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  • satyajit das - socialism for wall street

    Socialism for Wall Street

    Posted At : January 15, 2008 3:53 PM | Posted By : Satyajit Das


    In good times, financial markets embrace Capitalism. In bad times, financial markets re-discover Socialism. Currently, the US Federal Reserve is engaged in a dangerous strategy to look after its Wall Street friends. The origins of the current credit crisis lie in loose monetary policy and excessive capital flows that was turbo-charged by “financial engineering” techniques used by banks. Borrowing bought more borrowing fueling price increases in financial assets - debt, equity, property, infrastructure.
    In recent months, major banks have reported losses of around US$ 45 billion on their investments. Up to US$ 1 trillion of assets are also on their way back onto bank balance sheets as complex off-balance sheet structures (Collateralised Debt Obligations, conduits issuing Asset Backed Commercial Paper and Structured Investment Vehicles) are unwound.
    The major regulatory response has been cuts in the US Fed funds rate (0.75 % pa) and the discount rate. In recent weeks, the differential between inter-bank rates and the central bank targeted rates has widened to levels not seen since August. This points to further potential cuts in both rates by the end of the year. Lower cuts are inconsistent with above target inflation levels resulting from high oil prices, higher food prices, increasing cost pressures in emerging economies such as China and the potential inflationary effect of a weaker US dollar.
    The US central bank’s strategy is clear. The current credit problems require a substantial reduction in the level of borrowings and leverage in the global financial system. Asset prices ramped up by excessive debt need to adjust. The adjustment can take place via a “crash”. This would be de-stabilizing and would wreak further havoc on already weakened banks. Alternatively, the de-leveraging and price adjustment can be achieved by creating inflation through loose monetary policy. If asset prices remain at current levels, higher inflation allows values to fall in real terms. Higher inflation also reduces the value of the borrowings that must be paid back allowing the required reduction in leverage.
    Between January 1960 and December 1974, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was substantially unchanged. This is despite significant periodic rallies during the “go-go years”. If inflation averaged 5% pa, then the value of the market (ignoring dividends) lost around half (50%) of its value in real (inflation adjusted) terms.
    The Fed strategy also assists affected banks. The large writedowns in risky assets and the expected re-intermediation of assets means that some banks need large infusions of capital. Given recent performance and subdued profit outlook, it would be difficult for them to raise this capital at acceptable prices.
    Lower short-term interest rates allow banks to borrow cheaply. The money can be used to purchase government bonds that provide higher returns than the cost of borrowing. This generates profits for the bank without the banks having to hold capital against their assets (banks generally are not required to hold capital against government securities). The profits help re-capitalize the bank. An added benefit is that the US government can fund its deficit by selling its debt to the banks. This would be handy if foreign demand for US Treasuries decreases in response to the weaker dollar. The Bank of Japan used the same strategy to re-capitalize the loss making Japanese banks after the collapse of the “bubble economy” in 1989.
    Higher inflation expectations are already evident in higher gold prices, the steeper US yield curve (long term rates are higher than short-term rates) and the weaker US dollar. Foreign investors, especially large sovereign investment funds, are switching from financial assets (bonds) to “real” assets (companies with real businesses) reflecting higher inflationary expectations.
    The strategy is dangerous. Inflation can lead to a significant transfer of wealth from investors to borrowers. Inflation once embedded in the economy distorts economic activity such as investment and savings. The experience of the late 1970s and early 1980s highlights the difficulties in recapturing the inflation beast once uncaged. Paul Volcker, then Chairman of the Federal Reserve, bravely increased interest rates to stratospheric levels to squeeze inflation out of the financial system.
    The strategy may also not work. The cuts in rate do not appear to have had the desired effect in improving market liquidity conditions. Default risk concerns continue to inhibit lending and other routine financial transactions. Lower rates may set off further bubbles – for example, in equities and emerging markets. Asset prices may fall sharply anyway. In fairness to Dr. Bernanke, he has limited policy alternatives available.
    Central bankers have stated that “errant” banks and investors will not be “bailed out”. Actual actions suggest otherwise. Banks have played their “nuclear” option well. The specter of “systemic risk” – whether real or not - is one a central banker cannot ignore. The strategy has attracted little scrutiny or comment despite being implemented by unelected officials with public money and without any transparent political debate.
    The banks continue to privatize gains and socialize losses. Socialism for Wall Street will prevail, once again.


