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Welcome to the Weekly Report. Events are
moving at an accelerated pace requiring further Central Bank intervention as
Hedge funds and Investment Banks are hit by ever tighter credit conditions
and a run on deposits. I make no apology for using the past weeks events as
the central theme for the coming week. Without doubt we have entered a new
phase in both the financial and monetary spheres of the Global economy.
First up is US Tsy Sec Hank Paulson who had some rather strange advice for
Financial Institutions. He warned that the largest US banks should raise extra
capital beyond the $70Bn already accumulated in order to prevent the credit
crisis from worsening. He went on:
- "We are encouraging financial institutions to continue to strengthen
balance sheets by raising capital and revisiting dividend policies,...
We need those institutions to continue to lend and facilitate economic
growth."
I have some bad news for anyone relying on Mr Paulson to come up with a solution
to the credit crisis. The statement shows a complete lack of understanding
of what is currently happening. This is not a crisis, this is a full blown,
unfolding before our eyes, collapse in confidence in the fiat monetary system.
The complete lack of innovation by Banks, Hedge Funds, Financial Institutions,
Central Banks et al in response to the beginning and current situation is staggering.
What have we seen so far?
Consumers will get some legislation (passed eventually) it will be too little,
too late to save them.
Financial Institutions get instant, on demand, no books read bailouts from
the Fed. If you are not a Primary Dealer and not entitled to access the Discount
Windows, don't worry, the Federal Reserve will funnel the money through a PD,
it saves a lot of regulatory hassle. It helps if your party and counterparty
risks are huge, then you get classified as "too big to fail" as the domino
effect would destroy the current credit system.
Within Paulson's comment we see the lack of understanding of what Financial
Institutions (Large Banks and Primary Dealers) are already doing in
an attempt to stave off the biggest financial disaster in 100 years. They are
already raising capital by calling in loans, regardless of risk. It doesn't
matter if you are a Hedge Fund using borrowed leverage to deal in AAA rated
Municipal bonds, the FIs are calling in the loan, raising margin requirements
or asking for more and higher rated collateral on any borrowings. This is no
surprise, anyone who watched what happened with Asset Backed Commercial Paper
(ABCP) last year could see this coming. The Financial Institutions are not
recouping capital to re-invigorate lending, they are just hoarding cash to
ensure they can meet their own capital requirements and hunker down to survive
the approaching disaster.
Credit markets have not seized up due to a lack of capital per se, they seized
up due to a lack of confidence in the ability of collateral to keep its worth
and the rising risk that any Insurance used might not pay out. The "buck" didn't
stop here, it stopped everywhere.
A fiat monetary system, built on the use of credit as a driver for economic
growth, is utterly reliant on confidence. If action is taken that undermines
that confidence then the system stops working.
This is not a new phenomena, the evidence is already on display. The rise
in commodities, i.e "stuff" is not a function of inflation. It is a rise in
the lack of confidence of fiat money. When the dollar, the current world trading
benchmark, is debased you place your capital into assets that have a tangible
worth. They cannot be eroded or re-valued by the actions of a Central Bank,
they are worth something to someone. The dollar does not have the same worth.
It functions only because of the confidence placed in the assets that underpin
it.
Devalue the assets and you devalue the dollar. The Fed has decided to swap
US Treasuries for so-called AAA rated debt backed bonds, not placed on "watch" by
the credit rating agencies, currently on the books of Primary Dealers. The
risk of default on the debt has not been reduced, it has been transferred from
private Financial Institutions to the US Government and the tax payers. All
of the Feds actions are just to allow the current credit lending mechanisms
to continue. Devalue the assets, devalue the dollar. The cure to all these
ills that Paulson refers to is an illusion. The FIs have bought time, swapping
their collateral to the highest standard, allowing them roll their own borrowings
whilst calling in monies and assets owed to them. It helps when you have to
go begging to Sovereign Wealth Funds (SWF) to raise more cash. Don't expect
an increase in dividend payments on your banking shares either, in fact don't
expect dividends from a number of Financial Institutions for some time. Hank
said it is okay not to pay out. It's the patriotic thing to do.
How much capital do Financial Institutions need to reclaim?

Here is the latest
update, notice it does not include the increase in TAF. As I suspected,
the TAF is being increased to keep total reserves stable.

We know the situation has deteriorated with TAF limits now pushed out to $100Bn.
Doing a simple calculation, it would appear that the update to the chart above
(if total reserves are to be maintained at around $43Bn) will show non borrowed
reserves are now at or headed for net minus $57Bn (TAF minus total reserves).
When we drop into The
Slosh Report (highly recommended for Fed watchers) we see that the total
amount lent out by the Fed is currently $60Bn of which $44.8Bn is collateralised
by Mortgage Back Securities (MBS).
The Financial Institutions are in the hole to the Fed for between $101.8Bn
up to a possible $117Bn. Obviously this does not include any borrowings made
with other Central Banks, Institutions or SWFs.
Let us make an assumption that the "Fed capital" is required to shore up FI
borrowing positions and that they will have to repay it some time in the future.
We will use the lower figure of $101.8Bn and a leverage of 5, which is probably
very generous. FIs have a minimum of $509Bn in positions reliant on continued
Fed lending. If the FIs have (want?) to cover then they need to reclaim $509Bn
from the financial system. To do that they stop lending, call in margin, make
margin cover and leverage more onerous and close credit lines and facilities.
If the $509Bn is leveraged by a factor of 10 by the borrowers (Hedge Funds,
Mutual Funds, Insts, Private Venture, Buy out vehicles, off balance sheet vehicles
etc) then the drawdown on the financial economy to close out could amount to
$5090Bn.
Any attempt to do this in a disorderly fashion would result in financial Armageddon.
Thus we see the rationale behind the Feds actions. It is an attempt not to
mitigate the pain but to drip feed it, a little at a time, so the markets only
feel a series of pinches, not a right hook. The result however will be the
same.
If I had any funds invested with.....This article continues here.
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