Our economy didn’t melt down, it was taken down the unbridled greed of economic elites, enabled by their political courtesans in Washington.

Jim Hightower
What the hell’s happening here? Why is my bank in the tank? And my house and job? And my retirement money? Even my state’s teetering on the brink of broke! Who did this to us? Fair questions, but we’re not getting honest answers. Last year, at the first signs of the global financial slide toward the abyss, we were told that it’s just a little hiccup caused by something called subprime mortgages. Not to worry, the Powers That Be declared confidently, for we have the damage contained. And rest assured that “the fundamentals of our economy are sound.”

Then, this spring, Bear Stearns cratered, requiring an emergency federal subsidy to cover billions in bad loans. Okay, admitted those in charge, that subprime stuff actually is leveraged on up the financial system, and maybe there’s been a bit of greed among a few of the big players, but we really do have the problem contained now, and, hey, “the fundamentals of our economy are sound.”

But in September–Omigosh!–there went Lehman Brothers, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, AIG, Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, WaMu, Wachovia, and others. Well, yes, conceded the now-frazzled financial establishment, but gollies, we’re throwing hundreds of billions of your tax dollars into sandbags to contain the problem, and remember: “The fundamentals of our economy are sound.”

In October, the contagion rolled through Britain, Canada, and Europe; it spread to Brazil and across to China and Japan; and–Holy Schmoly–suddenly all of Iceland was melting in bankruptcy! Stay calm, cried an openly panicked chorus of Washington officials, for we’re holding some big summit meetings soon and consulting our Ouija boards, and…uh…ah…um…y’all just keep clinging to the thought that “the fundamentals of our economy are sound.”

Let’s meet some of the illusionists who are directly responsible for hurling you, me, America, and most of the world into this dark and as-yet unplumbed economic hole. More

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Posted by markw, filed under Finance. Date: November 9, 2008, 10:35 pm | No Comments »

MIKE WHITNEY
Counterpunch
There are signs that the credit crunch is easing. Interbank lending in dollars has fallen for a ninth straight day. The various indicators of stress in the market–Libor, the TED spread, and the Libor-OIS spread–are all gradually returning to normal, but the damage to the broader economy has been substantial. Major corporations have had to stretch their credit lines just to get the money they need to cover routine operating expenses and a lot of retailers have not been able to get funding for their inventories for the holiday season, so they’ll either have to hire fewer workers or simply shut their doors for Christmas. Also, corporate defaults have increased as businesses have been unable to turn over their short-term debt. According to Fitch Ratings, the “crisis will cut growth in credit this year by 50 percent as financial firms reduce leverage, investors’ appetite for risk declines, and the worldwide economy slows.” When credit is less available, there’s less business activity and the economy slows. Unemployment goes up and quarterly earnings go down. It’s a vicious circle that starts with speculation and ends in panic. The financial system has to reestablish its equilibrium by purging the excessive credit that developed through low interest rates and lax lending standards. Financial institutions everywhere are in the process of deleveraging which is putting downward pressure on the main stock indexes and creating turmoil in the currency markets.

The US Treasury and Federal Reserve are now underwriting the entire financial system. The free market has been abandoned altogether. Everything from commercial paper to money markets is now backed by the “full faith and credit of the United States”. Without that explicit government guarantee, the credit markets would still be frozen and the system would crash. But government guarantees do not address the real problem, which is toxic assets that must be accounted for and written down. All it does is take hundreds of billions of dollars in mortgage-backed garbage onto the nation’s balance sheet and undermine the creditworthiness of the United States. Eventually, foreign central banks will see the folly of this maneuver and refuse to buy more US debt. When that happens, there will be a run on the dollar and a major dislocation in the bond market. Then, the financial system will grind to a standstill once again.

Secretary of the Treasury Henry Paulson’s $125 billion capital “giveaway” to nine of the country’s largest banks has helped to calm the credit markets, but it won’t last. The “real economy” is beginning to stumble and the stock market is gyrating more wildly than anytime in history. Wall Street is consumed with fear and investors are ducking out the exits as fast as their feet will carry them. According to the New York Times, the banks probably won’t even use Paulson’s money to extend loans to consumers and businesses (as intended), but will hoard it to make sure they are sufficiently capitalized when their mortgage-backed assets are downgraded. Even worse, the banks may use the money to gobble up smaller local and regional banks. On Tuesday’s Jim Lerher News Hour, New York Times journalist Andrew Ross Sorkin put it like this: “The other thing that some of them may do with that money is go out and make acquisitions and buy other banks, (which) means that you will not be getting this money into your pocket anytime soon….I think the larger issue is the economy and these banks, in terms of lending, are not going to start lending real money until the economy turns.”

