Federal Reserve losing control

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Sir Allen Stanford

Postby antiaristo » Sat Feb 21, 2009 6:24 pm

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Sir Allen earned a Bachelor of Arts in Finance from Baylor University in 1974. He resides in St. Croix, US Virgin Islands, and holds dual citizenship, having become a citizen of Antigua and Barbuda ten years ago. He is the first American to be knighted by that British Commonwealth nation and was appointed Knight Commander of the Most Distinguished Order of the Nation. He was presented this honor by the Governor-General of Antigua and Barbuda, Sir James B. Carlisle in a ceremony attended by His Royal Highness Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex, in celebration of the country's Silver Jubilee in November 2006.


http://www.stanfordfinancial.com/sir_allen



"There is a misconception that I'm in bed with Lester Bird," Stanford would say. One man who thought the opposite was Baldwin Spencer, leader of the United Progressive Party, who replaced Bird as prime minister in 2004. "This man has a lien on our whole country," Spencer pronounced when he was in opposition. When Stanford was knighted in 2006, Spencer refused to stand during the ceremony. He would later damn Stanford in print as "haughty, arrogant and obnoxious" and deploring his "threats, innuendos and now downright political interference in our nation's affairs".


http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2009/fe ... ile1/print
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CLEAR ENOUGH?
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crystal

Postby dqueue » Sat Feb 21, 2009 10:27 pm

Re: CLEAR ENOUGH?

Crystal. There's much burning of assets... financial and otherwise.

Thank you, aa. This deserves to be cross-posted in the Stanford thread.
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Mises

Postby isachar » Sat Feb 21, 2009 10:59 pm

The corporate/fascist business model (e.g., modern State capitalism as evidenced and promoted by the US prior to 2008) outlived the statist/communist model by about 20 years.

The transition to whatever comes next is going to be very difficult for most in the [over] developed world.

From Mises Institute:

http://mises.org/story/3333

Economic Fascism and the Bailout Economy
Mises Daily by Gary North | Posted on 2/20/2009 12:00:00 AM

[This article originally appeared on LewRockwell.com.]

"Do I see this as the end of freedom?
No, I see it is the end of the fascist state."I have lived through three monumental historical events. I remember only two of them.

I do not remember the dropping of the two atomic bombs in August of 1945. As symbols of scientific world transformation, this constituted the most momentous event of the 20th century. This breakthrough, so far, has not led to nuclear war, even though on several occasions, it looked as though nuclear war was a distinct possibility. Nevertheless, the arrival of the nuclear age heralded a transformation of the modern world. We have not yet seen the end of that transformation.

Martin van Creveld, the great military historian in the state of Israel, has argued that the nuclear age ruined the plans of empire for large nations. They could no longer risk a war with each other. Yet spending on empire increased. Today, large states face resistance from nonstate groups. The Soviet Union went down when the Afghans beat them by using Stinger missiles. The USSR was an empire, and an empire that loses to insurgents has lost its reason for existence.

We are about to experience a similar defeat in the same country.

There have been two other major events since 1945. I suppose most people would agree on at least one of them: the collapse of the Soviet Union, August 19–21, 1991. While the collapse of the Berlin Wall in 1989 was the symbolic evidence of the collapse of the Soviet empire, it did not become clear until August of 1991. Historically, there has been nothing to match that disintegration. No empire that large ever collapsed that fast without bloodshed. I was here to see it.

There are old-line anti-Communists who still insist that it was all fake, that it is all a deception, that the Communists are still running the show in Russia. They do not understand the difference between fascism and Communism. The Russian system is fascist to the core: state-run capitalism.

We are now seeing what hard-core liberals always predicted would happen: the economic convergence of the two systems, USA and USSR. The system of economic convergence is fascism. That was what the liberals always wanted, but called it something else: "economic democracy" or "the government-business alliance."

September/October 2008
The second event that I regard as almost comparable in importance to the collapse of the Soviet Union was the collapse of the American banking system that took place in September and October of 2008.

