Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Jon's Thoughts on the Causes of the Financial Crisis

Everyone, or just about everyone, has heard about the credit crunch and potential major problem with the global economy. If you've listened to or read the news this week, the rejection of the first bailout by the House was partly blamed on John and Jane Q. Public's failure to understand that the unresolved credit crunch can affect individual families and "Main Street" as well as bankers and "Wall Street."

This evening while driving to dinner (side bar: supposedly the best pizza in Birmingham...okay but not great. Sauce tasted like sugar water. Toppings and whole wheat crust were excellent.), NPR was trying to put a "Mom and Pop" flavor on the financial crisis by interviewing small business owners. These owners cannot get $20,000 to $50,000 lines of credit from any bank to cover gaps created by the lag between accounts receivable and payable. As a result, the owners are 1) laying off employees or 2) not hiring new employees even though they want to.

This story was the latest one I've heard or read in the last week trying to convince the public of the need for a bailout.

I, for one, still am not convinced of the need for the bailout. I have been following the story, mainly through Baron's but also from radio and newspaper reports. I understand banks may have leveraged themselves $30 to $1 (i.e., the bank may actually have only $1, but they owe $30). But if you look back at oil and commodities prices over the last 12 to 18 months, you can see a picture as to why this occurred and why inflation is around 5%.

The simple answer is: GREED!. Artificially cheap credit drove a housing bubble that raised home prices and fueled NYSE growth. The Fed raised interest rates a few years ago to slow the ecomony to keep inflation low. ARMs readjusted at a higher rate, and a few mortgage defaults started.

At the time, I don't think anyone but the bankers knew their dollars were highly leveraged and they couldn't pay off debts. However instead of coming clean then, they looked for another investment to 1) cover their debts and 2) keep the financial growth rate elevated. Whether the banks acted jointly (criminal charges should be filed if this is proven) or one started and the others quickly deciphered their plan (most likely, IMHO), banks are guilty of the spike in oil and commodity (corn, wheat, soybean, metals, etc) prices.

Whenever, the media hyperbolized the effect of "insert natural disaster du jour or War on Terror development here" on oil or commodity prices (as appropriate), bankers artificially drove up the price of that commodity as their excuse to make more profits. The excessive volatility we have seen is the effect of bankers selling large positions in these markets to obtain cash to pay off short term debt, resulting from the housing mess, that had come due. Gullible John and Jane Q. Public accepted these price increases and volatility as 1) the new economy, 2) China's and India's fault, 3) no one knew what was happening, or 4) any other somewhat rational reason you can imagine.

Eventually, the inflation caused by the higher oil and commodities slowed the economy because John and Jane finally decreased their driving and stopped spending. "Uh Oh" say the bankers (and nephew Kendal, but he'll be a scientist or engineer when he grows up....not a banker) as oil and commodity prices fall dramatically because oil stockpiles are at record levels and the 2008 corn/wheat/soybean crop will be excellent.

With oil back at $100 per barrell (vs. $148) and corn at $4.80 per bushel (vs. $8), these bubbles have popped and bankers no longer have a mechanism to pay off their short-term debt. Hence, major defaults, bankrupt banks, and the "need" for a bailout. Note, the bankers could "short-sell" stocks, but the SEC banned short-selling recently.

So, what does bankers greed and the bailout have to do with John and Jane Q. Public's inability to get credit? In my opinion, ABSOLUTELY NOTHING.

Imagine the bailout does not occur and the economy returns to where it was in 2000 (as some experts predict). Yes, many companies will go bankrupt. Banks will not have the cash reserved to pay off their highly leveraged debt. Companies with receivables from the banks will go bankrupt because they will not get paid. I favor this type of free market cleansing of old ideas and mistakes (call it Darwinism). However, will all credit vanish? No! Because back in 2000 we easily obtained a mortgage at an obscenely low fixed rate and were able to get a loan to buy a car.

If credit and loans were easy to obtain in 2000, banks should not punish John and Jane Q. Public now by withholding credit in an effort to save themselves. If anything, banks should be giving these loans. How else do they make money than through interest on loans (okay, annoying service charges and fees don't count). Or the Feds can give the bailout money to small businesses. $700 billion dollars would give 1 million small businesses a $100,000 loan to cover expenses. Some politicians constantly preach that small businesses are the U.S. economy. Besides, the $50,000 some businesses need probably is a small fraction of the annual bonus some of these bankers received while creating this mess.