Paulson knows what the banks are up to; after all, these are his friends. The truth is, the $125 billion was not given to the banks to soften the effects of the recession or increase lending. It was given to make the strong banks even stronger so they could monopolize the industry. Paulson’s real plan is “more consolidation” and less competition, or as economist Michael Hudson says, “Big fish eat little fish”. The Treasury Secretary is using his authority to reward his friends rather than doing what is best for the country.

In the last few weeks, the broader economy has deteriorated faster than anytime in the last 70 years. That’s why Fed chief Ben Bernanke has given the nod to another stimulus package of $150 to $300 billion dollars. The gears are rusting in place and the desperation in Washington is palpable. Calculated Risk web site provided a transcript of a conference call by MSC Industrial Supply (MSC) which summed up the prevailing mood in today’s business world:

MSC: “In the last several weeks, customers’ sentiment has turned dramatically downwards. Here are a few of the things we have recently heard and I’ll quote a few of them. One quote is our new orders are down substantially in the last few weeks. Another is that corporate has told us to reduce inventory. What we have also heard is make due with what you have. And finally, another quote is capital expenditures are on hold. Customers are concerned about the economy and the lack of available credit. They’re reducing inventories, orders, and order size and there has been a trend toward deferring capital expenditures…”

MSC: “David, we view this time as unprecedented in history. The economy is undergoing a huge change, how that is going to shake out all remains to be seen, but I think what is important to know is it’s a huge change that, frankly, no one had a chance to see coming, so we than specifically in our customer base there is a tremendous amount of fear that is gripping customers and evidenced by what we have seen the last couple of weeks in October, almost buying paralysis, that is really the way that we think about it, and frankly, in speaking with so many customers what we see happening…. What is has happened here with the credit crisis is while the economy was by no means booming, it was kind of rolling along and we almost think that what typically would have taken six, seven, eight, 9, 12 months to start to come down happened almost literally overnight.” (Calculated Risk)

Events are now unfolding so quickly, they’re impossible to follow. But this much is clear, the wheels have fallen off the cart. The Fed has lost control of the system. On Monday, Bernanke announced the creation of the Money Market Investor Funding Facility (MMIFF), which will provide $550 billion in liquidity to U.S. money market investors. It is another in a long list of steps to try to provide liquidity to a system that is burning through trillions of dollars of credit via the deleveraging hedge funds and asset downgrades. Of course, the Fed does not really have the money it has committed. It will have to expand its balance sheet, issue more Treasurys, and hope that foreign central banks do not see that the US financial system is headed for the rocks.

“It is essential we preserve the foundations of democratic capitalism,” Bush bellowed on Monday.

All that’s left of the free market is the threadbare rhetoric of our lame duck President. The world’s biggest creditor is now the most ardent defender of market fundamentalism.

Last week, banks borrowed a record $437 billion per day, topping the previous week’s $420 billion per day a week earlier. Hundreds of banks cannot meet their capital requirements without regular low interest loans from the Federal Reserve. The banking system is in shambles. The FDIC needs to determine which banks can be saved and which need to be shut down, otherwise the insolvent banks will use the money they get from the Treasury on risky bets to dig their way out of bankruptcy. Without restrictions on how they can issue credit, many of the banks will engage in the same reckless behavior and speculation that brought on the current calamity.

92 year old Anna Schwartz, who co-authored “A Monetary History of the United States” with Milton Friedman, said in a recent Wall Street Journal interview that Paulson and Bernanke “should not be recapitalizing firms that should be shut down.” Rather, “firms that made wrong decisions should fail…. By keeping otherwise insolvent banks afloat, the Federal Reserve and the Treasury have actually prolonged the crisis.” At the same time, they have not alleviated the uncertainty among lenders “that would-be borrowers have the resources to repay them.” This is the very heart of the matter; the distrust will remain until the bankrupt institutions are shut down and confidence is restored. The good banks have to be strengthened, the bad banks have to be closed, deposits have to be insured, foreclosures have to be reduced (to stabilize home prices), and consumers need immediate stimulus (including food stamps, extended unemployment insurance, infrastructure spending and aid to states) to rev up the economy. All of these have to be done as quickly as possible to avoid further damage to the economy and greater personal suffering. According to an estimate by the UNs International Labour Organisation (ILO) “Twenty million jobs will disappear by the end of next year as a result of the impact of the financial crisis on the global economy…Construction, real estate, financial services, and the auto sector are most likely to be hit, according to the ILO’s estimate which is based on International Monetary Fund projections for the world economy.” It could be worse if the Bernanke and Paulson botch the rescue.

