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Posts Tagged ‘federal reserve’

Trust in free markets is dead

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Plutocracy, rule by the rich, is not named for Pluto, god of death, but his spoiled son, Plutus, the personification of wealth. The juxtaposition of a dead economy and bank billionaires makes this lineage apt.

The failure of Washington and Wall Street to foresee the financial crisis is well known. Less well known is their failure to grasp the depth of the crisis once it began. The crisis did not emerge suddenly in September 2008 with Lehman and AIG; it was in full swing by August 2007 with the Fed’s emergency discount rate cut. Why were our leaders blind not once, at the outset, but twice, after the crisis had begun?

Things got worse than regulators first imagined because of the hidden role of derivatives. A simple example makes the point. In 2007, there were about $1 trillion in subprime and similar risky mortgages outstanding. Historic default rates on mortgages were around 3 percent. It became clear that subprime defaults would be much higher. So assuming some sky-high estimate like a 25 percent default rate meant $250 billion of potential losses on $1 trillion of risky mortgages. A $250 billion loss is a big number but manageable in a $14 trillion economy. In real terms, it was not worse than the S&L crisis of the late 1980’s. Experts thought this was a problem to be managed but not one that threatened the financial system as a whole. This view prevailed through the spring and summer of 2008 as the Bear Stearns, Fannie and Freddie bailouts continued. There was a persistent sense that somehow the crisis was not going away, yet the basic subprime math made it hard to understand why. 

Unknown to the public, politicians and bank regulators, a grotesque edifice of credit default swaps had emerged in the shadows of Wall Street. Credit defaults swaps, CDS, are just side bets on whether some normal debt instrument will perform or fail. The size of the CDS market grew from $2.2 trillion in 2002 to $54 trillion in 2006. Not all of these CDS related to subprime mortgages but a large percentage did. If we generously assume half were subprime related, that’s a $27 trillion bet. Now, when we apply the 25 percent default rate we get losses of over $6 trillion; much closer to the actual losses in the collapse of 2007-2008 and over 20 times greater than the $250 billion estimate from subprime mortgages alone. (Article continues below) 

The subprime market was a scandalous fraud by itself. But the lying borrowers, crooked mortgage brokers, greedy investment bankers, corrupt rating agencies, crony-filled government agencies and ignorant investors combined could only lose $250 billion on their own. It took the quants at Goldman and elsewhere to find a way to lose over 20 times that amount through the magic of derivatives. Who said American technology is dead? It takes genius to turn a quarter-trillion-dollar scam into a $6 trillion catastrophe.

Surely some social good came out of this financial alchemy? After all, isn’t reward half of the risk-reward spectrum? When a city borrows money an airport can be built. When a corporation borrows a new factory rises. When individuals borrow they buy a house or car. Along with debt comes some investment, purchase or savings that helps advance the economy however fitfully. How many airports, roads, factories, farms, houses, cars or other goods fell out of the $27 trillion CDS piñata? I won’t keep you in suspense—the answer is none.

Unlike real banking which raises capital for worthy enterprises, the CDS market is a betting parlour with no social utility. But don’t the bets just change hands between winners and losers with no harm to the rest of us? Not exactly. The winners like Goldman made sure to collect. But the losers, after receiving their personal bonuses on up-front fees and buying houses in Nantucket, walked away and handed society the bill. If you’re wondering who the real losers are and you happen to be a taxpayer just look in a mirror.

Society is so in thrall to Goldman and the other banks that we can’t even hold them accountable. Their critics are accused of using hindsight as if the game wasn’t rigged from the start. Opponents are accused of being anti-free market as if putting horsemeat in hamburgers is a legitimate market activity. As a society, we’ve lost our nerve when it comes to bankers and their lobbyists. The Age of the Plutocrat has well and truly arrived.

Democrats are going through the motions of reform now while Republicans are going through the motions of reform later. There is no reform. The Dodd and Frank bills are shot through with easy loopholes a second-year law student could find. Blanche Lincoln’s bill has teeth, but no hope of passage. The new bank bailout fund is just another wealth transfer from citizens to the banks. The new systemic risk regulator does not understand risk, viewing it as stocks and flows to be dialled up or down rather than the complex nonlinear system poised on the edge of catastrophe, which it really is. Campaign contributions are flowing, lobbyists are high-fiving, journalists don’t get it and the public is confused and disgusted. We are blinded by a so-called free-market ideology subscribed to by politicians and pundits who can’t see the difference between a free-market and a rigged game. Free markets depend on trust and that died a long time ago.

Source: King World News Blog http://kingworldnews.com/kingworldnews/KWN_DailyWeb/KWN_DailyWeb.html

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Big Banking is out of control. Fight back – use cash

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

Big Banking is out of control. Many corporate financial institutions, considered too big to fail, received a share of a trillion dollars of taxpayer money. To thank us, they are hiking interest rates on existing credit card debt, lowering and cancelling small business credit lines, and imposing more and higher fees and penalties with impunity.

As taxpayers, workers, citizens and merchants we can fight back. Not with letters to the editor nor with calls to our government representatives. There is an easy, immediate and direct path toward banking and monetary reform that benefits people, not corporations, through everyday transactions in the marketplace. 

Use cash. (Continues below)

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Today, one of the biggest moneymakers for Big Banking is cash substitution services:  credit and debit cards. Users of debit and credit cards pay for the convenience these cards provide through fees, penalties and interest.

Merchants pay fees that average about $3.50 on every hundred dollars, plus the cost of those days they wait to be reimbursed by the banks. They pass these fees on to their customers in the form of higher prices. The purchaser pays the fee, whether they know it or not. So, every plastic payment is like getting money from an ATM that charges you 3.5%.

