Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Popeye Comments on Events in Japan
- Fed Releases 895 PDFs in Response to Court Order; Fed Does Not Disclose Collateral for Loans; Why Secrecy is a Problem; FDIC's Role in the Mess
- Geithner's Blatant Lies at the G20 Meeting; Four-Pronged Solution
Popeye Comments on Events in Japan Posted: 31 Mar 2011 04:14 PM PDT I just received an email from Popeye regarding the nuclear crisis in Japan. It was a short message: "That's all I can stands and I can't stands no more." Popeye was upset over all the hype. Yes, there is a catastrophe in Japan. Yes, the reactors are going to be unusable. And yes there is a huge problem regarding radioactive water. Yet, any rational person could figure all of that out weeks ago. So with each passing minute, someone, somewhere has to trump up something regarding the nuclear crisis in Japan to absurd levels. As a prime example, please consider Who Are the Liquidators? The prime minister of Japan has said that his government is "not in a position where we can be optimistic" about the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant.Blue Ribbon For Hype Award There is no point in reading an article beyond such absurd hype. There are hundreds of logical possibilities and conclusions one might draw. The first thing on my mind certainly would not have been that a "huge chunk of Japan was about to become uninhabitable". I would have thought something along the lines "the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant is totally destroyed". However, I assumed that well over a week ago. Note that the author did not even phrase his opinion as a "possibility" but rather as an inevitable "logical conclusion". When you hit a sentence like that, you know the author is in competition for the blue ribbon for hype award. There is no point in reading further because the author has already completely discredited himself. However, I do point out the site trumping up that "logical conclusion" has an appropriate name This Can't Be Happening. Presenting hype as a forgone logical conclusion needs to stop. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 31 Mar 2011 10:06 AM PDT At long last the Fed has responded to court pressure and the freedom of information act to release the names of banks receiving funds during the height of the crisis. The Fed packaged information into 895 individual PDFs and no doubt someone will compile a list soon. Unfortunately, no one can really say what risks the Fed took because the Fed does not disclose what collateral it accepted for the loans. Please consider Fed Releases Discount-Window Loan Records Under Order The Federal Reserve released thousands of pages of secret loan documents under court order, almost three years after Bloomberg LP first requested details of the central bank's unprecedented support to banks during the financial crisis.Also consider Bernanke's Fed Responds to Pressure for More Transparency For most of its 98-year history, the Federal Reserve has operated with all the transparency and enthusiasm for change of the Vatican. Now the ultra-secretive Fed is starting to change its ways, if somewhat grudgingly. Some of the new openness, such as Chairman Ben S. Bernanke's plan for quarterly press briefings, is the central bank's idea. Much of it comes under duress.So what did we find out? Not much, because the Fed did not disclose collateral. Notice the misguided policies of the Fed and FDIC though. By preventing all bank runs for decades, the Fed instilled an artificial and undeserved confidence in banks. It would be far better to disclose banks in trouble, let them go under one at a time quickly, rather than have a gigantic systemic mess at one time. Secrecy, in conjunction with fractional reserve lending is an exceptionally toxic brew. Overnight trust can change on a dime, system-wide, and it did. Moreover, by keeping poor banks alive (and my poster-boy for this is Chicago-based Corus Bank for making massive amounts of construction loans to build Florida condos), more money pours into failed institutions further increasing toxic loans. Failure of FDIC FDIC is a part of the problem. When the government guarantees deposits, everyone believes in every bank no matter how poorly they are run or what risks those banks poses. No one has any incentive to seek a bank with good lending practices. Instead they seek a bank that pays the highest yield because it is guaranteed. Driving deposits to banks that take the most risk is no way to run a system. Yet, that is precisely what the FDIC does, up to the FDIC limit of course. People look at FDIC as a big success because there was no crisis for decades. Instead, we had one gigantic crisis culminate at once, hardly a fair tradeoff for periods of artificially low problems. FDIC is Fraudulent No only is FDIC a problem, it is outright fraudulent to guarantee deposits that cannot possibly be guaranteed in a fractional reserve Ponzi-scheme system. For further discussion of the problems with fractional reserve lending please see Central Bank Authorized Fraud; Fractional Reserve Lending Problems Go Far Beyond "Duration Mismatch" Also see an excellent discussion on the Acting Man blog: Fractional Reserve Banking Revisited Ending the secrecy is easy. Simply abolish the Fed. However, that not the only thing that needs to happen. For a look at solutions, please consider Geithner's Blatant Lies at the G20 Meeting; Four-Pronged Solution Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Geithner's Blatant Lies at the G20 Meeting; Four-Pronged Solution Posted: 31 Mar 2011 01:52 AM PDT Proving that he cannot find his ass with two hands and a road map, Treasury secretary Tim Geithner says inflexible currencies are biggest monetary problem. Tightly controlled exchange rate regimes are the main flaw in the international monetary system and the solution is simple, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told a G20 meeting on Thursday.Lies, Lies, and More Lies It is hard to know where to start disputing the lies. Clearly the US has shown no interest in fixing the budget deficit. Republican and Democrats are locked in a battle over $30 billion, an amount less than 1% of the budget, and a mere 1.875% of the $1.6 trillion deficit. For more on the battle, please see Pissing and Moaning Over 1.875% of the Budget More importantly, does anyone in their right mind think that had China floated the Yuan, we would not have had this global crisis? Rampant credit expansion, unbridled central bank stimulus, deficit spending, and interest rates held too low too long is what created the crisis. China still suffers from rampant credit expansion, and unbridled central bank stimulus, and interest rates held too low too long. The US and EU suffer from two of those. In addition, the EU has a myriad of problems stemming from a currency union but no fiscal union. Japan has a debt to GDP ratio of 200% and growing and Keynesian clowns think the solution for Japan is to go deeper in debt. For that discussion, please see Window for More Idiocy is Always Open Four-Pronged Problem
For a discussion of the problems with fractional reserve lending please see Central Bank Authorized Fraud; Fractional Reserve Lending Problems Go Far Beyond "Duration Mismatch" Also see an excellent discussion on the Acting Man blog: Fractional Reserve Banking Revisited When Nixon closed the gold window, the enforcement mechanism (settling trade deficits in gold) went out the window with it. That was the last check on fiscal sanity everywhere, and created a license for governments to spend, central banks to print, and trade imbalances to soar. IMF SDR Non-Solution Buffoons will be all over Geithner's and Sarkozy's statements predicting the end of the dollar and the beginning of the Yuan as a reserve currency. Forget about it. Look at the four problems above. Does the IMF wet dream of SDRs (special drawing rights) fix anything? What backs SDRs? What is the enforcement mechanism for curing trade imbalances? Is the Yuan going to be a major reserve currency? The answers are No, Nothing, None, No. And "No Timmy Boy", tightly controlled exchange rate regimes are not "the" problem but rather an obscure symptom of the problem. Giethner said the solution was not complicated. That depends on the meaning of "complicated". Four-Pronged Solution
Do those things and problems will go away. China will not be able to fix its currency, print like mad, and waste money on enormous property bubbles. Nor will any government be able to print like mad and get away with it. Blaming the Yuan is like blaming pimples instead of blaming oily skin that causes pimples. China is nothing more than a convenient scapegoat for failed policies of the Fed, the Bush administration, and the Obama administration. Unfortunately, governments do not want to fix the problems because they all want to print like mad and they all want to do what they want, when they want. Eventually however, the market takes matters into its own hands like it did with Greece. Bear in mind I do not think it would be possible to implement my Four-Pronged solution big bang, but it certainly could be phased in over a number of years. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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