Archive for the ‘Bank Fraud Facts’ Category

Mish Shedlock: Government/Lender Debt Slaves – The New Homeowner Model

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

This direct and scathing piece from Mish Shedlock and the authors named in the first parpagraph makes it all too clear that the banks have a plan and the plan is for the homeowners to pay the bills no matter what. The worst thing of all – is, it’s working. By and large the hard working men and women of this country are paying completely outrageously inflated mortgages on properties not worth the loan amounts and continueing to do so for all the reasons mentioned here including the massive set up to get them to do just that. It’s time to find some equilibrium and some leverage – if the politicians do not have the will, then new politicians are needed. It is time for the laws to be enforced. This article is the most accurate account we’ve seen of what is really going on out there.
***

Government and Lender Policies of Fear and Shame…

Government, lenders, and various lender-sponsored “help” agencies have acted in unison, using fear mongering tactics and shame to manage the housing crisis for the sole benefit of lenders.

Thanks to Brent T. White at the James E. Rogers College of Law and the Sacramento Bee and for a fascinating called Underwater and Not Walking Away: Shame, Fear and the Social Management of the Housing Crisis.

Note: The PDF is 54 pages long and worth reading in entirety but I have condensed the discussion down to a very readable 3-4 pages of so. There is little sense in putting such a lengthy snip into a huge blockquote that will take up a lot of space. Instead, I will make it clear below when the article ends.

Abstract

Despite reports that homeowners are increasingly “walking away” from their mortgages, most homeowners continue to make their payments even when they are significantly underwater. This article suggests that most homeowners choose not to strategically default as a result of two emotional forces: 1) the desire to avoid the shame and guilt of foreclosure; and 2) exaggerated anxiety over foreclosure’s perceived consequences. Moreover, these emotional constraints are actively cultivated by the government and other social control agents in order to encourage homeowners to follow social and moral norms related to the honoring of financial obligations – and to ignore market and legal norms under which strategic default might be both viable and the wisest financial decision. Norms governing homeowner behavior stand in sharp contrast to norms governing lenders, who seek to maximize profits or minimize losses irrespective of concerns of morality or social responsibility. This norm asymmetry leads to distributional inequalities in which individual homeowners shoulder a disproportionate burden from the housing collapse.

II. Underwater and Staying Put

As further evidence that relatively few homeowners strategically default solely because they are underwater, housing markets with a sharply higher percentage of underwater homeowners as compared to the national average do not have sharply higher default rates.

As the chart below illustrates, this pattern of relatively low default rates compared to the percentage of underwater mortgages holds true almost universally across the hardest hit markets, with the default rate much more closely resembling the unemployment rate than the percent underwater:

III. The Financial Logic of Walking Away

Before examining why more underwater homeowners are not strategically defaulting, it might be helpful to explore why they should. A textbook premise of economics is that the value of a home, even an owner occupied one, is “the current value of the rent payments that could be earned from renting the property at market prices.”

In other words, when the net cost of buying a home exceeds the net cost of renting, one is better off renting. The equation is not as simple, however, as comparing total mortgage payments to rent payments because home ownership carries certain benefits including tax breaks and the potential for appreciation. Additionally, assuming a non-depreciating market, the portion of the mortgage payment that goes to principle rather than interest will eventually inure to the homeowner at the time of sale. On the flip side, homeownership carries significant costs that renting does not, including maintenance, homeowner’s insurance and substantial transaction costs upon selling.

In calculating whether to buy or rent, a potential homebuyer should compare the net cost of owning to the net cost of renting a similar home over the expected period of occupancy. The costs of owning include the interest-only portion of the loan payment, property taxes, maintenance, homeowners insurance, and transaction costs upon selling, minus the expected appreciation and cumulative tax savings over the planned period of ownership. As a rule of thumb, a potential homebuyer is generally better off renting when the home price exceeds 15 or 16 times the annual rent for comparable homes.

For example, a homeowner who bought an average home in Miami at the peak would have paid around $355,400. That home would now be worth only $198,00038 and, assuming a 5% down payment, the homeowner would have approximately $132,000 in negative equity. He could save approximately $116,000 by walking away and renting a comparable home. Or, he could stay and take 20 years just to recover lost equity – all the while throwing away $1300 a month in net savings that he could invest elsewhere.

The advantage of walking is even starker for the large percentage of individuals who bought more-expensive-than-average homes in the Miami area – or in any bubble market for that matter – in the last five years. Millions of U.S. homeowners could save hundreds of thousands of dollars by strategically defaulting on their mortgages.
Homeowners should be walking away in droves. But they aren’t.

