Yes, if you are in the right shoes in America, you are Free from the Law, Free from Responsibility and you get a Free Ride on the Capitalist Train that keeps you Free of Any Consequences for reckless action. This truly is the Capitalist Playground of the Earth where you can recklessly dupe hundreds of billions of dollars from any source that is stupid enough to play with you and it is all considered Clean Fun and be Dammed if your actions destroy lives, are detrimental to society or bankrupt companies leaving your customers out billions of dollars.
Yes, America is a great land and a place for every punk ass spoiled 72 degree pig that gets an ivy league education to rob, steal, cheat or by any other means rake out as much money from the rest of the ignorant ass working stiff who could not define the word "market" if they had $100,000 sitting in a suitcase in front of them.
I don't think there is a nation on the planet where the populace has their every move dictated by the whims of the corporate super citizens that operate around them stealing as much from them as humanly possible while at the same time canceling any voting "authority" they may have, all with complete impunity.
Here you go. In brief, Corzine is off Scott Free by Department of "Justice" (what a joke of a name for the institution, it should be renamed "Department of Ivy League Values Superimposed on Those Without the Money or Power or Knowledge to Know the Difference") even though the Commodities Futures Trading Commission has filed "civil" charges against him successfully.
Yes the CFTC can use evidence like: "To support the allegations, the CFTC used a recorded telephone conversations to support their charges that Corzine was fully aware of the transfers."
But the DOJ does not have enough evidence. The God Damn Defence Department has recorded damn near everything since 2007, before the "Financial Crises" really hit the fan, but nobody, I mean NOBODY has any evidence to charge anyone "criminally" for anything that happened. Yea, just pay some "fines" and go about raping the country my man.
God Bless America...
Showing posts with label financial crises. Show all posts
Showing posts with label financial crises. Show all posts
Monday, July 08, 2013
Saturday, July 03, 2010
Broken Financial Market
I have a desire to completely do away with “unregulated markets” of all kinds and “unregulated financial derivatives” of all kinds. In a world with over 6 Billion people, highly interconnected and mutually destined to live the same fate, there no longer exist any positive human element to Trillions of Dollars swathing around betting for or against any asset class or created asset class with the sole objective of raking as much money out of the global financial system as possible irrespective of the consequences of their actions on the lives, destinies or wellbeing of the human beings their actions touch.
These unregulated institutions function outside of the regulatory structures of any nation, global governing body, or regulated institutions, answer to no person or persons in any jurisdiction with which they operate and seek to make money irrespective of their impact on the human beings they may have positively or negatively. They need to be eliminated or regulated. They need all funding by regulated financial institutions to be terminated. Their products need to be liquidated. We need them no more.
All 401k accounts should go to cash now and stay in cash until the government fixes our vastly broken "free market" system. With thousands of people employing ever sophisticated technology with the sole purpose of taking as much cash out of the "free markets" and putting it in their pockets (clearly 60-80% of all volume in the "regulated markets" is being dictated by institutional traders, unregulated money), it is unwise for any hard working American to even contemplate putting money into this very broken system. I fear a entire generation of poverty stricken retirees within the next 5 years once again asking for a federal bail out of their worthless retirement accounts.
These unregulated institutions function outside of the regulatory structures of any nation, global governing body, or regulated institutions, answer to no person or persons in any jurisdiction with which they operate and seek to make money irrespective of their impact on the human beings they may have positively or negatively. They need to be eliminated or regulated. They need all funding by regulated financial institutions to be terminated. Their products need to be liquidated. We need them no more.
All 401k accounts should go to cash now and stay in cash until the government fixes our vastly broken "free market" system. With thousands of people employing ever sophisticated technology with the sole purpose of taking as much cash out of the "free markets" and putting it in their pockets (clearly 60-80% of all volume in the "regulated markets" is being dictated by institutional traders, unregulated money), it is unwise for any hard working American to even contemplate putting money into this very broken system. I fear a entire generation of poverty stricken retirees within the next 5 years once again asking for a federal bail out of their worthless retirement accounts.
Sunday, October 25, 2009
The Financial "Crises" is Not Over
I have been reading my weekend section of the FT this afternoon and came across two unrelated articles that struck a chord with me with respect to the financial markets. Some items that are notable, 1) Treasuries, since the credit crises, have been the only acceptable collateral in the "repo market" 2) There are still non financial companies out there that are writing off huge losses in derivative "investments" that are way out of proportion to the revenues they had as functioning companies, making me think more non-financial companies than I originally thought got hood-winked by Wall Street into derivative positions way out of line with the regular functioning of their business.
