|
"...Subprime losses already outweigh the Great Depression. Time somebody
did something, right...?"
IN 1984 THE BANK of ENGLAND saved Johnson Matthey Bank - a horribly
over-geared subsidiary of the centuries-old gold dealer - with an emergency
buy-out costing just £1.
The debts covered by the Bank of England, however, totaled $309 million on
one estimate. They took 10 years to clear from the Bank's balance sheet.
The Swedish government then stepped into the Scandinavian banking crisis of
1992, buying the 13% of Nordbanken shares that it didn't already own at a 10%
premium. That defended investors as well as depositors.
Washington even managed to contain the US savings & loan crisis of the
late 1980s, protecting savers but letting more than 1,000 finance companies
go under.
The direct cost to the US taxpayer was $124.6 billion, according to the General
Accounting Office's report - right about the total bank losses in the subprime
collapse so far.
All told, the S&L crisis cost "more than the cumulative loss of all US
banks during the Great Depression, even after adjusting for inflation," as
Jean-Charles Rochet, then a visiting professor at the London School of Economics,
put it in a speech on banking crises of 2002.
Whereas, by its end, the current banking crisis will see total mortgage-credit
losses of $400 billion according to Goldman Sachs' latest guess-timate. So "let's
be clear and honest," as Housing & Urban Development secretary Alphonso
Jackson said when launching Project Lifeline this week.
"One action alone will not solve every problem in the housing market," Jackson
said as he gave US home-buyers an extra 30 days to try and stall foreclosure.
He could just as easily have been talking about the entire banking industry.
One action alone won't solve it - not even if that one action does come from
Warren Buffett. Or the White House. Or the Federal Reserve.
But altogether?
And what if we throw in an extra $3.3 trillion of foreign government finance,
pouring out of the oil- and export-rich sovereign wealth funds of Arabia and
Asia? Might that be enough to wipe the world's greatest-ever credit bubble
from history?
"So far, institutions have raised nearly $75bn of capital from sovereign wealth
funds and public sources," notes Joseph Mason, associate professor of finance
at Drexel University and a senior fellow at the Wharton School, in the latest
market note from his private consultancy, Criterion Economics.
"[But] while the seemingly unconstrained supply of capital has, thus far,
been a blessing, it is not clear that the flow can continue. Recent events
suggest that private capital sources may be reaching their limits, at least
with respect to riskier institutions."
Citigroup just managed to raise funds at 5% interest. It is the world's largest
bank, after all. But MBIA, the biggest "monoline" bond insurer, was forced
to pay 14% on its AA-rated debt as Mason gasps.
"Ambac canceled their most recent recapitalization attempt," he adds, "ostensibly
because the cost was even higher."
So step forward Warren Buffett! The stock market initially rallied - and rallied
hard - on the idea that the Sage of Omaha might buy up bonds currently insured
by bond-insurance giants MBIA, Ambac and FGIC. Yet as Buffett told CNBC, he
only wants the municipal bonds these firms insure, and nothing else.
Because - get this - municipal bonds are currently cheaper to buy if they
come with insurance than without!
A "classic kind of mispricing" for the Sage of Omaha to exploit, as John Authers
notes in the Financial Times, this arbitrage also shows just how horrified
the entire investment world has become by the "monoline" insurers, thanks to
the very same junk that Warren Buffett will not step in and save.
Clearly, Buffett's offer makes great news for US towns and states wanting
to raise fresh capital to fund their core services. With his prime-beek cherry
Coke check-book at the ready, there's no need to repeat Sept. 1933 - when 28
American cities went into default - nor the Orange County default of 1995.
Especially not if the Federal government were to stand behind Buffett standing
behind the municipals. Right?
Buffett himself, however, was quick to point out that his offer "doesn't do
anything" for the subprime bonds, collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) and
leveraged debt pushing down on the bond insurer's credit ratings.
Indeed, "I'm not sure anything is going to do much for the CDOs," he said.
That doesn't mean state agencies and central banks won't try, however. "Direct
government bailouts are gaining in popularity," as Prof. Mason notes for Criterion.
He's not kidding!
Here in London, the British government has told the two remaining bidders
for Northern Rock - the top-five mortgage lender, hit by a banking run in Sept.
'07 and now supported by £26 billion ($46bn) of tax-funded loans - that
it's on the verge of full-scale nationalization.
Northern Rock was moved onto the British state's official balance sheet last
week.
Germany's IKB, currently 38% owned by the state, may see the government-run
KfW development bank raise its stake to 50% - effectively nationalizing the
subprime-hit lender - because private-sector investors are unwilling to back
a new capital raising.
In France, the state-controlled postal bank La Poste is rumored to be joining
the government-owned Caisse des Dépots in developing a bail-out package
for Société Générale. The country's second-largest
bank, SocGen managed to lose $3 billion on subprime investments - a little-known
fact given the $7 billion it lost to "rogue trader" Jerome Kerviel.
This week SocGen raised capital by offering new shares at a 39% discount to
its stock market price - itself already offering a near 42% discount from this
time last year.
And in Switzerland, UBS - due to report its first loss in history on Thursday,
worth some 4.4 billion Swiss Francs for 2007 as a whole ($4bn) - may gain financial
support from the Swiss government if shareholders reject the capital restructuring
proposed by the Singapore government. Along with an un-named Saudi investor,
Singapore's Government Investment Council (GIC) has offered to put up 13 billion
Swiss Francs ($11.3bn) without demanding a seat on the board.
But the GIC would take a controlling stake, however, since "on average, 30%
of shareholders turn up to vote at the AGMs," as one UBS shareholder told FinanceAsia this
week.
"Somebody controlling one-third of that" - and the GIC-Saudi investors would
hold 10% of the total between them - "effectively controls the company."
Does it matter? Maybe. "The investment arms of foreign governments appear
to have saved the day for American financial institutions," says Steven M.Davidoff
for Deal Book. They've also piled into the biggest banks in Europe too, saving
Western governments some $75 billion so far.
On one day alone last month, some $19 billion was raised by Citigroup and
Merrill Lynch tapping the convertible bond markets - and Citi's funding "included
investments from sovereign wealth funds in Singapore and Kuwait, alongside;;['
Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, the bank's second largest shareholder," reports Financial
News US.
Whatever the Asians and Arabs can do, Washington can do better of course,
starting with the little guy right at the bottom of the subprime pyramid -
the over-indebted home buyer himself.
George Bush might have watched 226 mortgage lenders go kaput since late 2006
(the latest count from ML-Implode.com), but he just signed that $168 billion
tax-rebate bill, hoping to stop the current slump in US house prices becoming
a genuine depression.
Not enough, grumbles Senate majority leader Harry Reid. The package is "far
from a panacea," he says, getting ready for a Democrat White House no doubt.
"Much more should be done. Another stimulus package or two."
Or three. Or four. You just keep writing the checks, Senator - and get the
Federal Reserve to keep US interest rates way below inflation.
We'll just keep Buying Gold outright
- with no default risk - and store it in privately-owned, ultra-secure gold
vaults, far outside the world's banking system.
|