The FDIC’s Sheila Bair has been the one “bright light” in the present financial train-wreck. She has done a first-rate job of closing “sick” banks and renegotiating mortgages. Last week, Bair blasted Paulson for focusing all his attention on the banks and financial institutions instead of homeowners, many of who are now facing foreclosure. In an article in the Wall Street Journal, she said: “We’re attacking it (the crisis) at the institution level as opposed to the borrower level, and it’s the borrowers that are defaulting. That is what’s causing the distress at the institution level…So why not tackle the borrower problem?”

Unlike Paulson, Bair seems to grasp that the hemorrhaging in the financial sector cannot be stopped unless the rate of foreclosures is slowed and housing prices stabilize. The FDIC chief has taken a sensible approach to the crisis by writing down the face-value of mortgages and putting homeowners in conventional 30-year fixed rate loans that make it possible for them to avoid foreclosure. According to Bloomberg, “(Bair) now has the authority to offer loan guarantees that could encourage modifications by mortgage-servicing companies in an effort to avert foreclosures. The new financial rescue plan “allows the government to set standards for mortgage changes and offer guarantees for loans that meet the standards.” This gets to the root of the larger problem which is stopping the slide in housing prices so that the mortgage-backed securities market can normalize.

The actions of the Fed, the Treasury and the FDIC are likely to cost in excess of $2 trillion. That does not include the trillions in market capitalization that are wiped out by plummeting home and stock prices. Nor does it include the incalculable suffering from rising unemployment, falling living standards, or personal hardship. Eventually, the Fed’s emergency measures will result in higher taxes, soaring deficits and slower growth. As America’s “consumer-based” economy flags and the recession deepens, capital will flee US Treasurys and securities and create a funding crisis. This may be hard to imagine, now that the dollar is strengthening and US Treasurys appear to be in great demand, but the handwriting is already on the wall.

Brad Setser explains the dollar’s surprising reversal in his latest blog-entry: “The dollar’s rise since July is part of a reversal in longstanding investment trends that prevailed during years of plentiful borrowing, strong growth and low financial-market volatility. “Essentially, every large trade that built up a head of steam in the go-go years has blown up or is in the process of blowing up,” wrote Alan Ruskin, chief international strategist at RBS Greenwich Capital, in a report to clients. “That goes for almost every asset class.”(Brad Setsers Blog)

The recent surge in US Treasurys is also misleading, much of it having to do with terrified investors that are dumping their shares in stocks, mutual funds and hedge funds for the percieved safety of US debt. Foreign investors, however, seem to be losing their enthusiasm for Treasurys as America’s future continues to darken.

The net foreign purchases of long term securities in August was a mere $14 billion following an even more dismal $8.6 billion in July; not nearly enough to meet $55 billion per month the US needs to balance its consumption of foreign goods. Even worse, the purchases of long-term US securities “went negative” by for foreign private investors (by $8.8 billion) which means that the dollar is being artificially propped up by foreign central banks to avert a disorderly unwinding of the currency.

Foreign investors and central banks are no longer providing the capital to support the US $700 billion current account deficit. They have lost confidence in America’s ability to bounce back from the credit crisis which has swept through the financial system and is now hammering away at the broader economy. That means the demand for US debt will fall and the prospect of hyperinflation will grow. Even if the dollar is able to weather the storm ahead (and the nation can avoid a funding crisis) the massive deficits brought on by Bernanke’s “emergency” spending spree will force interest rates upwards and tighten credit even more. As Michael Panzer, author of “Financial Armageddon” says:

“While the U.S. may not suffer from a funding crisis in the immediate future, the voracious money-raising appetite will make life much more difficult for the private sector, in the sense that, they will be ‘crowding out’ increasingly desperate borrowers who will find their options are more and more limited.”

The Fed now faces the daunting task of trying to maintain America’s dominant place in the global system while the economy contracts, deficits skyrocket and the pillars of US-style capitalism come crashing to earth.