So what does this mean?
First, the huge demand for US Government debt over the last year, despite a normal economic view that any nation running the kinds of reckless borrowing and printing of money the US has been would make rational investors run the other way, is a direct response to the fact that only treasures are being accepted as collateral in the global credit markets and the US Dollar is "reserve currency" by default. Hence, there is a very large demand component to treasuries that is unrealistic, unsustainable, unhealthy and explainable only within the context of the crash of the credit markets. Low US interest rates cannot be sustained much longer without GREAT cost to our financial system, as we know it. The Trillions of dollars in subsidies being offered by the Fed to the credit markets make the billions of dollars of reckless subsidies to say gasoline in Iran or bread in Egypt look like paltry handouts, yet those subsidies are often referred to as dangerous to those countries balance of payments and government debt ratios. Go figure.
Second, after seeing companies like chicken producer Pilgrims Pride go bankrupt largely due to derivative contracts in corn which went bad costing them millions, I realized that real companies that produced real products were pulled into the derivative markets (along with investment funds like Harvard University's Endowment) with promises from Wall Street Firms to "hedge" their operations at levels that were completely out of context with the needs to do so in their every day operations. So when I read that GM, the Bankrupt now Government owned US Automaker, just pumped $413 Million (Won 491 Billion) into it's Korean joint venture with Daewoo, called GM Daewoo, after GM Daewoo had it's "entire equity base (cash) wiped out by Won 2.3 Trillion of currency derivatives losses", I realized this problem has not gone away.
So how do these two seemingly unrelated articles jog my brain? Well, first, I have presumed for some time that the increasingly oligopolistic nature of American business does some things well. They become extremely inefficient and difficult to manage but hugely profitable due to their purchasing power with very large scale orders(evident by the ability of these companies to lay huge amounts of their work force and turn out higher profits with lower revenues); they are entirely responsible for driving manufacturing out of the US with their desire to constantly lower the cost of inputs to meet needs for quarterly profits; they become faceless, unwieldy and largely wrapped up in getting as large as possible by squeezing out any and all competitive elements while colluding with the other oligopoly members on pricing; the collective "tax" these companies call "profits" begin to look like a tax because no longer are these companies benefiting their many individual owners and pools of investors like when there are many players of all sizes in an industry, but these companies start to look like mini socialist governments, taxing their "customers" with fixed prices, lying to, cheating and outright stealing from their customers (at least 1 out of every 3 grocery store visits I make I have to return and get a refund on an item that was overcharged at the register); paying exorbitant salaries to the "apparatchik" (crony insiders) selected to run the organizations; paying their "workers" lower and lower wages and most importantly, generating HUGE amounts of cash which then must be "invested"; the cash generated is so large only Wall Street firms have the wherewithal to handle the money.
This is where Wall Street and Hedge Funds come in. Where does all the cash generated by these oligopoly companies go? It appears much of it found it's way into the same esoteric products that financial and insurance companies were buying and selling which means huge losses on the books of some companies. This is truly where Wall Street hits Main Street and it is only possible when Main Street has become an oligopolistic town with profits large enough to play with the big boys in New York and Off Shore. Now even these huge companies, which have shown a great penchant for halting internal "investment" and "growth plans", cutting dramatically their "inventory levels", laying off huge numbers of employees and hence creating very large cash balances, need to "play it safe" and buy treasuries as there is uncertainty in the economy and lack of any other "instrument" to invest in due to the collapse in the credit markets. The lack of liquidity from “productive industry” (those who make and sell tangible products) in the US is further exasborating the crises and forcing the Fed to offer more support then would otherwise have been needed.
I sense a great deal of resentment building towards the dollar and treasury markets by countries forced to continue to hold both when they know it is no longer economically wise to do so.
I sense companies are going to continue to accumulate cash and hence buy treasuries as a cushion to a potential continued decline in the economy.
I assume there are still huge amounts of esoteric derivative products on the books of many a financial institution (and otherwise) that are basically worthless but being recorded as having value to avoid a collapse in the institutions.
I assume everyone knows these worthless assets are worthless but have stopped pressing for more collateral because there is no more collateral so nobody sees any benefit in continuing to bleed a turnip dry since losses on one party's books simply reverberate into losses in everyone else’s as well.
