Sunday, March 29. 2009
Posted by Karl Denninger
in Editorial
at
15:01
« previous page (Page 2 of 16, totaling 78 entries) » next page Three Month Wrap-Up (1Q 2009)So here we have it, one quarter in the books (almost.) 2009 is shaping up to be an "interesting" year, in the form of the old Chinese curse - not the sort of "interesting" you want. I am going to focus on a few things; let's start with this graph that got posted over on the forum and was apparently excerpted from a Morgan Stanley report; it depicts the debt load and breaks it out (I've run a previous copy of a similar chart, but without the breakdown - this is much prettier) While GDP went from roughly $10 trillion to $14 trillion between 2000 and 2007 (I don't have a final 2008 number handy yet) debt grew much faster. But from this graph it is clear that the problem didn't start in 2000. In fact we came out of the historical "safe range" after the early 1980s recession, as the decision was made by government to start playing games with regulation and soundness not only for private citizens and corporate America, but for themselves as well. This sort of "fake prosperity" indeed looks real good and feels even better - for a while. I lived it, you lived it, we all lived it. I've spent a bit more than half my life living in this world, and indeed, life has been good. I have built businesses, sold one at a very nice profit, have been able to trade in the markets successfully and provide for my daughter, along with myself. But let's not kid ourselves - this "growth" was not real, and the above graph only speaks to the "on balance sheet" debt, ignoring the over $53 trillion in other liabilities that the government is carrying "off balance sheet" via Social Security and Medicare - obligations that have grown dramatically (and unsustainably) in the last 20 years. Anyone who has ever used a credit card (that would be most of us) knows how this works. If you walk into a store and buy a flatscreen TV for $1500, pulling out the plastic, you have taken an action that in fact has increased your cost of ownership of that television, not decreased it or kept it the same. Even if you pay it off at the end of the month, the store has paid a discount charge on your use of plastic (typically from 1-3%), and had you paid in cash you might have been able to negotiate for some or all of that as a lower price. Further it is inevitable that you will be eventually forced to either pay for the TV or go bankrupt. Many people played the "roll it over" game with credit cards for years, taking the balance on one card and rolling it to some new card before they had to pay it off. That game can continue for quite some time but eventually you reach the end of the rope where lenders will no longer finance this charade, and you're once again forced to cough it up or go under. Our government has become a machine to play "kick the can", but increasingly that can has been filling up with cement and it is moving a shorter and shorter distance with each kick. Eventually we will stub our toe. In 2000 had we taken our medicine the total contraction in GDP necessary to restore balance was approximately 10%, or $1 trillion dollars in net output that was being "pulled forward" via debt service, plus the embedded cost of interest. Today it has doubled as a direct consequence of our attempt to borrow and spend our way out of 2000-03 recession. While it appeared good initially, we bought only a few short years of apparent and false prosperity, instead digging an even deeper hole into which the average American has now descended. Government has learned exactly nothing from this; here are some excerpts from Tim Geithner this morning on "This Week". Note the contradiction:
The first part is right. But the second part isn't correct - it's a dodge for what was intentional misrepresentation of risk in instruments that the lenders knew were being mispriced.
Riiight. The very same Congress that passed Gramm-Leach-Bliley dismantling Depression-era regulations that would have prevented most of this silliness had they been in place? The very same Congress that has refused to rein in The Fed for effectively expropriating the power of appropriation that The Constitution gives exclusively to The House of Representatives? The very same Congress that not only allowed Henry Paulson to ramrod a bill through giving him plenary authority to spend $700 billion but when presented with hard proof that he knew full well prior to final passage that he did not intend to do with it what he had said with the first half, they let the other $350 billion out anyway?
You can't get there without reducing the debt back to sustainable levels. Levels that were sustainable and proved as such over the previous fifty years. Levels that are roughly half of where they are now. Levels that would require, with a constant GDP (ha!) the default or repayment of some twenty-five trillion dollars in debt!
That's a lie. In the 90s the so-called "strong growth" was based on a broadly-repeated lie about growth in Internet use, which led to unreasonable expectations and thus asset price appreciation. It was no more true than "houses always go up in price by 10% a year" was. And then we have this little ditty:
Cut the crap Tim. Its not credit, its debt. See the above graph? Go back and look again. The total debt in the system must contract, not expand, before we can have a durable and sound economic recovery. Yet everything this administration is doing is going to radically expand that debt - in fact, it will expand the total outstanding Federal debt by more than 10% this year alone, and 20% if you measure only against the public float (the correct measure.) Accountability? Where?
