"Men
haven’t changed much in the last 2,000 years and, in consequence, we
must still learn from history." –
Kenneth Clark,
"Civilisation"
"You shouldn’t be worried. You should
be angry. We’ve just come off a multiyear orgy of irresponsibility and
recklessness that’s unprecedented in the history of finance. Where was
the government? Where were the regulators? How did this happen?"
- Barry Ritholtz, CEO at Fusion IQ.
THE
WORLD FINANCIAL CRISIS
Indeed, how did it happen? The onset of the world’s worst financial
crisis in many decades is one of the most important factors (if not the most important factor)
currently influencing investment decisions.
The crisis has
created chaos and confusion. Not many people understand how the world has
arrived at this unfortunate situation. This report endeavours to identify the
underlying causes of the crisis and explains why the USA current account deficit has
been the main destabilising force in world finance.
To fully
comprehend what has happened requires at least a rudimentary knowledge of a
number of subjects, viz:
- Money - its origins and the various forms into
which it has evolved;
- The Fractional Reserve Banking system;
- The International
Monetary System;
- The development of derivatives, especially the
Over The Counter (OTC) derivatives market;
- How the various inputs melded into the
difficult crisis that the world is now facing.
Some of what
follows is very basic, but it is important to work through all the background
in order to eventually reach the point where the reader will hopefully
experience a moment when understanding dawns.
1.
MONEY – ITS ORIGINS &
DEVELOPMENT INTO DIFFERENT FORMS
Money evolved to
facilitate the exchange of goods and services. In a barter economy in ancient
societies one or two items became commonly used to facilitate exchanges. These
items were useful and attractive to everyone. They were traded, not for
themselves, but because they represented items that retained their value and
could be traded later for other goods and services. These items represented
the original forms of money.
These items that
emerged as money had a number of basic characteristics. They facilitated the
exchange of goods and services and could be divided into small units so that
even the smallest items could be traded. This function is called the
"medium of exchange". Secondly, they provided a means of
measurement of the relative values of different items,
this is the "unit of measurement" function. Finally, the items used
as money should not deteriorate so that they could be stored as savings for
future purchases. This is the "store of value" function. All forms
of successful money perform these three important and basic functions.
When the Bronze
Age allowed men to produce metals, the metals soon became used as money,
called "commodity" or "metallic" money. The metals were
not perishable whereas early forms of money tended to be livestock and
agricultural commodities which had limited life spans.
Many centuries
of trial and error saw gold and silver selected as the primary forms of
money, followed by copper and base metals. The use of precious metals as
money really took off when coins were minted containing a guaranteed amount
of metal, the guarantee being evidenced by the image of the King or Emperor
stamped on the coin. In Roman times the Aureus and
Denarius were the gold and silver coins in general use.
(See www.unrv.com/economy/romans-coins.php for a more
detailed account of Roman coinage.)
These coins were
widely accepted until the Romans started reducing the precious metal content
of the coins, making up the weight with cheaper metals. This trend towards
debasing the coinage eventually resulted in the demise of the Roman currency
and also of the Roman Empire. The gold
Bezant, produced in Constantinople, became a
coin used successfully for over 800 years in international as well as
national trade. It was the forerunner of other coins that were minted in European
countries through the middle ages.
Gold and silver
coins are heavy to carry around in quantity. Goldsmiths, who manufactured
gold and silver jewellery, had secure vaults to protect their stocks. They
extended their businesses to provide a safe-keeping service for wealthy
individuals who owned large quantities of coins. The Goldsmiths issued
receipts for the gold deposited with them. These paper receipts contained the
following wording: "I promise to pay Bearer on demand at the above
address xxx gold coins".
These receipts
were accepted by merchants and traders as being "as good as gold"
and were the forerunners of modern bank notes. They were more convenient to
transport and use than the heavy metallic coins. Thus the second form of
money was "receipt" money, following after "commodity" or
"metallic" money.
Goldsmiths
spotted another opportunity to expand their businesses by making loans of
gold coins. Initially the loans related to their own capital. The Goldsmiths
simply issued a receipt against their own gold holdings to the borrower. Later,
when the Goldsmiths noticed that only a small proportion of the gold coins
held in storage were ever claimed by their owners, they started increasing
their loan business by issuing receipts in excess of the gold that they had
in storage. As long as they always had sufficient gold coins on hand to meet
the quantity of receipts tendered for return of gold coins, everything was
fine and the holders of the receipts were not aware of the shortfall in
available gold coins.
