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Subject: Kolko / The Financial Crisis-An Outline / Oct 16
Date: Tue, 16 Oct 2007 19:25:52 -0700 (PDT)
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Today's commentary:
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2007-10/16kolko.cfm

==================================

ZNet Commentary
The Financial Crisis-An Outline October 16, 2007
By Gabriel Kolko

The global financial crisis that is now unfolding was both predictable 
and predicted.  It might have happened before the subprime mortgage 
meltdown in the United States triggered it, but it is important to 
stress that it was expected. "An accident waiting to happen," as Alan 
Greenspan, former chairman of the Federal Reserve, put it.  And now it 
is taking banks, investment houses, hedge funds, and speculators with 
it-some are just losing huge sums of money, others are going bankrupt or 
are up for sale cheaply. Where and how this crisis ends is utterly 
unpredictable, but it is already very serious.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF), the Bank for International 
Settlements, the British Financial Services Authority, the Financial 
Times, and innumerable mainstream commentators were increasingly worried 
and publicly warned against many of the financial innovations that have 
now imploded.  Warren Buffett, one of the richest men in the world, last 
year called credit derivatives-only one of the many new banking 
inventions-"financial weapons of mass destruction."  Very conservative 
institutions and people predicted the upheaval in global finances we are 
today experiencing.

The IMF has taken the lead in criticizing the new international 
financial structure, and over the past three years it has published 
numerous detailed reasons why it has become so dangerous to the world's 
economic stability.   Events have confirmed its prognostication that 
complexity and lack of transparency, the obscurity of risks and 
universal uncertainty, especially regarding collateralized debt and loan 
obligations, will cause a flight to security that will dry up much of 
the liquidity of banking.  "…Financial innovation itself," as a 
Financial Times columnist put it, "is the problem." The ultra-creative 
system is seizing up because no one understands where risks are located 
or how it works.  It began to do so this summer and fixing it is 
increasingly unlikely.

No one can measure the extent of the losses because there is no 
agreement whatsoever over the value of these numerous innovations. Most 
of the players who have stakes in the countless arcane investment 
instruments are utterly ignorant. But the sums are enormous.

Only a few of the many financial debacles give us a rough estimate:

The present crisis began-it has scarcely ended there--with subprime 
mortgage loans in the U.S., which were valued at over $1.3 trillion at 
the beginning of 2007 but are, for practical purposes, worth far, far 
less today. We can ignore the impact of this crisis on U.S. housing 
prices, but some projections are of a 10 percent decline-another two 
trillion or so.  Indirectly, of course, the mortgage crisis has also 
brought many millions of people throughout the U. S. and increasingly in 
Europe into a larger, more complex financial world.  Many will get badly 
hurt.

What the subprime market did was unleash a far greater maelstrom 
involving banks in England, Germany, France, Asia, and throughout the 
world, calling into question much of the global financial system as it 
has developed over the past decade.

Investment banks hold about half-trillion dollars in private equity 
debts they planned to place-mainly in leveraged buy-outs. They are now 
forced to sell them at discounts or keep them on their balance 
sheets-either way they will lose.

The near-failure of the German Sachsen LB bank, which had to be saved 
from bankruptcy with 17.3 billion euros in credit, revealed that 
European banks hold over half-trillion dollars in so-called asset backed 
commercial paper, much of it in the U. S. and subprime mortgages. 
Northern Rock in Britain, which in mid-September saw depositors withdraw 
two billion pounds in a few days and force it into virtual bankruptcy, 
is but another of many examples.  A failure in America caused Europe too 
to face a crisis. The problem is scarcely isolated.

The leading victim of this upheaval is the hedge funds. What are hedge 
funds? There are about 10,000 and, all told, they do everything. Some 
hedge funds, however, provided companies with capital and successfully 
competed with commercial banks because they took much greater risks.   A 
substantial proportion is simple gamblers; some even bet on the 
weather--hunches.  Many look to their computers and mathematics for 
models to guide their investments, and these have lost the most money, 
but funds based on other strategies also lost during August.  The 
spectacular Long-term Capital Management 1998 failure was also due to 
its reliance on ingenious mathematical propositions, yet no one learned 
any lessons from it, proving that appeals to reason as well as 
experience fall on deaf ears if there is money to be made.

Some gained during the August crisis but more lost, and in the aggregate 
the hedge funds lost a great deal-their allure of rapid riches gone. 
There have been some spectacular bankruptcies and bailouts, including 
some of the biggest investment firms.  Investors who got cold feet found 
that withdrawing money from hedge funds was nigh on impossible. The real 
worth of their holdings is hotly contested, and valuations vary wildly. 
  In reality, there is no way to appraise them realistically-they all 
depend largely on what people want to believe and will take, or the market.

We are at an end of an era, living through the worst financial panic in 
many decades. Now begins global financial instability. In the opinion of 
many informed observers, especially the Financial Times,' the entire 
financial system and the way it operates will have to be 
reconstructed-radically-and that is unlikely to occur.  It is impossible 
to speculate how long today's turmoil will last-but there now exists an 
uncertainty and lack of confidence that has been unparalleled since the 
1930s-and this ignorance and fear is itself a crucial factor. What is 
very clear is that losses are massive and the entire developed world is 
now experiencing the worst economic crisis since 1945, one in which 
troubles in one nation compound those in others.

All central banks are wracked by dilemmas.  They have neither the 
resources nor the knowledge, including legal powers, to remedy the 
present maelstrom.  Although there is clamor from financiers and 
assorted operators to bail them out, the Federal Reserve must also weigh 
the consequences of its moves, above all for inflation. Then there is 
the question of "moral hazards."  Is the Federal Reserve's 
responsibility to save financial adventurers from their own follies? 
Their dilemma is that if they do not attempt to save these politically 
powerful speculators the entire financial system may capsize, and so 
they have increasingly been forced to attempt to bail them out-thereby 
making it possible for them to survive and endanger the entire system in 
the future.

Throughout August the American and European central banks plunged about 
a half-trillion dollars into the banking system in an attempt to 
unfreeze blocked credit and loans that followed the subprime crisis-an 
event which triggered a "flight to safety" which greatly reduced banks' 
willingness to loan. In effect, the Federal Reserve relied on banks to 
restore confidence in the financial system, subsidizing their efforts.

Central banks' efforts succeeded only very partially but, in the 
aggregate, they failed: banks and investors now seek security rather 
than risk, and they will sit on their money. The Federal Reserve 
privately acknowledges its inability to cope with an inordinately 
complex financial structure.  European central bankers are in exactly 
the same dilemma: they simply don't know what to do.

But this scarcely touches the real problem, which is structural and 
impinges wholly on the way the world financial structure has evolved 
over the past two decades. As in the past, there is a critical split in 
the banking and finance world and each has political leverage along with 
clashing interests. More important, central banks were not designed to 
cope with today's realities and have neither the legal powers nor 
knowledge to control them.

In this context, central banks will have increasing problems and the 
solutions they propose, as in the past, will be utterly inadequate, not 
because their intentions are wrong but because it is impossible to 
regulate such a vast, complex economy-even less today than in the past 
because there is no international mechanism to do so. 
Internationalization of finance has meant less regulation than ever, and 
regulation was scarcely very effective even at the national level.

The global financial system is now out of control. Greed is rampant. 
Existing international institutions cannot change this reality. We are 
on the verge of a serious crisis-if not now, then in the near future.


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