    [emphasis added]

    http://www.wilmott.com/blogs/satyaji...ex.cfm/General

  • #2
    Re: satyajit das - socialism for wall street

    Originally posted by jk View Post
    Socialism for Wall Street

    Posted At : January 15, 2008 3:53 PM | Posted By : Satyajit Das
    Lower short-term interest rates allow banks to borrow cheaply. The money can be used to purchase government bonds that provide higher returns than the cost of borrowing. This generates profits for the bank without the banks having to hold capital against their assets (banks generally are not required to hold capital against government securities). The profits help re-capitalize the bank. An added benefit is that the US government can fund its deficit by selling its debt to the banks. This would be handy if foreign demand for US Treasuries decreases in response to the weaker dollar.
    [emphasis added]

    http://www.wilmott.com/blogs/satyaji...ex.cfm/General
    Good find, jk, Das, is a guy who to me is credible, but I cannot tell you why except he seems highly knowledgeable (which many do from my level) and he is not apparently a stooge for the banking industry or US government.

    What he describes seems circular to me. Borrow at the discount rate, and use that borrowed money to buy bonds from the Treasury. I see the profit from the Treasury bonds, but if the Banks borrow at the discount window--all short term--and invest in bonds which have to be longer term in order to yield greater than the discount rate, how do the banks pay back the loans to the Fed? Cash flow from bonds would not be big or quick enough to fund paying back the Fed.

    Not uncommonly are things like this over my head, am I clear enough above to generate some answers from anyone?

    EDit: Thinking some more it's like: jk, lend me a million bonars at 3.75% or whatever is the discount rate and I'll loan it back to you (buy your 30-year bond) at 4.3% for 30-years. Where do I get the money to pay you back the 1M bonars in 30 days?
    Last edited by Jim Nickerson; January 27, 2008, 01:49 AM.
    Jim 69 y/o

    "...Texans...the lowest form of white man there is." Robert Duvall, as Al Sieber, in "Geronimo." (see "Location" for examples.)

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    Good judgement comes from experience; experience comes from bad judgement. Unknown.

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    • #3
      Re: satyajit das - socialism for wall street

      Originally posted by Jim Nickerson View Post
      EDit: Thinking some more it's like: jk, lend me a million bonars at 3.75% or whatever is the discount rate and I'll loan it back to you (buy your 30-year bond) at 4.3% for 30-years. Where do I get the money to pay you back the 1M bonars in 30 days?
      you don't. you roll it over and roll in the interest. i.e. you just borrow a bit more, including the interest on the last borrowing.

      if the fed funds rate is headed for 2% [or less], it produces even more profits for the banks as long as the yield curve gets even steeper, which it will. a long bond sell-off, further steepening the curve, makes the trade even MORE profitable. can't lose, the banks get recapitalized. [as long as they don't go broke first.] during this period, however, the banks don't lend to corporations and individuals as much as they did in the past - they must repair their balance sheets first.

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      • #4
        Re: satyajit das - socialism for wall street

        Thanks for explaining that, jk.
        Great article. IIRC, Das is an authority on derivatives & has written a reference book on the stuff. He seems to subscribe to EJ's thesis on debt deflation and how this is likely to play out.
        He also addresses how the Fed rate cuts can help capitalize the banks, thereby helping the credit squeeze, though if I recall some recent articles (EJ, Choo of Nomura Securities?) correctly, the Japanese ended up directly injecting capital into privately held banks, i.e., the rate cut strategy may not have been successful in recapitalizing the banks.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: satyajit das - socialism for wall street

          Originally posted by zmas28 View Post
          Thanks for explaining that, jk.
          Great article. IIRC, Das is an authority on derivatives & has written a reference book on the stuff. He seems to subscribe to EJ's thesis on debt deflation and how this is likely to play out.
          He also addresses how the Fed rate cuts can help capitalize the banks, thereby helping the credit squeeze, though if I recall some recent articles (EJ, Choo of Nomura Securities?) correctly, the Japanese ended up directly injecting capital into privately held banks, i.e., the rate cut strategy may not have been successful in recapitalizing the banks.
          i don't know a great deal about japan, but the fact that long rates got so low must be at least one factor which prevented this strategy from working there. rising inflation expectations should prevent long yields from collapsing here.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: satyajit das - socialism for wall street

            Originally posted by jk View Post
            Higher inflation expectations are already evident in higher gold prices, the steeper US yield curve (long term rates are higher than short-term rates) and the weaker US dollar. Foreign investors, especially large sovereign investment funds, are switching from financial assets (bonds) to “real” assets (companies with real businesses) reflecting higher inflationary expectations.

