Thursday, January 26, 2012

Empty Lending

This is an activity which serves little useful purpose beyond the basic one of allowing a limited series of transfers from a depository with preternaturally cash rich clients and atypically few cash poor ones, so that it may fruitfully collaborate with a sister institution in the converse situation, to the shared benefit of all.
Outside of this, for Bank A to lend to Bank B so that B can buy the paper issued by Bank C which then deposits the funds with Bank A, each hoping to extract a few basis points advantage from the deal in their turn, is a gross exercise of financial incest, needlessly tying up resources and capital, both.
In fact, if we look at the instance of Europe, the truth is that, for all the undoubted pain and dislocation being suffered as we transition from an unsustainable whirl to something (hopefully) more sober and well-proportioned, this has been exactly what has been taking place.
In the three-and-a-quarter years since Fannie, Freddie, Fuld and AIG FP exploded our mass delusion that we had reached the Land of Cockaigne simply by pooling, slicing, and layering in upon itself more and more debt, granted on easier and easier terms to worse and worse borrowers, European banks have actually increased their aggregate lending to households and private non-banks in the Zone by €760 billion and they have extended €350 billion more in credit to EZ governments (not an unmitigated benefit, this, of course).
In marked contrast, they have reduced lending to one another by over €310 billion, withdrawing another €500 billion or so from non-Eurozone banks along the way. [There are, naturally, exceptions to this broad generalization, notably in Spain – where business lending is a hefty €100 billion below its April'09 peak. The point, nonetheless, remains a valid one].
None of this is to argue that the stresses are not very elevated, nor to pretend that the inevitable differences in the applied microstructure of such vast sums have not thrown up large numbers of winners and losers – whether deserving or undeserving – but it cannot be overlooked that with 35% of their total Eurozone assets consisting of exposures to one another (and 55% of the extra-EZ loans and non-equity securities on their balance sheets funding banks outside the single-currency area), they still have €11 trillion – some five times their combined capital – to go, if they are to shrink back to a less leveraged footing without doing more harm than is necessary to the world of work it is supposedly their primary purpose to serve.
Back in the day, arch Eurocrat, Jean-Claude Juncker, boasted that he and his fellow King Canutes vouched to 'fully assure' that no 'systemically-important financial institution' in their fiefdom would be 'allowed to fail' – the arrogant aside being that all the Zone's 6,000-plus credit institutions fell into that category of NTBTF – No-one Too Bad To Fail.
Such an exercise in Hubris inevitably called forth the savage shade of Nemesis and so, three years and more later, we have reached a pass where hardly a single SIFI can assure its peers that it can be saved, nor its sovereign's rating with it.
Accordingly, many observers point to Europe as making the case that the crisis has finally vindicated Keynes and delivered us, not just to the zero-bound, but to a veritable absolute zero of economics where the ability of money to have any effect has been completely frozen out.
But, far from Europe being the exception that proves the rule, so hopelessly have its drowning banks and foundering governments come to clutch at one another as they sink that much of the ECB's present intervention – vast as it is – may not be a means of direct inflation, at all, and so cannot be deemed to have 'failed'. You see, what is mostly afoot in Europe is that the national components of the system are simply being drawn into inserting themselves – providing a credit wrap if you will – between former correspondent banks in the different member states who have come to harbor unallayable suspicions about each other's true standing and so will not deal directly with one another as was their wont.
If we imagine that, in the good old days, a Spanish house-buyer might have borrowed from his local bank to stock his house with shiny, new German, kitchen appliances, this would have led to their export manufacturer adding to his monetary holdings at a German bank, with this last being happy to 'recycle' this fraction of the Great Teutonic Current Account Surplus by lending it back to the original Iberian agent of inflation.
Nowadays, alas, such insouciant laissez passer has become unthinkable, forcing the Spanish lender to close the gap by repoing or selling some of its securities holdings to the Banca de Espana. The German creditor likewise prefers to place his funds on deposit with the Buba and the transmission is completed between the two via the TARGET system. ECB assets – and the portion involving government bonds – will thereby have risen without any new monetization of debt whatsoever having taken place.
To see some evidence of this putative exchange in action, note that the Bundesbank's intra-ECSB exposures rose €360 billion in the three years after September'08, the Netherlands' by €80 billion (the pair having put on another €90 billion between them in the following two months), while German bank claims on other EZ members declined €180 billion and Dutch ones by €35 billion. A further leakage was to be found in whatever part of their €245 billion combined cutback of exposures to EU banks outside the single currency it was which related to the three English clearers who access the system via the DNB.
On the other side of the ledger, the data show also that the ECB's balance sheet waxed €540 billion fatter, (to which not insubstantial total the NCBs added another €910 billion during the period in question), by way of the acquiring – among other 'assets' – €250 billion in Euro area governments and €690 billion in claims on the region's banks and offsetting this with €1,040 billion in deposits accepted from the MFIs in their turn.
To gain a sense of the scale of these numbers, we may note that, in the year to last November, the Buba's TARGET balance rose to 20% of German GDP and the change was equivalent to 125% of the whole twelvemonth's current account surplus. For the DNB, the comparables were 25% of GDP and 100% of the surplus – and lest us not forget that the Bank's dealings with Lloyds, HSBC, and Standard Chartered may make that a low-ball estimate, given the net drain likely to result from the UK's own deficits.