In this way
"receipt" money morphed into "fractional receipt" money,
so called because the stock of gold coins in the Goldsmiths’ vaults was
only a fraction of the gold receipts issued by the Goldsmith. If greed caused
a Goldsmith to issue a vastly excessive number of receipts, it would cause
concern amongst the receipt holders. This could lead to a sudden unexpectedly
large surge of redemptions, absorbing the entire supply of gold coins in the
Goldsmith’s vaults. In those circumstances the Goldsmith was bankrupt
and would leave town in a hurry, just ahead of the lynching mob consisting of
the remaining holders of unredeemed receipts which were now valueless pieces
of paper. The threat of bankruptcy had the effect of imposing a discipline on
the lending activities of the Goldsmiths.
Goldsmiths were
the early bankers and the "fractional receipt" form of money
eventually developed into the modern "fractional reserve banking
system" which is in common use around the world. This system is
discussed in more detail in the next section.
The final form
of money that we need to discuss is the money in general use around the world
today. It is money issued by Government edict and defined as "legal
tender". This simply means that all citizens are required to accept
"legal tender" bank notes in trade and settlement of debts. It is
commonly called "fiat money". This is what we all work for and use
for living expenses.
There were times
when fiat money could be exchanged for gold at a country’s national
reserve bank. When convertibility into gold was available, fiat money was
"as good as gold" and generally accepted. The cost of the two World
Wars necessitated a change because both the UK
and the USA
had to create far more of their local currencies to pay for the wars than the
available gold stocks allowed.
The Bretton Woods agreement signed in June 1944 fixed gold
convertibility of the US Dollar at $35 per ounce, but convertibility was only
available countries holding gold in their national foreign exchange reserves.
Convertibility for individuals was cancelled. All other currencies were given
a fixed relationship to the US Dollar. This system worked well until the late
1960’s when it came under pressure with many countries, led by France,
exchanging their US Dollar foreign exchange holdings for gold.
In August 1971
President Nixon bowed to the pressure and abandoned the convertibility of the
US Dollar into gold at $35. This launched the world into a new and untried
system of completely floating fiat currencies. All countries were put in a
position where they could create unlimited amounts of their own local
currencies without restriction. This is one of the important sources of
trouble leading to the present crisis.
2.
THE FRACTIONAL RESERVE BANKING SYSTEM
Modern economies
use fiat money systems where the local currency is designated by Government
edict to be "legal tender" that must be accepted in all commercial
transactions within the economy. Modern fiat money is not convertible into
anything and is based simply on the "full faith and credit" of the
Government concerned. This fiat money may only be created by the Government
concerned, although most governments delegate this function to the
country’s Central Bank (CB).
Modern banking
systems allow Governments to "stimulate" their local economies by
creating money and injecting it into the banking system. Assume that $10m is
injected in this way and it is received by Bank A which then uses this
deposit to make $10m of loans. These loans are used by borrowers and
eventually deposited in other banks. This results in other banks receiving
deposits totalling $10m. This sequence could go on indefinitely until an
infinite number of loans are created on the back of the original $10m
deposit.
To limit this
multiplier effect of new money entering the system, banks are required to
place a fraction of their new deposits with the country’s CB and it is
only the remainder that may be loaned out. Typically the fraction of new
deposits required to be placed with the CB is of the order of 10%. Thus in
the example above, Bank A receiving a new deposit of $10m would have to place
$1m on deposit with the CB and would be free to loan $9m. The bank receiving
deposits from the $9m loaned by Bank A would have to place $900,000 with the
CB and would be free to lend $8.1m. Banks receiving the $8.1m would have to
put $810,000 with the CB and could lend $7.29m, and so on. Eventually the
original injection of $10m is multiplied to $100m in loans, a ten-fold
increase of the original $10m deposit.
