Jeffrey Snider is someone to watch. Can't say I agree with everything  he 
says ;
hell, I don't understand everything he says. But he is one helluva  smart 
economist
and someone who makes the system, if not transparently clear ( maybe  no-one
on Earth can do that ), at least clearer than before.
 
Bottom line :  How good is he at predicting outcomes  ?  The  forecast  
that is
relevant now is his wager that Europe is entering a recession now and  that
the USA will shortly follow, probably in the next 2 or 3 months.
 
Could be his prediction won't pan out.  I would sympathize. Economics  is 
complex
and there are so many dependent variables  --and just about no  independent 
variables--
that forecasting outcomes is best compared to the likelihood of herding  
cats successfully.
But he has given it his best shot and in the process exposes us to just  
what kind of mess
the economy actually is in.
 
Here is one of his statements that I happen to agree with at the 100% level 
 :
 
If central banks wanted to commit themselves truly to avoiding real  
deflation 
and a rerun of 1930-33, they could have pledged these trillions in  new 
currency units 
not to the banking system, but to the real economy to ensure access  to 
currency 
(instead of adhering to the century-old, traditional notion of  money 
elasticity). 
 
These have been my sentiments for at least 2-1/2 years. And these are the  
sentiments
of 99% of the 99%, viz. OWS and its supporters.
 
But do not fear, there is plenty in the article that is pro-market and  
pro-investor and,
quite simply, nothing that is orthodox by anyone's standards.  I  like that 
!
 
As before,  I have added a large number of emphases in BF. If you wish  to 
read
the article in its unredacted format, simply click "select all" and then  
click the BF button
enough times to return the piece to its original condition.
 
But do read it if you have an interest, it is educational in the best sense 
 of the word.
 
Billy
 
 
===========================================================
 
 
 
 
Real Clear Politics /  Markets
 
 
April 27, 2012  
Europe Is In Recession, the U.S. Isn't Far  Behind
By _Jeffrey  Snider_ (http://www.realclearmarkets.com/authors/?id=21262) 

The global banking system in 2012 has seen a marked transition from the  
monetary concept that gained universal traction nearly 100 years ago. The 
United  States in 1912 was the only economic power without a central bank, but 
by 1913  one had been created, though its creators, both bankers and 
government  officials, were very cautious about having the words "central bank" 
in 
the title  of the agency. Instead the Federal Reserve System was born as a 
private  corporation capitalized by individual regional banking interests, by 
far the  largest being the banks in New York City. As we have navigated this 
current  crisis, monetary policy is unmistakably a bank-first approach. In 
other words,  banks are viewed as the mechanism whereby monetary policy 
should create economic  success, to the exclusion of all other means.  
Similarly in Europe, the European Central Bank (ECB) was created for and by 
 the respective governments of Europe. The conflict of interest there is 
easily  determined in the continued quasi-bailouts of sovereign states through 
price  manipulation in asset markets. Both the Fed and ECB have engaged in 
forms of  monetary easing that, in their essence, are distinct variations on 
the theme of  money elasticity that launched the Fed nearly a hundred years 
ago. The manner of  that change is, on the surface, seemingly minor - 
central banks create  additional money and means of easing during crises. But 
below that surface lies  a much more direct and significant paradigm shift that 
again calls into question  exactly who central banks work for. 
The reason for instituting an American version of a central bank where one  
had been absent for seventy years was largely in response to the banking 
panics  that seemed to crop up seemingly out of nowhere with an almost 
regularity. There  was a massive wave of failures in 1893 that led to the worst 
depression in our  history to that point. By the time of the 1907 banking 
panic, economic opinion  was shifting toward the concept of "monetary 
elasticity". More and more elite  opinion, especially from within the banking 
interests 
themselves, were settling  on a lack of liquid money as the proximate cause 
for these panics. That bank  panics were usually linked to economic 
depressions gave the elasticity movement  a populist edge (in addition to a 
universal currency).

