Greenspan
- the Wizard of Bubbleland
By
Henry C.K. Liu
This article appeared in Asia
Times on September 14, 2005
The
Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank annual symposium at
Jackson Hole, Wyoming is a ritual in which central bankers from major
economies
all over the world, backed by their supporting cast of court jesters
masquerading as monetary economists, privately rationalize their
unmerited yet
enormous power over the fate of the global economy by publicly
confessing that
while their collective knowledge is grossly inadequate for the daunting
challenge of the task entrusted to them, their faith-based dogma
nevertheless
should remain above question. That dogma
is based on a single-dimensional theology that sound money is the sine qua non of economic well-being. It
is a peculiar ideology given that central banking as an institution
derives its raison
d’etre from the rejection of a rigid gold standard in favor of
monetary
elasticity. In plain language, central
banking sees as its prime function the management of the money supply
to fit
the transactional needs of the economy, instead of fixing the amount of
money
in circulation by the amount of gold held by the money-issuing
authority. Thus
central bankers believe in sound money, but not too sound please, lest
the
economy should falter. Their mantra is borrowed from the Confessions
of St Augustine: “God, give me chastity and continence
- but not just now.”
This year, the annual august
gathering in August took on
special fanfare as it marked the final appearance of Alan Greenspan as
Chairman
of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors. Among the several
interrelated
options of controlling the money supply, the Federal Reserve, acting as
a
fourth branch of government based on dubious constitutional legitimacy
and head
of the global central banking snake based on dollar hegemony, has
selected
interest rate policy as the instrument of choice for managing the
economy all
through the 18-year stewardship of Alan Greenspan, on whom much
accolade was
showered by invited participants in the Jackson Hole seminar in
anticipation of
his retirement in early 2006. Greenspan’s
formula of reducing market regulation by substituting it with
post-crisis
intervention is merely buying borrowed extensions of the boom with
amplified
severity of the inevitable bust down the road. The Fed is increasingly
reduced
by this formula to an irrelevant role of explaining an anarchic economy
rather
than directing it towards a rational paradigm. It has adopted the role
of a
clean-up crew of otherwise avoidable financial debris rather than that
of a preventive
guardian of public financial health. Greenspan’s monetary approach has
been
when in doubt, ease. This means
injecting more money into the banking system whenever the economy shows
signs
of faltering, even if caused by structural imbalances rather than
monetary
tightness. For almost two decades,
Greenspan has justifiably been in near-constant doubt about structural
balances
in the economy, yet his response to mounting imbalances has invariably
been the
administration of off-the-shelf monetary laxative, leading to a serious
case of
lingering monetary diarrhea that manifests itself in run-away asset
price
inflation mistaken for growth.
Paul Volcker, as chairman of the
Fed before Greenspan, caused
a “double-dip” recession in 1979-80 and 1981-82 to cure double-digit
inflation
and in the process, bringing the unemployment rate into double digits
for the
first time since 1940. Volcker then piloted the economy through its
long recovery
that ended with the 1987 crash. To his
credit, Volker did manage to bring unemployment below 5.5%, half a
point lower
than in the 1978-79 boom, and the acknowledged structural unemployment
rate of
6%. To achieve his heroic, albeit bloody victory over intractable
inflation,
Volker adopted a “new operating method” for the Fed in 1980 as a
therapeutic
shock treatment for Wall Street, which had been spoiled fearless by the
brazen
political opportunism of Arthur Burns, Volcker’s predecessor during the
Nixon-Ford era. Wall Street had lost
faith in the Fed’s political will to control inflation. The new
operating
method concentrated on managing monetary aggregates to levels deemed
appropriate for a given state of the economy, and let them dictate Fed
funds
rate (FFR) swings to be authorized by the Fed Open Market Committee
(FOMC). For 1980, this meant a FFR within
a range
from 13-19% in the context of double-digit inflation. This new
operating method
was an exercise in “creative uncertainty” to shock the financial market
out of
its complacency about the Fed’s tradition of interest rate stability
and
gradualism. The market had developed a habitual expectation that even
if the
Fed were forced by inflation trends to raise interest rates, it would
not
permit the market to be volatile, lest the political wrath from both
the White
House and the Congress should threaten its existence. Banks could
continue to create
money through lending as long as they could profitably manage the
gradual rise
in rates, foiling the Fed’s policy objective of slowing the growth of
the money
supply to contain inflation.