The fraction of
deposits that must be placed with the CB, which is called the "reserve
ratio", can be varied from time to time. It is one of the tools
available to the CB to control the economy and banking system. A few years
ago the reserve ratio in China
was 7% which allowed Chinese banks to multiply new deposits into loans 14
times greater than the original deposit. With inflation increasing in China,
the reserve ratio has been steadily increased to around 14%, allowing new
loans to be "only" a 7 times multiple of new deposits.
In Australia
the reserve ratio is 8% allowing a 12.5 times multiple of new deposits. Most
Australian banks operate on a more conservative ratio. For most countries,
the ratio is about 10% allowing a 10-fold multiplier of new deposits. This is
the ratio that we will use in the following discussion.
A typical bank
is a highly geared operation with reserves only 10% of assets. The majority
of bank assets are loans. Major losses (generally bad debts) can cause
pressure on the bank from several sources, pressure that has the capacity to
bring the bank to its knees.
Each day a bank
must regulate its reserve balance with the CB. After all trades are cleared
at the end of a day, some banks will have surplus liquidity while others will
have shortfalls. This gives rise to the overnight borrowing market where
banks with surplus cash will lend to those with a shortfall so that they can
top up their reserve deposits at the CB. If a bank with a shortfall cannot
borrow sufficient funds in the overnight market, or if the other banks refuse
to lend to that bank, the bank with the shortfall can borrow from the CB at
penalty rates.
If a bank has to
borrow excessively from the CB for a lengthy period of time, other banks and
depositors will become suspicious of that bank’s ability to carry on in
business and will withdraw their deposits from that bank. This can happen via
a line of individuals trying to withdraw their deposits (as in Northern Rock
in the UK)
or by electronic withdrawals (as in the Bear Stearns case). We will return to
Bear Stearns in section 5.
This is a brief
sketch of the Fractional Reserve Banking System, sufficient for the purposes
of this discussion. A detailed review of this subject by Murray Rothbard can be found at:
www.lewrockwell.com/rothbard/frb.html
3.
INTERNATIONAL MONETARY SYSTEM
As previously mentioned, in August 1971 President
Nixon decreed that the USA
would cease exchanging gold at $35 per ounce for dollars tendered by foreign
central banks. This act completely changed the International Monetary system
and removed the discipline that gold provided under the Gold Exchange
Standard which was introduced at the Bretton Woods
Conference in 1944.
Once gold was
removed as the disciplining factor in the monetary system, a new reserve
asset had to emerge. The US Dollar, presumably because of the size of the US
economy, became the de facto
international reserve asset.
What evolved became known as the US Dollar Standard.
The principal
flaw in the US Dollar Standard is that it has no mechanism to prevent or
correct large and persistent trade imbalances between countries. Under the
Gold Standard and its successor, the Gold Exchange Standard, countries that
ran current account deficits had to curb their activities when they ran out
of gold to settle their deficits. They had to devalue their currencies to
stimulate exports and curb imports.
Under the US
Dollar Standard, the USA
can settle large trade deficits by exporting newly created US Dollars. Consequently,
the deterioration in the US
current account deficit has gone unchecked for decades. It recently reached
the level of $2 Billion per day. This is one of the major factors that
has destabilised world economies, and is a major contributing factor to the
current crisis.
When foreign
companies sell goods in the USA
they take their dollar earnings home and convert them into their own
currencies. This puts upward pressure on those local currencies. The
CB’s of those countries intervene to prevent their currencies from
appreciating in order to preserve their trade advantage. They intervene by
creating local money and using this to buy US dollars. In this way, the
exporters are able to keep their export earnings in their domestic currency,
the local currency does not appreciate against the US dollar and the local
CB’s foreign exchange reserves reflect a large increase in their US
Dollar component.
The US
current account deficit of $2 billion per day finds its way into banking
systems around the world as new deposits. Enter the Fractional Reserve
banking system multiplier of 10 times new deposits. This
means that banks somewhere in the world have been given the capacity to
increase their loans by $20 billion per day, and that is per day, provided
that they can find suitably qualified borrowers
That is not the
end of the story. The foreign CB’s need to invest the US Dollar
component of their foreign exchange reserves somewhere. They have tended to
buy US Treasury Bonds, thus returning the $2 billion per day US current account deficit back to the USA. These
purchases result in new deposits into the US banking system of $2 billion
per day. Yes, that does mean that the US banks can also increase their
lending by 10 times that amount, or $20 billion per day, provided that they
can find suitably qualified borrowers.