 
The concept of monetary elasticity is quite simple in theory, something we  
are now well accustomed to in the current age of consistent crisis. During 
times  of distress, investors within the banking system's cumulative 
liability  structure increase their preference for holding cash over the 
continued 
holding  of those bank liabilities (whether that is demand deposits, hybrid 
preferred  securities, commercial paper or senior bonds). Since the banking 
system operates  on a fractional basis, the demand for cash far outpaces a 
bank's ability to pay  all of those redemption requests - a liquidity event. 
Monetary elasticity "fixes" this problem through central bank injections of 
 "liquidity". If the central bank pushes enough money into the banking 
system to  meet those redemption requests, then the panic should largely 
subside 
as  liability holders are further assured that liquidity remains available 
on  reasonably easy terms. But money elasticity, at least in its traditional 
format,  presupposes that "access" to money is the overriding factor in 
this shift in  liability-holder preferences. 
In the 21st century, access to currency has never seriously been 
threatened.  Instead, the shifting preference of liability-holders has been 
based 
solely on  avoidance of capital losses. I have maintained that deflation (_the  
real, devastating currency disease, not disinflation in prices due to weak  
demand_ 
(http://www.realclearmarkets.com/articles/2012/02/27/putting_banks_first_is_an_economic_dead_end_99536.html)
 ) in the real economy was never 
really possible because access was  never seriously threatened. Instead, banks 
were threatened because bond-holders,  especially those holding very 
short-term liabilities, refused to continuously  rollover various obligations 
within the cumulative banking system structure.  That refusal was, again, not 
about access to cash, it was about avoiding losses  that would inevitably 
follow from banks whose cumulative assets were worth less  (and in some cases 
far 
less) than liabilities, i.e., solvency. 
>From the central bank perspective, at least their publicly avowed  
perspective, the central issue of solvency was due to market-based declines in  
the 
prices of relatively illiquid assets. To wit: on July 28, 2008, Merrill  
Lynch (then a standalone company) "sold" a super senior tranche of a  
mortgage-ABS CDO. The notional value of the tranche was $30.1 billion. In June  
2008, 
the tranche was valued at $11.1 billion, a huge $19 billion writedown. The  
reported sales price was $6.7 billion, another 50% wipeout from the June  
level. 
Putting those numbers into perspective, since this was the super senior 
piece  with some amount of credit enhancements above it in the capital 
structure of the  CDO, would have meant a 100% default rate with an epically 
low 
recovery rate of  about 36% (or an 80% default rate with about a 20% recovery 
rate). None of those  numbers were anywhere near the true conditions of the 
mortgage market, even the  subprime mortgage market in its worst state. In 
other words, the market price of  the tranche during this period was nonsense, 
brought about by supply and demand  factors (illiquidity and dysfunction) 
in credit default swap trading. 
Without getting too far into the weeds of the intricacies of correlation  
trading, by March 2008 tranches of various pieces of various vintages of 
various  structures were quoted in correlations above 100% - a mathematical 
position that  is meaningless. The bottom line here was that, for reasons that 
had nothing to  do with the fundamental properties of the mortgage 
marketplace, overvalued as it  was, pricing in these "toxic" assets was nothing 
but 
noise, inappropriate under  any circumstance. That gave credence to the March 
2009 move to do away with  mark-to-market, and further support to QE 1.0 
where the Fed would buy these  mortgage assets at some value that was probably 
far closer to par or nominal  than many people would feel comfortable with. 
This brings up the uncomfortable debate about what prices are the most  
"appropriate", especially within the framework of a full-on crisis. Should 
these  market prices, meaningless in terms of fundamental valuations, be used 
when  deciding which bank is solvent at any given time? Obviously, given the 
way  policies were structured, central banks have come down emphatically on 
the side  of manipulation - basically denying that the market has any 
rational  sense in setting the price of these types of assets and further  
determining the general solvency of bank institutions, both idiosyncratically  
and, 
more importantly, cumulatively. In the case of those "toxic" mortgage  
securities, this, again, seems to be the appropriate course, at least on the  
surface. 
Where money elasticity comes into play here is the liquidity pressure that  
this tug-of-war in pricing generates. Banks may believe that assets are  
money good and that market-based prices are absolutely inappropriate 
benchmarks  for solvency, but individual investors can and do see things 
differently 
(that  is what makes a market) and react for different reasons. Investors 
might even  concur that assets, in the long-run, are "money good", but not be 
able to stick  around and take that chance if there are reasonable doubts or 
questions  surrounding those assets. Holding on to questionable assets 
entails  real risks to those investors, ancillary as they may be in the context 
of  fundamental valuations, that are not well understood by anyone other 
than those  unique investors. I'm talking about hedging and its impacts on how 