No one saw that collapse coming in August. The senior rulers of the United States — I do not mean politicians — have watched in horror as institutions that had survived since the mid-19th century went down: investment banks. These were banks that did not take deposits from the general public. They pooled large quantities of capital from private, wealthy investors. Within a matter of weeks, that business model collapsed. The investment banks scrambled to restructure their legal operations so as to be defined as commercial banks and therefore become eligible for the federal bailout money. Meanwhile, huge commercial banks almost went bankrupt. They did not go bankrupt only because of government intervention and because larger banks absorbed them. Wachovia went down. Washington Mutual went down. The share prices of the two largest banks in the United States, Bank of America and Citigroup, are still close to penny-share status.

Anyone who does not understand the magnitude of what is taking place is an economic ignoramus. I have plenty of these ignoramuses contacting me, telling me it was all planned by the insiders. The conspiracy has won again! In their worldview, the conspiracy always wins. That is because they believe that the conspiracy has the attributes of God. It is omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent.

Here is their intellectual problem: they do not believe in the free market. They cannot conceive of a social institution based on voluntarism that can break the backs of government planners and central bankers. They will believe anything but this. They think of themselves as defenders of the free market, but they do not grasp the power of the free market to enforce consumers' decisions.

The conspiracy of well-placed insiders is now tottering. The whole structure of the national American political system has rested on the solvency of the largest American banks. These banks have all been called into question. They are now gutted.

The thought that commercial-bank insiders actively demolished trillions of dollars of their own equity as part of a conspiratorial plan is so imbecilic, so outrageous, so ludicrous that I am convinced that these conspiracy worshippers have lost whatever remained of their minds. They have been gutted intellectually, just as the banks have been gutted financially.

Some of them probably think that Communists still run Russia. Ex-Communists do: bureaucrats, mobsters, and KGB agents. But Communism is dead. How do I know? Look at a map of Russia. Look for the old names: Stalingrad and Leningrad. Gone. Maps tell a great deal about a civilization. Russian maps tell us that Communism is dead.

The American conspirators have lost the one thing that they thought they had: control over the nation and the nation's finances by means of the fractional-reserve banking system. That system is coming unglued, just as Ludwig von Mises said it would, just as Murray Rothbard said it would, and just as those other Austrian economists who understand the enormous weakness of the fractional-reserve system said it would.

I wonder sometimes if there is anything coherent remaining in what is generally called the conservative movement. Do any of these people have a clue as to what has been taking place? We are seeing the disintegration of the fractional-reserve banking system all over the world. It is being held together by bailouts, which are the government equivalent of bailing wire and chewing gum.

The only thing holding the whole structure together is an enormous residual faith in the state and a naïve faith that deficits don't matter. That phrase is associated with supply-side conservatives and the vast majority of those people who call themselves Chicago School economists. Supply-siders said it, and Chicago School economists cautiously chimed in, "Someday, maybe deficits will matter, but not soon. At the margin — this year, next year, and until I am dead — deficits don't matter."

It has been the Austrian School economists who have warned, decade after decade, that the increase in the federal debt would eventually threaten the solvency of the government and the stability of the dollar. Now that this is visibly coming true, we still do not hear from professional economists cries of warning regarding trillion-dollar annual federal deficits. They say nothing — except when they say it is a good idea, because it is necessary, because we have got to save the banks, because we have got to regulate the economy, and, most of all, because the unhampered free-market system really does not work.

This is what we are getting from people who have generally been known as free-market economists. They are lining up as cheerleaders as the banks go to the federal trough. The federal deficit soars into astronomical regions, and the monetary base soars just as fast, yet the academic economists are silent. This is not the silence of the lambs; this is a silence of unindicted coconspirators, most of whom teach in tax-supported universities and spend their careers writing unreadable articles in unread academic journals in order to get tenure, so that the taxpayers can never fire them. These people are apologists for the state. Most of them have been on a public payroll all of their lives. These are the people who, in the name of conservative free-market principles, are supposed to stand in the gap to warn us that the ship of state is going over the falls.

