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     Mar 26, 2008
Page 2 of 5
CREDIT BUBBLE BULLETIN
Nationalization and dislocation

Commentary and weekly watch by Doug Noland

the orchestration a politically expedient economic boom. After beginning the nineties with assets of $454 billion, the GSEs ended the decade with balance sheets that had swelled more than three-fold to $1.723 trillion.

In the latter years of the '90s, global financial crisis coupled with political foible - not to mention Wall Street’s rapidly growing power and influence - granted the GSEs carte blanche. And then there was the market hysteria surrounding Y-2K (or millennium computer bug), followed by the bursting of the technology bubble, the terrible terrorist attacks, and then the 2002 corporate bond

 

dislocation. By the time accounting irregularities surfaced in 2004, GSE assets had almost reached $3 trillion.

I also have a hunch with regard to Alan Greenspan's now infamous prodding, when he was Fed chairman, of households into adjustable-rate mortgages. I think he recognized clearly the degree to which the impaired GSEs (and their scantily capitalized counterparties) had become acutely vulnerable to a rise in market yields. As the Maestro, his interest-rate policies (market manipulations) orchestrated a massive shift of interest-rate risk from the financial sector to the household sector. In the process, however, recklessly low interest rates spurred unprecedented mortgage lending and speculative excesses that today imperil borrower, lender, leveraged speculator and system stability alike.

Affront to credit pricing
Somewhere along line, I think the Fed came to appreciate the extent to which they had delegated monetary (mis-) management to the agencies (and their Wall Street enthusiasts). Meantime, some politicians belatedly came to recognize what an affront the GSEs had become to the pricing and allocation of system credit, as well as to the functioning of free markets more generally. Especially after the 2004 revelation of massive fraud and gross system inadequacies, a consensus developed in Washington that the GSEs needed both restraint and a powerful regulator (although the legislative details were much too slow to materialize). Apparently, all these justifiable concerns were chucked out the window this week in the name of "system stability".

After first reaching $2 trillion in 1999, Fannie and Freddie’s combined books of business surpassed $5.0 trillion in January. This "book" increased $638 billion, or 16%, last year, in what will surely be the greatest transfer yet of risky mortgage credit to the GSEs (only to be greatly outdone in 2008). Interestingly, OFHEO, Washington politicians, and Wall Street analysts are keen to play a dangerous game pretending that there is limited risk in guaranteeing MBS (as opposed to the obvious risk associated with mortgages retained on their balance sheet). The absurdity of Mr Lockhart stating that the GSEs will be in a position to take on an additional $2 trillion of mortgage risk this year is simply incomprehensible. Keep in mind that the GSEs are on the hook for the "timely payment of principle and interest" on more than $5 trillion of American mortgages - and counting … Such obligations will, in the post-bubble era, prove untenable.

I remember when my old analytical nemesis Paul McCulley would refer to himself as a "populist" (I still prefer my "inflationist" characterization). Well, where are our "populist" statesmen today? The average American is getting slammed by rapid inflation in the prices for fuel, food, healthcare, education and other basis necessities. He was duped into various dangerous mortgage products to purchase homes with, in many cases, grossly inflated market values. Millions are in the process of losing virtually everything.

The average American was also duped into various risky investment products, while the bursting of bubble markets will leave him dreadfully unprepared for retirement. Now, he is seeing the returns from his savings crushed by the melee to bailout Wall Street "money changers" and speculators. Over the coming months, millions will lose their jobs with the inevitable adjustment and realignment to cope with post-bubble realities. And now, apparently, the American taxpayer is to sit back and watch his contingent liabilities balloon (even further) with the nationalization of the US mortgage market.

I understand perfectly the motivation Wall Street, the administration and the Fed have in blindly throwing the kitchen sink at this unfolding crisis. These are indeed scary times bereft of solutions. I am certainly familiar with the view that bailing out Wall Street and the speculators is medicine necessary to stabilize the system. But not only is this approach both inequitable and unethical on moral grounds, it is my view that such endeavors will prove only further destabilizing for the system overall.

Many this past weekend were undoubtedly relieved by the market's strong rally. The Fed and administration finally are said to have discovered the right antidote - crisis resolved - buy financial stocks! I will caution, however, that US and global markets this week had "dislocation" written all over them.

First of all, there is the issue to resolve of a problematic dislocation in the massive "repo" market (involving agreements in which the seller of securities agrees to buy them back at a specified time and price). We all should hope and pray that this is not the next contemporary financing market buckling under the forces of contagion. And to see commodities break down while financial stocks go into spectacular melt-up mode forebodes only greater losses for leveraged speculators in the troubled "market neutral" and "quant" arenas.

