I didn't create this title. This is the title of an article in
FT last week by George Soros, someone needs no introduction. In the article,
he provides great discussions on the root cause, reason and consequence of
the current credit crisis, which has widened far beyond just the initial subprime
area.
A normal boom and bust credit cycle is simply easy credit causing people to
push up property price, in turn increasing the amount of credit, which creates
a self-reinforcing cycle until the bubble bursts. This has happened many times
throughout history, and when bubble bursts, people suffer a little but after
some time, things come back.
But things has changed a lot during last 10-20 years. In order to prevent
recession and eliminate credit bust period, the Fed and government have intervened
repeatedly both monetarily and fiscally whenever financial market is in trouble.
They have flooded the market with easy credit by providing large liquidity
and lowering short term interest rate. As a result, they have prolonged the
bull market and credit boom period as long as they can to keep people happy.
This is similar to "treating a drunk by giving him another drink", as well
said by a investment advisor. Whether people will have to pay for this kind
of temporary shock therapies by suffering deeper pain in a very long bear market
with dead credit, has been beyond Fed's consideration. Good job, Greenspan.
Poor Bernanke, as people say, timing is everything.
This is also the main reason behind the deregulation of financial institutions
during last 20 years, since Fed needs Wall St to fully corroborate, utilize
and leverage all the easy credits they provide. Pretty soon we are at the mercy
of investment banks doing their own risk management with no reserves required
and no regulatory oversight (and we know they have done a great job on evaluating
risk on both their products and their own firms!), not like the good old days
when local and traditional commercial banks were required by regulations to
have sufficient reserves to make loans and mortgages. And unnecessarily keeping
interest rate low forever has further increased the level of easy credits and
liquidity.
At the same time, do our rating agencies provide any oversight to help the
public? At least not in the complex structured product area such as mortgages.
Rating agency and structured product group, the most profitable group at Wall
St, are basically using the same black box computer model and assumption to
price and rate their exotic, complex MBS products no one can understand. Trust
the computer, sure. But why do we still need the rating agency then? Whatever
the structured group says, we take your word for it. But did someone also say
computer is garbage in and garbage out? Well, previously everything out of
their shop was triple A rated, not garbage. Somehow now they are all junk rated
and become garbage. It must be our own fault to mess them up.
"Everything that could go wrong did. What started with subprime mortgages
spread to all collateralized debt obligations, endangered municipal and mortgage
insurance and reinsurance companies and threatened to unravel the multi-trillion-dollar
credit default swap market. Investment banks' commitments to leveraged buyouts
became liabilities."
George continues, "If federal funds were lowered beyond a certain point, .....the
ability of the Fed to stimulate the economy comes to an end." Where is that
point? George Soros didn't want to say, but he probably feels it is getting
very close and the reason why he wrote this article. Maybe at or slightly below
3%?
For believers of the theory that low interest rates can save us, just look
at Japan for the last 10-15 years; zero or even negative interest rate has
not help much to stimulate the economy after the burst of both stock and real
estate bubbles. George's most interesting statement is: "the current crisis
marks the end of an era of credit expansion based on the dollar as the international
reserve currency."
What he didn't say is, if US dollar loses its reserve status, there is no
obvious replacement currency, at least not at this moment. What happens then?
One possible, likely and logical solution could be that countries around the
world would consider gold as their reserves again.
Does George Soros imply that we are returning to gold standard?