The only possible reason for the bailout is that sovereign nations (China, Thailand, etc.) will be upset because they purchased the CDOs from the banks thinking they were safe investments. That would be bad because these countries also finance our huge budget deficitis. We don't want to make them mad and they'd withhold their money. Then we'd really be in a serious mess. Who would bailout the U.S.?

3 comments:

Mrs. B said...

I cannot put my thoughts around this adequately; this is why I have not blogged about it myself.

But, here goes an "early morning" ramble.

You raise very excellent points.

However, one of the concerns I have, not just for me but for folks that are retired and/or don't have a lot of money OR a lot of time to recover from this is exactly that.

If the stock market crashes, which it likely will even more if some sort of a fix is not instituted, John and Jane's 401(k)s, retirement funds, etc., go south. Very very far south.

And, although many of us have ample time (and resources) to recover, many people do not and will not.

We've lost more money than I care to talk about at this point, however, we'll figure out how to recover it, and hopefully then some, over the next 10 years or so.

Some say, "It's just paper money", but, depending on how long you have to retirement, it really isn't, especially if you never get it back. Or, if you are already retired and living off your IRAs, well, depending on how you had your portfolio allocated, you may be a few income brackets lower today than you were last week.

How do those people get the money back when they are no longer pumping earnings into their accounts?

I've noticed, in general, that is is typically YOUNGER people (or those that don't have any money invested in the stock market) who are clammering, "No bail out!" Because they probably don't have to worry about their retirement funds (if they even have one) and they are the ones who will foot the bill in the long run because they are younger (which I can understand would piss folks off).

And, regarding money that's been lost that might eventually "come back"; in the meantime, folks are losing out on the compounding interest.

Well, I'm rambling here.

My primary concern in NOT doing anything is that it will be because people are short-sighted and think, "I don't want to bail out those greedy SOBs". Agreed. But, we're along for the ride with those greedy SOBs (unless you have your money stuffed under your mattress or in a box under a floor board somewhere).

I heard on NPR the other day snippets of people calling in and leaving messages about the bail out and their thoughts.

Most were against it citing the SOB thing.

But one guy, who, from the sound of his voice was likely elderly, was close to tears.

He said,

"I just looked at my 401(k) this morning and I've lost thousands and thousands and thousands of dollars; I need that money, what am I going to do?"

One of my ex bosses used to always say, "It is how you handle the cards you are dealt that really matters".

So, we've got a problem. It must be fixed, not ignored. I really do believe ignoring it will be a hell of a lot worse than most people believe. No, not the end of the world, but, extremely problematic.

Then, we've got to ensure it never happens again. That is when and where we can start blaming and pointing fingers and punishing the SOBs (BTW, I do feel strongly that the execs in charge of these institutions should be at the tail end of the dole out line and, when they get there, someone says, "Sorry, we're all fresh out of money!"

Doc said...

Hmm... Maybe I'm one of those "younger people" but I have a difficult time rationalizing giving a bailout to those who are the ones that caused the problem in the first place.

In my opinion, the bankers are the ones who made the bad loans and absolving their mistake by practically "socializing" the government is not a good idea to me. I feel it would be more responsible to send that $700 billion back to the taxpayer (the ones who have debts) and let the tax payer put that money towards mortgages, loans, etc.

Screw all this trickle down crap, how about letting it trickle up?

From a fundamental perspective, what the government is proposing is greater federal expansion by utilizing taxpayer dollars to save select macro businesses. IMO, those are OUR dollars and WE should have the right to decide where they go.

I'd think that flooding the market from the bottom upwards would eventually correct the market, since "hypothetically" the macro industries would be getting their money back if Joe & Jane were paying their debts.

However, in either instance, greed would take hold and the money would likely not go where it is supposed to go (which would be correcting bad debt).

Now, our household is not exactly in dire straights, but we have definitely felt the pinch of inflation and I feel for those close to retirement or retired who have lost a fortune. As a result, we have been forced to cinch our belt considerably, since we know we have upcoming debts that will incur (new baby, etc.).

Tough times, and luckily us kids are fortunate that the market should adjust by our retirements.

/end rant.

Miriam said...

They should be there to represent their constituents, so whatever your opinion, contact your representative in Congress and voice your opinion...If you don't know who it is, it is easy to look up.

http://www.house.gov/house/MemberWWW_by_State.shtml

BTW the girls are precious and I love reading about them on your blog.