Cliff Notes on Financial
Maelstrom
by
Jim Willie CB
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Jim Willie CB, editor
of the “HAT TRICK LETTER”
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positioned to rise during the ongoing panicky attempt to sustain an
unsustainable system burdened by numerous imbalances aggravated by global
village forces. An historically unprecedented mess has
been created by compromised central bankers and inept economic advisors, whose
interference has irreversibly altered and damaged the world financial system,
urgently pushed after the removed anchor of money to gold. Analysis features
Gold, Crude Oil, USDollar, Treasury bonds, and
inter-market dynamics with the US Economy and US Federal Reserve monetary policy.
As the financial markets stare at the abyss, contemplate the
cliff, suffering massive falls in selective stocks, a
review of ‘Cliff Notes’ might be appropriate. The financial maelstrom is
gathering force and fury. The Bear Stearns story has a story behind it, as
usual in the Grand Manhattan Den, where violent financial battles give false
appearances as desperate measures are played out behind the scenes. The drama
on Wall Street will make history. These guys are killing each other, while they
cooperate with each other. Like crows, they killed and devoured one of their
own.
BROKERAGE FIRMS REEL
Bear Stearns was fed to the wolves, an easy correct forecast
from last early autumn. Denials nowadays constitute confirmations, from mere
mention. Their refusal in 1998 during the LongTerm
Capital Mgmt bailout to act like a Wall Street team player was the hidden
motive to carve them into pieces. One must ask why last Friday it traded around
the $30/share price all day long after 10am.
The answer is easy, as they wanted to give insiders a chance to sell most of
the 186 million shares, a gift of $5 billion sure to anger many. My view is
that JPMorgan took its best assets at discount,
tossed much of the damaged assets into their Wall Street garbage can, which is
never emptied, never sees any balance sheet, blessed by the US Federal Reserve,
protected to new security laws. If Bear Stearns share holders reject the JPM
seizure takeover, then the gem Bear Stearns headquarter building in Manhattan
can be bought by JPM for a song. Actually, JPM might have only started the
bidding process, sure to result in JPM upping their own
bid. BStearns has (or had) 14 thousand workers, most
having been paid in stock share bonuses in recent months. The economy in New
York City is sure to be badly harmed, worse than
already. Wall Street jobs account for 35% of NYCity
wages.
The other story not told is that Bear Stearns was dissolved before
the wrecked investment bank had a chance to take advantage of the Term Security
Lending Facility. It will be made available by the USFed
at the end of March. The sleazy hogs on Wall Street wanted to remove one player
at that window. The other story not told is that a liquidation of Bear Stearns
would inevitably have resulted in a massive credit derivative meltdown. The
consequences cannot be estimated. The derivative upside down pyramid is mammoth. No precedent exists for its partial unwind or
dissolution. The pyramid holds together the entire USTreasury
complex, attached to interest rate swaps, attached to credit default swaps of
various types, and so on. This pyramid is leveraged 70 to 1. The talk is funny
though, since the USFed has backstopped only $30
billion in Bear Stearns securities. What about the other $800 to $1500 billion
rancid bonds floating within striking distance to Wall Street and major bank
balance sheets? In truth, we might later learn that Bear Stearns helped
to bail out JPMorgan, in helping to shore up its
credit derivatives, in providing some emergency collateral, soon to bust,
to prevent a JPMorgan failure!!! JPMorgan owns $7.778 trillion of credit derivatives, two
and half times as much as Citigroup, the same toxic stuff that crippled
Citigroup. JPMorgan skated on this one without
publicity.
The other story is that Bear Stearns CEO Alan Schwartz
assured just last week that all was well, liquidity was adequate, and the
company was in good shape. Enron CEO Ken Lay said the same thing. And lest
one forget, Enron and Bear Stearns have a common denominator in JPMorgan being a key player in the operations and agent
during the demise of the two firms.
JPM taught Enron everything they knew about offshore special purpose
entity firms, yet they escaped all legal challenges by losing clients in court.
When the USFed frees JPM from liability on any losses
from collateral submitted by Bear Stearns, one has to giggle since the USFed is JPMorgan. Think
consolidation of the best bond assets in JPMorgan’s
hands. Think more damage and consolidation upon the next victim, like Lehman
Brothers. Think building the Fed Reserve bank system. The Mussolini Fascist
Business Model might be opening a new chapter.

The XBD banker broker dealer stock index had a horrible day
on Monday, with some repair on Tuesday and Wednesday. The XBD stock index fell
11% in a visit to hell and back, rendering big technical damage to many
component stocks, especially Lehman Brothers. LEH fell by 19% on Monday.