It’s this simple, the more times we use cash instead of plastic we will be wielding the power of the market to deprive banks and financial institutions of the profits that purchase the influence and power that has corrupted our financial and monetary system.

Together we can change the balance of power by doing just two things:

Use Cash instead of plastic.

Enlist others to do the same with simple actions.

Visit site: http://www.usecashmovement.org/

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Our money system would be a joke if it didn’t cause suffering to billions of people

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Have the authorities in our supposedly democratic country been deliberately concealing from citizens and their representatives how the money system they manage for us now works? Yes, of course they have.

In the last few weeks, this lunatic saga has continued to unravel. It still has further to go and more to reveal. Developed by us oh-so-clever humans and used by no other species, the idiotic way we allow our money system to be managed would be a joke – if it didn’t cause suffering to billions of people and other creatures around the world.

Around the world now, thousands of politicians, officials, experts, NGOs, commentators and journalists from many countries are preparing for the Copenhagen global climate conference in December. Already they accept that it won’t produce a binding treaty, only prepare the ground for the possibility of one at a later date. (Continues below)

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More important in the long run, none of them seem to understand the link between the global environmental threat and global finance. It is that the world’s money system now imposes a perverse calculus of values on countries, places and people everywhere.

This both encourages the better-off minority to try to preserve and expand their privileged economic and social positions, and compels the poorer majority to try to survive and maintain themselves and their families, in ways that are bound to overwhelm the planet’s resources, including its capacity to absorb carbon and other climate-changing emissions. Without the worldwide money system’s radical reform, any eventual climate treaty is bound to fail.

Continue reading at: http://www.jamesrobertson.com/newsletter.htm

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Why is monetary reform a censored subject?

Friday, August 14th, 2009

Machiavelli pointed out that “He who introduces a new order of things has all those who profit from the old order as enemies, and he has only lukewarm allies in all those who might profit from the new” (The Prince, 1532). Very true. But we need to pursue the question further.

Why do virtually no politicians, officials, economists, academics, media commentators, and bankers and other finance professionals acknowledge publicly how our money supply is now created? And why do they avoid discussing the possibility of a better way than allowing the banks to create it as profit-making “credit”?

And what about the multitude of charities and pressure groups and NGOs around the world, focused on poverty, overseas aid, the environment and each of the many other spheres in which people suffer from our dependence on banks to create the world’s money supplies? Are they so concentrated on raising money for their own activities that they don’t recognise the present way of creating money as a cause of the ills they oppose? or are they just scared of offending the banks?

These are not academic questions. To some people they will be hostile. To others they may be helpful. Corrupting and corrupted self-interested opponents of monetary reform will contest them or try to ignore them. But, to the larger number of people passively unmoved by the need for reform, a less hostile approach will be more effective. (Continues below)

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We are all motivated to some extent by how we perceive the balance of risk and reward between the different courses of action open to us. That applies to all the professionals directly concerned with money, and to the press and broadcasting media, as it does to everyone else. To some extent, the careers, reputations, earnings, pensions and investments of thousands of influential people in our legislatures and press and broadcasting industries as well as banking are directly affected by the fortunes of the banking industry.

To create the necessary momentum in favour of monetary reform we have to find ways both of combating the actively negative influence of corruption, competing commitments, over-cautious inaction and passive lack of concern, and of strengthening positive interest and committed support for reform.

Those two approaches together are needed to convince public and electoral opinion strongly enough of the need for monetary reform to compel increasing numbers of the professionals in charge of managing the money system to change their thinking in that direction too.

Read newsletter: http://www.jamesrobertson.com/news-aug09.htm

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What US economy? There’s nothing left to recover

Friday, July 17th, 2009

There is no economy left to recover. The US manufacturing economy was lost to off-shoring and free trade ideology. It was replaced by a mythical “New Economy.”

The “New Economy” was based on services. Its artificial life was fed by the Federal Reserve’s artificially low interest rates, which produced a real estate bubble, and by “free market” financial deregulation, which unleashed financial gangsters to new heights of debt leverage and fraudulent financial products.

The real economy was traded away for a make-believe economy. When the make-believe economy collapsed, Americans’ wealth in their real estate, pensions, and savings collapsed dramatically while their jobs disappeared.

The debt economy caused Americans to leverage their assets. They refinanced their homes and spent the equity. They maxed out numerous credit cards. They worked as many jobs as they could find. Debt expansion and multiple family incomes kept the economy going.

Read article: http://www.counterpunch.org/roberts07162009.html

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Precious metals investing for dummies

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

A comprehensive and yet uncomplicated introduction to investing in precious metals, particularly gold and silver. If you’ve seen the bottom fall out of your pension, savings or other investments as a result of the 2008/09 financial crisis, this book points the way to an alternative method of protecting your future. The writer demystifies an area of investment which most people know little or nothing about and shows how privately held hard assets would have protected many hapless victims of the so-called ‘credit crunch’ from the avarice and incompetence of private central bankers.

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Buy from Amazon.co.uk: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Precious-Metals-Investing-Dummies-Mladjenovic/dp/0470130873/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1247160365&sr=1-1

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The US government may borrow more money from banks to lend to banks – great idea

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

There are speculations that the US economy needs a second stimulus to recover from its current doldrums as the first one has apparently failed to treat the ailing economy.

The US may need another stimulus plan to secure its recovery, said Laura Tyson, a Barack Obama aide and member of his economic advisory panel. Addressing the Nomura Asia Equity Forum in Singapore Tuesday, Tyson explained that the first stimulus package embraced “a significant amount of investment in long-term growth.”

Read article: http://presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=100054&sectionid=3510203

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