Volker’s new operating method
reversed the traditional
mandate of the Fed, which, as a central bank, was supposed to be
responsible
for maintaining orderly markets, meaning smooth, gradual changes in
interest
rates. The new operating method was an attempt to induce the threat of
short-term pain to stabilize long-term inflation expectations. The
reversal was
necessary because the market had come to expect the Fed to only
gradually raise
interest rates keep even an unbalanced economy from collapsing.
Targeting the
money supply generates large sudden swings in short-term interest rates
that
produce unintended shifts in the real economy that then feed back into
demand
for money. The process has been described as the Fed acting as a
monetarist dog
chasing its own tail.
Unlike
the Keynesian formula of deficit financing to reduce unemployment in a
down
cycle, the Fed’s easy money approach since the Nixon administration had
been to
channel the funny money to the rich who need it least, rather than to
the poor
who would immediately spend it to sustain aggregate demand to moderate
the
business cycle. This supply-side easy money approach led to an economy
of
overcapacity, with idle plants unable to profitably produce goods for
lack of
consumer demand. Say’s law, that supply creates its own demand, is
inoperative
unless there is full employment, which sound money deems undesirable.
Greenspan’s measured-paced
interest rate policy is a
reversal back to the Fed’s tradition of gradualism.
The trouble with a measured-paced interest
rate policy in a debt-driven economy of overcapacity is that the debt
cancer is
spreading faster than the gradual doses of medical radiation can
handle. Yet
fatality is a poor trade-off for the avoidance of hair loss from
radiation. Greenspan’s measured pace
represents a lack
of political courage to acknowledge that it is preferable by far for
the
finance sector to take a huge haircut preemptively than for the whole
economy
to collapse later. Moral hazard is
increased unless risk takers in the finance sector are made to bear the
consequences of their actions, and not be allowed to pass the pain from
risk
onto the economy at large.
All economists agree that when
money growth slows, market interest rates go up.
Yet the emergence of unregulated credit markets has cast doubt of the
reverse
causal effect. Rising interest rates no
longer necessarily slow money growth. Often it merely makes money
growth more
costly to accelerate asset price appreciation, curiously defined by
economists
as growth, not inflation. This is particularly true with short-term
rate which
is the only rate that can be set directly by the Fed.
An excessively low short-term rate
encouraging banks to borrow short-term to lend long term to try to
profit from
the interest rate spread. Also, the trouble with the use of the FFR
target to
control money supply was that it had to be set by fiat, which exposed
the Fed
to unwanted political pressure for interrupting the boom. A case can be
made,
and is frequently made, that the Fed’s FFR target tends to be a
self-fulfilling
prophecy rather than a device to manage future trends. High FFR targets
deflate
while low targets inflate, and there is little argument about that
relationship
beyond the dispute on the definition of inflation. Because Greenspan
had no
hesitation in lowering the FFR target in a less-than-measured pace to
reverse
asset deflation in the 2000 recession, and again in the summer of 2003,
his
subsequent measured pace in bringing the FFR target back above
inflation rate represents
an act of policy cowardice.<>
Market demand for new loans,
expressed as the pace for new
lending, obviously would not be moderated by raising the price of
money, as
long as the inflation/interest gap remains profitable. Yet bank
deregulation
diluted the Fed's control of the supply of credit, leaving price of
short-term
funds (interest rate) as the only operational lever. Price is not
always an
effective lever against runaway demand, as Greenspan found out in the
1990s.
Raising the price of money to fight inflation in a debt economy is by
definition self-neutralizing because high interest cost is itself
inflationary
in a debt economy. Deregulation also allows the price of money to
allocate
credit in the market, often directing credit to where the economy needs
it
least, namely the speculative arena where borrowers are more prepared
to pay
high rates.
The Fed might have in its employ
a staff of very
sophisticated economists who understood the complex multi-dimensional
forces of
the market, but the tools available to the Fed for dealing with market
instability was single-dimensional by ideology and design.
Measured-paced interest-rate
policy was the only weapon available to the Fed to tame an aggressively
unruly
market that increasingly viewed the Fed as a paper tiger.
The Fed protects itself from
criticism of ideological bias
in its decision-making by depriving the public and its critics of
timely
information paid for by tax money. The Fed remains above criticism
because its
decisions are always based on more current information on the economy
than that
available to the market, decisions that the market would understand
only if it
had the same information, although the rationale for depriving the
market of
the latest information on the economy in the age of instant
communication and
political transparency has never been made clear.