Don't hold your breath.

What Is to Be Done?
What can be done about it? Politically, nothing. The American political system has been soft-core fascist for almost a century. Liberals love to call conservatives fascists. The problem is, the liberals are right. Of course, well-informed conservatives like to call liberals fascists, and they are correct, too. Everyone who believes in the efficiency of the so-called government-business alliance is a fascist.

The fascist state has always been an attempt to control private industry by means of inflation, taxation, and regulation. Fascism has always been a system of keeping the big boys alive and happy at the expense of the taxpayers. Of course, the faces change. The system was always one gigantic system of cartels, regulation, and fiat money. It was, in short, everything that the critics of modern capitalism say is wrong with capitalism. This is why John Maynard Keynes wrote this in his foreword to the German edition of his General Theory (1936):

The theory of aggregated production, which is the point of the following book, nevertheless can be much easier adapted to the conditions of a totalitarian state [eines totalen Staates] than the theory of production and distribution of a given production put forth under conditions of free competition and a large degree of laissez-faire. This is one of the reasons that justifies the fact that I call my theory a general theory.

The modern economic system is one gigantic interlocking system of promised bailouts, beginning with Social Security. In commerce, it is a system designed to keep large producers protected from consumers. It has never been anything else ever since the national political triumph of the Progressive movement in the fateful year of 1912. In that year, the three candidates for president were statists to the core, all followers of the Progressivist doctrines, all advocates of central banking, and all happy to see the federal government expand control over business throughout the country — and throughout the world.

This is not the story we get in the history textbooks, because the textbook writers love what was done in 1912 and subsequently. The public school system has taught that this was the salvation of capitalism ever since.

We are now seeing the unraveling of the entire system, all over the world. Whatever happens from this point on, economic production will be hampered by ever-increasing regulation. The government is now intervening to save the banks, which means that the banks are beholden to the government.

President Obama has said that senior bank officials are not going to be able to receive more than $500,000 a year. They are not going to get money from stock options until the government gets its money back. I think this is great. My only regret is that he didn't say it was $250,000 year. Or maybe $100,000 year. Or maybe about $50,000 a year. Let them live in New York City on that! The whole crew should resign and go into some decent line of work.

Fractional-reserve banking has been a con job from the beginning. Rothbard and Mises pointed this out, and they were hated for it. The economists trust bureaucracy. They trust people with Ph.D.'s just like themselves. But, except at the Federal Reserve, the agencies are run by lawyers and by appointees who hope to get a fat lobbying salary when they leave the government. Why should we think that a bunch of Harvard- and Yale-educated lawyers, who were recruited by New York City banks that were always protected by the Federal Reserve System, would have any idea of how to run an economy? We now know how well they could run the economy: they stripped off million-dollar bonuses for running the system over the falls.

"I wonder sometimes if there is anything coherent remaining in what is generally called the conservative movement. Do any of these people have a clue as to what has been taking place?"It is not going to get much better. The banks are gutted. The best and the brightest graduates will not be going into banking for as long as there is a $500,000 cap on salaries, if Obama gets his way.

As far as I am concerned, the pay cap should be forever. And when the bank-created inflation comes, the government should not change this salary cap to let them benefit from a cost-of-living escalator clause. Their predecessors knew how to get rich under a manipulated currency. As far as I'm concerned, their replacements should get poorer the same way.

For over a century, the best and the brightest of the students graduating from the senior universities of the country have been recruited into big government and fractional-reserve banking. In other words, they relied on coercion to get rich personally and to direct the growth of American capitalism. They got rich, and capitalism grew, but it grew in terms of malinvestments. It grew because the fiat money was used to lower interest rates, and these lower interest rates led to malinvested capital. Mises showed how this system operated as early as 1912.