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Posted by markw, filed under Economy, Finance. Date: October 25, 2008, 11:04 am | No Comments »

Marc Faber: US will go bankrupt

“Marc Faber was born in Zurich and schooled in Geneva, Switzerland. He studied Economics at the University of Zurich and, at the age of 24, obtained a Ph.D. in Economics magna cum laude. Faber resides in Thailand and is best known for the Gloom Boom Doom newsletter…Faber is famous for advising his clients to get out of the stock market one week before the October 1987 crash.”

Marc Faber said US long term treasury bonds should have “junk” ratings and US government will go bankrupt; it’s only a matter of time.

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Posted by markw, filed under Economy, Video. Date: October 14, 2008, 6:11 pm | No Comments »

app.com
Gold will be the main beneficiary as concern about the U.S. government’s Wall Street bailout triggers a plunge in the U.S. dollar, said Tocqueville Asset Management LP’s John Hathaway. The dollar fell for a fourth session yesterday on speculation that Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson’s $700 billion plan to bail out banks will inflate the budget deficit. Gold extended its gains in the past week to 16 percent before slipping back $6 to $903 an ounce in early trading in New York today. “The dollar’s crossed the Rubicon. It’s the point of no return,” Hathaway said Monday in an interview in New York, where the fund is based. “It’s just loss of confidence in paper currency of whatever brand it is.”

The dollar, which rose to $1.4724 per euro in New York, may slide to $1.60 and beyond, triggering a move by European central bankers to devalue their currency to help their economies remain competitive, said Hathaway, who manages $800 million in gold and mining stocks. “They’ll trash the euro because the euro-dollar exchange rate above 1.60 will just be chaos for the European economies,” Hathaway said. “They’ll debase the euro somehow, they’ll have no choice. There’s no paper standard to measure it against, which is why this is coming down to gold.” More

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Posted by markw, filed under News. Date: September 23, 2008, 4:51 pm | No Comments »

The Market Ticker
To put this in perspective, in order to balance out the new deficit spending individual income tax rates would have to DOUBLE. That’s right - to bail out the fat cats on Wall Street your taxes will almost certainly double within a year or two. Are you still gonna let ‘em pass this bill? Remember, Henry Paulson got $500 million personally out of this and Goldman Sachs paid out close to $50 billion in bonuses over the last two years alone. More

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Posted by markw, filed under Economy. Date: September 23, 2008, 4:03 pm | No Comments »

Patrick Barron
Forget all the pronouncements from Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke. Their attempts to explain how monetary expansion in the form of a government bailout of Fannie and Freddie will cure the subprime lending crisis is as scientific as a witchdoctor’s explanation of how his chants and powders will chase away demons. The government is following the same monetary policies it pursued to such horrific ends during the Great Depression of the 1930s. At that time of falling prices in general, not just housing prices as now, the government passed the Wagner Act, granting special privileges to labor unions which forced major unionized industries to negotiate with them. This had the effect of raising the cost of labor in the face of a general fall in the price level. Like any other overpriced good, the demand for labor shrank dramatically. But rather than rescind the Wagner Act, which was one of the major causes of massive unemployment, British economist John Maynard Keynes convinced governments around the world to inflate their currencies. This had the effect over a very long period of time of causing all other prices to rise, as the market attempted to restore the relationship of the cost of labor to all other prices within the market. Overpriced labor’s purchasing power was gradually sapped away. Wages weren’t reduced, but all other prices rose, which had the same effect.

That will be the result of the present administration’s monetary stimulus efforts. It will not allow housing prices to fall, so that the market can re-establish the proper relationship between the cost of housing and all other goods in the market. That would cause pain in the politically connected businesses that benefited for so many years from the boom in real estate. Instead it will create the conditions for rising prices generally over the next several years. Already this process has started, with energy and food prices leading the way. Austrian school economists know that the price level is not a pond that rises and falls in a uniform manner. Excess money enters the market at certain points, causing prices to rise in certain industries and certain parts of the country. Plus, all other factors affecting an economy are still at work. But over time all prices will be higher than they would have been in an uninhibited market. Then we will have become inured to high priced housing because the prices of everything else will be much higher too. More

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Posted by markw, filed under Economy. Date: September 15, 2008, 5:16 pm | No Comments »

Gary Dorsch
“Imagination is more important than knowledge”, the brilliant Albert Einstein used to say. Imagine for just a moment, that the Dow Jones Industrials has become a key instrument of national economic policy, and that by “actively managing” its direction, the government could impact the wealth of tens of millions of US households, and by extension, influence consumer confidence and spending. Since the appointment of Henry Paulson to the helm at the US Treasury, the US stock market has always found a way to defy the law of gravity. During Paulson’s short reign, the Dow Jones Industrials (DJI-30) broke an 80-year old record for the longest streak of gains with only three declining days in between. During the first seven months of his tenure, the S&P 500 did not decline by 2%, the second longest-period without a 2% correction since 1964.