assets,  especially credit assets, are dispersed and held throughout the 
"system"  (indeed, that was the primary problem with credit default swap 
trading, the  increased need for hedging created worse pricing in structured 
finance, which  created the need for more hedging, and so on). Even in the 
Merrill Lynch example  I cited above, it is very likely that Merrill Lynch felt 
it 
was getting  fleeced on the sale, but could not hold onto that particular 
asset any longer  for reasons that had little to do with the fundamentals or 
even their outlook  for that asset. 
So central banks have become the firesale buyer of last resort,  supposedly 
taking the long view on these assets. Since central banks have none  of the 
pressures of investors, and control the ability to generate liquidity on  
demand, they can mediate the short-term noise and apparent meaninglessness of 
 market prices and the longer run cash flow of any asset in their 
possession.  That is what money elasticity has become - the bridge from 
insanity 
(from their  perspective) to more docile conditions where investors can "come 
to 
their  senses". 
Except that it appears, on more than one occasion, that investors and their 
 crazy market prices have been right. [ ? ] Greece is the most  well-known 
example. For over two years, the ECB has used this new money  elasticity 
process to prop up the value of Greek bonds, all in the name of  avoiding a 
Merrill Lynch-type situation in peripheral sovereign bonds, and the  general 
"contagion" that might foster. But for all the bonds  the ECB purchased, for 
all the price manipulation done in the name of creating a  bridge to saner 
days, all the ECB did was fool more banks (ahem, MF Global,  Dexia) to follow 
it down the rabbit hole to further instability, and, yes, even  greater 
insolvency. 
So the paradigm of money elasticity is no longer about access to cash  in 
the real economy, it is used as a measure of countering market prices, all  
done in the name of the market always being wrong. However, even in the  case 
of subprime mortgage bonds that were pricing insanity, the Federal Reserve, 
 which until now looks to have been correct in stepping in, may yet follow 
Greek  debt into full-blown default (especially if housing prices continue 
to contract,  or re-contract, not to mention the current, still-hidden state 
of commercial  real estate). That brings up a very important point that does 
not seem  to be fully appreciated, especially in the context of continued 
faith in central  banks. What if, instead of building a bridge to saner 
conditions, money  elasticity in its current usage is actually creating even 
more 
instability that  leads to even worse calamity? 
Europe is the central case study on this point. By its very liquidity  
methods, the ECB actively encourages banks, especially banks that are already 
in 
 the most trouble, to buy more and more of "troubled" sovereign bonds. The  
biggest buyers of Spanish and Italian debt during the LTRO periods have 
been  Spanish and Italian banks. And the more Spanish and Italian debt these 
banks  buy, the more depositors flee. In the European system, that has led to 
dramatic  and drastic Target II imbalances, where capital (over and above 
merchandise  current account deficits) is received in the "core" countries, 
especially  Germany, and forcibly recycled back to the periphery via National 
Central Banks  (NCB). So the money elasticity doctrine of the ECB forces the 
Bundesbank in  Germany to accept claims for cash against Spain and Italy 
(and Greece before  it). The more individual depositor and bondholder money 
flows out of the  periphery, the more the Bundesbank is forced to "front" the 
periphery. 
This forced liquidity injection, rather than help "solve" the  periphery's 
problem, creates additional and greater tension, including and  especially 
political tension. Rather than isolating and breaking the  perpetuating 
feedback loop of crisis, this doctrine spreads "contagion"  far and wide 
without 
ever addressing the original imbalances in the first  place. 
Again, Greece is useful as an example here. The ECB ostensibly bought two  
years time for Greece to "clean up its act", reign in deficit spending and 
get  its current accounts under control, but during the whole of those two 
purchased  years every single measurable parameter worsened, and worsened 
significantly.  For its part, the Greek government's adherence to "austerity" 
and ability to  meet specifications were overstated at every interval, missing 
key targets  regularly, as if bailouts were never really serious (we know 
conclusively today  that they were not). Even now, after actually defaulting, 
the country continues  to miss key targets that were set just a few months 
ago as conditions for the  latest bailout (a bailout in this context is just 
the mechanism for money  elasticity, especially since most, if not all, of 
the actual money ends up in  the hands of banks). 
Furthermore, perhaps far more importantly, investors were correct to flee  
Greek debt, while the ECB was fully wrong in supporting its price. In terms 
of  time, the past two years bought the Greek government enough liquidity 
support to  run up an additional EUR43 billion in fresh debt (CY 2010 + 2011), 
that was  ultimately flushed down the hole in the default, nearly taking 
the entire system  with it on December 8, 2011, before that default was 
finally "decided". As it is  now, with Spain and Italy now at the forefront 
without a Greek distraction,  markets are following the exact same pattern as 
2011 
 
