Archive for October, 2008

The Fall of Greenspan

Sunday, October 26th, 2008



The Greenspan Tailspin

October 26, 2008

Alan Greenspan actually communicated reasonably clearly this week.
This is news itself. But, what he said was his judgment about
regulating the new-fangled financial instruments was wrong. Greenspan
opposed the regulation, and that ideology carried the day some years
ago. Fair, transparent, standardized, liquid markets and exchanges had
been created for futures contracts, stock options, index options,
warrants, and every type of esoteric vehicle in the 20th century.
So, even though something like a Credit Default Swap (CDS) is
an "institutional" vehicle, it needed some rules. Otherwise, it
was subject to abuse.

Fire insurance sounds pretty standard and even dull. But, it's pretty dicey if your insurance company doesn't have the reserves to pay the claims. All at once, it too can look like a Ponzi Scheme. Greenspan said he had expected the "institutional" ( read sophisticated ) managers to protect their respective businesses and stockholders. So, he admitted this week he was wrong. Way too late, Greenspin.

Nick Anderson may have the best editorial cartoon shot at Greenspan.  Click here to take a look.
And, other cartoonists are also mocking Greenspan. 
Click here to find the latest.

Greenspan is getting his just desserts. But have you noticed
that he's also being made the scapegoat for the whole financial
crisis? Greenspan was not a dictator who is solely to blame.
Where was the entire U.S. Congress? Where were the grown-ups
in the Executive Branch? What does it take to get the political
class to do its job?

One option (just one of many) is to vote for "The None-of-the-Above Party." But, you've probably already come up with your own conclusions. Just vote.


Charlie Ponzi and the Bankers

Saturday, October 18th, 2008

I just can’t think about the Great Depression and today’s
“Credit Crisis” without thinking “Ponzi Scheme.” Ponzi’s
main success had a great “Wall Street Story” behind it.
He said he could buy international postal coupons abroad
and redeem them in the United States for a gross profit of 400%.
That was true. Ponzi said an investor could make
a 50% profit in 45 days. He repaid enough investors often
enough that his company eventually was bringing in $250,000
each day. However, no one analyzed that the overhead of
converting those low-value coupons produced losses, not profits.
The only “dividend” was a return of money paid with the NEW money
coming in. But, Ponzi was getting rich. The end came in 1920.
That’s one form of free enterprise. Truly free enterprise allows
this kind of “Bubble.”
(See the reference link below for the full Ponzi story.)

The 1920’s Stock Market Bubble

Next comes the Stock Market Credit Scheme in the 1920’s.
It is the root cause of the Great Depression. In some
segments of society, it was indeed the Roaring Twenties.
The stock market was rising. By the late twenties, one
esteemed economist said America had reached a permanent
level of prosperity. However, there was little regulation
of credit. Banks would lend money for stocks if the borrower
put up 5%. That is huge leverage. A person who had $100
could buy stock worth $2,000. HUGE LEVERAGE! A stock which
rose in value to $2,500 had made 500 percent for the
borrower who only put up $100. Well, just like Ponzi’s
investors, the word got around about a great way to get
rich. It was, “Borrow money. Buy stock.” We know that
the Mighty Mississippi River begins with trickles of
water in Minnesota. The growing amounts of money mushroomed.
As more borrowed money created more demand for stocks,
prices rose. The price of the stock could be sent to the
sky based on credit only. So far, so good.

That was the rosy picture. The flip side of leverage
(margin money) is that the investor above would lose
100% of his capital when the stock price went down 5%.
As above, a DROP of $500 meant the speculator (forget
the word investor) lost the $100 and still owed another
$400 to repay the bank. And, what if the speculator didn’t
repay the bank? The bank had to pay. Thus, the lucrative
bank loan business wiped out 20% of the banks. On the
way down, the bank as well as the borrower had to liquidate
everything they could get their hands on.

We know the rest of the story of this Bubble: meltdown
and misery. Will Rogers was a savvy financial manager in
addition to being a great humorist. Rogers said he was more
concerned about the return of his money than the return on
his money.

More Crises and Bubbles

Fast forward to the 1980’s. Remember the Savings and Loan
Crisis? Why? The bankers screwed up the managment of credit.
How about the Dot-Com Bubble? Well, that wasn’t credit.
That stands apart as simply a detachment from the belief
that internet companies needed to actually make money.
It is closer to the Tulip Craze and the South Sea Bubble.
In sum, they sound like a manic greedy rush of many without
getting a boost from the credit industry.