According to the Minneapolis
Fed, aside from the color of
their covers, the Fed’s Red and Beige books differed in one important
way: the
Red Book was prepared for policymakers only, and was not intended for
public
consumption. The Red Book became public in 1983 after a request by the
longtime
representative from the District of Columbia, Walter Fauntroy, for
public
release of the Green Book, which contains the Fed’s closely-held
national
models and economic forecasts. The Fed deemed this unwise and the Red
Book was
offered in its place. To mark the change, the color red was dropped in
favor of
beige (it was for a time also called the Tan Book). To detract from the
implied
importance of the document in FOMC policymaking, the public release of
the
Beige Book, published eight times per year containing anecdotal
information on
current economic conditions in all twelve districts through reports
from
Federal Reserve District Banks and Branch directors and interviews with
key
business contacts, economists, market experts, and other sources, is
timed for
two weeks prior to an FOMC meeting, so that the media and others would
recognize that the information contained in it is dated and, therefore,
does
not have a major influence on future policy. The Fed’s power of
decision is not
based on a better understanding on how the economy works than market
participants, but on more timely and privileged information. The
rationale for
keeping the Green Book from public view has never been explained, so
much for
policy transparency in a democratic society. Perhaps,
as Greenspan has been saying
recently: the state of the art of
economic forecasting is far from reliable, thus there is no harm
keeping it from
the public.
And there is plenty of argument
about the Fed’s projection
ability on the economy. History has shown that the Fed, more often than
not,
has made wrong decisions based on faulty projection. Greenspan has been
rightly
criticized for letting a housing price “bubble” develop, equating it to
the one
that swept technology stocks to stratospheric levels before bursting in
2000.
Greenspan argues the Fed’s role is to mop up after bubbles burst, since
bubbles
are hard to spot and deflate safely. But accidents are also difficult
to
predict; and that difficulty is not a good argument against buying
insurance. There is no doubt that there
is a price to be paid for every policy action. But
the price of prematurely slowing down a
debt bubble is infinitely
lower than letting the bubble build until it bursts uncontrollably. In
finance
as in medicine, prevention is preferable to even the best cure. All market participants know pigs lose money.
And a monetary pig loses control of the economy.
Greenspan has said on several
occasions that while he
expected continued debate over whether the Fed could and should use its
power
over short-term interest rates to try to influence asset prices, he did
not see
that as feasible. “The configuration of asset prices is already an
integral
part of our evaluation of the large array of forces that influence
financial
stability and economic growth,” he repeated that theme in his speech at
Jackson
Hole, “but given our current state of knowledge, I find it difficult to
envision
central banks successfully targeting asset prices any time soon.” Yet his negative real interest rate policy
since 2000 to prevent deflation was a clear policy of asset price
targeting.
Volcker’s new operating method
in 1980 was designed to let
the monetary aggregates set the FFR targets mathematically to provide
political
cover for the FOMC members if the FFR target needed to go to high
double
digits. This was monetarism through the back door, not by intellectual
commitment, but by political cowardice. Volcker
used the monetary aggregate formula to deflect political heat to stay
in the
monetary kitchen. Greenspan’s one-note monetary policy of relying on
changing
the FFR target is not based on any definitive understanding of the
relationship
between interest rate levels and economic growth, a deficiency he has
repeatedly acknowledged not just for himself but also for the entire
economics
community. Yet after all is said and done, the only instrument the most
powerful official in the financial world relies on to manage the
world’s
dominant economy is raising or lowering the FFR.
At a meeting of the American
Economic Association in San
Diego on January 3, 2004, Greenspan spoke on “Risk and Uncertainty in
Monetary
Policy” in which he asserted that Fed policies had been correct and
successful
in handling the bubble economy. He defended himself against criticism,
saying
policymakers would have damaged the economy in the late 1990s had they
tried to
prevent or later puncture that era’s speculative stock market bubble.