V. The Social Control of the Housing Crisis

Alarmed by the possibility that foreclosures may reach a tipping point, formal federal policy has aimed to stem the tide of foreclosures through programs designed to “reduce household cash flow problems,” such as the Making Home Affordable (MHA) loan modification program and Hope For Homeowners.

In other words, federal policy assumes that homeowners are – for the most part – not “ruthless” and won’t walk away from their mortgages simply because they have negative equity. Most homeowners walk only when they can no longer afford to stay. As evidence of this fact, only 45% of homeowners would walk even if they had $300,000 in negative equity. This percentage drops to 38% among the subset of individuals who believe it is immoral to strategically default on one’s mortgage (a subset to which 87% of homeowners belong).

These numbers suggest that the “moral constraint” is a powerful one indeed – and that, for most people, only the complete inability to afford their mortgage would push them to default. On the other hand, the fact that 63% of “amoral” individuals would default at $300,000 in negative equity, and 59% would do so at $200,000, suggests that federal policy can only proceed on the premise that affordability is the prime consideration as long as the moral and social constraints on foreclosure remain strong.

The government thus has an incentive, along with certain other economic and social institutions interested in limiting the number of foreclosures, in cultivating guilt and shame in those who would contemplate walking away. Similarly, knowing that guilt and shame alone are not enough to prevent many individuals from defaulting once negative equity is extreme, these same institutions have an interest in increasing the perceived cost of foreclosure by cultivating fear of financial disaster for those who contemplate it.

At the political level, government spokespersons, including President Obama, have repeatedly emphasized the virtue of homeowners who have acted “responsibly” in “making their payments each month”. The worst criticism has been reserved, however, for those who would walk away from mortgages that they can afford.

Such individuals are portrayed as obscene, offensive, and unethical, and likened to deadbeat dads who walk out on their children, or those who would have “given up” and just handed over Europe to the Nazis.

Indeed, a homeowner contemplating a strategic default would be hard pressed to avoid the message that doing so would place them among the most despicable members of society.

Moreover, a homeowner who turned to any number of credit counseling agencies would also find little sympathy – and much moralizing – should they announce their plan to walk on their “affordable” mortgage. Gail Cunningham of the National Foundation for Credit Counseling declared for example in an interview on NPR: “Walking away from one’s home should be the absolute last resort. However desperate a situation might become for a homeowner, that does not relieve us of our responsibilities.”

Indeed, the uniform message of both governmental and non-profit counseling agencies (which are typically funded at least in significant part by the financial industry) is that “walking away” is not a responsible choice and should be avoided at all costs.

Social control of would be defaulters is not limited to moral suasion, however. Predominate messages regarding foreclosure also frequently employ fear to persuade homeowners that strategic default is a bad choice. Indeed, almost every media story on those who “walk away from their mortgages” condemns the behavior as immoral and enlists some “expert” to explain that foreclosure is, despite any claims to the contrary, a devastating event.

Similar warnings of disaster pervade the information given to homeowners by HUD-approved housing counseling agencies, such as the following from the Anaheim Housing Counseling Agency:

Losing your home can be the worst and most devastating event to you personally, and your credit history. This is a scenario that you don’t want to occur if you can avoid it! Not only will you lose the comfort of your home and your investment, but a Foreclosure will stay pending on your credit history for as long as 10 years. This will jeopardize your ability to qualify for any future home loan purchases, it may affect your ability to access loans for car purchase and other needed purchases, and loan costs are likely to be higher both in fees and interest paid.

As discussed above, fear alone is a powerful motivator. But guilt and fear in combination are even more potent.

This may be because most individuals have a deep-seated, if ill-defined, sense that if they do “bad things,” bad things will happen to them. Whatever the psychological underpinnings, most people simply do not believe they will escape punishment for their moral transgressions. Guilt and fear of punishment go together.

As explored above, however, there is in fact a huge financial upside to strategic default for seriously underwater homeowners – an upside that is routinely ignored by the media, credit counseling agencies, and other political and economic institutions in “informing” homeowners about the consequences of default. Moreover, the costs of default are not nearly as extreme as these same institutions typically misrepresent them to be. In reality: homeowners face no risk of a deficiency judgment in many states or, regardless of the state, for FHA loans or loans held by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac; even in recourse states, lenders are unlikely to pursue a deficiency judgment because it is economically inefficient to do so; there is no tax liability on “forgiven portions” of home mortgages under current federal tax law in effect until 2012; defaulting on one’s mortgage does not mean that one’s other credit lines will be revoked; and most people can expect to recover from the negative impact of foreclosure on their credit score within a two years (and, meanwhile, two years of poor credit need not seriously impact one’s life).