Goldman Sachs was down 10% early in the day, closing down 4%. Citigroup lost
another 7% after being down almost 10%, UBS lost 11%, Morgan Stanley lost 8%, Merrill Lynch lost 4% after being down 8%. The stock
price action tells the wary observer to expect a challenge or near death
experience for Lehman Brothers, possibly worse. Their portfolio is similar
to Bear Stearns, only larger. The mortgage bond damage will next shift to the
prime adjustable mortgages, so reckless in their innovation. They will crater
this summer upon rate reset, victims of their own written time bombs. Thus the deserved name of Exploding ARMs.
Even USFed Chairman Bernanke
acknowledged last week that 40% of all mortgage defaults are prime, not subprime. On two days, the XBD broker dealers recovered
most of the loss. The broker dealers play a significant role, to manage the
execution of official policy, full of the requisite manipulation and corruption
of markets. See the management of the credit derivative pyramid, the gold
ambushes, the currency interventions, the collusion with the debt ratings
agencies, and even possibly the intimidation of the monoline
bond insurers to serve as the bagholders in the
historically unprecedented international sale of fraudulent mortgage bonds. Can
anyone defend against my claim that the Untied States upper echelons represent
institutionalized and protected dishonesty???

My warning quip to the idealists among us has been often used
lately, when people salivate over the prospect of chronic conmen suffering deep
losses, enduring insolvency, incapable of shame, yet almost certain to end up
in some form of bankruptcy. My stated line is “Beware when billionaires face
bankruptcy, since they make a phone call and change the rules. Often those
rules conflict with your strategy and plans.” This time the rules might be
concerning gathering wealth from strategies that oppose the defense of a
national financial integrity. This time those attempting to secure their wealth
and protect it from illicit national grabs and seizures might be labeled as
unpatriotic. This time the system has been virtually broken by decades of
destructive inflation, of misspent funds, of grand theft (see Fannie Mae and
military contractors), of encouraged abandonment of the manufacturing sector,
of destructive emphasis of a war economy footing, of irresponsible Medicare
guarantees, of harmful demographic shifts, and lately of incredibly deep bond
fraud. The bond fraud episode is the crowning finale of the US
banking system, with toxic outlets to most global banking centers. One might
wonder if it were planned.
REMINISCENT OF GREAT DEPRESSION
When Bear Stearns was dissolved and its assets rescued, the USFed and JPMorgan invoked a
feature of banking policies not used since the Great Depression. Too many other
comparisons can be made to that dreaded era. The bank insolvency is the biggest
commonality. The ability to print money, shovel printing press output from one
room to another easily, permit phony accounting of balance sheets, hide within
offshore subsidiaries, and extend the risk model to great heights, these are
new & better innovations not available 70 years ago. Well tragically, these
innovations are being unmasked as thin, flimsy, unable to withstand storms, and
possibly even fraudulent. As the stock market and bond market suffer blow
after blow, fail to stabilize, fail to recover, only to endure more breakdown
in the structure, memories come to the Great Depression, when recoveries only
led to deeper losses as the catastrophe unfolded. This time around, another
catastrophe is expected in a bank system meltdown, a bond system total seizure,
and a risk model system dissolved.
Amidst all this maelstrom, one must
ask if wisdom prevailed during the Clinton Administration to repeal the Glass Steagall Law from the Great Depression era. That law
created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp for insuring individual banks and
depositors, up to $100k per account. The law also blocked any attempt to merge
banks, brokerage firms, and insurance companies. The legislation intended to
protect a meltdown to spread to all critical structural elements of the
financial system. With the Glass Steagall repeal, one
has to wonder if some destruction was planned, or else a major consolidation
was the ultimate goal. My belief is firm, that powers in Old Europe and London
that control the USFed more than is publicly known
are restoring power back to Switzerland. They have resented the arrogant and
reckless US
bankers for two generations.
By the way, the FDIC insures bank accounts. But the SIPC
guarantees participating brokerage accounts up to a
$500k limit, plus $100k on cash accounts. People might soon hear more about
their stock protection if giant financial conglomerates go bust. Some stock
accounts might be frozen, as the courts sort it all out. When an SIPC member
becomes insolvent, SIPC will ask the court to appoint a trustee to supervise
the liquidation of firm assets and to process investor claims. Coverage of bank
and brokerage accounts will be a popular topic soon.