            The paper money handlers are starting to realize where this is leading “Real Assets” with value.
            The process started some time ago http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthr...0611#post10611 and is in fast track currently as the WP reports.

            http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...010202988.html

            Washington Post Staff Writers
            Thursday, January 3, 2008;
            Carlyle and other investment firms see themselves as part of the solution for governments facing declining tax revenues and a troubled municipal bond market that has left them unable to complete or repair billions of dollars in public works projects.
            Other big Wall Street firms, such as J.P. Morgan Chase, Goldman Sachs and Lehman Bros., have made deals or are looking for similar ones for their investors, most of whom are pension funds, foreign governments, endowments and wealthy families and individuals.
            "What we bring is capital," Dove said. "Maryland could raise taxes, put up sales tax and raise municipal bonds to build the intercounty connector. An alternative could be to say to the private sector, 'You build that, you run it in partnership with us and we [Maryland] will use the money to build schools, hospitals or health-care facilities.' Virginia is a state that does this now."
            Some toll roads, such as the Dulles Greenway, are owned and managed by private companies. But the push by private equity is different because buyout firms prefer to partner with municipalities rather than run the projects on their own. This type of relationship is more appealing to state and local governments and is expected to spark the privatization of huge swaths of infrastructure, transportation analyst say.
            "The word is spreading and the climate of opinion has changed significantly in the last five years or so in that the public accepts tolls now much more readily than they used to," Ken Orski, who writes a newsletter on transportation and has worked in the field for more than three decades. "They don't necessarily love them, but view them as inevitable given the shortage of funds and the public's dislike of increasing the gas tax."

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: satyajit das - socialism for wall street

              Originally posted by jk View Post
              i don't know a great deal about japan, but the fact that long rates got so low must be at least one factor which prevented this strategy from working there. rising inflation expectations should prevent long yields from collapsing here.
              EJ writes in...
              Good find. Satyajit Das is talking about Risk Pollution. Banks made profits on new loans by externalizing costs (default risk insurance) via securitization and credit derivatives and we all get to clean it up with higher interest rates (eventually), a weak currency, and inflation taxes when the Fed and government bail out the banks. We saw it coming miles away. Which leads me to our themes.

              iTulip themes for 2008

              Ongoing housing market collapse - updates in line with Jan. 2005 forecast (off 10% or more in 2008, with 15% to 20% more to follow)
              Ongoing debt deflation bear market - updates in line with Dec. 2007 call (off 30% in 2008)
              Ongoing Risk Pollution fallout and cleanup - updates in line with Apr. 2006 forecast (definition of the international SuperFund to clean it up)
              Ongoing dollar decline (Class A preferred vs common shares in USA, Inc.) - updates in line with 2001 gold forecast (off another 50% over the next three years)
              China vs USA - updates in line with Mar. 2006 forecast (political competition heats up, economic cooperation declines)
              Peak Cheap Oil - update to 2006 Energy and Money analysis
              Distribution of Disaster: political responses to US the attempts to externalize economic and political distress* - new analysis to lay out scenarios of a potential de-globalization scenario

              Main iTulip theme for the next five years


              Period X: US FIRE Economy failure and De-globalization vs infrastructure-centric re-industrialization

              * The Japanese were unable to externalize their economic fallout of their debt deflation and had to cope with them within their own borders. The US will seek to externalize its problems and has already by depreciating the dollar against the euro.
              Last edited by FRED; January 27, 2008, 12:07 PM.
              Ed.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: satyajit das - socialism for wall street

                Originally posted by FRED View Post
                EJ writes in...

                Period X: US FIRE Economy failure and De-globalization vs infrastructure-centric re-industrialization

                Can you arrange an interview with Dr Hudson on the subject? Does he charge to be interviewed? If so I would contribute. As a follow up question, what would be his current thoughts regarding a question/ answer from a previous interview.
                http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthr...14541#poststop
                EJ: Government has expanded in every dimension, both in total spending and in employment, under Republican administrations, contrary to the ideology of the Republican party. Might the Democratic party prove equally paradoxical, shrinking government? What is your philosophy on size of government and what are your expectations if the policies of the Democratic Leadership Counsel (DLC) are followed?
                Hudson: The Democrats are likely to make government even bigger. The DLC wants centralized economic planning by the Wall Street gang even more than Republicans do. For example, look at what Bill Clinton did to Russia. That's what Hillary Clinton will do for the U.S.
                Last edited by bill; January 27, 2008, 02:34 PM.

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                • #9
                  Re: satyajit das - socialism for wall street

                  The question is whether the Fed/US Gov't can bail fast enough to stay ahead of the world/internal population backlash.

                  Unlike Japan, the present mess is unwinding both from a much proportionally larger position and in a much faster time scale.

                  That these are derivatives based on s**t doesn't help; the Japan problem was primarily overvaluations by 10x or so; the US problem is at least 5x (i.e. 50x overvaluation) or more.

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                  • #10
                    Re: satyajit das - socialism for wall street

                    Originally posted by bill View Post
                    Can you arrange an interview with Dr Hudson on the subject? Does he charge to be interviewed? If so I would contribute. As a follow up question, what would be his current thoughts regarding a question/ answer from a previous interview.
                    http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthr...14541#poststop


                    We have re-interviewed Hudson last week and plan to publish the interview next week.
                    Ed.

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