Ever since September of 2008, we have seen the fruits of the fiat money roots that Mises warned against almost a century ago. But modern free-market economists are as hostile to Mises's theory of the business cycle as they were hostile to Mises's theory of the economic irrationalism of socialism … until the Soviet Union fell. Then, they got religion, but they still never mention Mises. It was as if he had never lived.

Mises? Who is Mises? Yes, the Soviet Union went bankrupt. We didn't think it would in 1986. Except for that lucky guesser Judy Shelton, nobody predicted that it would. We told people that the Soviet Union had remarkable economic growth. Yes, it turned out that the Soviet Union was nothing but Bangladesh with missiles, just as journalist Richard Grenier said in the 1980s. We did not see this at the time. Still, we will take credit for its collapse anyway: the new capitalism defeated it. We will continue to praise the regulated fascist economy that the United States has been over the last hundred years, and call for more of the same. We love economic efficiency, because efficiency lets the state get larger. When people get richer, they can pay more taxes.

This is why academic economists are demanding even more federal spending to bail out the banks and the other institutions associated with high finance. Almost to a man, they are saying that the bailouts are necessary. Why? Because they have been great proponents of the mixed economy ever since John Maynard Keynes wrote The General Theory in 1936 — even before this, since the real mentor of American fascist banking, Irving Fisher, back in 1911.

Fisher almost went bankrupt in the Great Depression, yet he is still revered as the greatest economist in American history. He was a fiat-money man from day one. He believed that the government and the central bank could control the economy by means of monetary policy. He was the great apologist of the corrupt monetary system that we now suffer from. An academic, he was the high priest. Milton Friedman was little more than an acolyte to Irving Fisher on the money question.

Nominal Recovery
There is real recovery and nominal recovery — recovery in terms of rising prices. Rising wages and rising prices give the illusion of prosperity.

Always in the past, there has been a recovery after a recession. Always in the past, the bailouts have worked to cover up the underlying malinvested capital. Always in the past, the Federal Reserve has inflated, and the economy revived.

"We are seeing the disintegration of the fractional-reserve banking system all over the world. It is being held together by bailouts, which are the government equivalent of bailing wire and chewing gum."This economy will revive, but it will revive on a new basis. It is no longer possible for someone who understands Austrian School economics to look at this economy as anything remotely resembling a free-market economy. At the very core of the free-market economy, as Mises said in 1912, is the monetary system. That system is now completely and openly run by a cartel that is now trapped by the federal government. The Federal Reserve System is soon going to have to bail out the federal government. The federal government is bailing out the commercial banks, and if the federal government cannot bail out the banks, the Federal Reserve has got to do it directly. In either case, the banks are busted. The capital is gone: wasted. The money is still in people's bank accounts, but the fiat-money-funded projects have turned out to be losers. The skyscrapers are empty. The recovery is going to be a nominal recovery, based on the digits known as dollars. These digits are going to be produced in such massive quantities that prices will shoot up as never before in peacetime America. It is going to be the destruction of the dollar.

Austrian School economists have been predicting this for years, but now we have the Federal Reserve on our side. We can look at the adjusted monetary base, and we can see what is going to happen. Unless the Federal Reserve System raises the reserve requirement — thereby undermining the profitability of the entire banking system, and thereby busting hundreds of banks, including some big ones — the adjusted monetary base is going to be translated into real money. That real money is going to get spent. When it gets spent, it is going to raise prices.

We are seeing the culmination of a century of bad economic policies. Academic economists never sounded the alarm after 1936. They did not sound the alarm because they are the paid agents of the state, certified by earlier generations of paid agents of the state. The state has paid for the services of these men and women, and they perform accordingly. They understand the fundamental rule: "When you take the king's shilling, you do the king's bidding."

The next college-level economics textbook that exposes the Federal Reserve System as the commercial bank cartel's enforcement arm will be the first one.