VI. The Asymmetry of Homeowner and Lender Norms

One obvious response to the above discussion is that society benefits when people honor their financial obligations and behave according to social and moral norms, rather than strictly legal or market norms. This may be true if lenders behaved according to the same social and moral norms. In the case of lender-borrower behavior, however, there is a clear imbalance in placing personal responsibility on the borrower to honor their “promise to pay” in order to relieve the lender of their agreement to take back the home in lieu of payment. Given lenders generally superior knowledge and understanding of both mortgage instruments and valuation of real estate, it seems only fair to hold them to the benefit of their bargain. At a basic level, sound underwriting of mortgage loans requires lenders to ensure that a loan is sufficiently collateralized in the event of default.

As such, historical home prices have hewed nationally to a price-to-annual-rent ratio of roughly 15-to-1. At the peak of the market, however, price-to-rent ratios reached 38-to-1 in the most inflated markets, and the national average reached 23-to-1.

If personal responsibility is the operative value, then lenders who ignored basic economic principles (of which they should have been aware) should bear at least equal responsibility to homeowners for issuing collateralized loans that were far in excess of the intrinsic value of the home.

Moreover, since lenders generally arrange the appraisal (which home buyers must pay for) and home buyers rely upon the lender to ensure the home is worth the purchase price, one might argue that lender should bear much more than 50% responsibility for the bad investment of the homeowner and lender.

Indeed, lenders’ mortgage default risk models have long shown that the loan-to-value ratio is a critical factor in default risk. Lenders relaxed this requirement, however, as credit default models showed that few borrowers were “ruthless,” meaning that few borrowers default as soon as the loan value exceeds the market value of the home.

This is not to say that lenders are solely responsible for the housing run-up and bust, but that they do in fact bear a substantial portion of the blame – and thus should thus bear a substantial portion of the cost. One might argue, in fact, that the value of personal responsibility would require lenders to own up to their share of the blame, and work with underwater homeowners by voluntarily writing off some of the negative equity.

But lenders, of course, do not operate according norms of personal responsibility, and seek instead to maximize profit (or minimize losses). Appealing to this duty, it has been suggested that, given the great cost to lenders of foreclosure, they have an economic incentive to modify loans for homeowners in danger of default.

Recent studies seeking to explain this apparently irrational behavior have shown that lenders are simply operating to maximize profit and minimize losses, just as they would be expected to do.

First, lenders know that borrowers with high credit scores are unlikely to default even at high levels of negative equity. To modify loans for these homeowners would be to throw money away – and to encourage more homeowners to ask for modifications. Second, a significant number of homeowners who temporarily default on their mortgages “self-cure” without any help from their lender – though self cure rates have dropped precipitously in the last two years. Again, to modify the loans of individuals who would otherwise self cure would be to throw away money. Third, homeowners with poor credit, or who end up in arrears because of “triggering events” such as unemployment, divorce, or other financially devastating circumstances are likely to default on the modified loan as well. To modify loans for these individuals is to waste time and risk housing prices falling further before the lender eventually has to foreclosure and sell the property anyway.

Given these economic incentives for the lender, a seriously underwater homeowner with good credit and solid mortgage payment history who responsibly calls his lender to work out a loan modification is likely to be told by his lender that it will not discuss a loan modification until the homeowner is 30 days or more delinquent on his mortgage payment.

The lender is making a bet (and a good one) that the homeowner values his credit score too much to miss a payment and will just give up the idea of a loan modification.

However, if the homeowner does what the lender suggests, misses a payment, and calls back to discuss a loan modification in 30 days, the homeowner is likely to be told to call back when he is 90 days delinquent. In the meantime, the lender will send the borrower a series of strongly-worded notices reminding him of his moral obligation to pay and threatening legal action, including foreclosure and a deficiency judgment, if the homeowner does not bring his mortgage payments current. The lender is again making a bet (and again a good one) that the homeowner will be shamed or frightened into paying their mortgage. If the homeowner calls the lender’s bluff and calls back when he is 90 days delinquent, there is a good possibility that he will be told that his credit score is now so low that he does not qualify for a loan modification.