I recall reading many books about finance and economics
following the Stock Market Crash of 1987. I concluded that
the cause of the Great Depression was “LEVERAGE.” I wanted
to imagine what pitfall(s) lay in the future that could
ever lead to such a “Category 5 Economic Hurricane”. The only
condition I saw was the leverage in residential housing.
I believed that a conventional mortgage with 20% down was
a vulnerability that resembled buying stocks with 5% down.
After all, in 1987 regulations required stock buyers to have
at least 50% down, i.e. margin. And, houses are bought and sold
in a market. I did not forecast that such a disaster would
really happen. However, if and when all other economic activity
took a big nosedive at the same time, housing would then be
the sector that would bring to America the “perfect storm” of collapse.

Today’s Housing Bubble

Well, here’s the cause: Leverage. This is exactly the
parallel story of the Stock Market Bubble. In 1998 or so,
I read a feature article about a West Coast mortgage broker
who said, “If you can fog a mirror, I can get you a loan.”

Now we were back in the 1920’s. No longer did a buyer have
to come up with 20%, or even 5% (margin) to buy a house.
The lenders went along with it. The financial industry
created the “Credit Default Swap” (CDS) to tell investors
that weak mortgages had been insured. The industry did not
explain that they were unregulated. As such, the so-called
insurers kept selling their “insurance” taking on leverage
of 20 times, 30 times, 60 times their reserves to ever cover
any losses anyway. So the bankers closed their eyes and lent
money. Does that remind you of the bankers of the 1920’s?
And the sellers of the Swaps made a ton of money while it
lasted. Does that remind you of Charlie Ponzi’s Scheme?
Thus, the perfect marriage of stupidity and swindle created
this perfect storm. It has been in place and making money for
years. They just lasted longer than Ponzi’s enterprise.

What’s Going To Change?

The conventional wisdom these days is: “The definition of
insanity is making the same mistake over and over and
expecting a different result.” Both major political groups
have overseen the entire system for decades. Albert
Einstein said that it takes a brilliant person to solve a problem,
but real genius to prevent the problem.

I really don’t see any national political leadership that addresses the long-term solution to prevent another bubble. In other words, the inmates are still in charge of the asylum.

– Byron.

Reference Links:

Charles Ponzi:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ponzi

Replace Entire Congress?

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

A new Rasmussen poll digs into the depth of dissatisfaction with the national elected politicians. The polls in general reveal the disapproval level registered by the American people. It’s very, very low. However, this poll shows the anger of a party voter even against his/her OWN party. This link gives you the details.

59% Would Vote to Replace Entire Congress

Did you note this finding: “Only half (49%) believe that the current Congress is better than individuals selected at random from the phone book.”

The bailout has just added anger on top of disgust.
Imagine! Imagine! America just might get a really fresh start
on election day. We could hardly do worse, could we?

Where’s the Long-Term Economic Plan?

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

The U.S. Senate passed a variation of the Paulson Bailout
Scheme. Yes, the Kritters in the Kongress will come up
with some version of it. Again, no new ideas will
penetrate the minds of those living the lifestyles of
the rich and powerful members of the U.S. Kongress.

Is the problem a credit crunch caused by too many
Americans buying homes at prices too high? Losses
in real estate values? Cheap credit at artificially
bargain interest rates? All of that is symptomatic.
Too high or too low compared to WHAT? What are the
root causes of so much misery and instability?

MONEY 101

Lesson 1:  This is simple. Why can’t people can’t pay
their bills? When they can’t do that, they’re poor.
Poor people are poor because they don’t have enough money.

Lesson 2: How do people get money for their bills and
mortgages? (This is Money 101.) They go to work and get paid
a wage. So, what will mess up your life or their lives?

Lesson 3:  Well, if you lose a job to an immigrant, you
have lost your ability to pay your bills. If you’re looking
for a job, but an immigrant (legal or illegal) gets the job,
you’re out of income. How are you going to pay the rent or
the mortgage?

Lesson 4: If your company is in a shaky industry (or has
shaky management), a downturn may cost you your job.
No job; no income; no money for all your bills.