The magic of the
Fractional Reserve banking system combined with the current unsound
International Monetary system has, incredibly, provided banks around the
world with the potential to increase their loans by $40 billion per day! This
is how massively the US
current account deficit has destabilised the world financial system.
4.
DEVELOPMENT OF THE OTC DERIVATIVES MARKET
The US trade deficit has been growing steadily for nearly 2 decades,
providing vast new loan potential to banking systems around the world. This
vast increase in world wide lending capacity is directly responsible for the
various bubbles that have emerged in different places. Examples are Japan in the late 1980’s (stock market
and real estate), in other Asian countries in the 1990’s and more
recently in China.
In the USA, the technology
bubble and the recent real estate bubble were supported by this huge increase
in liquidity flowing from the new lending capacity injected into the
world’s banking systems by the US current account deficit.
Not
surprisingly, banks have had increasing difficulty finding suitable
investments and credit-worthy borrowers for the vast amount of potential new
lending capacity that they had available. Huge demand for new products or new
investments emerged. Fertile minds on Wall Street and in other financial
centres went to work to develop an array of new investment products with an
alphabet soup of acronyms to satisfy this demand.
The search for
new loans reached increasingly less credit-worthy borrowers. Ultimately
standards degenerated to such an extent that people who should never have
been allowed to borrow, called Ninjas, (no income, no job, no
assets), were able to obtain 100% mortgage loans to purchase homes. The
bottom of the borrowing barrel had been scraped bare. Thereafter it was only
a matter of time before trouble in the form of losses emerged.
Bankers must
have been aware of the risks being run in this highly charged situation of easily
available excess liquidity. Over The Counter (OTC) derivatives were developed
to provide insurance against specific risks and to distribute the general
risks over a wider market. These OTC contracts are individually tailored
instruments. A whole new lexicon or vocabulary has evolved around them. Words
such as caps, collars, floors and swaptions emerged
out of the Bear Stearns fiasco. What these words mean can only be ascertained
by lawyers looking at the small print of each derivative contract.
There is no
clearing house or market authority standing behind these contracts to ensure
that they are fully discharged. In the event of some parties going bankrupt
or simply refusing to meet their obligations, the counter parties to those
contracts would have no alternative but to sue the defaulting party or stand
in the line of creditors in the bankruptcy proceedings. .
The Bank for
International Settlements (BIS) makes an attempt to quantify the growth in
OTC derivative products. Growth has been phenomenal, recently reaching
something of the order of more than $500 trillion (with a T) in
"notional" value. Notional value simply means the gross amount
covered by the contract. For example an option or swap contract covering
$100m of bonds might cost say $2m in premium. The $100m is the notional value
while $2m is the initial underlying market value. Subsequently the market
value of a particular contract could vary from zero to $100m depending on the
terms of the contract and how the underlying securities perform.
There is an
element of double counting as many contracts have been arbitraged or sold to
a range of different parties. The BIS only picks up OTC derivatives from
banks and similar sources and makes no attempt to quantify OTC derivatives
entered into by non-banking participants such as hedge funds, investment
funds, stock brokers and others. The BIS believes that their figures cover
about 85% of outstanding OTC derivative contracts but the truth is that they
really don’t know how much non-banking participants have generated in
OTC derivative contracts.
The growth in
OTC derivatives has been dramatic, particularly over the past decade. Credit
Default Swaps (CDS) have been the fastest growing derivative category
recently. They are a form of stop loss insurance on credit or financial
instruments. CDS derivatives have grown from $10 Trillion to $46 Trillion
(notional value) in the 2 years to June 2007. This included a massive
gain of $24 Trillion in just the 6 months to June 2007, a breathtaking 109%
gain in half a year. A lot of people must have suspected what was coming and
bought insurance against possible loss. It remains to be seen whether they
will be able to collect on these contracts.
The numbers
involved in OTC derivatives are so massive, even if calculated at supposed
"gross market value" (assuming that it was possible to calculate
that number), that they dwarf the rest of the numbers in the world economy
and financial system. The risk inherent in OTC derivatives is that the entire
edifice can only function provided all parties involved meet their
obligations when they fall due. A collapse of a major counter-party could
trigger a domino like collapse of banks around the world.