Most lenders will, in other words, take full advantage of the asymmetry of norms between lender and homeowner and will use the threat of damaging the borrower’s credit score to bring the homeowner into compliance. Additionally, many lenders will only bargain when the threat of damaging the homeowner’s credit has lost its force and it becomes clear to the lender that foreclosure is imminent absent some accommodation. On a fundamental level, the asymmetry of moral norms for borrowers and market norms for lenders gives lenders an unfair advantage in negotiations related to the enforcement of contractual rights and obligations.

*** END OF ARTICLE SNIP ***

There is more in the article including a discussion as to what to do about it all. I do not agree with many of the proposed solutions and indeed the article points out flaws in most of the solutions that have been proposed.

However, I do agree with the basic idea that asymmetry is a huge problem, that the playing field needs to be leveled.

Moreover, I will add that the real moral hazard is attempting to keep people debt slaves by purposely overstating the costs of walking away while ignoring all of the benefits. These “help” agencies are designed to do one thing and one thing only: help the lender regardless of the cost to the homeowner.

If these “help agencies” actually gave a realistic assessment of the advantages of walking away, we would see more willingness for voluntary cooperation between lenders and homeowners to negotiate a mutually beneficial arrangement. Instead we have a one sided winner-take-all approach whereby the only way for the homeowner to win is to walk away.

The current system of offering lenders a few thousand dollars to refinance a loan making the loan “more affordable” does nothing to address the fundamental problem of too much debt that will act as a drag on the economy for a decade to come.

The article concludes …

Regardless of the precise policy prescription, it is time to put to rest the assumption that a borrower who exercises the option to default is somehow immoral or irresponsible. To the contrary, walking away may be the most financially responsible choice if it allows one to meet one’s unsecured credit obligations or provide for the future economic stability of one’s family.

Individuals should not be artificially discouraged on the basis of “morality” from making financially prudent decisions, particularly when the party on the other side is amorally operating according to market norms and could have acted to protect itself by following prudent underwriting practices.

The current housing bust should be viewed for what it is: a market failure – not a moral failure on the part of American homeowners. That being the case, it is time to take morals out of the picture and search for an equitable solution to the negative equity problem.

Other than a single sentence about “market failure” that was a brilliantly written piece by Brent T. White. The market did not fail, government policies to promote housing in conjunction with loose monetary policies at the Fed is what failed. Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, HUD, the FHA, and the Fed all failed. Every one of those agencies should be abolished.

In the meantime, morality and fear mongering is not the solution. Instead, a rational look at the costs and benefits of walking away will encourage market solutions involving renegotiating debt levels to affordable levels rather than concentrating on affordable payment levels. A focus on the latter will act as a drag on the economy for a decade.

Addendum:

Walking away may be a good thing but laws vary state by state.

This is very important: Please do yourself a favor and Consult An Attorney Before Walking Away. The link will explain why.

Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Mike “Mish” Shedlock is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction.
Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/account_management.html to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific.
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Goldman Secretly Bet on US Housing Crash McClatchy Finds

Sunday, November 1st, 2009

Still not sure about bank fraud? This is the latest in the breaking story of how Goldman raked in billions as they destroyed their own clients and investors…

How Goldman secretly bet on the U.S. housing crash

The mainstream media finally reports something that is about 1 year old and manny of us knew since 2005

C-J
By Greg Gordon | McClatchy Newspapers
WASHINGTON — In 2006 and 2007, Goldman Sachs Group peddled more than $40 billion in securities backed by at least 200,000 risky home mortgages, but never told the buyers it was secretly betting that a sharp drop in U.S. housing prices would send the value of those securities plummeting.

Goldman’s sales and its clandestine wagers, completed at the brink of the housing market meltdown, enabled the nation’s premier investment bank to pass most of its potential losses to others before a flood of mortgage defaults staggered the U.S. and global economies.

Only later did investors discover that what Goldman had promoted as triple-A rated investments were closer to junk.

Now, pension funds, insurance companies, labor unions and foreign financial institutions that bought those dicey mortgage securities are facing large losses, and a five-month McClatchy investigation has found that Goldman’s failure to disclose that it made secret, exotic bets on an imminent housing crash may have violated securities laws.

“The Securities and Exchange Commission should be very interested in any financial company that secretly decides a financial product is a loser and then goes out and actively markets that product or very similar products to unsuspecting customers without disclosing its true opinion,” said Laurence Kotlikoff, a Boston University economics professor who’s proposed a massive overhaul of the nation’s banks. “This is fraud and should be prosecuted.”