Lesson 5: If you get sick and can’t work, you lose your
job and your income. How are you going to pay your rent
or mortgage? Oh, maybe you have medical insurance.
That may pay doctors and hospitals, but it doesn’t pay
the rent or the mortgage, does it? Got cancer? You get
to decide to pay the insurance for treatment, or pay
for the treatment itself, or pay the mortgage.

Forty-seven million Americans don’t even have bad
medical insurance. They have none. Half the bankruptcies
in the country involve illness. 27,000 people die each
year because they have no money for medical treatment.
(Dead people don’t have to file for bankruptcy.)

Lesson 6: If you spend all your savings on your kid’s
education, that means you have no cushion. You’re a great,
unselfish parent. However, any negative event makes
you unable to pay your bills. You’re poor.

Lesson 7: Oh, one more thing. Bad things happen to nice
people. How about those credit cards to see you over the
tough spots? How long does it take to run out of
credit when the credit pushers charge 20%, 25%, or 29%
rapidly compounding interest? (Used to be only the Mafia
charged that.) Albert Einstein said, “The most powerful
force in the universe is compound interest.”

Lesson 8: The cost of energy (and everything else) goes
up because you are dependent on foreign products. America’s
leaders, thirty years ago, told you that the goal was
to become independent of imported oil. Our dependence
is now at an all time high.

Lesson 9: You have to pay more for everything for
a couple of reasons. First, the government is spending
more money than it has. It’s close to broke. It is
also on “credit crack.” Second, America has been buying
way more from foreigners than it sells to foreigners.
The result? The dollar has been going down the toilet
for years. Your prices are going up . . . and up . . .
and up. Where’s our American leadership?

Lesson 10: To a korporate lobbyist, a good government
program gives the benefits to their own special group,
while a different group pays the bill. Can you see
who is getting bailed out? Are you going to pay for it?

POP QUIZ: Explain what would be a long-term plan for America
to improve the lives of Americans.

GOOD ANSWERS: a) Investing in America by building a great
system of highways, railroads, and transportation.
b) Implementing national health insurance.
c) Controlling the excesses of Korporate Amerika.
d) Ending the waste of a trillion dollars on foreign wars.
e) Balancing the federal budget.
f) Stopping the destruction of American jobs.
g) Voting against elected officials now in office.

In short, the average person needs a Fair Deal.

Bad Bailout Defeated: Celebrate Democracy!

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

The House of Representatives defeated the Paulson-slanted
bailout bill. Two of three Republicans and forty percent
of Democrats voted “NO!” Surprising. Very surprising.
The reasons for it were supplied by voters and citizens.
Reps were reporting that the calls and emails overwhelmed
them. The opposition of us the people was running 100-1.
What a thrill to hear that people cared, expressed
themselves, and won! That’s the way the system is supposed
to work. Absolutely thrilling.

That number of $750 BILLION was too much to ignore, it seems.
And, the benefits were seen as going to Wall Street with
the bill of $5,000 per worker being paid by the average person.
There’s the source of the outrage. Enough is enough.

But . . . back to the democracy of it. The best known
uprising in America is the Boston Tea Party. Five thousand
people, a third of Boston, turned out to protest the
Tea Tax that night. Then the actual attack on the ships
with the tea was carried out by less than a hundred people
who chopped open 342 chests and dumped them in the water.
The huzzah was “Boston harbor a tea-pot tonight!”

Historian Paul Gilje found 150 riots between 1765 and 1769.
And it continued apace till the Revolution started. The
country was animated by anger and rebellion. Collectors
of the Stamp Tax were forced from office, sometimes tarred
and feathered. Governors had their homes destroyed and burned.

Before Ethan Allen and the Green Mountain Boys were soldiers
of the Revolution, they were a resistance movement threatening
the powerful and the rich. In North Carolina, Raphael
says the Regulators “intimidated their enemies, disrupted
the courts, and freed their leaders from jails.”

The history is full of incidents. Colonial America was
a top-down society and economy run by those put in power
by the King of England. The colonists had no vote except
the threat and exercise of violence. We modern Americans
have a vote. The threat and exercise of the vote is
a replacement for violence, in one sense. But it has
to be exercised. Agree or disagree with the so-called
bailout plan, the people spoke and got their way.
It’s thrilling.

Reference Source:

“A People’s History of the American Revolution” by Ray Raphael.