Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- How Ben Bernanke "F*d" the Banks and Fixed Income Savers at the Same Time
- It's Fashion Week in Paris (and I have Pictures to Prove it)
- "Does Anyone Really Know What is Going on with Foreclosures?"
- Open Letter to Merkel, Trichet, Sarkozy, Papandreou, Berlusconi: Extend-and-Pretend Session is Finished, It's Do or Die
- Reader Question Regarding the Role of Credit in Inflation/Deflation; US vs. Europe
- Restructuring Plans Underway for Another 21 Banks Says Vice President of the European Commission; What's the Real Number?
How Ben Bernanke "F*d" the Banks and Fixed Income Savers at the Same Time Posted: 05 Oct 2011 10:41 PM PDT Hello Ben. It seems your ploy to hold interest rates at preposterously low levels has backfired into a run on Bank of America assets. Citizens are up in arms. Amazingly, customers in St. Louis cannot even enter banks to withdraw money. Please ignore the first few sentences in the video below about payday loans and instead listen to the rest of the message. URL if video does not play: SWAT Teams in St. Louis Protecting Bank of America; Refusing Customer Withdrawals Bank of America Customer Frustration Grows Inquiring minds are reading Bank of America Customer Frustration Grows Bank of America's plan to add a five dollar a month debit fee has angered customers.Fee Parade Things are now so "F*d" up that banks cannot make money on deposits and consumers cannot even get access to their money. It's not just at Bank of America. Wells Fargo and Citigroup have joined the fee parade. Please consider Citibank is next with a new banking fee Another day, another new bank fee.By the way, this brings up another point. I worked for two decades at banks on the programming side. Evey bank wanted accounts no matter how small for economies of scale. The reasons for that policy are that it costs next to nothing to process incremental accounts, and costs can be spread out over all of those accounts. I fail to see how the same cannot be true today. After all, if savings and loans and small banks with no economies of scale can handle these smaller accounts and at least break even, then why can't Citigroup and Bank of America? Two Answers
Ultimate Irony of Fed Policies Here is the ultimate irony in the asinine policies of Ben Bernanke and the Fed: As a result of "too big to fail" policies of the Fed, the big got so big they are not even profitable at the low interest rates Bernanke has set for the alleged benefit of the banks and the economy. Not only did Bernanke "F" those on fixed income, he "F*d" all the banks that cannot make a profit on small accounts. Congratulations Ben. It is not easy to be that big a failure. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
It's Fashion Week in Paris (and I have Pictures to Prove it) Posted: 05 Oct 2011 05:48 PM PDT In the lighter side of the news of those who comment on the news, I am pleased to report that Max Keiser won an Honorary Life Membership from University of Limerick for His Work as a Journalist Exposing Financial Terrorists Moreover, I am also pleased to report that Charlotte Kemp Muhl, an American model and actress from suburban Atlanta, Georgia, and the youngest model to appear on the cover of Britain's Harper's and Queen magazine, just happens to be a big fan of the Max Keiser Report. Given that it's fashion week in Paris, it is only fitting that Muhl would seek out the ever-stylish Max Keiser for a photo-op. Given that it's extremely difficult to judge who in that picture is more stylish, I defer to my readers to decide for themselves. In God I love fashion week in Paris!!! Max Comments: "This photo was taken by Charlotte's boyfriend and band mate Sean Ono Lennon in the lobby of their hotel earlier this evening. Turns out Sean and Charlotte are big Keiser Report fans…. but I noticed they seemed to ask Stacy all the serious questions. Maybe I should go back to go-go dancing in the West Village." Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
"Does Anyone Really Know What is Going on with Foreclosures?" Posted: 05 Oct 2011 11:28 AM PDT Patrick Pulatie at LFI Analytics has noticed a huge discrepancy in the number of reported foreclosures by varying organizations. Via Email Pulatie writes ... Much of my off time is spent in reviewing the reports of other entities regarding the foreclosure crisis, correlating data and trying to forecast what to expect in the future.Data Sources for Figures Cited Above
Addendum: As a comment to this post, Pulatie added ... OCC is likely getting their information from the GSE's, since that would be easy to track. I "assume" this because they only follow 62% of the loans, which is about the size of the market that the GSE's held during the peak of the boom.Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 05 Oct 2011 10:56 AM PDT Dear Chancellor Merkel, President Sarkozy The market has indicated the extend-and-pretend session that you have come to love, is over. It's now time to do or die. Hoping-against-hope the problems will go away will no longer work, and in fact never worked ever (it just eventually made the problems worse). So, either you put together a credible plan for a fiscal union or you put together a credible plan for a breakup of the Eurozone. Since the former is impossible because of German supreme court rulings, common sense would dictate you start working on the latter. In the meantime, if you come up with a credible plan to recapitalize insolvent banks, a plan that sticks it to bondholders and not taxpayers, a plan that lets Greece default, perhaps you can appease the market and buy additional time while working on a vitally needed plan B (a breakup of the Eurozone). I am not sure how long the market will give you on the these plans. It could be as little as two days or as long as five weeks, but action in the banking sector and stocks in general says not long. cc ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet, Prime Minister