I figure, there is no near term end to the financial crises because it will take years for all of the worthless paper to be "wound down" so to speak while companies try to "earn" their way out of the financial mess.
What does all this mean? Is somebody going to blink? The markets now only have to drop 100 points for every man in Washington to find a podium and announce a new "program" or "reinforce their support" of the credit markets or "ensure no change in liquidity or interest rates" or whatever to "calm" the markets so they can continue their rise straight out of the stratosphere. It used to take Paulson 300 points to do the same. One needs little more evidence that the smoke screen being sold the public by the media conglomerates and PR spinsters in Washington is a total lie.
The global financial system is still a complete mess. Wall Street is celebrating every time a company "beats" some arbitrary analyst "prediction" of how much earnings and profits would drop over last year. Yes "drop" over last year. So if my profits are only down 18% and revenues down 10% when the street was looking for profits down 20% and revenues down 12% then my stock is going to a 52 week high! Yes I can celebrate that my stock is worth as much as in early 2008 even though my company is doing 30% or so less business than January 2008.
This is all liquidity driven. I love seeing the CNBC pundits all acting like everything is normal again. They talk stocks and earnings like the credit crises never happened. There is no need to discuss the fact that the Fed IS the Residential Mortgage Market, Commercial Mortgage Market, Consumer Credit Market, Student Loan Market, Auto Finance Market not to mention the other myriad of "support systems" in place to keep other markets from crumbling. The interest rates we are all paying on our credit cards, mortgages, and auto loans are all massively subsidized right now by the Fed and FDIC. The rates are COMPLETELY divorced from "market reality" which to an economic minded person like me no longer resembles "reality" at all.
Companies still being brought to their knees by bad derivative bets; trillions of dollars in "assets" on the books of thousands of banks, companies and hedge funds that are in the best case scenario worth $.30 on the dollar; hundreds of billions of dollars in government debt being sold every couple weeks by the Fed to finance the massive stimulus and deficit spending by the government being soaked up by institutions with no where else to turn to put their dollars; commodity prices completely divorced from economic demand realities; stock market valuations 20-40% elevated from fundamental realities, what does this mean?
Simple, we are seeing global inflation of ALL dollar-based assets, which is reflecting as we speak the massive loss in purchasing power of the dollar. Yet the dollar itself is only marginally off against a basket of currencies from last year's dramatic fall then rise again and the Fed is telling us that consumer prices in the US are stable to falling. How much longer can the relative value of the US Dollar maintain stability while the amount of dollars needed to purchase all commodities priced in dollar continues to rise?
If the US economy faces a second dip and other countries economies follow, especially the few developing nations that have held up relatively well during this latest recession, the underlying demand for commodities priced in dollars would drop further putting downward pressure on the price, but will this result in an actual drop in the dollar price of these assets or will the dollar price for commodities simply continue to rise as institutions increasingly seek to get out of their dollars by buying other assets?
This is the big money question. How far will the equity markets rise before someone decides to take his or her cash out in a big way? With all these dollars floating around now and the obvious inflation in the price of every global asset priced in dollars, the absolute dire state of the credit markets has held the Fed's hand in removing liquidity and getting interest rates back to normal levels. Where is the break point?
Removing liquidity will force reckoning by all those firms with worthless assets on their books and could put credit markets back in crises mode. Not removing liquidity is causing the inflation of all dollar-based assets globally. We are paying a huge, unrecognizably destructive price for being both the global reserve currency and the source of the global financial crises. We screwed ourselves and everyone else and there is no turning back. By not allowing the markets to work out the derivative driven credit crises, not matter how immediately painful it would have been, we have simply delayed the inevitable market correction while simultaneously created a new asset bubble fed by to many dollars floating around. The next move will be a double whammy. I cannot wait.
So what does this mean?
First, the huge demand for US Government debt over the last year, despite a normal economic view that any nation running the kinds of reckless borrowing and printing of money the US has been would make rational investors run the other way, is a direct response to the fact that only treasures are being accepted as collateral in the global credit markets and the US Dollar is "reserve currency" by default. Hence, there is a very large demand component to treasuries that is unrealistic, unsustainable, unhealthy and explainable only within the context of the crash of the credit markets. Low US interest rates cannot be sustained much longer without GREAT cost to our financial system, as we know it. The Trillions of dollars in subsidies being offered by the Fed to the credit markets make the billions of dollars of reckless subsidies to say gasoline in Iran or bread in Egypt look like paltry handouts, yet those subsidies are often referred to as dangerous to those countries balance of payments and government debt ratios. Go figure.
