calamity to get much more severe is significant. These numbers
are mind boggling when placed in perspective. For example, the total annual
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the United States is only about $14 Trillion
which is included in the total annual Global GDP of about $50 Trillion.
Incidentally, where did all these lost digital dollars go? Mostly they evaporated,
they no longer exist. Needless to say, what that means is that various individuals
and financial institutions are no longer as financially secure as they once
were. Indeed they could be insolvent and close to declaring bankruptcy. In
aggregate, the declining prices of assets of all kinds is what is called price
deflation. There is more price deflation ahead in the pipeline.
What can we expect next? More of the same, at least for awhile. Yes price
deflation of assets of all kinds is likely to continue. That means houses and
stocks will continue to drop in price until the unwinding of unsustainable
leverage is complete. Given that government, investment banks and hedge funds
have not yet publicly divulged the extent of leveraged assets, there is no
way of telling.
No one can develop a genuinely effective solution to a problem which can't
be described, measured or understood. As a result, we will continue to
observe lots of talk by governments and central banks about buying shares
in banks and other financial institutions as well as using public money to
buy large amounts of unmarketable derivative products from institutions.
Lots of money will be borrowed and given by government to allow this process
to continue.
The original $700 Billion in bailout money will no doubt be multiplied several
times over resulting in Trillions of taxpayer dollars being committed to the
cause of "financial liquidity." That is merely a fancy term which means that
some financial institutions will be given public money so they will not become
insolvent or have to declare bankruptcy. These injections of public cash are
also justified on the grounds that banks are encouraged to lend to each other
and to consumers, otherwise the entire financial deck of cards would become
frozen in place, causing untold harm to the global economy.
Financial System Dislocation first, NOW the Real Economy:
All the discussion about banks, leverage, borrowing, asset deflation and so
forth, is merely preliminary to the main event. Real people seldom have much
to do with high finance nor do they know much about banks or hedge funds. What
the average person does know, however, is whether they have a job, what interest
rates are on their mortgage and credit card purchases and what effect that
has on her/his monthly payments and whether s/he continues to qualify for credit.
Persons closer to retirement wonder whether their Defined Contribution Pension
Plan, such as a 401K or other employer or personally held pensions like an
RRSP, are adequate to live in retirement. Even those fortunate enough to have
vested defined Benefit Pension Plans, like most public sector workers or those
employed by General Motors, should have cause for concern. Bankruptcies allow
courts to cancel contracts and to readjust all manner of agreements previously
thought inviolate.
Most people today are increasingly worried about their personal financial
wellbeing, whether their lifestyle will be substantially and negatively impacted
by the events they read about daily, as well as those we have not yet encountered.
These concerns are real and valid. Moreover, no one can assure anyone else
at this stage what the final consequences will be from the many rapid developments
we continue to hear about. This uncertainty creates much anxiety which leads
to fear of the unknown future.
Clearly, loss of a job and the income associated with it is life changing,
as well as lifestyle changing. Equally, substantial asset deflation and
losses in pensions of persons on the cusp of retirement, requires a total
recalibration of retirement plans and lifestyle expectations. Even those
persons in their working prime with family obligations, who will continue
to have the income from a job, will live under the cloud of uncertainty.
Events unfolding daily will lead all of us to evaluate our assumptions and
habits. The lifestyle we assumed was normal based on well paying and secure
jobs may change. Frequent family outings for dinner, expensive foreign vacations,
two new cars in the driveway, houses large enough for twice the number of current
occupants have become realistic expectations over the recent past. Indeed,
they are entitlements for many persons. All those little personal indulgences
which we take for granted, and which in aggregate cost much more than pocket
change, may have to be given up in the interest of saving for the proverbial
rainy day.
In their place will be fewer trips to the shopping mall, older cars, less
distance driven in the interest of fuel savings, more meals at home, fewer
and more modest vacations, more saving, fewer credit card purchases, less debt
and lower monthly payment obligations. This describes a lower standard of
living ahead. It is guaranteed for most of us and it is likely to become
permanent. Thrift will again become a value to which many will subscribe.
It will become respectable, even cool, to be thrifty.