OUR NATION pursued a policy at all levels, public and private, of pulling forward demand and when the bill came due, we pulled it forward again. This is unsustainable as eventually that debt must be paid down or defaulted. We are here because of the policy that you are espousing here and now Mr. Geithner, along with your puppeteer President Obama. You, along with those who preceded you, believed that we could pull forward demand forever and never pay the check, continually rolling debt over and accruing the interest. Anyone with more than two firing neurons and a basic understand of mathematics knows that eventually you must face the music with such a policy. We are simply arguing over when that music will be faced, not if. In order to restore economic balance without massive defaults you would have to more than double GDP while not taking on one more dollar of new debt. That is obviously not going to happen, as put forward by President Obama's budget - in order to achieve that he would have to have promulgated a budget that was balanced, yet find a way while doing so to get GDP growth back on track and forsake private credit growth. But that's not what he did or what you're promoting. You are attempting instead to kick the can down the road one more time, and it will not work.
Why shouldn't those who "took on too much risk" suffer catastrophic damage? Why shouldn't the homeowner who lied about their income go bankrupt? Why shouldn't the bank who securitized debt with bought-and-paid-for ratings using fault models go bankrupt? Why shouldn't the bank that funded too much commercial development at insane (and blatantly unsupportable) cap rates go bankrupt? Why shouldn't those who refused to listen to people just like myself and a handful of others - who were warning years ago about the dangers of this sort of economic policy, both in writing and elsewhere, go bankrupt? The fact is that they should and must go bankrupt, because it is only through bankruptcy that this sort of behavior is punished by the marketplace and people are dissuaded from doing it again!
That's a flat lie. AIG could have been told "no money unless these contracts are renegotiated with a haircut." Indeed, GM and Chrysler were told this. "Here's some money, but if you don't get those haircuts negotiated in a reasonable amount of time, we're going to claw it back and you're going down the chute." AIG could have had the same stricture imposed. It wasn't, and I believe the reason it wasn't was to allow what amounted to a $100 billion dollar heist to be perpetrated upon the American Taxpayer without the knowledge or consent of Congress.
This is simply not true. Treasury could have conditioned the receipt of money by AIG originally on the haircutting of these contracts and could have conditioned the second "slug" of it as well. It also could, right here and now, today, use its 79.9% ownership stake in AIG to fire the entirety of the board and management in AIG, nationalize the firm entirely, and refuse to put one more dollar into the company until these contracts are renegotiated, forcing immediate defaults by putting the firm into receivership if the counterparties refuse. All of this is within the government's power, but it is more important to provide a backdoor bailout to certain banks than to protect the taxpayer's interest.
Oh yes it will Mr. Secretary, and much sooner than you think. Just not in a way you'll like. President Obama hasn't got his arms around the truth yet - or is simply unwilling to speak it:
Nope. That is exactly backward; the excessive debt must be paid down or defaulted and the economy must be re-based to a sustainable level of output predicated on actual production and ability to earn - that is, to spend what is earned, not what can be borrowed from someone who is a bigger sucker than you. The Atlantic ran a powerful article by a former chief economist for the IMF; the short version is contained in this quote:
Gee, you think? Then he comes out with what I have advocated all along:
Yep. And a warning....
Does that make it clear where my "doom and gloom" comes from? Do we have to wait for the full-on economic collapse before our government gets it? An increasing number of people who have seen this before, from bloggers like myself to economists at the IMF to people like Paul Krugman, have been and are sounding the alarm. Many of them have come around slowly to the reality of what we face, but come around they have. The math, my friends, is simply never wrong, no matter whether you would prefer to deny it or not. Simply put, once again:
We can do this the hard way or we can do this the catastrophic way, but whether we like it or not it will happen, because the mathematics of the situation make it inevitable - whether the government and "elites" like it or not. I will repeat what I said months ago - Barack Obama is our first Black President, and if he does not get his act together and stop this stupidity he is going to be our last President. Comments
Friday, March 27. 2009
Posted by Karl Denninger
in Politics
at
22:57
« previous page (Page 2 of 16, totaling 78 entries) » next page What's Disturbing About The Truth?Maybe someone can tell me what is "disturbing" about the following video:
I've watched it. Exactly what is "disturbing"? That our government works for us, and that the people have an unalienable right to enforce this fact? Ever read The Declaration of Independence, the document that led to the foundation of this nation? Let me help you:
