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If money
can be created from thin air, the opposite is also true: it can be
destroyed as well. Usually it is the Federal Reserve System that does
the creating, but the destruction comes by other means. Bear
Stearns’ hedge fund investors have found this out the hard way. Two
of its funds recently went belly up, taking 100% of investors’ capital
with them. One of the funds, the Bear Stearns High-Grade Structured
Credit Strategies Enhanced Leverage fund, reported $638 million of investor
capital in the first quarter. Today nothing remains.
How can
money so quickly and effectively be destroyed? To understand this, we
have to understand how the money was created in the first place. According
to news reports, the underlying securities in the hedge fund in question were
subprime mortgages.
Mr. Jones Takes
out a Sub Prime Loan
Let’s say it’s 2003, and Mr. Jones, who has less than stellar
credit wants to buy a house. He goes to the bank to get a mortgage. The
conventional wisdom is that the bank loans him money so he can buy the
house. In reality, Mr. Jones is actually borrowing the money from
himself, -- or rather against his own future earnings. The bank simply
facilitates the real estate transaction between him and the house
seller. It does this by writing a note that says ‘we’ve
loaned Mr. Jones X dollars and he’s promised to pay us the money back
over 30 years. We are holding his house as collateral until the money
is paid back.’ This note is called the mortgage, and it becomes the
bank’s asset. Under Federal Reserve rules, it can use this asset
to create the money to pay
the seller of the house.
In
reality, the bank has no money, and the mortgage has value only because of
Mr. Jones’s promise to
pay back the money. As long as Mr. Jones’s promise is good, the mortgage will
retain its value and the bank can sell it to another investor – for
example a hedge fund.
The Hedge Fund
Buys Mr. Jones’s Mortgage
The hedge fund bought thousands of mortgages like Mr. Jones’s, with the
hope of collecting a steady stream of income as borrowers paid off their
mortgages. That sounded like a good idea, and a solid bet. People
traditionally are very good about paying their mortgages back. No one,
after all, wants to lose their home. In fact, it sounded like great idea – so great in fact,
that Bear Stearns took the $638 million of its investors money, borrowed $10 billion more, (yes, that is a b) and put it all into subprime
mortgages.
Mr. Jones
Defaults
As it turned out, Mr. Jones, and many more like him were unable to keep their
promises to pay the money back. Maybe Mr. Jones lost his job in this
terrible economy; maybe he got sick and couldn’t work; maybe he
didn’t understand that his mortgage payment was going to jump to
something he couldn’t afford; maybe he thought he could sell the house
for more money, and never expected to hold on to it this long; maybe he just
wasn’t a good credit risk to begin with.
Whatever
the reason, Mr. Jones and millions like him had to break their promises about paying back
the loans. In the end they’ll just give their keys back to the
bank and say, “Thanks, but no thanks. I can’t afford
it.”
The banks
in turn will say, “Don’t give us the keys. We sold your
mortgage a long time ago. We don’t even know who owns your
mortgage now, and frankly we don’t care.”
Until now,
his debt was an asset of the fund, and was being used as collateral against
loans ten times its value. But the moment that Mr. Jones gave up on the idea
of home ownership, the value of his mortgage simply disappeared. The
paper asset, which derived its value from Mr. Jones’s promise, was
destroyed. This had a cascading effect, since Mr. Jones’s
mortgage was being used as collateral to borrow money to buy even more subprime mortgages, many of which were also
defaulting. Assets purchased on borrowed money were now
worthless. Only the debts remained, and suddenly there was more debt
than the original amount that investors had put into the fund. These
original funds would be needed repay the debts incurred by the fund. Nothing
is left to return to investors. This is the process by which money is
destroyed.
What about the houses, you ask? Yes, they have some value, but not nearly as
much as when they were first purchased. Again, it was not the houses that had
the value, it was Mr. Jones promise to pay a steady
stream of high interest income over 30 years that was valuable to investors.
American Dream,
Up in Smoke
Not only is the money gone, but so are the dreams of those millions of
homeowners. The decision to purchase a home is not made lightly, and is
usually accompanied by great hope and optimism. Defaults are the
opposite. As the collective mood of millions of people like Mr. Jones,
(not to mention the investors in the hedge funds who also lost everything)
shifts from exuberance and optimism to negativity and pessimism,
it is reflected in the larger economy as financial losses. This is a
major aspect of the Wave Principle,
which predicts tough times ahead.
Inflation and
Deflation
The Federal Reserve System has systematically inflated the money supply since
1987, causing tremendous inflation. Along the way, money has also been
destroyed, most memorably during the dot.com collapse of 2000-2003. This
process of destruction is part of the reason why the economy has not
experienced true hyperinflation.
In fact, a
key point here is that the Fed is not really creating money, but credit. In
truth, money is a physical commodity. Credit is simply the ability to
buy something. Today credit functions as money, so it is difficult to
tell the difference, but this was not, and will not always be the case.
If the Fed
had actually printed bills (rather than made electronic book entries) for
each dollar it created, those dollars would still be circulating in the
economy and inflation would be much higher. As it is, the Fed can
create credit, and those closest to the source of that credit creation
– banks and government contractors – reap the greatest
benefits. As the credit works its way through the system, it 1) causes
general inflation, and 2) finds its way into weaker, less experienced hands
– the likes of Mr. Jones and his subprime
mortgage, or the average investor chasing internet stocks. In these
weak hands, it can easily be manipulated to destruction.
Through
this process of destruction, runaway money supply growth can be
controlled. But if the destruction process gets out of hand, it is
possible that we could see the reverse of what we have seen over the past
twenty years – a prolonged period of sustained deflation. This could happen if
people’s preference for assets over debt shifts along with the social
mood. Recall that the value of paper assets is only as good as the promise
standing behind them. Bear Stearns promise to investors rested on the
promises of millions of people like Mr. Jones to continue paying their
mortgages. Its not that they didn’t want to pay; economic
conditions and the way the mortgages were written made sure that they
couldn’t. If people like Mr. Jones become unwilling or
unable to borrow, and if hedge fund investors who lost everything become to
skittish about borrowing, the Fed will have a more difficult time increasing
the money supply, since all credit creation today comes via debt creation.
The most
recent issue of the Elliott Wave Financial Forecast, which remains a
steadfast proponent of deflation, (available here, sign in
required) made this
observation earlier this month:
“When
Merrill Lynch announced that it planned to sell the securities in [the Bear
Stearns hedge fund] on the open market, Bloomberg reported that the
“threat is sending shudders across Wall Street.” Why? “A
sale would give banks, brokerages and investors the one thing they want to
avoid: a real price on the bonds in the fund that could serve as a
benchmark.”
Later that
day, Merrill decided against an open market sale. Retuters
described the episode this way: “If word of the exact nature of
the losses became public, it would have forced many other funds to revalue
their holding and perhaps lose money, setting off a domino effect that could
rattle markets globally.”
How much
value, based on how many broken promises, has already been lost but not yet
revealed? As long as financial prices rise (as they have continued to
recently) no one is interested in such questions. But in the end, an
ever inflating money supply is simply unsustainable. Money must also be
destroyed to maintain equilibrium.
In his most recent
testimony before Congress, Chairman
Bernanke reiterated that inflation is the
Fed’s foremost concern. For the time being, the Fed is holding
interest rates steady. If it can hold the line, and allow the market to
continue on its destructive path, inflation can be contained. The risk
is that the destruction gets out of hand, and becomes full blown
deflation.
By :
Michael Nystrom
Bull not Bull
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