John Coffee, a Columbia University law professor who served on an advisory committee to the New York Stock Exchange, said that investment banks have wide latitude to manage their assets, and so the legality of Goldman’s maneuvers depends on what its executives knew at the time.

“It would look much more damaging,” Coffee said, “if it appeared that the firm was dumping these investments because it saw them as toxic waste and virtually worthless.”

Lloyd Blankfein, Goldman’s chairman and chief executive, declined to be interviewed for this article.

A Goldman spokesman, Michael DuVally, said that the firm decided in December 2006 to reduce its mortgage risks and did so by selling off subprime-related securities and making myriad insurance-like bets, called credit-default swaps, to “hedge” against a housing downturn.

DuVally told McClatchy that Goldman “had no obligation to disclose how it was managing its risk, nor would investors have expected us to do so … other market participants had access to the same information we did.”

For the past year, Goldman has been on the defensive over its Washington connections and the billions in federal bailout funds it received. Scant attention has been paid, however, to how it became the only major Wall Street player to extricate itself from the subprime securities market before the housing bubble burst.

Goldman remains, along with Morgan Stanley, one of two venerable Wall Street investment banks still standing. Their grievously wounded peers Bear Stearns and Merrill Lynch fell into the arms of retail banks, while another, Lehman Brothers, folded.

To piece together Goldman’s role in the subprime meltdown, McClatchy reviewed hundreds of documents, SEC filings, copies of secret investment circulars, lawsuits and interviewed numerous people familiar with the firm’s activities.

McClatchy’s inquiry found that Goldman Sachs:

Bought and converted into high-yield bonds tens of thousands of mortgages from subprime lenders that became the subjects of FBI investigations into whether they’d misled borrowers or exaggerated applicants’ incomes to justify making hefty loans.

Used offshore tax havens to shuffle its mortgage-backed securities to institutions worldwide, including European and Asian banks, often in secret deals run through the Cayman Islands, a British territory in the Caribbean that companies use to bypass U.S. disclosure requirements.

Has dispatched lawyers across the country to repossess homes from bankrupt or financially struggling individuals, many of whom lacked sufficient credit or income but got subprime mortgages anyway because Wall Street made it easy for them to qualify.

Was buoyed last fall by key federal bailout decisions, at least two of which involved then-Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, a former Goldman chief executive whose staff at Treasury included several other Goldman alumni.

The firm benefited when Paulson elected not to save rival Lehman Brothers from collapse, and when he organized a massive rescue of tottering global insurer American International Group while in constant telephone contact with Goldman chief Blankfein. With the Federal Reserve Board’s blessing, AIG later used $12.9 billion in taxpayers’ dollars to pay off every penny it owed Goldman.

These decisions preserved billions of dollars in value for Goldman’s executives and shareholders. For example, Blankfein held 1.6 million shares in the company in September 2008, and he could have lost more than $150 million if his firm had gone bankrupt.

Read the Entire Story Here

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And More from Karl Denninger – FDIC Fails to Protect Depositors

Friday, October 30th, 2009

This week Mr. Denninger is on a roll and it’s all good. Well, not for the bankers or the people who are losing money in bank frauds but in terms of telling it like it is.

When are the people of this country going to get mad enough to do something about the rampant theft of trillions of dollars from them, their children and their grandchildren?  When are the peop0le responsible for the massive inflationary credit bubble and its subsequent collapse going to be held accountable for the rampant profit taking and market manipulations which have crippled the people, the small busiensses and the working people of this nation? Maybe never… particularly so long as Goldman Sachs is allowed to run the Treasury and the SEC as it seems now clear they do.

Welcome to the Untied States of Goldman Sachs – where the strings are all coming off and the threads of sound money markets are tattering in the winds of the coming storms.

The FDIC Must Be Indicted

Yeah, ok, the title is dramatic and will never happen.

Nonetheless, if we were truly a nation of laws, it would happen.

The LA Times notes regarding IndyMac depositors over the insurance limit:

The head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. delivered some bad news personally to uninsured depositors who lost money last year when IndyMac Bank crashed and burned, saying an act of Congress is their only hope for recovering their funds.

“When a bank fails, we have to do what’s least-cost to our deposit insurance fund,” FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair said during a public appearance Wednesday in Los Angeles.

Sheila is correct as far as she goes, but like most government employees, it is what she didn’t say that is the problem, not what she did.