(http://www.realclearmarkets.com/articles/2012/02/10/economics_the_science_of_hubristic_hope_99510.html).
  The feedback loop of investor fear has not 
been broken by all this  liquidity because it has never been liquidity that 
has been feared. The issue  has always been one of solvency, as in who gets 
to bear the brunt of losses  generated by market prices incorrectly 
over-valuing assets and cash flow during  one of the most artificial growth 
periods 
in history. 
Under the current rules of the banking system, liquidity is not even a  
significant factor in credit creation - vault cash is an anachronistic  notion 
that has no bearing on a 21st century bank. Therefore,  money elasticity as 
it was understood and designed in 1912 has no  reference in 2012. Since 
equity capital is the bank parameter that  drives credit, including prices, 
that 
over-valuation leftover from the housing  bubble period diminishes equity 
capital directly, and thereby liquidity  conditions derivatively. The more 
the system has to take losses on credit  assets, the more the system has to 
actively deleverage itself, either through  direct asset sales or raising 
equity capital. 
In 2008, losses on super senior tranches accounted for 42% of worldwide  
writedowns of credit assets according to creditflux.com ($218 billion 
worldwide,  $145 billion in North America alone). Since credit is pyramided on 
top  
of equity capital reserves, not cash reserves, that $218 billion taken out 
of  equity capital (losses on the income statement ultimately reduce retained 
 earnings on the balance sheet, the largest component of Tier 1 capital) 
meant a  multi-trillion dollar hole in the global banking system's ability to 
hold any  and all assets. That is why central banks and governments were 
"forced"  to recapitalize the banking system (including the final version of 
TARP in the  U.S.) as part of each bailout attempt, funded by each central 
bank's money  elasticity doctrine. 
Would we have avoided the panic of 2008 had money elasticity been fervently 
 applied prior to Lehman Brothers failure? Not likely, since only 42% of 
the  losses were what I would consider due to irregularities in the credit 
default  swap marketplace. That left (leaves) $300 billion in losses that were 
all too  appropriate. And that is the largest problem. Investors know that 
there are  losses to be taken, but central banks have decided to use money 
elasticity on  each and every asset class or "systemically important" obligor. 
Again, as in the  case of Greece, investors were correct. In the case of 
"toxic" mortgage assets,  investors were mostly correct (perhaps 58% correct). 
Money elasticity  cannot work where everyone is saved, with no regard to 
how irresponsible they  may have been. In that case the irresponsible are 
simply sheltered enough to  continue to be irresponsible, an anathema to a 
functioning  marketplace. 
Instead of trying to save the whole system, preserving it as it was  before 
2007, central banks should have been focused on helping the system take  
the painful medication of market discipline. Greece should have been  put into 
default in 2010 (at the latest) rather than deny that a default was  even a 
remote possibility. It would have been a serious blow to markets,  but 
better then than now after all the new debt that has been added.  The modern 
version of money elasticity allows imbalances to grow far  greater to the point 
they become systemically dangerous - market discipline is  the pressure 
release to those imbalances. The largest banks in the US  are now even larger 
today than in 2008 because there were none but a few minor  failures 
"allowed" (what if Bear Stearns was unwound rather than shepherded into  JP 
Morgan, 
or if Merrill Lynch failed instead of being absorbed by Bank of  America?). 
Lehman Brothers failed and it kicked off a panic, but had others been  
allowed to follow we might not today, nearly four years later, be still looking 
 