3 SCARY GRAPHS: BANKS, MONEY & HOUSEHOLDS
Some have asked in private emails whether the bigger the
bank, the safer their future. My answer is simple. The bigger the bank, the more
likely they are to hold a much riskier portfolio, and
thus the more likely their failure. Most big Wall Street banks and broker
dealers, along with a scattering of major US banks are in the same pickle, from
owning too many mortgage bonds and related credit derivatives leveraged from
them, even being saddled with bonds scheduled for interrupted private equity
deals. Bank assets have vanished. The neighborhood bank with branches of
operation only within a corner of their resident state is probably much more
insulated from the bond market debacle. They likely originated loans, own some,
but might have recycled most of them through Fannie Mae in order to continue to
earn fees on new loans. Some have asked if the USFed
can make unlimited number of bank bailouts, can refund on unlimited number of
mortgage bonds submitted by banks. Well yes, sure, but the accumulating risk to
the USDollar is being recognized and felt. The US$
decline is not done; it is going lower.

The US banking system is teetering at the precipice, the brink of
collapse. Almost two years ago, in the Hat Trick Letter, my forecast was
made crystal clear, that the housing crisis and mortgage debacle would topple
and destroy the US banking system, just like what happened to Japan in the 1990 decade.
The US banking system cannot withstand insolvency like the
stronger Japanese banking system, which survived temporarily as vampire
entities. Weekly events point to wrecked mechanisms in the US banking system. They will continue to worsen unfortunately.
The financial condition of institutions within the US banking system has gone critical, with core assets gone
negative. Total deposits held, free of borrowed USFed
reserves, have vanished. US banks have burned through their entire capital core,
melted down from disastrous mortgage portfolios, their bonds, and related CDO
leveraged bond derivatives. They must now rely upon borrowed reserves from the USFed in order to continue to function as lending
institutions. They have turned heavily to the USFed
Term Auction Facility and now the Term Security Lending Facility for resupplied capital. That is not injected, donated, free
money. It must be returned, or such is the plan. With the TSLF, the USFed now extends loans for AAA-rated mortgage bonds of
private vintage, not just Fannie & Freddie type. They expanded to $200
billion per month and 28 days in duration, with a lowered 3.25% borrowing rate,
and likely renewable feature. As we know, many AAA bonds are crappy. So banks
might be unloading some rancid meat. The masters who control the USFed cannot be happy.
The US banks by early December had about $43 billion in total
reserves. The current statement by the Federal Reserve offers a daily
average ‘Non-Borrowed Reserves’ at MINUS $20 billion. Worse, the Fed Reserve
estimates by early April that amount will be MINUS $60 billion. The US banks are living off borrowed money, and time. Be prepared
for some high profile bank failures, a process already begun. Home loan
defaults have combined with falling home collateral valuation to destroy
mortgage bonds and related securities to the extent that banks have lost their
entire capital. The only way to recover from this situation is for banks to
find a way to make a lot of money really fast. The time has grown urgent to inflate
rapidly, or else face an unstoppable chain reaction of bond failures followed
by bank failures. Big banks do not have adequate loan loss reserves set aside.
Money and wealth will be destroyed either from falling home portfolios and
mortgage bond values, from reckless lending and much fraud at all levels.
The shocking reality is that the
banking system has gone from a 10% reserve requirement to a minus 5%
requirement. Still too much bank capital is in illiquid overvalued bonds. The USFed is trying to increase the money supply faster than
banks can write down losses. Keep in mind what New York
University economics professor Nouriel Roubini says, “For every dollar loss of capital, you
reduce lending by ten dollars.” The Shadow Govt
Statistics folks do such great work in removing deceptive games and gimmicks. They
report the US$ money supply is growing at an annual 18.0% rate, March
2007 over March 2007. The sitting Secy of Inflation Bernanke, when
pressed in Congress recently to comment on the monetary inflation gone haywire,
simply said they monitor the Consumer Price Inflation only. Wow! Talk about
riding a horse while sitting backwards on the saddle! What a hack! What a lousy
cowboy!

Many standing loans
involve homeowners who owe a greater loan balance than the home is worth, the
home equity having evaporated. And home prices are heading lower. Chronicling
the Great American Tragedy, the New
York Times writes, “Not since the Depression has a larger share
of Americans owed more on their homes than they are worth. With the collapse
of the housing boom, nearly 8.8 million homeowners, or 10.3% of the total
are underwater. That is more than double the percentage just a year
ago.” To this date, USFed, Dept Treasury, and USGovt efforts have not accomplished much toward reversing
this trend. Tragically, of mortgages originated from 2006 onward in recent
vintage, 30% are now burdened by negative equity. The ratio of under-water
mortgages, those with negative equity, the ‘Upside Down’ loans, for these more
recent loans is forecasted to rise to more than 50%. The mortgages of older
vintage are also rising in their negative equity ratio. They are catching up to
the newer vintage home loans. The national housing foundation is going
underwater. Contrast with falling home values, which might not stabilize in
2008 as the graph shows. Note two different scales describe the two series.