Second, after seeing companies like chicken producer Pilgrims Pride go bankrupt largely due to derivative contracts in corn which went bad costing them millions, I realized that real companies that produced real products were pulled into the derivative markets (along with investment funds like Harvard University's Endowment) with promises from Wall Street Firms to "hedge" their operations at levels that were completely out of context with the needs to do so in their every day operations. So when I read that GM, the Bankrupt now Government owned US Automaker, just pumped $413 Million (Won 491 Billion) into it's Korean joint venture with Daewoo, called GM Daewoo, after GM Daewoo had it's "entire equity base (cash) wiped out by Won 2.3 Trillion of currency derivatives losses", I realized this problem has not gone away.
So how do these two seemingly unrelated articles jog my brain? Well, first, I have presumed for some time that the increasingly oligopolistic nature of American business does some things well. They become extremely inefficient and difficult to manage but hugely profitable due to their purchasing power with very large scale orders(evident by the ability of these companies to lay huge amounts of their work force and turn out higher profits with lower revenues); they are entirely responsible for driving manufacturing out of the US with their desire to constantly lower the cost of inputs to meet needs for quarterly profits; they become faceless, unwieldy and largely wrapped up in getting as large as possible by squeezing out any and all competitive elements while colluding with the other oligopoly members on pricing; the collective "tax" these companies call "profits" begin to look like a tax because no longer are these companies benefiting their many individual owners and pools of investors like when there are many players of all sizes in an industry, but these companies start to look like mini socialist governments, taxing their "customers" with fixed prices, lying to, cheating and outright stealing from their customers (at least 1 out of every 3 grocery store visits I make I have to return and get a refund on an item that was overcharged at the register); paying exorbitant salaries to the "apparatchik" (crony insiders) selected to run the organizations; paying their "workers" lower and lower wages and most importantly, generating HUGE amounts of cash which then must be "invested"; the cash generated is so large only Wall Street firms have the wherewithal to handle the money.
This is where Wall Street and Hedge Funds come in. Where does all the cash generated by these oligopoly companies go? It appears much of it found it's way into the same esoteric products that financial and insurance companies were buying and selling which means huge losses on the books of some companies. This is truly where Wall Street hits Main Street and it is only possible when Main Street has become an oligopolistic town with profits large enough to play with the big boys in New York and Off Shore. Now even these huge companies, which have shown a great penchant for halting internal "investment" and "growth plans", cutting dramatically their "inventory levels", laying off huge numbers of employees and hence creating very large cash balances, need to "play it safe" and buy treasuries as there is uncertainty in the economy and lack of any other "instrument" to invest in due to the collapse in the credit markets. The lack of liquidity from “productive industry” (those who make and sell tangible products) in the US is further exasborating the crises and forcing the Fed to offer more support then would otherwise have been needed.
I sense a great deal of resentment building towards the dollar and treasury markets by countries forced to continue to hold both when they know it is no longer economically wise to do so.
I sense companies are going to continue to accumulate cash and hence buy treasuries as a cushion to a potential continued decline in the economy.
I assume there are still huge amounts of esoteric derivative products on the books of many a financial institution (and otherwise) that are basically worthless but being recorded as having value to avoid a collapse in the institutions.
I assume everyone knows these worthless assets are worthless but have stopped pressing for more collateral because there is no more collateral so nobody sees any benefit in continuing to bleed a turnip dry since losses on one party's books simply reverberate into losses in everyone else’s as well.
I figure, there is no near term end to the financial crises because it will take years for all of the worthless paper to be "wound down" so to speak while companies try to "earn" their way out of the financial mess.
What does all this mean? Is somebody going to blink? The markets now only have to drop 100 points for every man in Washington to find a podium and announce a new "program" or "reinforce their support" of the credit markets or "ensure no change in liquidity or interest rates" or whatever to "calm" the markets so they can continue their rise straight out of the stratosphere. It used to take Paulson 300 points to do the same. One needs little more evidence that the smoke screen being sold the public by the media conglomerates and PR spinsters in Washington is a total lie.
