Vive La France – the Road to Hyperinflation
By Peter Schiff
This week, as the financial sector began to give way under
the unbearable weight of bad mortgage debt, the Federal Reserve stepped in to
save the day. At least that’s what it
says in the script.
In a surprise move, the Federal Reserve announced its
intention to swap $200 billion of treasury debt for $200 billion of potentially
worthless mortgage-backed securities. The Fed may have been partially
spurred to take the step as a result of the rapid collapse of Carlyle Capital Corp. a publicly traded private equity
firm that is a subsidiary of the Carlyle Group. The Dutch firm could not
meet margin calls on its depreciating collateral of AAA-rated mortgaged-backed
securities guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. On Friday, the Fed
then took the unusual step of providing emergency “non-recourse” funding to
Bear Stearns, collateralized by that firm’s similarly worthless mortgage debt.
Apparently the Fed now stands willing to assume any mortgage-related risk that
no other private entity would touch.
That the Fed would take such extreme measures, which would
have been considered unthinkable even a few months ago, followed a few notable
media events that may have affected their thinking. On Monday, Wall
Street was rocked by an article in Barron’s that suggested that government
sponsored lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac lacked sufficient capital to cover
the likely losses on the $5 trillion in mortgages they insure (a position that
I have taken for years) and raised the possibility of either bankruptcy or a
government bailout. On CNBC the next day, Paul McCulley, the managing
director at Pimco, the world’s largest bond fund, publicly called for the Fed
to use it balance sheet and its printing press to buy mortgages.
According to the Fed, its new plan does not amount to buying
mortgages but simply accepting them as collateral for 28-day loans. However, will the Fed really return these
ticking time bombs to their true owners in 28 days, inciting the very collapse
its actions were originally designed to postpone? Why does the Fed believe that the mortgages
will be marketable next month; or the month after that? Nor can we
believe that such “loans” will be restricted to only $200 billion. Bear
Stearns and Carlyle are certainly not alone in massive exposure to bad debt. Given the unprecedented leverage that many of
the biggest financial firms used to play in this market, there will be many
more failures to come. Does the Fed
stand ready to bail out all comers? Based
on this course of action, the Fed, or more precisely American citizens, will
end up with trillions, not billions, of such securities on its books.
The problem with these mortgages (other than the borrowers
lacking any means or desire to repay them) is that the underlying collateral is
worth a fraction of the face amount. With recent foreclosure recovery
rates amounting to less than 50 cents on the dollar, it is no wonder that no
one wants them. The real estate bubble allowed borrowers to leverage themselves
to the hilt using inflated home values as collateral. However, now that
the bubble has burst, mortgage balances far exceed current property
values. It is a trillion dollar time bomb that no one can possible
defuse.
Paper dollars are technically Federal Reserve Notes, which
means they are liabilities of the Fed. When it puts newly minted notes
into circulation it does so by buying assets, usually U.S.
treasuries, which it then holds on its balance sheet to offset that
liability. By swapping treasuries for mortgages, the Fed effectively
alters the compilation of its balance sheet and the backing of its notes.
However, backing paper money with mortgages is nothing
new. The French tried it in the late 18th Century, and it lead
to hyperinflation. Assignats, which were first issued in 1790 to help
finance the French revolution, were backed by mortgages on confiscated church
properties. Although the stolen
underlying collateral did have some value, the revolutionaries saw no reason to
limit how many Assignats were printed, which resulted in massive depreciation.
Within three years, price controls were introduced and failure to accept
Assignats, initially an offence subject to six years in prison, was made a
capital crime. By 1799 the currency was completely worthless.
If even the threat of death could not prop up the Assignat,
does anyone believe that the currency could have been saved if Robespierre had
forcefully mouthed a “strong Assignat policy” as President Bush is now doing
with the dollar? Rather than repeating the mistakes of history we should
learn from them. Our own failed experiment with the Continental currency
as well as the Great Depression should prove conclusively that it is Austrian,
and not French, economics we should be following.
For a more in depth
analysis of our financial problems and the inherent dangers they pose for the
U.S. economy and U.S. dollar denominated investments, read my new book “Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse.” Click here to order a
copy today.
More importantly, don’t wait for
reality to set in. Protect your wealth
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