The problem lies with the willful and intentional refusal to enforce black-letter law, in this case Title 12, Chapter 16, Section 1831o which says in part:

Each appropriate Federal banking agency and the Corporation (acting in the Corporation’s capacity as the insurer of depository institutions under this chapter) shall carry out the purpose of this section by taking prompt corrective action to resolve the problems of insured depository institutions.

“Shall” is a specific term of art in legislation.  It allows no discretion and mandates action.  “May” and “Can” are two other words of course, and mean what they say – as does “shall.”

This section of the law goes on to define capitalization “buckets”, each of which represents a level above water, or above zero, of the excess of assets .vs. liabilities for depository institutions.

It also contains plenty of other “shall” directives such as:

Each appropriate Federal banking agency shall—
(A) closely monitor the condition of any undercapitalized insured depository institution;
(B) closely monitor compliance with capital restoration plans, restrictions, and requirements imposed under this section; and
(C) periodically review the plan, restrictions, and requirements applicable to any undercapitalized insured depository institution to determine whether the plan, restrictions, and requirements are achieving the purpose of this section.

and plenty more.

Everyone should go read that section of law, and note all the shall requirements in there.

These are not suggestions, they are mandates, and if they were followed each and every bank that has been closed by the FDIC would have resulted in ZERO loss to uninsured depositors.

The reason for this is simple, when you get down to it – a bank’s “capital structure” looks like this (roughly) in terms of claims against a failed institution:

  1. Advances and loans/liens by the government (e.g. employment taxes and liabilities)
  2. Deposit liabilities
  3. Senior secured debt (bondholders)
  4. Senior unsecured debt (bondholders)
  5. Ordinary debt (bondholders)
  6. Preferred stockholders (hybrid stock/bondholders)
  7. Common stockholders
  8. Excess capital (retained earnings, etc.)

As you can see in a liquidation depositors are subordinate only to statutory preference for employment and similar related claims; the entire capital structure of the firm has to be wiped out before depositors take any loss whatsoever.

If assets are properly valued at all times by government examiners and the bank is closed in accordance with the black-letter requirements of Prompt Corrective Action, then in a liquidation the depositors will never lose any money and neither will the FDIC’s Deposit Insurance Fund.

It is in fact willful and intentional blindness by government agencies, including but not limited to allowing financial institutions to lie about the value of their assets, that has resulted in these losses being sustained by ordinary Americans.

Sheila Bair and the rest of the government’s “apparatus”, including the OTS and OCC, will undoubtedly claim “sovereign immunity” from suit, even though in the instant case, that of IndyMac, the OTS’ own inspector general has disclosed that an OTS employee and persons at IndyMac conspired together to back-date deposits, thereby distorting the bank’s financial condition, and there is now a 100-bank set of history on FDIC seizures that shows the FDIC has not been and still is not following the black letter requirements of Prompt Corrective Action.

We the people must not accept this sort of malfeasance and misfeasance.  These losses sustained by ordinary Americans are not the result of bad luck or even bad decisions by the banks that have failed.

Instead, these losses taken by ordinary Americans occurred as a direct result of malfeasance and misfeasance by the OTS, OCC and FDIC itself.

To be blunt, if you lost money as a consequence of being an uninsured depositor at IndyMac that loss occurred as a direct consequence of the willful blindness (or worse) of government agencies who have intentionally and wantonly refused to obey the mandates set before them under black-letter law.

You were, in essence, robbed by the government.

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The Market Ticker – Fed Fraud Continues

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Once again we find the Untied States of Goldman Sachs unravvling the financial world in what looks very much like a team effort to take everyone down in one big swell foop.  Sure, the recession is over, Cash for Clunkers worked, and we are all going to be very happy (homeless and unemployed) campers very soon.  Is anyone paying attention besides Karl?

Friday, October 30. 2009

Posted by Karl Denninger in Federal Reserve at 12:01

Oh Boy, Threats!

I was wondering how long it would take before the threats really started to show up in earnest..

Kansas City Fed president Thomas Hoenig is circulating a book titled “The Balance of Power: The Political Fight for an Independent Central Bank.” Charles Plosser of Philadelphia said on Sept. 29, “we must preserve” the Fed’s structure.

Must?  That implies that there is an “or else” in there somewhere… let’s see…. can I find an “or else”?

U.S. stocks, bonds and the dollar would collapse if investors perceive Congress violating the independence of the policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee, said Former Fed Governor Laurence Meyer, now vice chairman of Macroeconomic Advisers LLC.

