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Senate Intellectual Vacuum - SIV M-Lack

   SEC-Fed lack of overview:   Crisis of Confidence 



growth of greed


M-Lack syndrome:


fundamental lack of competent and responsible mitigation, abatement or diminuation of anything harsh, severe, afflictive or calamitous. Compare tax-risk analysis, control or moderation of economic depression, technology assessment due to a structural lack of overview and scientized insight... a P3-doctrine related paradigm. More on the E-Lock, Energy-Economy, later. Parliamentary deficit -informationterror- related: Congress/Senate Intellectual Vacuum/ SIV. Sustainable mitigation and moderation in the context of an open public debate is the only way out from the degenerating democratic process that is based on structural parliamentary deficit.


 


'Banks Boost Borrowing From Fed For Second Week'    http://www.gata.org/node/5435


Ken Lewis Bank of America chief: "I know Treasury bought the sandwiches"!  (during the Treasury-initiated top-level Superfund meeting resulting in the M-LEC idea;  move for a lost resort)


 Greenspam & Errbanke 


Save Our System, Forget Our Souls!


 


Henry Kaufman Takes the Fed to the Woodshed




Listen to this article For those who may be too young to have been around in his heyday, Henry Kaufman, aka Dr. Doom, was one of the preeminent economists during the early to mid 1980s, when his firm, Salomon Brothers, ruled the bond markets. Kaufman had a particularly well honed ability to read interest rate trends, no mean skill when that was where the action was (during the Volcker-induced recession of 1980-1982, equities were seen as a has-been). He is also a particularly articulate speaker and writer.

Kaufman is still highly regarded. For example, after Bernanke's October presentation at the Economics Club of New York, Kaufman asked him a question from the floor. Mere mortals don't get to do that.

Today, in the Wall Street Journal, Kaufman criticizes the Fed on its policies towards transparency. He argues that the current mix, transparent monetary policy and opacity in financial markets, has not only helped fuel asset bubbles, but will also impede the return of stability.

Kaufman avoids polemics of any kind and goes to some length to be factual and dispassionate. Nevertheless, his article sets forth how a short-term focus took innovations that could have been salutary and instead rendered them toxic. In large measure, this happened because the inmates are running the asylum. Senior managers are hostage to mid-level producers, who could take their business to another firm or form a hedge fund.

And these internal entrepreneurs have every incentive to take huge risks. If they win, they get a handsome payout. And if they lose, even if they lost their job, Wall Street is remarkably forgiving. Many traders who have been responsible for noteworthy meltdowns (the poster child being former Salomon star and head of Long Term Capital Management John Meriwether) go on to successful second and third acts.

This is nevertheless a fundamental indictment of the incentive structures of the financial services industry. And it results primarily from the fact that these firms are now public.

In the old days of private partnerships, it wasn't just senior management, but also the leaders of the revenue producing units, which were often quite narrow, who were owners. Profits were retained largely within the firm, creating long-term incentives. And while talented young performers were well paid, the big prize was joining the partnership, which enabled the partners to rein in current compensation.

Now with public shareholders, everyone is paid on a current basis (even executive option plans tend to operate in addition to rather than in lieu of bonuses) and there is no particular reason to be careful with the house's money. Even though Morgan Stanley CEO John Mack decided to forego a year-end bonus, the firm's bonus pool was $10 billion. Note that it has also secured an agreement from China Investment Corp, to invest $5 billion, ostensively to shore up Morgan Stanley's capital base after a fourth-quarter loss of $3.6 billion.

Looks like Morgan Stanley sold equity so it could pay out bonuses, a move that would have been unthinkable 20 years ago.

Back to Kaufman. He discusses in detail how the Fed's move towards greater transparency has in fact backfired in terms of helping it achieve its institutional goals. And he point out how the libertarian/free market ideology so dear to Greenspan and widely accepted in the American culture cannot readily be reconciled with the cold fact that there are institutions too big to fail, and the number that falls into that category has increased over time. More disclosure of their risk-taking is a minimum requirement, and although Kaufman does not say it here, more regulation is likely necessary as well.

From the Wall Street Journal:

Transparency is a hallmark of modern capitalism, and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has made transparency a hallmark of his new regime. Yet among our leading financial institutions, opacity, not financial transparency, has been on the rise

The combination -- increasingly opaque financial markets and increasingly transparent monetary policy -- has created a dangerous brew of financial excesses. Unless both trends are reversed, financial stability will remain elusive.

The explanation for increasingly opaque financial markets lies chiefly in securitization -- the conversion of non-marketable assets into marketable obligations -- which has accelerated dramatically in recent decades.