A Swiss Signal to Buy Gold

It was on that day that the European Central Bank (ECB) "loaned" roughly €500 billion to Europe's major banks at 1% interest. This capital will allow all the big banks to report adequate capital ratios when they file their annual reports...which is code for "getting a huge bailout."
Whatever you want to call it, simply know this: There will not be a deflationary collapse in Europe. The Euro will not collapse in the near term.
Instead, Europe will see a gigantic increase in its money supply.
When asked by the Financial Times if there was any substantive difference between what the ECB was doing (printing money and "loaning" it at 1%) and what the Federal Reserve has been doing since 2009 (printing money and buying mortgages and Treasury bonds), ECB president Mario Draghi replied:
 "Each jurisdiction has not only its own rules, but also its own vocabulary. We call them 'non-standard measures.' They are certainly unprecedented. But the reliance on the banking channel falls squarely in our mandate."
Let me translate Mario's political blather: "There is little difference. We are printing money to bail out deadbeat borrowers and big banks."
I have been writing, consistently, for almost four years, that the world's gigantic debt bubble will end in a massive inflation. I have long believed sovereign borrowers from around the world would choose to inflate their debts away, rather than suffer the consequences of actual defaults and restructurings. The reluctance of some members of the European Union (Germany, in particular) to do so caused a delay in the realization of my thesis...But it will not change the inevitable result.
Soon, you will see a massive financial-led economic rebound as the credit market re-opens, thanks to government-manipulated, ultra-low interest rates. In the short term, millions of people will cheer these moves, as the risk of any economic pain will have apparently been removed.
But this resolution is a mirage...
Instead of wiping out the bankers, brokers, and politicians who approved these bad debts (and were enriched by them), these bad debts will now be paid for by the millions and millions of people who rely on the two major global currencies – the Euro and the Dollar. The trillions of Dollars in bad loans will be paid for through inflation. It's an invisible, secret tax that not one in a hundred regular people even understand.
Over time, the result of these actions will be a vastly lower standard of living, thanks to declines in purchasing power and increasing commodity prices. Real wages will be much lower, as employers will not readily increase wages to keep up with inflation.
Volatile paper currencies will make it harder for entrepreneurs to invest and source products and services across borders. The so-called "wealth gap" will increase dramatically, as inflation will increase the purchasing power of the rich (whose assets will increase in value), while the poor – who have no ready means to protect themselves from inflation – are further impoverished.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

More Downgrades Ahead

On Friday the 13th, Standard and Poor's cut the credit ratings of nine European countries. S&P's biggest scalp was France. France has lost its AAA credit rating and been put on a "negative outlook"; the financial equivalent of the naughty step.
The downgrades weren't all that surprising. After all, on December 5th 2011, S&P warned the Europeans to get their divided house in order. Almost nothing constructive or helpful to solve Europe's debt problem has happened since then. In the currency markets, the Euro made new lows against the Australian Dollar.
In its Friday announcement S&P said, "Today's rating actions are primarily driven by our assessment that the policy initiatives that have been taken by European policy makers in recent weeks may be insufficient to fully address ongoing systemic stresses in the Euro zone." You don't say?
Austria was also relieved of its AAA rating in Friday's action. This poses a problem for Europe's bailout fund, the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF). France and Austria have signed up to provide about €180 billion to the EFSF. Subtract €180 from €440 (the original total funding of the EFSF) and you get €260 billion – the current capacity of the fund minus French and Austrian contributions.
Remember, though, that the EFSF is already on the hook for contributing €130 billion to the second Greek bailout (because the first bailout of €109 billion worked so well). That would leave the fund with €130 billion to bail out the rest of Europe, which hardly seems like enough at this point. It won't be long before the EFSF has its own credit rating cut.

Gold and Silver Prices Find Their Footing

IT WOULD SEEM gold and silver have found their footing at the start of 2012, notes Gene Arensberg's GotGoldReport.
Last week gold logged a $22.37 (1.4%) advance for a last trade of $1,638.68 (USD Cash Market).

Here at GotGoldReport we have adopted the notion that gold is currently inside a giant, months-long pennant formation – still digesting its fear-assisted parabolic interim pinnacle of $1,923 last September. Most technicians will agree that pennant formations are often continuation patterns that resolve in the direction of the prevailing trend more than not.