The global financial system is still a complete mess. Wall Street is celebrating every time a company "beats" some arbitrary analyst "prediction" of how much earnings and profits would drop over last year. Yes "drop" over last year. So if my profits are only down 18% and revenues down 10% when the street was looking for profits down 20% and revenues down 12% then my stock is going to a 52 week high! Yes I can celebrate that my stock is worth as much as in early 2008 even though my company is doing 30% or so less business than January 2008.
This is all liquidity driven. I love seeing the CNBC pundits all acting like everything is normal again. They talk stocks and earnings like the credit crises never happened. There is no need to discuss the fact that the Fed IS the Residential Mortgage Market, Commercial Mortgage Market, Consumer Credit Market, Student Loan Market, Auto Finance Market not to mention the other myriad of "support systems" in place to keep other markets from crumbling. The interest rates we are all paying on our credit cards, mortgages, and auto loans are all massively subsidized right now by the Fed and FDIC. The rates are COMPLETELY divorced from "market reality" which to an economic minded person like me no longer resembles "reality" at all.
Companies still being brought to their knees by bad derivative bets; trillions of dollars in "assets" on the books of thousands of banks, companies and hedge funds that are in the best case scenario worth $.30 on the dollar; hundreds of billions of dollars in government debt being sold every couple weeks by the Fed to finance the massive stimulus and deficit spending by the government being soaked up by institutions with no where else to turn to put their dollars; commodity prices completely divorced from economic demand realities; stock market valuations 20-40% elevated from fundamental realities, what does this mean?
Simple, we are seeing global inflation of ALL dollar-based assets, which is reflecting as we speak the massive loss in purchasing power of the dollar. Yet the dollar itself is only marginally off against a basket of currencies from last year's dramatic fall then rise again and the Fed is telling us that consumer prices in the US are stable to falling. How much longer can the relative value of the US Dollar maintain stability while the amount of dollars needed to purchase all commodities priced in dollar continues to rise?
If the US economy faces a second dip and other countries economies follow, especially the few developing nations that have held up relatively well during this latest recession, the underlying demand for commodities priced in dollars would drop further putting downward pressure on the price, but will this result in an actual drop in the dollar price of these assets or will the dollar price for commodities simply continue to rise as institutions increasingly seek to get out of their dollars by buying other assets?
This is the big money question. How far will the equity markets rise before someone decides to take his or her cash out in a big way? With all these dollars floating around now and the obvious inflation in the price of every global asset priced in dollars, the absolute dire state of the credit markets has held the Fed's hand in removing liquidity and getting interest rates back to normal levels. Where is the break point?
Removing liquidity will force reckoning by all those firms with worthless assets on their books and could put credit markets back in crises mode. Not removing liquidity is causing the inflation of all dollar-based assets globally. We are paying a huge, unrecognizably destructive price for being both the global reserve currency and the source of the global financial crises. We screwed ourselves and everyone else and there is no turning back. By not allowing the markets to work out the derivative driven credit crises, not matter how immediately painful it would have been, we have simply delayed the inevitable market correction while simultaneously created a new asset bubble fed by to many dollars floating around. The next move will be a double whammy. I cannot wait.
Sunday, February 22, 2009
Finally an "Authority" Advocates Re-regulation
I was in University in the late 1980's and early 1990's studying economics at the University of Maryland when I was faced with two options, grow the company I started or pursue my masters in Economics with my thesis being the need for an international financial regulatory authority. At the time I had lofty ideas of becoming a global economic guru who would advocate the abandonment of the archaic, inefficient, unfair, and destructive way economics was dealt with on an international level. Human beings had managed to create highly sophisticated financial "systems" and global financial "markets" that were rapidly evolving but unfortunately the perspective of human beings was Neanderthalistic.
I had the benefit of studying Economics during the collapse of the S&L industry in the US along with a real estate bust, junk bond market implosion and fairly severe recession. I also was a "student" of economics and finance through real world experience and investing from 1981 which allowed me to experience the severe 1982 recession in the US, the Latin American debt crises, gold price explosion and implosion, oil price implosion and the first destructive false economic "growth" experiment of supply side economics by the Reagan Administration (accompanied by military welfare spending and enemy creation) and brilliantly orchestrated junk bond bubble and accompanying corporate buy out craze.
It was obvious to me during my studies we had a systematically flawed economic model functioning on a national and global scale and there were no way the idiots with ass backwards motivations who ran this model and all of its intuitions would be able to do anything that would be a net benefit to humanity. The same holds true today.