In theory, securitized markets are supposed to operate on the basis of accurate and readily available prices, the clear assessment of credit quality, and objective analyses of these obligations by rating agencies and those engaged in trading and underwriting them. These virtuous mechanisms presumably have been reinforced by a host of new credit instruments, especially financial derivatives that mitigate risk taking. Securitization also has been supported by a dazzling array of new quantitative analytical techniques that are capable, according to practitioners, of defining risk probability down to decimal point levels.

So what went wrong? In the broadest sense, the structural changes in the financial markets encouraged participants to become short-term oriented.

Financial intermediaries quickly recognized that the process of securitization held the potential for enormous profits -- from underwriting, distributing and trading the newly commodified obligations, as well as from managing them for others. To many, the profit potential seemed virtually unlimited, because it stretched well beyond non-marketable assets (like a mortgage) and was global in scope. Thus securitization drove a massive wave of credit creation and helped lift the level of financial-market transactions to record levels.

The new credit entrepreneurship paid off handsomely. For nearly a decade -- up to mid 2007 -- financial profits outpaced the growth of profits in the broader markets.

But the fervor for profits from securitization also ushered in a host of less apparent, and less cheery, institutional shifts. Senior managers at a growing number of leading financial institutions either lost control of risk management or became its captives. In some cases, this happened as managers struggled to understand the dazzling complexity and diversity of the risks assumed by their financial conglomerates. And every institution, of course, felt growing competitive pressure to take on risk in order to maintain market share.

The glamour and profit of risk-taking insured that the risk-takers themselves gained more and more power within the structure of financial institutions. With the eclipse of partnerships on Wall Street, investment banks and other financial institutions are now owned by absentee stockholders, the vast majority of whom lack the information and the analytical skills needed to judge the risk portfolios of their institutions. In any case, it is the rare shareholder who will voice displeasure during favorable markets.

Power and decision-making increasingly resided in the middle ranks of leading financial institutions. Unlike top managers, who are supposed to take the long view and think strategically, those in the middle ranks -- traders, investment bankers and managers of proprietary activities -- compete in arenas that are by nature focused on the near term. They are the rainmakers. They and their institutions thrive on profits from securitized markets and on ever-expanding asset markets. They are biased to pursue ever greater levels of risk.

Incentive systems within financial institutions offer few restraints. It is possible, though rare, for top managers to be removed from office. But even then, judging by recent events, compensation packages for the deposed are more than generous. Middle managers are sometimes dismissed, but they too typically received generous termination payments as part of their contractual arrangements. Such arrangements are net losses for employers, for there are no claw-back provisions to recoup any of the losses incurred by the former managers.

As financial markets have become opaque and risk-laden, the Federal Reserve has touted its own growing transparency. Yet the central bank has made no real effort to compel financial institutions to follow suit.

When the Fed failed to put into place new disclosure requirements or otherwise penetrate market opacity, market participants took note and devised new ways to camouflage risk and create additional excessive credit.

Some of the Special Investment Vehicles (SIVs) that contributed to the recent hemorrhaging of the money market were an off-balance-sheet activity of bank holding companies -- and therefore subject to Federal Reserve supervision. But the Fed seemed satisfied to allow them, as long as it determined that the value-at-risk procedure employed by these holding companies fell within generally accepted parameters.

Rather than focus on the threat posed by the lack of transparency, the Fed has focused on mechanical deficiencies in the market. For instance, regulators tried to insure that the huge volume of trades would be cleared quickly and with correct documentation. This is worthwhile, but by itself cannot forestall credit abuses. By failing to acknowledge and attack risks posed by opaque financial practices, the Fed encouraged them.

Ironically, the Fed's own transparency -- as demonstrated by the new tenor of the central bank's open market pronouncements in recent years -- has tended to foster rather than dampen financial excesses. Perhaps nothing better illustrates the Fed's lack of pre-emptive restraint than what has become known in the investment community as the "Greenspan Put."

Briefly stated, this is the now-prevailing view that monetary authorities do not know when a full-blown credit bubble is upon us, but that they do know what to do once a bubble bursts. I have long argued this approach condones excessive credit growth. Massive infusion of new funds following a major market collapse can provide temporary relief, but it does not repair the long-term political, social and economic damage caused by the meltdown. How can this monetary approach not reduce market discipline before the collapse, or incite a quick return to speculative activities after the Fed rescue?

Consider another example of the Fed's transparency policy that is likely to backfire. In November 2007, the Fed announced that it will "increase the frequency and content" of its economic projections released to the public. Rather than twice a year, the Fed will announce them quarterly; and it will extend the forecast horizon to three years from two.

At first blush, these might seem like moves in a positive direction. But will they actually diminish market opacity or restrain market activity within prudent bounds?

This is highly unlikely. That is the case, at least, for the Fed's first, more-detailed economic pronouncement, which predicted moderate economic growth for the next three years, inflation to remain within acceptable bounds, and high resource utilization, as measured by the unemployment rate. In contrast, if the Fed were to project a significant escalation in the inflation rate or a sharp cyclical turn to a business recession, financial markets would recoil, and the central bank would be blamed for damaging the economy.