The short financials and long commodities "pairs trade" was quickly added to the list of favorite trades gone sour. And those (and there were many) using March options (especially financial sector derivatives) to hedge market risk saw this strategy go up in flames as well. Speculators that were long international markets against shorts in the US were similarly crushed. And speculators hedging with short positions in agency, agency MBS, and many other fixed-income derivative indices quickly found themselves on the wrong side of hasty developments.

Surely, policymakers were keen to mete out some punishment on the increasingly destabilizing "systemic risk trade" (shorting stocks, bonds, credit derivative indices, buying bearish derivative products, etc.), but the upshot was only further destabilization.

News that the GSEs were back in the game in a big way added to an already highly unsettled situation for myriad sophisticated trading strategies. But before getting too excited about the spectacular short-squeeze, keep in mind that shorting has become an instrumental facet of leveraged speculator trading strategies - and, really, contemporary finance more broadly speaking. And the disintegration of an ever increasing number of hedge fund and Wall Street strategies, as I’ve written previously, remains at the heart of deepening monetary disorder.

Not surprisingly, the Fed could not risk a Bear Stearns failure - not with all of its derivative, repo and counterparty exposures. It really was not a difficult fix. Yet the rapidly lengthening line of vulnerable non-bank lenders (Thornburg, CIT Group, and Rescap come immediately to mind) and hedge funds will pose a greater challenge. There are some very substantial balance sheets at risk and significantly more "de-leveraging" in the offing - and the big banks will have no appetite.

The S&P500 is down a modest 7% from the much-changed financial and economic world of one year ago. While having little impact on the unfolding credit crisis (or home prices), policymakers have thus far largely succeeded in sustaining inflated US stock prices. But, in reality, the profound deterioration in the US and global credit backdrop has greatly altered prospects for the vast majority of companies, industries, and the US and global economies more generally.

Unsustainable credit
Despite any number of policy actions and all the good intentions imaginable, there is absolutely no way that the US financial system will now be capable of sustaining either the (pre-bust) quantity of credit or the uniform flow of finance that levitated bubble economy asset prices, household incomes, corporate cash-flows, "investment" spending or consumption.

Huge sections of the credit infrastructures (notably throughout Wall Street-backed finance) are inoperable and discredited. Prominent monetary processes have been broken and the resulting flow of finance radically revamped.

Prospective credit and financial flows will prove insufficient for scores of companies, as well as for state and local governments and various entities all along the economic food chain. Enormous numbers of business downsizings and failures - many by companies that thrived during the bubble era - will lead to huge losses of jobs and incomes (many at the "upper end" where the greatest excesses transpired).

I simply see no way around it - nationalization of US mortgages notwithstanding. It is fundamental to my analytical framework that efforts to subvert the unavoidable adjustment process only extend the misallocation of finance and real resources, while adding greatly to the future burden of the financial institutions today aggressively intermediating very risky pre-adjustment credit (certainly including the banking system and GSEs). And I certainly don’t believe this week’s rally in the dollar should be viewed as a vote of confidence for the direction of US policymaking. Nationalization will prove a further blow to already fragile confidence.

WEEKLY WATCH
The NYSE Financial Index declined 2.1% Monday, jumped 6.8% Tuesday, fell 2.3% Wednesday and then surged 5.0% Thursday. The Bank Index jumped 10.2% in this extraordinary four-day trading week (down 3.1% y-t-d). Morgan Stanley gained 20.4%, Lehman Brothers 19.3%, and Goldman Sachs 12.7%. The Homebuilder index jumped 13.3% (up 13.4% y-t-d), and the Morgan Stanley Retail index rose 7.7% (down 1.9%). For the week, the Dow gained 3.3% (down 6.8%) and the S&P500 3.1% (down 9.5%). The Transports surged 4.3% (up 3%), and the Morgan Stanley Cyclical index gained 0.6% (down 8.5%). The Utilities added 0.3% (down 11.1%), and the Morgan Stanley Consumer index increased 1.3% (down 6.5%). The small cap Russell 2000 gained 2.7% (down 11%), and the S&P400 Mid-Caps rose 1.1% (down 10.3%). The NASDAQ100 gained 2.2% (down 16%), and the Morgan Stanley High Tech index advanced 1.6% (down 16%). The Semiconductors added 0.4% (down 16.7%). The Street.com Internet Index gained 2.9% (down 11.5%), and the NASDAQ Telecommunications index increased 0.8% (down 12.5%). The Biotechs gained 1.1% (down 11.6%).

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