The market savvy Treasury chief, who built a $730 million fortune at Goldman Sachs, is also the chairman of the Working Group on Financial Markets, commonly known as the Plunge Protection Team (PPT), created by Ronald Reagan to prevent a repeat of the Wall Street meltdown in October 1987. The PPT is empowered to intervene in stock index futures and the foreign currency markets in the event of a crash. Paulson and his Plunge Protection Team are dealing with another tough challenge, trying to extend the S&P 500’s all-time record for avoiding a 10% correction. It’s been 52-months since the S&P 500’s last slide of 10% or more, which took place from January 14 to March 11, 2003, when it lost 14 percent. Since then, the benchmark index has more than doubled without a similar drop.

“It’s my job to be vigilant,” Paulson said on July 26th. “I’ve made this statement when the markets looked very good, and I’ve made it during times of volatility, but I will say that on global financial shocks, it’s very hard to predict them. I am comforted by the fact that we have a strong global economy and very healthy economy in the US, but it’s my job to be vigilant,” Paulson said. Federal Reserve chief Ben “helicopter” Bernanke is the US Treasury chief’s right hand man, a key player controlling the US money supply. Since Paulsen’s confirmation in July 2006, the broad M3 money supply has expanded at a 13% annualized clip, its fastest in 30-years, in a brazen effort to inflate the US stock markets, and keep the cost of borrowing low for corporate takeover artists. More
Also See: NO FREEDOM OF INFO ON PLUNGE PROTECTION TEAM

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Posted by markw, filed under Finance. Date: September 1, 2008, 10:54 am | No Comments »

The Market Ticker
Henry Paulson is about to be given an $800 BILLION dollar blank check in the form of an increased Federal Debt Ceiling which he can spend on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac IN ANY WAY HE CHOOSES, INCLUDING BUYING THE CRAPPIEST LOANS THEY HAVE AND STICKING A ONE HUNDRED PERCENT LOSS, $800 BILLION WORTH, ON YOUR TAX BILL. A huge percentage of the debt issued by Freddie and Fannie - about $1.5 trillion worth - is held by foreign central banks. Paulson is proposing to bail out the Chinese and Japanese governments with our tax money! Paulson SAYS he will “protect the taxpayer.”

THE BILL ALLOWS HIM TO SCREW YOU WITH ABSOLUTELY NO RECOURSE. More

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Posted by markw, filed under Finance. Date: July 23, 2008, 12:50 pm | No Comments »

A run on a California bank … while the nation’s two federally chartered mortgage giants turned up in need of a government rescue plan, a plan Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson described as being aimed at “supporting the stability of financial markets.” Stocks rallied, but only after weeks of losses. There was a new round of layoffs by General Motors. And even though oil prices fell a little, there was confirmation that inflation is on the rise. Consumer prices were up 1.1 % in June, while wages fell 2.4 percent over the past year. Art Cashin, director of floor operations for UBS Financial Services, says it’s been one of the most unstable periods he has seen in 45 years on the New York Stock Exchange.

A new CBS News/New York Times poll finds that 80% of Americans believe the condition of the economy is bad. The fallout continues. That once-booming housing market that we’ve all seen go bust … Says Mark Weisbrot, co-director of the non-partisan Center for Economic and Policy Research, “That’s the overwhelming cause of this recession. And that’s because we built up an enormous bubble in home prices from 1996 to 2006. It was over eight trillion dollars of bubble wealth.” Weisbrot says that only about 40% of that bubble has deflated so far. “So you’re going to have a lot more foreclosures, a lot more writedowns in banks, possible bankruptcies.” By some estimates, banks may need to write off up to one trillion dollars in bad loans. More

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Posted by markw, filed under Economy. Date: July 20, 2008, 4:00 pm | No Comments »