It is a
very peculiar position, one that would be expected from the risk
manager of a
commercial bank or a hedge fund, not a central banker whose job
presumably is
to ensure systemic stability by eliminating rather than managing, and
therefore
accepting systemic risk. “There appears to be enough evidence, at least
tentatively, to conclude that our strategy of addressing the bubble’s
consequences rather than the bubble itself has been successful,”
Greenspan
boasted prematurely. Yet twenty months later at Jackson Hole, Greenspan
said:
“This vast increase in the market value of asset claims is in part the
indirect
result of investors accepting lower compensation for risk. Such an
increase in
market value is too often viewed by market participants as structural
and
permanent. To some extent, those higher values may be reflecting the
increased
flexibility and resilience of our economy. But what they perceive as
newly
abundant liquidity can readily disappear. Any onset of increased
investor
caution elevates risk premiums and, as a consequence, lowers asset
values and
promotes the liquidation of the debt that supported higher asset
prices. This
is the reason that history has not dealt kindly with the aftermath of
protracted periods of low risk premiums.” But the source of the
mistaken view
held by market participants is traceable to Greenspan’s declared
refusal to
prevent the bubble and to his adherence to a measured-paced interest
rate
policy to manage the bubble once it has become undeniable.
Greenspan, notwithstanding his
denial of responsibility in
helping through the 1990s to unleash the equity bubble, had this to say
in 2004
in hindsight after the bubble burst in 2000: “Instead of trying to
contain a
putative bubble by drastic actions with largely unpredictable
consequences, we
chose, as we noted in our mid-1999 congressional testimony, to focus on
policies to mitigate the fallout when it occurs and, hopefully, ease
the
transition to the next expansion.”
By the next expansion, Greenspan
meant the next bubble which
manifested itself in housing. The mitigating policy was a massive
injection of
liquidity into the banking system. There is a structural reason why the
housing
bubble replaced the high-tech bubble. Houses
cannot be imported like manufactured
goods, although much of the
content in houses, such as furniture, hardware, windows, kitchen
equipment and
bath fixtures are mostly manufactured overseas. Yet construction jobs
cannot be
outsourced overseas to take advantage of wage arbitrage. Instead, some
of
non-skilled jobs are filled by low-waged illegal immigrants. Total
outstanding
home mortgage in 1999 was $4.45 trillion and by 2004 it grew to $7.56
trillion,
most of which were absorbed by refinancing of higher home prices at
lower
interest rates. When Greenspan took over at the Fed in 1987, total
outstanding
home mortgage stood only at $1.82 trillion. On
his watch, outstanding home mortgage
quadrupled. Much of this money has been
printed by the
Fed, exported through the trade deficit and re-imported as debt.
Greenspan went on: “During 2001,
in the aftermath of the
bursting of the bubble and the acts of terrorism in September 2001, the
Federal
funds rate was lowered 4-3/4 percentage points. Subsequently, another
75 basis
points were pared, bringing the rate by June 2003 to its current 1
percent, the
lowest level in 45 years. We were able to be unusually aggressive in
the
initial stages of the recession of 2001 because both inflation and
inflation
expectations were low and stable… … We thought we needed to be, and
could be,
forceful in 2002 and 2003 as well because, with demand weak, inflation
risks
had become two-sided for the first time in forty years. There appears
to be
enough evidence, at least tentatively, to conclude that our strategy of
addressing
the bubble’s consequences rather than the bubble itself has been
successful.
Despite the stock market plunge, terrorist attacks, corporate scandals,
and
wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, we experienced an exceptionally mild
recession -
even milder than that of a decade earlier. As I discuss later, much of
the
ability of the US economy to absorb these sequences of shocks resulted
from
notably improved structural flexibility. But highly aggressive monetary
ease
was doubtless also a significant contributor to stability.” Structural flexibility and aggressive
monetary ease are significant contributors to stability? One might as
well
claim that drug addiction calms nerves.
The growth of capital markets
was responsible for the long
boom that began with the Greenspan era in 1987, rather than bank
lending.
Banks’ share of net credit markets, according Fed data on flow of
funds,
dropped from a peak of over 62% in 1975 to 27.5% in 2004 while
securitization’s
share rose from negligible in 1975 to over 60% in 2004. Securitization
now
stands at over $3 trillion up from $375 billion in 1985.
It shows the effect of a shift of importance
from banks as funding intermediaries to the capital/credit markets. Nasdaq companies rely less on banks for funds
and are thus less affected by Greenspan’s interest rate policy. Greenspan has been vocal in explaining that
his monetary policy gradual moves of rising FFR was not specifically
targeted
towards the stock markets but toward the unsustainable expansion of the
economy
as a whole, although with the same breath, he decried the dangers of
the wealth
effect if it ever ends up heavier on the consumption side than on the
investment side, which of course was exactly what happened. Consumer spending has been holding up the US
economy in recent years, while most of the supply-side investment has
gone
overseas. This has caused a separation between the dollar economy and
the US
economy. The dollar economy expands from global dollar hegemony while
the US
economy is hollowed out of manufacturing. Dollar hegemony has deprived
the US
economy of real productivity from manufacturing and forced it into
virtual
productivity from finance manipulation.