for the next Lehman Brothers.[ ? ] 
Market discipline, while painful and certainly disruptive, actually  solves 
imbalances. The 2008 panic was likely fully unavoidable, and that is  
tragic that these same imbalances were ever allowed to grow so large, but there 
 
is no reason we have to have a rerun every few years along largely the same  
lines. Taking losses and having deflation in the financial economy  would 
not have been the end of the world as we know it. Central banks  can proclaim 
that banks and the economy are one and the same, but that does not  make it 
true. Again, there was no real danger of deflation in the real  economy as 
currency, as in the usage of money to transact, was never in short  supply. 
What has been in short supply, and remains in short supply, are  sustainable 
streams of real income due to productive activities - the kinds of  
activities that have a hard time flourishing under continuously dysfunctional  
monetary regimes. 
Greece's problem, any more than subprime obligors' problems,  continues to 
be a lack of sustainable income due to productive activities, i.e.,  jobs 
and profitable businesses and taxes on both. That is now universally  
recognized as the problem, meaning that investors know the full score.  
Propping up 
prices, while maintaining the illusion of solvency, does not really  address 
solvency. No one is fooled by money elasticity; even John Corzine was  not 
fooled. This doctrine of monetary elasticity, applied as it is universally  
in the 21st century model, does not enhance the marketplace for assets,  
returning it to a more normal or "rational" footing. Reckless money  elasticity 
of this kind is intended to supplant the marketplace (which  is what 
Corzine was foolishly betting on). In one very important respect, this  is not 
all 
that much removed from executing capital controls, the kind of soft  
bureaucratic control we have come to expect in the age of central bank  
indirect 
economic planning. Capital controls, given  this level of dysfunction, 
effectively lock in these imbalances, forcing  investors to seek other, even 
more 
destructive avenues to fulfill their negative  expectations. The noose only 
tightens. 
If central banks wanted to commit themselves truly to avoiding real  
deflation and a rerun of 1930-33, they could have pledged these trillions in 
new  
currency units not to the banking system, but to the real economy to ensure  
access to currency (instead of adhering to the century-old, traditional 
notion  of money elasticity - depositors at IndyMac, for instance, had little  
trouble with its deserved demise and the subsequent transition to a new  
institution). Banks would have failed, prices would have fallen and it  would 
have been nasty (it already was), but the system that emerged, hopefully  
chastened at that point, would have created a foundation for a real  recovery. 
How different would our current outlook be if  investors the world over were 
relatively sure that most or nearly all  appropriate losses were behind us? 
The real question that gets to the heart of  the matter is: what kind of a 
recovery would we have experienced if the  irresponsible were no longer able 
to be irresponsible? 
These counterfactuals are always hard because there is no real way to  be 
sure. What we are sure of, and what suggests there is something  rotten at 
the core of this new central bank application of money elasticity, is  that 
current policies have most decidedly not delivered. Europe is already in  
re-recession, one that will, in my opinion, be worse than predicted by economic 
 
professionals (admittedly a low bar). The U.S. is not that far ahead, and 
by  summer I have little doubt we will again, for the third time in as many 
years,  be joining Europe in the re-recession chatter. Regardless of which 
direction we  head, the one constant is that markets will be denied, under the 
faux-auspices  of a hundred-year old paradigm, their proper role of 
correcting imbalances  because it might just work and belie the canard that the 
real economy cannot  survive without the banking system as it is. Capitalism 
can flourish on its own  without monetarism.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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