5. HOW IT
HAPPENED
The crisis has
reached the point where the US
banking system has effectively exhausted its reserves that it should have
with the Fed. The US
banks are functioning only because the Federal Reserve is lending the banks
what they need to meet their reserve requirements by taking on questionable
assets at cost. It makes nonsense of the fractional reserve system of banking
when the banks have virtually no reserves and are operating only courtesy of
the Fed.
The desperate
measures to save Bear Stearns (BS) were implemented because of the
"inter-connectivity" of banks and investment houses involved in the
OTC derivatives market. BS had an exposure to OTC derivatives of more than
$13 trillion notional value. If BS went bankrupt and could not meet its OTC
derivatives obligations, it could possibly have triggered a domino like banking
collapse.
JP Morgan Chase
had the largest exposure to OTC derivatives of all the American banks at $78
trillion prior to taking over the OTC derivative obligations of BS. When
combined with BS, Morgan will have an exposure of over $91 trillion to OTC
derivatives at notional value. This is nearly 18% of the world’s
exposure to these instruments.
How did it all
happen? Alan Greenspan is the top culprit being blamed by the media. There is
an element of truth in this allegation but his part was a small one. The fact
is that the world went along with the major problem, being the US trade
deficit, and accepted US dollars in exchange for real goods and services. World
wide fiat money and fractional reserve banking systems caused a much bigger
flood of liquidity than Greenspan was ever responsible for.
Greenspan
possibly did take interest rates too low for too long and allowed the Fed to
be more accommodative than was strictly warranted during the early years of
this decade. The cake had already been baked by then. Greenspan’s free
and easy attitude simply accelerated the eating of the cake. If Greenspan had
taken a strongly decisive attitude, as Paul Volker took in the 1980’s,
Greenspan would have triggered a deflationary collapse. Nobody wanted that.
Call it benign
neglect. Call it national introspection with individual countries only being
concerned about their own interests. Nobody wanted to disturb the status quo.
Call it lack of concern about what would eventually happen. It is summed up
in the attitude: "it’s our currency but it is your problem".
Sure the rating
agencies and the regulators have questions to answer but the real reason it
happened is that the world had to get to a point where totally irrational
lending finally reached the last unworthy recipient of a loan. Then things
could change. It required serious losses to refocus attention on conservatism
and probity. It required losses large enough to get people to really examine
what happened, to correctly identify the causes and to take action to ensure
a better system in the future.
6.
WHAT HAPPENS NOW?
It does not take
a genius to work out that the US Dollar Standard (with the US dollar as the
reserve currency) has to go, but it will take a genius to work out what the
new system should be. The new system will require sound money that cannot be
manufactured at will by Governments, money that performs the 3 basic
functions of medium of exchange, unit of measurement and store of value. A
new international monetary system needs to be developed.
It seems that
the eternal money, gold, will have to be returned to the monetary systems,
both national and international, to provide the necessary discipline.
That is all for
the future. Meanwhile there is a mess to clear up and how that occurs will
have investment consequences and implications.
There was a
crisis in the US
banking system during the 1970’s with major loans to South American
Governments going sour. South American countries actually defaulted on their
sovereign loans, leaving the American banks with large losses. If these
losses were brought to account, the banking system would have wiped out its
reserves. Special permission was granted to allow the loans to be carried at
book value until the banks raised new capital and/or accumulated sufficient
profits to write off their South American loan losses. The banks were allowed
time to trade out of their losses.
The current
situation is different. In the 1970’s crisis it was possible to
identify where the losses would fall and the individual banks could quantify
their losses. In 2008 it is impossible to identify the quantum of losses or
determine where they will fall. The US banking system has already
recognised losses that have wiped out bank reserves to the extent that the
banks can only continue operating with aid from the Fed. The losses written
off to date are likely to be augmented by additional sub-prime and CDS losses
of presently unknown magnitude. Moreover, it is unclear where those losses
will finally appear. Every bank is suspect.
The mountain of
OTC derivatives is one of the major problems facing the world’s banking
and financial systems. Unfortunately there is no easy way of getting rid of
these derivatives. George Soros recently suggested that a clearing house
system should be established for the OTC derivatives. This is an impractical
suggestion as a brief example will quickly illustrate.