It is a curious position, as
most Greenspan’s positions seem
to be: asset inflation is good unless it is spent by consumers rather
than to
fuel more asset inflation. He continues
to try half-heartedly to restrain demand in favor of supply in an
economy
already plagued by overcapacity. He ignores the glaring fact that
supply-side
investment while staying in the global dollar economy through dollar
hegemony,
has largely skirted the US economy, leaving it with an unsustainable
debt
bubble. Greenspan seems to think that it does not matter who owns the
dollars
the Fed prints, as long as most debts are denominated in dollars that
the Fed
can print at will. In a sense, he is the wizard of dollar hegemony
which in
addition to impoverishing all non-dollar economies, is beginning to
impoverish
also the US economy.
Greenspan also supported the
Bush $1.3 trillion tax cut of
2001 and the additional $674 billion tax cut of 2003 which instead of
helping
the economy, merely shifted debt from the private sector to the public
sector
in the form of fiscal deficits and sovereign debt.
Instead of increasing savings from the tax
cut, the private sector promptly took on more debt. The tax cut so
favored the
rich that the tax savings from the low-income earners mostly goes to
pay
interest on the loans funded by tax savings of the rich.
The so-called "bifurcated"
market indexes of the
late 1990s, dividing the so-call New Economy from the Old Economy, with
one
group of companies contributing to new highs, the other to new lows,
clearly
indicated that the Fed, whose sole weapon being monetary measures, had
lost
control of the New Economy which appeared impervious to short-term
interest
rates, while unable to help the Old Economy. Under
such conditions, the only way the Fed
could slow the economy was
to overshoot the interest rate target to try in vain to rein in an
interest-impervious
Nasdaq at the peril of the whole economy. Interest
sensitive stocks were battered badly,
including banks and
non-bank lenders, such as GE and Amex. This group of financial services
companies, including commercial banks, brokerage firms and mortgage
lenders,
had produced some of the biggest profits in the post-1987-crash bull
market. The combination of rising
interest rates and the hefty leverage on the books of these businesses
proved
hazardous to their stock prices. Money center banks and broker dealers
were
most vulnerable because they were the most exposed to
interest-rate-related
products such as swaps and mortgages.
The most popular of all
derivative products is the interest
rate swap, which essentially allows participants to make bets on the
direction
interest rates will take. According to the Office of the Comptroller of
the
Currency (OCC), interest rate swaps accounted for three out of four
derivative
contracts held by commercial banks at the end of 1999. The notional
value of
these swaps totaled almost $25 trillion; 2-3% of that ($500-750
billion) reflected
the banks’ true credit risk in these products. Monetary economists have
no idea
if notional values are part of the money supply and with what discount
ratio.
As we now know from experience, creative accounting has legally and
illegally transformed
debt proceeds as revenue.
The OCC 2005 Report on Condition
and Performance of
Commercial Banks shows that loan demand grew at 11% in Q1 2005 while
core
deposit grew at 7%, producing a 4% gap. That meant that banks loan
growth was
not fully funded by deposits. The report identified possible
risks as: cooling off in housing markets has accompanied slower loan
growth; past
regional housing price declines have lingered; credit quality problems
in
housing have spilled over to other loan types. Not
a comforting picture.
Derivatives of all kinds weigh
heavily on banks’ capital
structures. But interest rate swaps can be especially toxic when
interest rates
rise. And since only a few business economists predicted a jump in
rates for
the first half of the year when 1999 began while yields in fact rose
25%, these
institutions found themselves on the wrong side of an interest rate
gamble by
2000. Moreover, as interest rates rose,
banks’ income diminished from interest-rate-related businesses, such as
mortgage lending. Interest-sensitive
sources of income were the revenue disappointment in 2000, as trading
was in
1999. The banks’ response was to lower
credit requirement for loans.
When Treasury yields were at
their highest levels before the
Treasury under Larry Summers launched its long-term debt buybacks in
2000, rate
increases from the Fed seemed a consistent if not rational policy.
Stock
investors in the Old Economy did not get spooked by the expected rising
rates.