Seems rather clear to me. That our Congress voted for the largest spending bill without reading it? That Congress was told (several times) to enforce our immigration laws and has refused? That illegal immigrants have no right to the common weal of our nation but Congress continues to insist that they do? That Congress was told (at a level of 300:1 against) to NOT pass the EESA/TARP, and they ignored us? That we the people indeed have spent our time watching American Idol and playing with consumer products bought with insoluble debt instead of discharging the duties of Citizenship? That citizenship is not a spectator sport, and that the Declaration above gives us as Citizens the absolute right, as a collective group of people, to march on Washington DC, peaceably assemble there and through non-violent means demand that all 535 clowns in the Capitol resign - refusing to leave or permit ordinary commerce in that city (again, through non-violent civil disobedience) until they do? That the people have every right to demand the redress called for in that video be passed as law and put into force - now? That if we the people do not demand the cessation of these abuses that we are on a path today that will, with mathematical certainty, lead to the ruin of our nation, the loss of civil and political order, and that you will need a firearm to defend your person and property from those who would take advantage of the loss of that civil order and, quite possibly, to prevent the formation a different government in that political vaccum that would be completely unrecognizable to those who have actually read our Constitution? All of the above are facts, not opinions. Perhaps - just perhaps - did a few tea bags show up in Washington DC? I along with many others have called for them to be sent. Our government exists only because we the people grant it power over our lives. This is not because government has rights - it is because our creator endowed us with unalienable rights, among them life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. If you don't believe this, you're not an American. Government in fact has no rights. All rights flow from creation, and government creates nothing. Government in fact steals for all it acquires, but we the people consent to that theft in the form of taxation so that order, as we direct, may flow from law. That is, government acquires privileges only as we the people direct, and we the people have the absolute right to revoke those privileges, in part or full, any time we the people so choose. The founding fathers not only understood this they were willing to die for it. Some of them, in fact, did. We the people today are indeed cowards in the main. Rather than demand that our government - OUR GOVERNMENT - do as we direct we instead returned nearly all of the representatives and senators who voted for the EESA/TARP against our explicit instruction to office in an election held just a couple of weeks later! Is it any wonder that Congress feels free to allow con men in the "banking industry", both foreign and domestic, to literally steal nearly $100 billion dollars of our money through a "bailout" of AIG, passed through the firm as a conduit to banks around the world? Is it any wonder that The Federal Reserve feels perfectly free to ignore strictures in its enabling legislation that prohibit it from holding equity stakes in assets of both AIG and the failed firm Bear Sterns, in the process (it appears) intentionally overpaying by $30 billion dollars? Is it any wonder that The Federal Reserve felt perfectly free to give the finger to an FOIA request filed by Bloomberg News seeking to determine who had been bailed out and with what funds, specifically? Is it any wonder that both Democrat and Republican candidates for President voted for the EESA/TARP - a bill that gave Henry Paulson plenary authority to spend $700 billion dollars we did not have, despite being told by their constituents - the population of this nation, by a 300:1 margin - to vote "NO" - and we, less than a month later, elected one of them President, despite the presence of other candidates on the ballots of all fifty states? Is it any wonder that when the first half of that money was spent in a form and fashion other than Mr. Paulson stated it would be that Congress felt perfectly comfortable in doing nothing about it - not even revoking authority to spend the second half of the funds? Is it any wonder that our government has felt "perfectly ok" more than doubling the public float of debt in The United States when one considers all pledged and funded bailout actions - events that have added more than eight trillion dollars of both funded and committed bailout monies to a public float that previously was six trillion? Is it any wonder that our Congress and our Judiciary has ignored the blatant acts of fraud in our financial system for more than ten years, including but not limited to the Appraisers Petition signed by thousands of independent property appraisers, the Madoff scandal which they were notified of more than a decade ago, the alleged fraud at Stanford which they also knew of, millions of fraudulent mortgage applications, cooked appraisals, credit default swaps written with no capacity to pay, naked (illegal) short selling, intentionally false rumors and massive insider trading linked to them, obvious leaks of confidential government activity (and trades placed upon that information) prior to its pubic release, and literally hundreds of firms who reported "profits" that in fact were the fruit of poisonous activity, calling into question whether these profits were ever actually earned? All this and much more occurred over the last twenty years, yet you can count on your fingers the number of actual and meaningful prosecutions of people from the top down that were involved in these outrageous acts that fleeced Americans to the tune of trillions of dollars. None of these things are, or should be "wonders". We've been too busy watching American Idol to be bothered with discharging our duties of citizenship in The United States. Citizenship is not a spectator sport, and we the people have been called out - and found wanting. If you want to keep your nation, America, it is long past the time when you should be off your duff and making clear to your government that this sort of blatant fraud, theft and corruption will not be tolerated, it will stop, and that each and every person responsible will be indicted, tried, and if convicted go to prison - right here and now - no matter how "well-connected" they are. Period. Comments