There is no academic hue and cry against the massive deficits of the federal government and the massive bailouts by the federal government. Economists are silent because they have been cheerleaders for the Federal Reserve System from day one. For these people, the Federal Reserve can do no wrong today, because it did wrong from 1929 to 1933, and Milton Friedman exposed this for all to see. What was the great evil of the Federal Reserve during that period, according to Friedman? It did not inflate to offset the contraction of money due to collapsing banks.

Friedman hated free-market banking. He disparaged the gold standard. He believed in government control over money. At the core of the free market is money. At the core of Friedman's economics was the state. He just wanted to make the state more efficient.

The academic economists never mention the fact that it was the expansionary policies of the Federal Reserve during the 1920s that led to the collapse of the banking system in the early 1930s. The Fed had been set up so as to prevent any such collapse, and yet that collapse was the worst collapse in American history. Then what is the right approach? What do the economists say should be done? Give more power to the Federal Reserve System. That is exactly what has been done over the last five months, and the academic economists cheer.

The academic economists say that things will recover. They tell us that it will again be business as usual. They tell us that once we get through this crisis, the American economy will boom once again. They believe in the fascist economy. They believe that government regulation is better than the free market. They believe the government-run, bankruptcy-protected banks, which we now openly have, are better than private, profit-seeking institutions that are not protected by a government-created cartel called the Federal Reserve System. They believe in fascism, and they are going to tell you that everything is fine as the fascist state extends power over every aspect of our lives.

Broken Promises, Waning Faith
Do I see this as the end of freedom? No, I see it is the end of the fascist state. The monstrosity came close to going belly-up last October. It is on its last, tottering legs. It has lost the respect of the public.

The politicians are even convinced that the banks were run by a bunch of corrupt, self-serving men, which was in fact the case. What government-protected industry isn't? But that was not why the bankers lost money. They were lured by Alan Greenspan's policies of easy money and low interest rates into believing that the boom was real, and that they could leverage themselves 30 to 1 or 40 to 1 and get paid for their wisdom. They were high-paid suckers. The Austrian School economists warned all through the period that this was going to happen. We were all dismissed as cranks.

"This is a silence of unindicted coconspirators, most of whom teach in tax-supported universities and spend their careers writing unreadable articles in unread academic journals in order to get tenure, so that the taxpayers can never fire them."As the Internet grows in its influence, alternative views can get to a minority of educated people. The success of the Ludwig von Mises Institute in getting Austrian School economics in front of hundreds of thousands of young people, all over the world, who would never have heard about Mises or Rothbard had it not been for the World Wide Web, indicates that the foundations of the modern fascist economy are being undermined where it counts, which is in the minds of bright people who are no longer buying into the system.

In the long run, Keynes was right: the economic policies of politicians today are based on the writings of some obscure economist of the past. Those two economists were Irving Fisher and John Maynard Keynes. Their world is now toppling. Through their disciples, they are like a pair of drunks staggering along, holding each other up. Keynes wanted deficit spending. Fisher wanted a banking system that would cover these deficits.

The money from the central-banking system funds the Treasury, and the Treasury in turn bails out the big commercial banks — no longer nearly so big. Everything is based on a daisy chain of digits. Meanwhile, unemployment is rising, production is falling, fear is spreading, loss of faith is spreading, and tens of thousands of formerly highly paid specialists in finance are looking for jobs. This is not a matter of a conspiracy; this is a matter of the free market finally voting no against the conspirators.

There are conservatives who think that all is lost because of the conspiracy. These are people who never did anything anyway. They do not see that we are at the end of an era. We are seeing the culmination of a 500-year era. Jacques Barzun titled his great history of this era From Dawn to Decadence. We are seeing what Martin van Creveld called the fall of the state, meaning the nation-state.

These scholars agree: we are seeing the bankruptcy of every Western government that has made too many big promises to too many voters regarding free healthcare and guaranteed retirement. All of it will collapse. The tatters of the promises will point to the tatters of those who made the promises — politicians — and the tatters of the system that was supposedly going to guarantee delivery of the promises.