But when the gap between the Treasury and the Fed left Telephone bonds
at 8.22%
while 30-year treasuries at 6.14% (5.38% a year earlier), investors
jumped
ship.
Moreover, even as the Nasdaq
suffered a substantial
correction, its impact on the wealth effect was not expected to be
total. Major investment banks had been
pitching to
high-tech/internet founders and early shareholders to hedge their
multi-million
dollar winnings to-date by signing away their future upsides to risk
investors. So, for many high-tech
swimmers, this amounts to second layer swimming trunks on which they
can depend
and not risk being caught naked when the tide receded suddenly. Unfortunately, much of the diversification
stay within the New Economy where high returns from capital gain could
be
achieved. It was the financial version of a flat-proved tubeless tire
that can
get the motorist to the next gas station or 30 miles (whichever is
closer) in
the event of a puncture. It does not,
however, guarantee the driver the existence of a gas station that has
not been
forced into bankruptcy within 30 miles. It
does not protect the motorist from a
systemic collapse. Greed always
neutralizes fear.
There was a near total
disconnect between the old and new
economies in 1999. The DJIA was falling,
according to analysts, because of investor disappointment over
earnings, which
would be further impacted adversely by rising interest rates. Yet the
Nasdaq
remains impervious to both interest rate hikes and
near-perpetual negative earnings.
Globally, other markets were
catching the Wall Street greed affliction. Hong
Kong, which traditionally followed US
markets because of its currency peg to the dollar and its exports
reliance on
US markets, saw the HSI shoot through 17,000 (coming from a low of
6,600 in
August 1997) while the DOW broke above 9,000, primarily because of a
tulip-like
hysteria on Internet startups and telephone mergers.
One grandmother in Hong Kong was reported to
have asked a 20-year-old broker what the Internet was while she was
writing out
a six-figure check to buy the IPO shares of an Internet startup. It was
not
likely that the company she was investing her retirement money in would
show a
positive cash flow in her life time. The
odds were that the longevity of the grandmother was greater than that
of the new
company.
Meanwhile, back in the US,
mutual funds were forced to
jettison their old fashioned balanced portfolios in favor of all tech
strategies. In one week in 1999, $1.6 billion additional went into high
tech
funds, $1.2 billion went into bio-tech, and $1 billion into aggressive
growth
funds. S&P 500-linked funds lost
investors. Greenspan made his famous "irrational exuberance" speech
at the Annual Dinner and Francis Boyer Lecture of the American
Enterprise
Institute for Public Policy Research in Washington, DC on December 5,
1996,
when the DJIA was at 6,437. On January 14, 2000, the DJIA peaked at
11,723, and
on March 16, 2000, the DJIA experienced its largest one-day point gain
in
history - 499.19 points - to close at 10,630.60. On April 14, 2000, 22
trading
days later, the DJIA plummeted 617.78 points, closing at 10,305.77 -
its
steepest point decline in a single day historically so far. This
volatility
came purely from speculative forces finance by debt. The economy did
not change
in 22 trading days.
Now, who are the investors in
the Old and New Economies? Institutions
such as pension funds and
endowment funds, are prevented by law or internal rules to detach
themselves
from broadly based portfolios, when “qualified investors”, those with
net worth
is over $2 million or more, depending on SEC definition, are the
investors in
the New Economy. Many who gained from the rise of the New Economy used
their
new wealth to acquire assets in the old economy at fire sale prices and
the
excess brought down both the Old and New Economies.
Investors in the Old Economy did not benefit
from the speculative rise of the New Economy, but they nevertheless had
to pay
for the losses.
Illustrating the merger of the
New and Old Economy, American
Online (AOL) announced on January 10, 2000, a merger with Time Warner
Inc,
paying $182 billion for the media giant. The offer from AOL, whose
market value
was $163 billion, valued Time Warner at a premium of $164.75 billion,
about
double the target company’s $83 billion market capitalization at the
close of
market trading. The Federal Communication Commission approved a $350
billion
merger between AOL and Time Warner a year later on January 19, 2001.
Two years
later, on January 30, 2003 AOL-Time Warner reported a $45.5 billion
quarterly
loss to account for the declining value of its flagship America Online
property, bringing the company to post an annual loss of nearly $100
billion,
the largest annual loss ever in corporate history.
From the start of 2002 until the
end of the same year, the
NASDAQ composite index fell 49.5%. The S&P 500 dropped 23% in 2002.