There it is!

Let’s see…. stocks and bonds eh?   Which stocks and bonds would be “threatened” if The Fed was forced to account for its actions, like, for instance, to show us all what it bought, with what it bought, and to provide us with CUSIP’s so we could look at the current market value (if any!) of these stocks and bonds?

Would that, per chance, be the stocks and bonds of banks that are holding hundreds of billions of dollars of HELOCs on their balance sheets at or close to PAR (100% of face value) when the first mortgage hasn’t had a payment made on it in a year, the house is worth 50% of the first mortgage’s outstanding balance, and the home is in BubbleVille, CA?

Or would it be the stocks and bonds of institutions that have (between them) well north of a trillion dollars of off-balance sheet “stuff” in a big black box labeled “good as gold”, when “gold” really refers to the fact that it is “used dogfood” and has the same color – but not the same mass or consistency?

Would it be all those myriad institutions that The Fed was (along with OTS, OCC and the FDIC) responsible for overseeing and enforcing the strictures of Prompt Corrective Action (12 USC Chap 16 Sec 1831o), a law that has been entirely ignored when it comes to the larger banks in the financial system for more than a decade?

Would it be the institution (Goldman Sachs) linked to the NY Fed who has had board members who also served as the former Chairman of the company that isn’t a commercial bank but managed to finagle itself a bank holding company charter – with the permission of the very same NY Fed?

The central bank has also come under fire for granting a waiver allowing a former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. chairman to remain on the board of the New York Fed after the company opted to come under Fed oversight.

What did Dodd have to say?

Allowing banks to select their supervisors is “absolutely backwards,” Dodd said this month, without mentioning Fed interest-rate policy.

Really Chris?  That didn’t seem to bother you for the last how many years?  Why now?  A bit short on campaign contributions this cycle?

Some legislators want to “make the institution more political, and I think that’s terribly unfortunate,” Hoenig, 63, Kansas City’s president since 1991, said in an Oct. 9 interview.

Oh, I disagree Mr. Hoenig.

If the process becomes more political it will be by your own hand, and that of the rest of the Fed Governors, and it will be a side effect, not an intended outcome.

You really ought to go stand in front of a mirror, along with Bernanke, Plosser and the rest, and glance thereupon.  There you will find the cause of this little mess.

Let’s see, shall we count the ways (although I’m sure I’ll miss some of them!)  I think so.

  • Greenspan rubber-stamped a blatantly unlawful merger of Travelers and Citibank, then lobbied for the passage of Gramm-Leach-Bliley, retroactively making it legal.  That (bad) law was the first of the last line of nails in the coffin of bank regulation that had kept the system sound and functional for more than fifty years.
  • Brooksley Born warned of the danger of an unregulated CDS market and was literally stomped into the ground by the rank derision of both Greenspan and Larry Summers.  She was right, they were wrong and this nonsense allowed the AIG mess to unfold – a mess that was effectively sanctioned by Greenspan and Summers.  Where are the apologies and corrections?  Missing – the obfuscation continues in this regard!

