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Firstly, before we get into this letter, a quick explanation of the new format.
I have set up a blog (click here) to try an encourage building a membership
and utilise an easier way to archive previous letters. It will make it easier
for your comments to be posted and accessed too. I have enjoyed the feedback
from various readers out there, I have received really good, thought provoking
comments that deserve a wider viewing and this format should help.
Its free, as promised. Its a simple blog, so what I intend to do is send out
an email to the members to let them know a new letter is available. To view
it you need to create a Google email address (after 30 days, you can sign in
as a guest until then) it only takes a minute or so. The advantage of membership
is that you will get to view the letter first, publishing it elsewhere will
be delayed. I will also look to start publishing more frequently (alright,
who groaned?)
Right lets get on with it.
What have Paulson, Bernanke and Greenspan got in common? Let me show you and
then I want to write about what I think they are alluding to, ie what they
see is coming but dare not utter, not yet anyway. I also want to walk you through
the steps to deflation ( that's a good title for an album) and why those steps
are throwing up the current confusion of thought in the mainstream media.
Here are the comments that caught my eye this past week:
Paulson: "The housing decline is still unfolding and I view it as the most
significant current risk to our economy," he said. "The longer housing prices
remain stagnant or fall, the greater the penalty to our future economic growth."
"The ongoing housing correction is not ending as quickly as it might have
appeared late last year," he said. "And now it looks like it will continue
to adversely impact our economy, our capital markets, and many homeowners for
some time yet."
Bernanke: who said "market uncertainty" in September led to the cut in federal
funds rate by a 0.5%. Bernanke said the assessment of Fed governors and bank
presidents was that market uncertainty was thought to be "unusually high."
Greenspan: the market does not appear to have priced in the risks posed by
the ongoing housing slump.
As recently as 2 months ago these 3 individuals didn't agree with each other,
Greenspan was talking of highish odds of a recession, Bernanke was waiting
for more data and worrying about inflation and Paulson saw no signs of a spillover
into the economy from the housing slump. Now we have a consensus, they all
have something in common.
Its the markets. Be it either adverse impact, lack of pricing risk or unusually
high uncertainty its all down to whats happening in the markets.
What does this tell us? Firstly, there is a real fear out there that the markets
are getting out of control and that reality has yet to visit. Secondly, the
watchkeepers/booksellers of the economy are no longer looking ahead, even if
they say they are. This means trouble is brewing, big trouble.
It looks like Bernanke and Paulson are preparing the "Excuse Quotes " chapters
for their eventual books. Since early this year we have been subjected to the
official line that the fallout from sub-prime (now housing, an upgrade to include
prime, Alt A and Jumbo loans) would not harm the economy, that there would
be no spillover. Then we began to get the odd mention of minimal spillover
but the problem was contained. All this talk was to keep confidence in the
markets, be they stocks, bonds or derivatives.
Not anymore. Now we get warnings (Darling, the UK Chancellor, is also now
warning of economic harm to the UK) that this will affect the US economy, because
the scope, size and the timescale of the problem is much greater than previously
imagined. Greenspan, whose remarks about a recession in the US made earlier
this year were ignored, is now joined by the Fed and the US Tsy. We are still
getting remarks that US growth is "strong" and will be "about trend". Yeah,
like that's believable after the back tracking on the causation that could
affect growth.
The actions of the Fed are also interesting. Contrary to what the media will
tell you, the Fed is not pumping money into the economy. It did initiate a
few new weekly rolling repos back in August that it is still allowing to be
rolled but there has been no ongoing infusion of cash, the Fed has remained
tight. You can check this out at the NY Fed site: http://www.ny.frb.org/.
So we can see, debt (ABCP), lent out as an instrument to secure short term
debt( electronic cash), the proceeds of which is used to lend as credit - has
imploded.Banks are not exactly banging on the glass at the discount window
either. It looks pretty obvious that after the setting up (if it happens, its
not a done deal) of the Super SIV, the Banks and Institutions have been told
to use their own cash to sort out the mess of the off sheet imbalances. It
seems the US Tsy has adopted Enron accounting practises as acceptable, maybe
Enron was just ahead of the curve in financial innovation?
So, why have such practises now been condoned? That's simple. The problem
is so big, so interconnected with all forms of the derivative markets that
the only way out is to park the toxic instruments into a dump. I suspect the
dump will have a long history of leaks, drip feeding poisonous paper into the
community.
I want to walk you through why I see deflation in the future.
At this point I have to make something clear, whilst the traditional view
of deflation is less money in the economy, I do not see cash as the current
driver of inflation/deflation. The mover is credit. Allowing an unfettered
increase of credit to replace the traditional over printing of notes to sustain
a bubble(s) or ponzi scheme (if banks have, as a % of loans, effectively no
reserves, what else can the system be based on?) then a reduction in credit
must be deflationary.
The importance of this cannot be under-estimated. Credit itself has/is being
used as an asset to beget more credit. This explains the exponential rise in
credit, it feeds on itself as credit notes become the asset to allow further
credit to be lent out. By allowing credit to underwrite itself to form other
types of credit the whole system becomes reliant on the confidence of lenders
and borrowers having the means to eventually repay. If that confidence is put
under pressure, the system stops. If confidence cannot be restored in a very
short timescale (Central Bank / Tsy intervention) then the system begins to
reverse, as credit is redeemed. The reversal will be at the same pace as the
initial rise in credit growth. Although painful, the reversal would be orderly,
as long as all the borrowers have the ability to repay. If that ability to
repay is impaired then the redemption becomes disorderly. This is the stage
we have reached today.
The Super SIV mooted by the Banks is the last gasp attempt to stop a disorderly
destruction of credit. A disorderly destruction of credit will invoke deflation.
Now some readers will be looking at the price of commodities and scratching
their heads, trying to resolve the high prices they see with a deflationary
outlook. I sympathise, the confusion is understandable. The thought would be
if the price of "stuff" is going up, surely the price of end products will
rise too? That must be inflationary!
Well it would be inflationary if prices caused an increase in credit. Its
the horse and cart. The cart (price inflation) is dragged along by the availability
of the horse (credit) to work and to continue to work at an ever increasing
amount of effort. If the horse has a heart attack, the cart stops. If the cart
is loaded with debt and its on an uphill slope, it will roll backwards.
So if this simple writer can see this surely all those buyers of commodities
can too? They can. They are not buying "stuff" as an inflation hedge. They
are buying hard assets. Something that the destruction of credit cannot take
away. Except for those who bought using leverage and margin of course.
I'll leave you with a simple chart from the St Louis Fed that says a lot.

As we can see Financial CP flat lined for most of the year and after a slight
rise, dropped. It is struggling to reach the gain line. Financials are not
putting their own cash into the market in any great amount. This shows fear
and uncertainty. ABCP looks to be in a terminal decline.
ABCP (the assets being debt) lent out to secure electro-cash, which is used
to finance long term borrowing by a third party - has collapsed.
The horse is dead. That rumbling noise you can hear is the cart careering
downhill.
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