The academics still believe in the healing power of the state. The voters still believe this, too. But voters are catching on more rapidly than the academics that the state is running out of wiggle room. Millions of voters have figured out that they are going to get stiffed. They don't know what to do about it, but at least they understand that they really are going to get stiffed.

The academics say "no." They keep telling all of us that everything is okay, that a few more trillion-dollar deficits will solve the problem. The doubling of the monetary base in 2009 will have no more disruptive effects than the doubling of the monetary base did in the second half of 2008. They tell us all this, but the public is either oblivious, or else is growing suspicious.

We will have another round or two of centralized government, and probably more than one or two rounds of increased monetary expansion. But what we will not have is a restoration of anything resembling the financial world that existed prior to September 2008. That world is gone. The insiders will not get it back. They may get an imitation of it, based on fiat money that does not buy very much, but they will not see the world of 2007 restored. The power base of the modern fascist state is unraveling rapidly.


$28 $21

"At the very core of the free-market economy, as Mises said in 1912, is the monetary system."This is why it is important for you to preserve your assets by not believing the official assurances. Put your money where the experts tell you that you should not put your money. You should take your money out of those segments of the economy into which the experts say you should put your money, claiming it will soon boom. They have ignored the fact that the stock market has been a losing case since March 2000. They would not admit it then; they will not admit it now. Anybody who bought and held a portfolio of indexed American stocks in March of 2000 has lost well over half of his money. Investors will learn, even though academic economists will not.

Conclusion
What I am saying is this: this time it's different. This time the fractional-reserve banking system has shot its wad. It is begging for ever-larger handouts from the Treasury Department, which needs central-bank fiat money to bail out the economy. The public is accepting this grudgingly, and the academic economists are cheering, but the reality is that this time it's different. You had better adjust your portfolio, your career plans, and your retirement plans accordingly.
"The simplest evidence is the most unbearable." - Brentos 7/3/08
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Postby JackRiddler » Sun Feb 22, 2009 1:06 am

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There's a lot here, but a key thing I've understood from this thread:

We knew the crash was set up and preprogrammed in the 1999-2002 period, as the next leg of scamflation following the crises and near-crash of that period. It was inevitable by 2005-2006, manifested in Aug. 2007 and has blasted out into increasingly dire stages ever since.

But here I've learned that the most dramatic single indicator, in fact the caesura or kill-shot if you will, has gone almost unnoticed and is best represented by what happens from Dec. 2007-Jan. 2009 in the following two items:

http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/ ... 3hist1.htm

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Image

I read it like this: They lose everything real all at once in the course of sudden insolvency; receive an injection that far exceeds what they'd had as non-borrowed reserves before; but horde it because the debt and derivative obligations remain far out of reach.

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Postby wintler2 » Sun Feb 22, 2009 1:12 am

Gary North @ Mises wrote:.. The thought that commercial-bank insiders actively demolished trillions of dollars of their own equity as part of a conspiratorial plan is so imbecilic, so outrageous, so ludicrous that I am convinced that these conspiracy worshippers have lost whatever remained of their minds. They have been gutted intellectually, just as the banks have been gutted financially. ..
Theres gold in them thar goldbugs.
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Postby JackRiddler » Sun Feb 22, 2009 1:42 am

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First of all, we're not talking about conspiracy, we're talking about operations of class war, but I know that no matter how open and obvious, these will remain invisible to the willful blindness of Christian libertarians laden with investment advice. That is, Gary North.

Mr. North has no problems insinuating other "conspiracies," as after Sept. 11th, when he was among the first to advance idle speculations about numerical discrepancies in the passenger lists. Perhaps, in contemplating the trillions lost in equity by the patsy investors and depositors, and by the banks as institutions, Mr. North doesn't think much of the dozens or hundreds of billions reaped in dollars by the movers and managers as individuals. (Ironically enough, it's the equity that was largely a phantom of inflated valuations, and the dollars that still retain value, no matter where they landed.)