  • Bernanke ran his “Depression Avoidance Playbook” to a “T” following the original subprime meltdown.  However, he has failed to explain how he can be excused for (1) claiming that house price appreciation was “a reflection of strong fundamentals” in light of the fact that it was driven by dangerous and even fraudulent lending, (2) the nation “was unlikely” to suffer a recession, and (3) failing to detect or get in front of any of the failures prior to them happening.  In fact, Bernanke and The Fed granted many Federal Reserve Policy Waivers (the infamous “23A” waivers) that in fact concentrated and increased risk while the crisis was unfolding.
  • The policies of The Fed were allegedly to “help lending”; in point of fact what Bernanke missed is that while he can provide all the printed money he wants he cannot control where it goes.  And “go” it went, right into oil and other commodities first in late 2008 and then again in the summer of 2009, causing not one but two doubles of oil prices off the bottom – first from $70 to $140 and then again this spring and summer from $35 to over $80.  This, despite demand collapsing for oil and refined products.
  • In the same light this “flood of liquidity”, instead of promoting economic growth, went into the stock market as well.  This has driven the S&P’s P/E to one hundred and forty (as of 9/30/2009), a level never before seen in the history of the stock market, and on a historical valuation basis some seven times expected price/earnings value and more than double the previous high of approximately 60 (just before the Tech Bubble collapsed.)  Should the stock market correct to a “somewhat reasonable” P/E of 50, the S&P 500 would trade at 375!  Should it correct to a “more normal” P/E of 20, it would trade at 150! Of course earnings could (and almost certainly will) improve, but even if they double this implies that “fair value” for the S&P 500 is something close to 300!  What are the societal and political implications of that collapse should it come, and how does Bernanke believe he can avoid mean reversion – when every other attempt to do so thus far has failed?  Bernanke has done nothing more than create more asset bubbles in a puerile attempt to avoid taking responsibility for the policy mistakes that led to this crisis in the first place.
  • The Fed (along with the other regulators at the table) have been either willfully blind or intentionally complicit in the “valuation shams” of the last several years.  They, along with Congress, twisted FASB’s arm into formally allowing what amounts to mythical accounting to be used to “value” assets.  This, along with willful and intentional blindness (or worse) toward the requirements of Prompt Corrective Action allowed large banks, of which The Fed is one of their primary regulators, to find themselves in a negative real asset position compared to liabilities – that is, on an accounting basis, bankrupt.  Rather than take the institutions into receivership The Fed along with other regulators have looked the other way and “recapitalized” these institutions with taxpayer money via what amounted to locking Congressional leaders in a room and pointing an economic gun at their heads.  This isn’t the first time either – witness Citibank’s history during the Latin American Debt Crisis, LTCM and other episodes.  By some accounts several of these institutions have been broke more than once and yet “saved” by this “regulatory forbearance.”  The cost has been shoveled off to borrowers and the taxpayer generally.
  • The Fed has arguably violated the black-letter law of Section 14 of The Federal Reserve Act.  Section 13(3) currently allows The Fed to make loans under “unusual and exigent circumstances” as it sees fit but nothing in Section 13(3) permits it to purchase assets by printing new bank reserves – that is, by printing money. That function is controlled by Section 14, and a plain reading of that section does not disclose any legal authority to buy Fannie or Freddie paper, nor the assets of Bear Stearns and AIG.  Yet all of these programs were in fact put in place and continue to this day.
  • Who is the real holder of all the Treasuries in “Caribbean Banking Centers“?  You don’t actually expect me to believe that little islands like Antigua and Grand Cayman have the sovereign wealth to support holding nearly two hundred billion dollars of Treasuries, do you?  Is that a vehicle by which back-door monetization can (and has) taken place?  Germany, with a real economy and government, by contrast holds a mere $55 billion dollars, and even Russia (and Hong Kong!) have only $121 billion.

The Fed has promoted and in fact still is promoting through policy action the lie that credit can expand “forever” at a rate that exceeds GDP.  This is mathematically impossible and Bernanke knows it.  I do not accept that he is ignorant of this fact as he is clearly an intelligent man and in addition is a credentialed Professor with an advanced degree – therefore, I must conclude that this is not an error but rather an intentional lie. It is, in fact, the big lie upon which all others rest, and yet as I have repeatedly pointed out the mathematical facts are not subject to dispute.  To recap, here’s the graph:

And to recap on the averages:

GDP growth from the early 1950s onward has been 6.818% annually, debt growth 8.777%, for a spread of 1.959%.

From 1990 onward, GDP grew at 5.396%, debt at 7.907%, for a spread of 2.511%.

From 2000 onward GDP grew at 5.225%, debt at 8.495%, for a spread of 3.270%.

The spread is increasing and the chart above shows that mathematically it is inevitable that you WILL reach the point where debt service cannot be maintained so long as the spread either is maintained or increases.  This is the essence of the “Ponzi Finance Indicator” that I have posted before, to wit:

All of this data is from The Fed’s own Z1 release and the BEA’s GDP series.

You can’t argue with your own data!

The outcome of these policies is not in question, as that is a matter of mathematics.

Mathematics that The Fed has willfully and wantonly ignored.

Congress must put a stop to it before the economy and monetary system collapses – not due to “oversight” of The Fed, but rather due to The Fed’s own policies, obfuscation and willful disregard of mathematics.

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Banking Crisis, Bill Moyers, Marcy Kaptur, Simon Johnson: America Grok This

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

In a recent poll we read we were discouraged to see that still some 85% of Americans bleme either Democrats or Republicans for the curren crisis and only 15% actually blame the true culprits, the banks…

If you are still unifiormed, stick around awhile and read and watch videos. If not this piece will lay it out as plain as the nose on your face. Well, either way it may do that.

So… watch it and learn.

And when you are done learning and ready to do something, give us a shout. :D

Meantime, have a great day!

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