The latest data on home foreclosures, delinquencies, late payments,
existing home inventory, new home inventory, and median home value does not
indicate in any manner whatsoever that the housing market has even remotely
stabilized. More mortgage bond pain and bank writeoffs
are to be expected by anyone not hindered by rose colored glasses, banker
public relations motives, or USGovt mental handicaps.
California and Florida continue to bear more than their share of
national foreclosures. The two states accounted for 30% of mortgages entering
the foreclosure process. Arizona and Nevada are sure to increase sharply in the next
couple quarters. The big new twist is voluntary foreclosures, abandonment of
homes and their loans, in direct response to running under-water with home
equity gone, perhaps negative. People are choosing not to service debt on a
deflating failed asset.
CENTRAL BANK INTERVENTION NEXT
As the USDollar continues to reel,
to decline to low levels never seen before, support does not exist. Clearly,
some form of central bank intervention is next. However, in order for such
extraordinary action to be effective and not futile, monetary policy must be
coordinated and cooperative. The major central banks must work together to
support the USDollar. They must cut official interest
rates in concert with the USFed. That means the Euro
Central Bank must agree to an official cut in its rigid interest rate. They
might employ an interim rate cut. Even a 25 basis point cut would be
significant. They must publicly state that they are defending against a rising
euro currency, and that price inflation will be a risk to stomach. The planned
goal would be to end the US$
decline. The extra benefit would be seen in the bond market and banking system,
from added liquidity and soon housing price stability. Without dispute, the
underlying problem is the housing crisis and price declines in collateral.
My attention is squarely focused on the Euro Central Bank,
which has the greatest potential to quickly change the awful sentiment plaguing
the USDollar. The USFed
just cut interest rates again by 75 basis points. The USDollar
had moved down in anticipation of this latest cut. The Bank of Canada has cut
twice its interest rate. The Bank of England has also cut its official rate,
only once, and surely will again. The Bank of Japan is talking about a rate
cut. But the Europeans are dominated by the Germans, who want no rate cut at
all. The Germans warned of the precise problems seen right now, do not wish to
fix a problem with more of the same actions that produced the problem, and
resent having to foot the bill during the aftermath of these problems.
The gold price will not stop at
the $1000 milestone. The silver price will not stop at the $20 milestone, and
will vastly outperform gold. The crude oil price might go below the $100
milestone briefly, but will return and shoot past the century mark. No no no!!! All are heading much higher, because the
banking problem is not to be soon fixed, the bond problem is not to be soon
fixed, the economy is not to be soon fixed, household distress is not to be
soon fixed. Maybe none can be fixed, even as money thrown at the problem
accelerates parabolically. The limited power of USFed solutions, and limited arsenal of devices to treat
the problem, will ensure that monetary inflation will be the main tool.
Still, adding liquidity in rescues, repairs, and bailouts is not seen as the
cause of the problem. It still is seen as the immediate solution. SUCH IS THE
HERESY THAT HAS DESTROYED THE US BANKING SYSTEM. They operate under an objective to
revitalize the housing market, and stop its price decline. They must enable the
bank system to become solvent. All that administered inflation means much more
gains to gold, silver, and even crude oil. Bigger problems than rising gold,
silver, and crude oil come if Consumer Price Inflation starts to grow without
bounds. The USTreasury Bond market will suffer heart
attacks, the beneficiary being gold, silver, and crude oil!!!
Remarkably, when the USFed was about to predictably cut the official interest
rate again, gold mysteriously got hit on Monday. On the day of the rate cut
Tuesday and the following day Wednesday, gold got hit again and the USDollar rallied. The Boyz were
busy. The smackdown of gold under $950 and of silver
under $19 only managed to remove and cleanse these two important metals markets
of their overbought situation. The Boyz have cleared
the path for gold to reach $1100 and for silver to reach $26. Nothing has been
solved yet on most critical battle fronts. The bigger moves up are yet to come!
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Jim
Willie CB is a statistical analyst in marketing research and retail
forecasting. He holds a PhD in
Statistics. His career has stretched over 25 years. He aspires to thrive in the
financial editor world, unencumbered by the limitations of economic
credentials. Visit his free website to find articles from topflight authors at www.GoldenJackass.com . For personal
questions about subscriptions, contact him at JimWillieCB@aol.com