So I had the absolute pleasure of reading this article today on Marketwatch about what Henry Kaufman thinks of the global mess we are in.
Notably his statement:
And his further remarks:
Yes it pleases me greatly to know I was thinking ahead of this smart man. In fact what his article brings to mind were the few (far to few when I think back) conversations I had when I took the liberty of knocking on the door of one of my professors from time to time to ask their opinion of what was happening in the "real economic world" outside of the somewhat antiquated textbooks I had to study with.
If I had a chance to do it all over again I am still not sure I would have taken the path of furthering my economics education instead of pursuing my business. I was very turned off by the bureaucratic and pathetic "counseling" at the state university. When I initially inquired about the masters program they looked at my completed transcripts and suggested I had 2 semesters of classes that were required just to apply (I was like, why in the hell didn't you spell that out when I started my major, idiot?) and the fact that the University of Maryland for all it's efforts was basically churning out graduates to fill a cube at the Department of Labor crunching boring ass stats for yet more bureaucrats. Economics was going through it's "mathematicization" phase and I did not see the subject in the same light.
Perhaps this has something to do with the mess we are in now. Not unlike the "magic" of any idiot being able to create an impressive business plan and financial projection with the wider use of computers and the newly accessible spreadsheet programs in the 1980's that in my view had a great impression on the flow of money then, the movement of Economics by people determined to make it more of a "science" through the use of statistics, mathematics and computer models totally devalued what I saw as the beauty of economics as a social science that could have better application using some of the emerging technologies but not for those technologies to "take over" the discipline in entirety.
I strongly believe the current crises once again came greatly by application of sophisticated mathematics and technology in the creation of financial products that on paper made "investors" believe anything and any return was possible if you could "hedge", "buy protection for" and or otherwise "remove responsibility for losses" through securitization which resulted in the explosion of credit and unbelievably cheap prices.
I have been saying for more than three years now that all of this "protection" was nothing but a house of cards, not to mention the "false" profits created in the sale of the products themselves and it would not last longer than early 2008. Well here we are. We are nowhere near bottom and finally some "smart" people who did stay in the wonderful discipline of Economics, and who shared my views, are being listened to. God bless them...
I had the benefit of studying Economics during the collapse of the S&L industry in the US along with a real estate bust, junk bond market implosion and fairly severe recession. I also was a "student" of economics and finance through real world experience and investing from 1981 which allowed me to experience the severe 1982 recession in the US, the Latin American debt crises, gold price explosion and implosion, oil price implosion and the first destructive false economic "growth" experiment of supply side economics by the Reagan Administration (accompanied by military welfare spending and enemy creation) and brilliantly orchestrated junk bond bubble and accompanying corporate buy out craze.
It was obvious to me during my studies we had a systematically flawed economic model functioning on a national and global scale and there were no way the idiots with ass backwards motivations who ran this model and all of its intuitions would be able to do anything that would be a net benefit to humanity. The same holds true today.
So I had the absolute pleasure of reading this article today on Marketwatch about what Henry Kaufman thinks of the global mess we are in.
Notably his statement:
A: The expectation certainly has to be that the banks are undercapitalized, quite a number of them. There are still probably some additional write-offs to be taken. The value of assets are not down yet to what they are supposed to be marked down to. This would seem to me to be an ongoing problem until we see some improvement in economic activity.
There are further issues facing the banking system. There will have to be a re-regulation of the financial system.
My recommendation has been the centralization of the supervision of the financial markets. Let there be one major oversight institution over markets and institutions. The head of that oversight group should sit as a vice-chairman of the Federal Reserve Board. The chairman of the Fed and the head of this oversight group [should] render an annual report to Congress showing what the financial health is of, say, the 25 largest financial institutions of the U.S. And that body should also provide a credit rating for each of those 25 institutions.
And his further remarks:
A: The Federal Reserve has admitted that the deregulation that has occurred has been a mistake. The Fed will support some re-regulation. It has not indicated what the magnitude of that re-regulation will be. Neither will the U.S. Treasury.
The Federal Reserve and the Treasury over the last two decades have let the financial markets be on a deregulated basis. We did not supervise financial institutions tightly. The assumption by the authorities, the kind of belief by the Treasury and the Federal Reserve was that those who do well will prosper in the financial markets, those who do poorly will fail. That of course was not allowed to happen because we just don't allow big institutions to fail because of the systemic risks they pose to the entire world and the system at large in the U.S.