On
December 31, 2002, the NASDAQ was 80% below its peak in 2000. From 2001
through
March of 2003, the total number of civilian jobs rose only 0.3%,
against an
average annual increase of 2.4% during the 1990s. The US lost 1.5
million
non-farm jobs from 2001 to March 2003, a drop of 1.2%. Unemployment
rose to 6%.
What Greenspan did was to punish the general public by devaluing their
future
pension and cash flow, to pay for the sins of the aggressively
investing rich
who continue to add to their wealth with Greenspan’s blessing as long
as the
ill-gained riches from speculation are reinvested for more speculation
for more
ill gains.
The alleged "recovery" of the
stock market in 2003
- with the DJIA rising by 25% from its low in March, the Nasdaq rising
a
phenomenal 50 percent, the S&P 500 rising 26% and the Russell 2000
rising
45% - was tempered by the dollar falling 20% against the euro, 10%
against the
yen despite BOJ intervention, and a whopping 34% against the Australian
dollar
on rising demand on gold, iron ore and other commodities produced
there. This
explained why it was a jobless recovery.
On Greenspan’s 18-year watch,
GSE (Government Sponsored
Enterprises) assets ballooned 830%, from $346 billion to $2.872
trillion. GSEs
are financing entities created by Congress to fund subsidized loans to
certain
groups of borrowers such as middle and low-income homeowners, farmers
and
students. Agency MBS (mortgage-backed securities) surged 670% to $3.55
Trillion. Outstanding ABS (Asset-backed securities) exploded from $75
billion
to today’ more than $2.70 trillion. Greenspan
presided over the greatest expansion
of speculative finance in
history, including a trillion-dollar hedge fund industry, bloated Wall
Street
firm balance sheets approaching $2 trillion, a $3.3 trillion repo
market, and a
global derivatives market with notional values surpassing an
unfathomable $220
trillion. Granted notional values are not true risk exposures. But a
swing of
1% in interest rate on a notional value of $220 trillion is $2.2
trillion,
approximately 20% of US GDP.
Under Volker’s new operating
method in 1980, banks became
vulnerably exposed to risks that interest rates might suddenly and
drastically
go against even their short-term credit positions. Also, banks had been
expanding new loans beyond the growth of deposits, by borrowing
shorter-term
funds at lower interest rates. This practice was given the benign label
of
“managed liability”, allowing banks to profit from interest-rate
spreads over
the yield curve, which had seldom been allowed by the Fed to get
inverted, that
is, with short-term rates higher than longer-term rates. Because of the
large
size of outstanding long-term debts in the credit market, long-term
interest
rates are normally set by supply and demand. Moreover,
long-term debts are issued by the
Treasury and by private
enterprises, not by the Fed. The Fed’s
power over interest rates is limited to the overnight Fed funds rate
which
defines the annualized short-term cost of borrowings between banks.
This practice of borrowing
short-term at low interest rates
to lend long-term at higher interest rates, known as "carry trade" in
bank parlance, when globalized by deregulated cross-border flow of
funds,
eventually led to the Asian financial crisis of 1997 when interest-rate
and
exchange-rate volatility became the new paradigm. Today, there are
undeniable
signs that the same interest rate risks have infested the housing
bubble in
recent years. And the Fed’s traditional
gradualism, now revived as “measured pace” in raising the FFR targets
in
response to rapid asset price inflation has had little effect in
curbing bank lending
to fund rampant speculation. In recent
months, Greenspan has repeatedly denied the existence of a national
housing
bubble by drawing on the conventional wisdom that the US housing market
is
highly disaggregated by location, which is true enough.
Disaggregated markets are normally not exposed
to contagion, a term given to the process of distressed deals dragging
down
healthy deals in the same market as speculator throw good money after
bad to
try to stem the tide of losses. But the bubble in the housing market is
caused
by creative housing finance made possible by the emergence of a
deregulated
global credit market through finance liberalization. The low cost of
mortgages
lifts all house prices beyond levels sustainable by household income in
otherwise disaggregated markets. Under
cross-border finance liberalization, negative wealth effects from asset
value
correction are highly contagious. For example, the Dallas Fed Beige
Book
released on July 27, 2005 states: “Contacts
say real
estate investment is extremely high in part because the District’s
competitively-priced markets are attracting investment capital from
more
expensive coastal markets.” The
nation-wide proliferation of no-income-verification, interest-only,
zero-equity
and cash-out loans, while making financial sense in a rising market, is
fatally
toxic in a falling market, which will hit a speculative boom as surely
as the
sun will set. Since the money financing
this housing bubble is sourced globally, a bursting of the US housing
bubble
will have dire consequences globally.