What would be more helpful is what is currently missing from the Fed's current repertoire: the central bank's assessment of financial developments for the next three years, and the specific interest rate range needed if the Fed is to achieve its economic targets.

At the heart of the Federal Reserve's diminished influence as a positive economic influence is its ambivalent core philosophy. During his long tenure as Fed chairman, Alan Greenspan ostensibly was an economic libertarian. This means not only that the market knows best, but that the market should decide winners and losers.

I say "ostensibly," because, like Mr. Greenspan and the central bank that continues in the shadow of his legacy, most Americans applaud competition while being uncomfortable with certain kinds of personal and institutional failure. There is no better example than our attitudes about the failure of large financial institutions.

With huge liabilities resting on a thin capital base, they are vulnerable giants. Yet they are the custodians of the public's temporary funds, savings and investments. They cannot be allowed to fail. The costs -- financially and economically, socially and politically, domestically and internationally -- are unacceptable.

So many economic libertarians such as Alan Greenspan live uncomfortably with the doctrine of too-big-to-fail. Nevertheless, one cannot be a true advocate of the philosophy by adhering to it when monetary ease is the order of the day, and abandoning it when market discipline punishes those who have committed financial excesses.

Even out of office, Mr. Greenspan continues to want it both ways. His best-selling memoir reasserts his laissez-faire philosophy, but in a recent pronouncement he advocated giving funds directly to needy subprime mortgage borrowers to permit them to meet their contractual mortgage obligations.

This would have three consequences. It would alleviate the immediate pain of the borrowers (who should not have been allowed to borrow in the first place). It would keep the façade of the financial system in place without disciplining excessive lending practices. And it would socialize the cost of the problem by raising the government's budget deficit.

Today, a shrinking number of huge, integrated financial conglomerates dominate markets. They offer a full range of financial services -- commercial banking, investment banking, insurance, credit cards, asset management, mutual funds, pension funds and so on. But annual reports, 10-K reports and other currently required reporting tools give us little idea of the true extent of their risk-taking activities.

My own preliminary efforts to calculate, for a book in progress, the proportion of risk exposure to tangible financial assets within these institutions suggests a ratio of dozens of dollars at risk for each one in hand. Our economy would be better off if the Federal Reserve focused its campaign for greater transparency on those leveraged giants, rather than making the kinds of pronouncements that encourage them to take on even more risk.




America Diminished NYTimes The Washington Note.jpg 


 






Central banks move on credit crunch:

























The pact brought together the central banks of the US, EU, Canada, Switzerland and England [EPA]





Central banks around the world have made a co-ordinated effort to stem a mounting credit crisis.

 

The US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank on Wednesday joined forces with the central banks of Canada, England and Switzerland to cut interest rates in an attempt to stimulate the world economy by injecting more cash into the market.


The biggest collective banking effort since the September 11, 2001 attacks shut down US financial markets will make billions of dollars available to private banks.

But the move was greeted by scepticism in Asia as markets opened

on Thursday.

Asia unimpressed



Japan's Nikkei slid about 1.2 per cent, reflecting investors' doubts about the usefulness of the pact. Hong Kong's Hang Seng opened flat as investors treaded cautiously. Yutaka Mura, a senior technical analyst at Shinko Securities, said it was unlikely that stocks would rise much because the plan "does not seem to fundamentally solve the credit crunch".


 


The central banks' initiative comes after cuts in interest rates by the US Federal Reserve, the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England failed to reduce rates banks were charging each other for borrowing money. The Bank of Japan and Sweden's Riksbank also announced their support for the plan. The credit crisis erupted earlier this year when record housing foreclosures in the US sub-prime mortgage market left banks weary of lending.


 


Recession fears


 


Economists are concerned that a continued reluctance to lend money could trigger a recession in the US, with a knock-on effect on the rest of the world. David Wyss of Standard and Poor's told Al Jazeera that banks were afraid of lending, both to other banks and to consumers. "As a result, they are demanding higher premiums, higher differences above the cost of lending to the government or to the Fed in order to lend that money out," he said. But Tom Metzold of Eaton Vance Management believed the move would ease the credit crunch "because there will be more money available for banks and other lending institutions".


 



Bruce Kasman, chief economist for JPMorgan Chase, said: "These guys are coming and telling you they're going to be there. They're going to come in and make sure the liquidity issues in the marketplace don't get to be too severe."


 


Al Jazeera's John Terrett said Wall Street at first responded positively to the international banking pact, with the Dow Jones average soaring initially, but those gains were reduced by early Wednesday afternoon as investors began to realise there was no proof the banking band-aid would work.



 


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