As a result, financial markets were allowed to end up in all sorts of risky ventures, and this contributed to the mishaps that we have today.
We live in global financial markets. We have institutions that operate on a global basis. Therefore, we should have an international oversight group over major financial institutions regardless of whether they're in London, New York, Paris or Tokyo. They should come under one major supervisory authority. That authority should set requirements for capital should set rulings for types of leverage that the institution can undertake, should set training practices for the major markets.
If we do not have a unified supervision, the business will flow to those markets that are most liberal. And those markets will then create havoc for the rest of the international financial groups.
I think there's more support coming for that now than when I first wrote about this 15, 20 years ago because I see France pushing in that direction. The Europeans on the Continent are pushing in that direction. The only ones I haven't heard from on this are the Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury.
Yes it pleases me greatly to know I was thinking ahead of this smart man. In fact what his article brings to mind were the few (far to few when I think back) conversations I had when I took the liberty of knocking on the door of one of my professors from time to time to ask their opinion of what was happening in the "real economic world" outside of the somewhat antiquated textbooks I had to study with.
If I had a chance to do it all over again I am still not sure I would have taken the path of furthering my economics education instead of pursuing my business. I was very turned off by the bureaucratic and pathetic "counseling" at the state university. When I initially inquired about the masters program they looked at my completed transcripts and suggested I had 2 semesters of classes that were required just to apply (I was like, why in the hell didn't you spell that out when I started my major, idiot?) and the fact that the University of Maryland for all it's efforts was basically churning out graduates to fill a cube at the Department of Labor crunching boring ass stats for yet more bureaucrats. Economics was going through it's "mathematicization" phase and I did not see the subject in the same light.
Perhaps this has something to do with the mess we are in now. Not unlike the "magic" of any idiot being able to create an impressive business plan and financial projection with the wider use of computers and the newly accessible spreadsheet programs in the 1980's that in my view had a great impression on the flow of money then, the movement of Economics by people determined to make it more of a "science" through the use of statistics, mathematics and computer models totally devalued what I saw as the beauty of economics as a social science that could have better application using some of the emerging technologies but not for those technologies to "take over" the discipline in entirety.
I strongly believe the current crises once again came greatly by application of sophisticated mathematics and technology in the creation of financial products that on paper made "investors" believe anything and any return was possible if you could "hedge", "buy protection for" and or otherwise "remove responsibility for losses" through securitization which resulted in the explosion of credit and unbelievably cheap prices.
I have been saying for more than three years now that all of this "protection" was nothing but a house of cards, not to mention the "false" profits created in the sale of the products themselves and it would not last longer than early 2008. Well here we are. We are nowhere near bottom and finally some "smart" people who did stay in the wonderful discipline of Economics, and who shared my views, are being listened to. God bless them...
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Sir Lloyd Blankfein calls for More Controls?
Are you kidding? Mr. Blankfein, head of Goldman Sachs, was quoted in the Financial Times saying almost exactly (one word exception, key word of course) what I have been saying for some time. Here is the quote:
This completely blew me away. I read it like three times, then read the entire article over again. My statement used many times, though more harsh, read something like this:
OK so it is a little different but if you just changed the word "some" in Blankfein's quote to "the same" and added the words "as other regulated financial institutions" to the end of the sentence you would have what I have been saying.
The idiots that run our financial world are almost there. Maybe some day they will "get it".
Read article here (subscription may be required)
"All pools of capital that depend on the smooth functioning of the financial system and are large enough to be a burden on it in a crisis should be subject to some degree of regulation."
This completely blew me away. I read it like three times, then read the entire article over again. My statement used many times, though more harsh, read something like this:
In a world of over 6 billion people, having a couple trillion dollars of unregulated money leveraged 10 to one or greater doing everything they can on a global scale to earn 30% on their money with no allegiance to any nation, no regulatory authority to answer to and no rules on what they can or cannot buy, sell, create or destroy (not to mention being serviced and lent to by regulated entities) no longer serves the human race any useful purpose, period.
OK so it is a little different but if you just changed the word "some" in Blankfein's quote to "the same" and added the words "as other regulated financial institutions" to the end of the sentence you would have what I have been saying.
The idiots that run our financial world are almost there. Maybe some day they will "get it".
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