Ok, I have painted what some may characterize as a bleak future. I am not
a sadist, therefore I don't get pleasure out of other person's misery. What
this description of current economic and financial events and issues is designed
to do is to give the reader a more or less composite picture of what is transpiring
in front of us daily. The sudden onset of what we have been observing and hearing
over the recent past has genuinely surprised me. Each day seems to bring new
developments to the extent it is difficult to keep up with what is happening.
Moreover, understanding each part and how the parts fit together and impact
each other, is a real challenge.
What we all should understand is that, while this crisis started in the
financial sector, the misnamed "subprime problem" has rapidly morphed into
the real economy. That is where we all live and work and where we will
mainly be impacted. My point is that even if government, central banks and
the financial sector were able to gain firm control over financial processes
and institutions, the problem is likely to be much more pervasive, deep
and enduring in the broader economy. Anyone who suggests otherwise is
not being honest. Equally, anyone who is able to give specifics in terms
of length and depth of the current and deepening recession is simply guessing.
What bothers me more than anything else is how unhelpful government and
politicians are in demonstrating leadership. National elections in the
United States and Canada coincided with the onset of this crisis, yet precious
little substance, other than statements which repeated the normal bromides
of concern, was offered. This was the perfect opportunity to show real leadership,
yet nothing of consequence emerged. I think I understand why. My understanding
of politics and experience in government lead me to a couple of salient observations.
Politicians are for the most part a reflection of the voter...his values
and expectations. Yes, the politician likes the perks of his job and
wants to keep them by being re-elected. S/he has learned that one attracts
votes by telling the voter what s/he wants to hear. What the voter wants
to hear is determined by professional public opinion polling and through
testing on focus groups representative of various voter profiles. Promises
are frequently ignored after the election. In spite of this, the voter seldom
makes the cynical politicians pay by tossing them out. Why is this?
My theory is that the voter, people in general, are resistant to bad news.
Bad news is not only upsetting, it is almost paralyzing if one deems that s/he
can not do anything about fixing the problem or crisis. That is perhaps why
so many people were caught relatively flat footed and unaware of the issues
which are behind the current crisis. People would rather avoid the bad news
altogether. Denial is powerful. Politicians have learned there is a price
for leadership which conveys bad news and sacrifice.
Once the problem or crisis is visible, however, it becomes very necessary
for politicians to appear to be in charge and to be doing "something" useful
to hopefully "fix" the problem. That is the stage we are at currently. I like
to call it the phoney fix phase. It is phoney because much of the activity
and money spent is primarily a public relations exercise.
Unfortunately, priorities are most often determined by political pressure
from prominent special interests. For proof merely look at the current GM,
Ford and Chrysler bailout process in which the union, management, shareholders
and regional politicians join to unanimously demand large amounts of the medicine
called taxpayer money. Think too of the earlier and imminent stimulus packages
to voters of cheques of up to $600 for every person carried on the IRS rolls.
These payments are recognized to be relatively useless in targeting specific
economic problems, but they do convey to the voter action and concern by their
government.
Lastly, I continue to believe that no genuinely effective solutions to
the current plethora of actual and potential problems can be developed and
implemented until all the facts are made public. That means we must know
which financial institutions hold what derivatives (CDO's) issued by whom,
what was the purchase price, current market value and what degree of leverage
is involved. I know the numbers could be genuinely horrific, but without
the facts, effective solutions absolutely can not be devised and implemented.
Without the facts, the process will degenerate into little more than a public
relations exercise designed to convince the confused public that leadership
is being exhibited and something useful is being done "to fix the problem.
The current coordinated creation and distribution of copious quantities of
new money around the globe will undoubtedly end in inflation during the next
several years. My investment approach for sometime has been to invest in gold,
silver, and the shares of natural resource and commodities companies. It is
the best protection against the coming inflation, perhaps hyperinflation. Like
all investors, with hindsight, it would have been great to have sold earlier
at the cycle peak in late 2007 and avoided this wretched financial meltdown.
But I have never lost sight of my reasons and convictions as to where we are
headed and how best to manage our monies during this challenging period. Get
yourself positioned and hang on as we are in for the ride of our lives.
In my next piece, I will be focusing on "How To Invest in This Global Crisis".
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