Papandreou, Prime Minister Berlusconi, Eurogroup Chairman Jean-Claude Juncker Mish Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Reader Question Regarding the Role of Credit in Inflation/Deflation; US vs. Europe Posted: 05 Oct 2011 08:56 AM PDT A reader from Germany has questions regarding the role of credit in my deflation thesis. Josef writes: Hello MishNo Contradiction Hello Josef An accepted offer for credit is a loan, resulting in debt for the borrower, and an asset (the loan) on the balance sheet of the lender (typically a bank or finance company). So yes debt = credit extended (plus agreed upon interest). When the value of assets (loans) drop significantly, banks become capital impaired and cannot lend. This is happening now even though banks are hiding losses by not marking assets to market prices. We have heard absurd statements from the Central bank of France that there are no toxic assets on French bank balance sheets. The market price of Greek debt says otherwise. Plunge in Mark-to-Market Prices of Bank Assets We can infer marked-to market plunges in value of bank assets by the enormous drops in financial stocks this year. We know the value of debt on the balance sheets of banks has collapsed, even if banks deny it. Inability to pay back debt also shows up in credit default swaps, sovereign debt ratings, and soaring bond yields of Greece, Portugal, Spain, and Italy vs. Germany. These credit actions show a demand for safe hiding places such as US and German government bonds and cash. We can see that in record low US treasury yields and German government bond yields. Debt Not Marked-to-Market The second question is where your error is "wouldn't I need less real estate to get rid of my debt?" The debt remains until it is written off. In the US, people still owe more on their houses than they can pay back. The money is owed but will not be paid back. The same applied to may types of loans including auto loans, credit card debt, home equity lines, etc. Enormous Foreclosure Backlog US Banks have the value of their assets (mortgage loans, commercial real estate loans, consumer credit loans), at prices that do not reflect likelihood of default and thus that debt is not marked-to-market. Writedowns are deflation in action, and they are coming. In many instances, people walk away from mortgage debt. In those cases banks eventually foreclose. The key word is "eventually" as the list of pending foreclosures is measured in decades at the current rate. Please see First Time Foreclosure Starts Near 3-Year Lows, However Bad News Overwhelms; Foreclosure Pipeline in NY is 693 months and 621 Months in NJ for details. US Writedowns Coming on REOs When homeowners walk away or go bankrupt, generally they are relieved of debt. However the problem for banks does not go away. After foreclosure, banks have a different asset on the books. It is no longer a loan, but rather REO (Real Estate Owned). What do you think those houses on the balance sheets of banks are worth vs. the value banks hypothesize they are worth? Once again, this capital impairment shows up in banks inability and unwillingness to lend. When banks don't lend, businesses don't expand, and when businesses don't expand unemployment stays high. This deflationary cycle feeds on itself until home prices fall to the point where there is genuine demand for them and banks are recapitalized. European Writedowns The biggest debt problem in Europe is in regards to loans made by French and German banks to Greece, Spain, Portugal, and Italy. The ECB, EU, and IMF compounded the problem by throwing more money at Greece, on terms and timelines Greece cannot possibly pay back. Europe has other huge structural issues regarding productivity in Spain and Greece vs. Germany, and in currency union that cannot possibly work given the lack of a fiscal union. Poor Policies by IMF, EU, ECB, Fed EU, IMF, ECB, and Fed policies in the US and Europe were designed to hide losses on real estate loans, to hide losses on sovereign debt loans to Greece, Spain, Portugal etc, and to prevent losses to banks and bondholders. Barry Ritholtz had an excellent column on that yesterday called Banking's Self Inflicted Wounds. Policies of governments and central banks that bail out private banks are wrong because they place more burden on already over-extended and deep in debt taxpayers who are not equipped to take on more debt. The deflationary backdrop will persist until debt is written off, consumer deleveraging peaks, home prices fall to affordable values, and global structural imbalances fixed. The situation is not encouraging because of five critical problems. Five Critical Problems
Process is Important, Not the Term It's important to not get hung up on the term "deflation" but rather to understand the process I am describing, the implications of that process, and why the policy actions taken have not worked (and cannot possibly work), all called well in advance. For more on the process of deflation (regardless of what one wants to call it), please see Bizarro World Inflation; About that 2011 Hyperinflation Call ... Yes Virginia, U.S. Back in Deflation; Inflation Scare Ends; Hyperinflationists Wrong Twice Over Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 05 Oct 2011 12:19 AM PDT Inquiring minds are reading details of a Speech by Joaquín Almunia Vice President of the European Commission responsible for Competition Policy on October 4, 2011. Since 2008, people throughout the EU have been asked to accept the huge government bailout of the financial sector and to endure the austerity measures required to bring public finances under control.The EC ...
The most galling of all is this blatant lie "The Commission's work has reduced the amount of taxpayers' money that has gone to financial institutions and has addressed the moral-hazard issue." If that is not enough to make you puke, nothing is. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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