No comments
Friday, March 27. 2009
Posted by Karl Denninger
in Editorial
at
16:47
« previous page (Page 2 of 16, totaling 78 entries) » next page Dylan Ratigan And CNBCIt has come to my attention that Dylan Ratigan has "severed" his relationship with CNBC, and rumors are flying that it was over a difference of opinion with management. A quick check of the web shows that Fast Money no longer lists him as part of the team. I called CNBC's Public Relations Department this morning when I first got wind of this perhaps being the case to make sure they were aware of my considered opinion that Mr. Ratigan was one of the few reasons to watch their network, as he has been one of the few people who has been willing to take on the "mis statements", question the "conventional wisdom" and raise hell when appropriate - such as his recent rants about AIG being apparently used as a conduit for US Taxpayer funds to banks, a subject that has now drawn the attention of NY Attorney General Mr. Cuomo who is investigating (as he is charged with) whether laws have been violated. Whatever the circumstances surrounding Mr. Ratigan's separation from CNBC, the fact remains that CNBC has a well-deserved reputation among many in the investing community, including Ticker readers and Tickerforum users, of being a "pumper's channel", refusing, for the most part, to present the markets and news related to them in an even-handed manner. This is not a new view or belief, and indeed, if one were to go back and view their coverage "objectively" in 2006, 2007 and the first part of 2008, I believe it would be flatly impossible in light of the outcome of events in the markets to characterize their coverage as "balanced", "even-handed" or, for that matter, even in the category of "journalism." Mr. Ratigan was the notable exception to that commonly-held belief in my opinion, and CNBC will be much the poorer for the loss of his talent and refusal to do other than call 'em as he saw 'em. In addition I have noted a rather interesting change of tone in Rick Santelli's reporting over the last couple of weeks. I can only speculate on who applied a jackboot to his neck - and shake my head in sad acceptance of his decision not to provide a one-finger salute in response. Journalism is not about parroting a party line or being "polite." The entire purpose of journalism, and the reason we have a First Amendment, is to expressly permit and encourage the exposure of those events and words that others would prefer remain hidden. After all, nobody ever tries to censor speech that they do not find offensive. While the blogging community has picked up the torch of expositive journalism to a large degree, it is an affront to the public rights of way and airwaves over which both cable and over-the-air TV operate when repression of investigative reporting and exposition of believed wrong-doing is driven from those public resources as a consequence of corporate or political pressure. This much I can tell you - there will be one fewer television tuned to CNBC as a consequence of this event - mine. I wish Mr. Ratigan the best in his future endeavors, and as for CNBC, perhaps this is the beginning of the disintegration of their sorry franchise. Hope springs eternal. Comments
No comments
Friday, March 27. 2009
Posted by Karl Denninger
in Regulatory
at
10:34
« previous page (Page 2 of 16, totaling 78 entries) » next page WayBack Machine: HellFire CallHere's an interesting article:
That's Gramm-Leach-Bliley, which dismantled Glass-Steagall. Some quotes:
Larry Summers eh? Oh, you mean the stooge in Obama's Cabinet? Yes, him.
Funny how we waited until everyone who went through that special Hell known as "The Depression" were dead, then we simply rode roughshod over what they taught us and declared them "fools."
Uh huh Mr. Gramm. Like your "mental recession" Mr. Gramm? Freedom is the answer, but freedom does not include freedom to defraud, whether it is the fraud of a borrower overstating his income, the fraud of a ratings agency being "bought" or the fraud of an investment bank selling what it represents are "perfectly good" securities out the front door while shorting them on its prop desk in the next room.
And now we get to learn them again!
Citibank, Bank America, Wells Fargo, Wachovia, Washington Mutual, IndyMac, Downey Savings and Loan. Need I go on?
History, ten years hence, has now played out. Who was correct? There is a special place in Hell for the architects and supporters of this legislation, and if we learn one thing from this, it is that we need to put Glass-Steagall back into place and repeal this piece of legislative dog squeeze. Oh, and while you're at it, look at when that law was passed, and who signed it. 1999 - right at the peak of The Internet Bubble, and President Clinton put his signature to that piece of paper. So much for "it was all Bush's fault". Comments
No comments
Friday, March 27. 2009
Posted by Karl Denninger
in Regulatory
at
09:15
« previous page (Page 2 of 16, totaling 78 entries) » next page Geithner: Fix The CDS Mess!Geithner is unwilling to ban credit-default swaps eh?
That's fine. All I have wanted, and all that is necessary to stop the stupidity, is:
End of problem. For those firms that cannot prove capital adequacy by posting margin their positions are immediately liquidated against them, exactly as happens with a margin call in other instruments. I have been calling for this since April of 2008 again in May of 2008 and in many other Tickers since. Cut the crap Timmy. If you have any intention of resolving this matter and preventing the further looting of the American Taxpayer, you will correct this problem right here and now. You know exactly how to accomplish it. Comments
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