The bonus payments the Wall Street cliques gave themselves at the end of 2007 and again in 2008 sure look like peanuts -- what's $50 billion compared to the trillions in equity lost? -- but that's not at all how the recipients of these bonuses see it.

Come now, do people exist who would watch whole nations burn, just to get a relative smidgen of plunder for themselves? Even to the lazy student of history, the answer is obvious. Not only do they exist, they've been a driving force. The more successful ones are honored with post-facto titles like 'the Great', 'the Terrible', 'the Butcher'.

Consider the poacher of the largest and most magnificient of all land creatures: the elephant. Who lives nine decades, who remembers everything he sees, who knows himself in the mirror, who moans with all the pleasures and pains of earthly sentience, of fate. He weighs four or six tons. Surely the poacher wouldn't kill this divinity just for a pair of lousy tusks that don't even weigh 200 pounds between them, and leave the hulking corpse on the savannah to rot, too much even for the scavengers to benefit for long?

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Postby JackRiddler » Sun Feb 22, 2009 1:55 am

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There's plenty I can harmonize with in Gary North's piece, without a doubt.

But it gets very hard to read early on, after this:

No one saw that collapse coming in August.


He means August 2008.

Um, hello? Guess he spent the 00's studiously avoiding RI, and about seven hundred or seven thousand other sites. But starting in August 2007, he must have been lying in an isolation tank, since the collapse was manifest from that moment, and not just to the unfairly maligned Cassandras.

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Postby Nordic » Sun Feb 22, 2009 2:27 am

JackRiddler wrote:.

There's plenty I can harmonize with in Gary North's piece, without a doubt.

But it gets very hard to read early on, after this:

No one saw that collapse coming in August.


He means August 2008.

Um, hello? Guess he spent the 00's studiously avoiding RI, and about seven hundred or seven thousand other sites. But starting in August 2007, he must have been lying in an isolation tank, since the collapse was manifest from that moment, and not just to the unfairly maligned Cassandras.

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And obviously he didn't even listen to the IMF, yes the IMF, who warned in March of 2008 that all of this was about to happen.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/ee21ddbc-f08b ... ck_check=1

Governments might have to intervene with taxpayers’ money to shore up the financial system and prevent a “downward credit spiral” from taking hold, the International Monetary Fund said on Wednesday.

John Lipsky, the IMF’s first deputy managing director, said: “We must keep all options on the table, including the potential use of public funds to safeguard the financial system.”

The statement by the senior IMF official marks the second radical policy intervention from the IMF this year. It had previously called on governments to consider using fiscal policy to offset the impact of the credit crisis on growth.

Mr Lipsky said: “I fully recognise an appropriate role for public sector intervention after market solutions have been exhausted.”

He urged policymakers to “think the unthinkable” and prepare now for what they would do if the worst case scenarios materialised and “low probability but high impact events” threatened to jeopardise global financial stability.

He warned of the risk that a “global financial decelerator” could take hold, in which rising defaults and margin calls from lenders triggered forced asset sales, driving down the value of collateral and forcing further forced sales.

The IMF deputy managing director’s comments make it clear that the fund is open in principle to the possibility of taxpayer-funded intervention in the market for mortgage securities as well as intervention to save individual banks from bankruptcy.

Mr Lipsky warned: “The risks of further escalation of this crisis are rising and decisive policy action will be needed.”

He said this crisis was different from recent past crises because both the financial markets and the banking system “have faltered simultaneously”. The first priority had to be to reverse the “spreading strains” in global financial markets and restore the functioning of the financial system in advanced economies.

Mr Lipsky said there should be no let up in the pressure on financial institutions to disclose losses but said pressure to deleverage “needs to be kept orderly”.

He also urged banks to recapitalise to avoid shrinking their balance sheet.

Stressing that this was a global problem – not one confined to the US – he said it would have to be addressed in a “global context”.