Assume that
investor A buys $100m of 5 year bonds in XYZ Company. He is unsure of the
strength of XYZ Co. and buys a 5 year CDS from B to cover any loss in the
event of XYZ Co defaulting on its bonds. The investor pays a premium of say
$2m per annum. Two years later it is desired to close down this transaction. If
A and B were still the only parties to the
transaction, they could sit around a table and discuss how to determine the
current market value of the CDS. IF they could agree a market
value for the CDS and IF both parties were willing to cancel
the CDS, it could be cancelled by one party paying to the other the mutually
agreed amount.
In reality B
will probably have arbitraged its position to a
number of other parties and the investor A may have sold his bonds to a
number of other investors with the CDS protection attached. It is a practical
impossibility to get all parties to this simple transaction together to
discuss a possible settlement and cancellation of the deal. This is just one
simple transaction without the complication of additional features such as
collars, caps, swaptions, etc. It is also just one
of zillions of OTC transactions that are in existence. To expect a clearing
house to be able to settle these derivative contracts is just wishful
thinking.
This mountain of OTC derivatives
has the capacity to bring down the banking system in the event of the
bankruptcy of one or more of the larger counter parties. Some way has to be
found to eliminate this OTC derivative cancer which would otherwise be fatal
to the present system.
History has
shown that when debt becomes excessive, the lenders almost always lose. They
lose either because their debtors go bankrupt or they lose because they are
repaid in currency which has been debased by wholesale printing, making the
currency worth very little in real terms. There is no doubt that the world
has reached an extreme level of debt creation. The only question is whether
the debt will be settled by bankruptcies or whether the debt will be repaid
in largely worthless currency.
Fed chief Ben
Bernanke has made it quite plain that his plan is NOT to allow debt to be
repaid by bankruptcy and deflation. All his actions to date are in line with
his proclaimed policy. There is no reason to think that he will change his
thinking or modus operandi. Thus we have to believe that USA
has embarked on a voyage that will allow debts to be repaid in debased,
largely worthless currency.
Jim Sinclair has
drawn an analogy comparing the Weimar
Republic in 1919 with the present mountain of OTC derivatives. After World War I the
Allies imposed excessively large reparation claims on the German Republic.
The Germans objected to the magnitude of the claims and only agreed to the
quantum when the Allies allowed the Germans to settle the reparation payments
in Reichsmarks. The Germans then adopted the
attitude that "if they want Reichsmarks, we
will give them Reichsmarks".
They then proceeded to print new Reichsmarks at an
accelerating rate to settle the reparation debts, eventually causing
hyperinflation that destroyed the German currency.
Jim Sinclair
suggests that if one crosses out the words
"reparation payments" and replaces them with the words "OTC
derivative contracts" one would have a clearer picture of the current
circumstances. The suggestion is that the OTC derivative problem can only be
settled by creating sufficient new currency so as to inflate the currency to
the point where it is largely worthless. That would allow all these
derivative contracts to be settled in debased currency.
All the evidence
to date suggests that a liquidation of debt via the deflationary bankruptcy
route could only happen by accident. It is possible to have a temporary
situation where debt is extinguished by bankruptcy in part of the economy
whilst the currency is being aggressively debased.
Eventually,
however, the odds strongly favouring the elimination of currently excessive
debt via debasing the currency route should prevail.
This report
commenced with two quotations and it finishes with 3 quotations. These come
from above the massive arches of the triple doorways into the Milan
Cathedral:
Above the first
arch: "All that pleases is but for a moment."
Above the second
arch: "All that troubles is but for a moment."
Above the third
arch: "That only is important which is eternal."
Gold has been
the eternal money.
Alf Field
Disclosure and Disclaimer
Statement: The author is not a disinterested party in that he has personal investments
gold and silver bullion, gold and silver mining shares as well as in base
metal and uranium mining companies. The author’s objective in writing
this article is to interest potential investors in this subject to the point
where they are encouraged to conduct their own further diligent research.
Neither the information nor the opinions expressed should be construed as a
solicitation to buy or sell any stock, currency or commodity. Investors are
recommended to obtain the advice of a qualified investment advisor before
entering into any transactions. The author has neither been paid nor received
any other inducement to write this article
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