Volker’s new operating method in
1980 greatly increased the banks’ risk
exposure to interest rate volatility. Volcker
also set an additional 8% reserve on
borrowed funds for lending,
on top of the normal 10% required, to curb the creation of money
through partial-reserve
banking lending and thus to slow the growth of the monetary aggregate.
In 1980,
the repos market was not a significant factor. A quarter of a century
later, a
2002 study by the NY Fed shows banks now appear to be managing their
cash
inventories less to comply with regulatory reserve minimums than to
meet
business needs with borrowed funds, mostly from the repo market.<>
In the age of finance
globalization, exchange rate movements
have become a critical channel through which monetary policy affects
the
economy, and they tend to respond promptly to a change in the provision
of
reserves and in interest rates. Information on exchange rates, like
that on interest
rates, is available almost continuously throughout each day in the repo
and
futures markets.
Interpreting the meaning of
movements in foreign exchange
rates, however, is not always straightforward. A decline in the foreign
exchange value of the dollar, for example, could indicate that monetary
policy
had become more accommodative, with possible risks of inflation. But
foreign
exchange rates respond to other influences, such as market assessments
of the
strength of aggregate demand or developments abroad. For example, a
weaker
dollar on foreign exchange markets could instead suggest lessened
demand for US
goods and decreased inflationary pressures. Or a weaker dollar could
result
from higher interest rates abroad—making assets in those countries more
attractive—that could come from strengthening economies or the
tightening of
monetary policy abroad. US inflation
rate has been held down by low-price imports. A fall in the exchange
value of
the dollar will lead to inflationary pressures in the US.
The distortion of the exchange rate of the
market by dollar hegemony is substantial.
Determining which level of the
exchange rate is most
consistent with the ultimate goals of policy can be difficult if not
impossible.
Selecting the wrong level could lead to a sustained period of deflation
and
high levels of economic slack or to a greatly overheated economy. As
the
Treasury views a strong dollar as a matter of national interest, the
exchange
rate of the dollar in an otherwise free market is viewed by the US as a
matter
of national security, on which the Fed is obliged by law to defer to
the
Treasury. Also, reacting in an aggressive way to exchange market
pressures
could result in the transmission to the US of certain disturbances from
abroad,
as the exchange rate could not adjust to cushion them. Consequently,
the Fed
does not have specific targets for exchange rates but considers
movements in
those rates in the context of other available information about
financial
markets and economies at home and abroad. However, the debt-driven US
economy
requires a strong dollar to keep foreign lenders from selling the
dollar debts
they hold. Exchange rate policy is set
by the Treasury as a matter of national economic security to which the
Fed is
obliged by law to support.
Knowing that, the Fed is
engaging in self-delusion when it
relies on a measured-paced interest rate policy to deal with a run-sway
debt
bubble sourced globally. For the Fed,
the debt bubble is already too big to burst. The only option is to keep
feeding
it albeit at a slower pace. The measured-pace interest rate policy is
merely an
attempt to slow the bubble’s rate of expansion, not to stop it, much
less to
burst it. But a measured-paced interest
rate policy will slow down the economy enough for a soft landing. It
will only
prolong the bubble for a bigger bang at the end. What
Greenspan did at Jackson Hole was to
give warning that the end is at hand.
Through mortgage-backed
securitization, banks now are mere
loan intermediaries who assume no long-term risk on the risky loans
they make,
which are sold as securitized debt of unbundled levels of risk to
institutional
investors with varying risk appetite commensurate with their varying
need for
higher returns. But who are
institutional investors? They are mostly pension funds who manage the
money the
working public depends on for retirement. In other words, the aggregate
retirement
assets of the working public are exposed to the risk of the same
working public
defaulting on their own house mortgages. When a home owner loses
his/her home
through default of its mortgage, the home owner will also lose his/her
retirement nest egg invested in the securitized mortgage pool while the
banks
stay technically solvent. That is the
hidden network of linked financial land mines in a housing bubble
financed by
mortgage-backed securitization to which no one is paying attention. The bursting of the housing bubble will act
as a detonator for a massive pension crisis.
Next: The Repo Time Bomb
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