Mr Lipsky said the “first line of defence” remained monetary policy and interest rates. But monetary policy was “hampered” by problems in the credit markets and “there is a risk of a broader and more intense tightening in credit conditions”.

This was why the IMF was making the case that “there is likely to be a role in some countries for stepped-up counter-cyclical macroeconomic policy measures to help support demand”. Fiscal policy was the “second line of defence”.

But Mr Lipsky said “macroeconomic policies may not be sufficient to cushion the blow if an extreme event occurs” – making it essential that policymakers prepared for the possible need to intervene.


This made the hair of my head stand up when I first read it. I think the DOW was hitting record highs at this point.

The IMF knew this was coming and went out of their way to warn states about it. For anyone to claim "nobody saw it coming" is simply a lie, and they damn well KNOW it's a lie.
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Postby wintler2 » Sun Feb 22, 2009 3:26 am

I agree that greed & stupidity were & are sufficient to create conditions for and then precipitate the economic collapse, and that there were decades of warnings that it was to come. Neither proves that some elite cabal planned and executed the whole thing, which is the disempowering meme that keeps getting slipped into discussion. Yes JR there are class war aspects to it, say with privelidged elites conspiring to swindle the rubes on the way up and down (a.k.a US Fed Reserve), but i don't see evidence that any grouping is actually in control or is working to a long term plan. It is a scrum of theives and thugs, not a ballet of power and planning.
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Postby vigilant » Sun Feb 22, 2009 4:39 am

wintler2 wrote:I agree that greed & stupidity were & are sufficient to create conditions for and then precipitate the economic collapse, and that there were decades of warnings that it was to come. Neither proves that some elite cabal planned and executed the whole thing, which is the disempowering meme that keeps getting slipped into discussion. Yes JR there are class war aspects to it, say with privelidged elites conspiring to swindle the rubes on the way up and down (a.k.a US Fed Reserve), but i don't see evidence that any grouping is actually in control or is working to a long term plan. It is a scrum of theives and thugs, not a ballet of power and planning.



Yes it is a scrum of thieves, but within every scrum, group, or collection, there is hierarchy. Someone, or some faction will be at the top. As it is with money, and the electronic nature of fantasy money, someone or some faction will be in control.

This is the fact that seems to escape the thought process of most trying to figure this deal out>>>>>>>Money does not "just happen". There is absolutely someone who determines what money is, how much money there will be, when there will be certain volumes of money, and when there will not be. These are the people with true power. Which takes us to the next step.>>>

wintler2 quoted:
Gary North @ Mises wrote:
.. The thought that commercial-bank insiders actively demolished trillions of dollars of their own equity as part of a conspiratorial plan is so imbecilic, so outrageous, so ludicrous that I am convinced that these conspiracy worshippers have lost whatever remained of their minds. They have been gutted intellectually, just as the banks have been gutted financially. ..


wintler2 wrote:
Theres gold in them thar goldbugs.

If a person has the power to decide what money is, they also have the power to control how many fantasy electronic dollars will be in the system. If a person has the power to decide these things, wiping out their entire net worth is not a problem, and could be a benefit. By wiping out their entire net worth, or even a large portion of it, it creates a vacuum. Vacuums pull things toward it. By having control of this process, money wiped out of fantasy entries, can also be put back in just as easily because nothing but "an idea" is being pulled out and put back in.

By giving a population a false idea, the scenario can be constructed so that the vacuum, current, flow, liquidity, in a mode that insures that it will flow in one direction for decades. He who is on the receiving end of the flow is king. Directing flow is being King, holding and hoarding dollars is not King.
The whole world is a stage...will somebody turn the lights on please?....I have to go bang my head against the wall for a while and assimilate....
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Postby JackRiddler » Sun Feb 22, 2009 5:06 am

wintler2 wrote:i don't see evidence that any grouping is actually in control or is working to a long term plan. It is a scrum of theives and thugs, not a ballet of power and planning.


Please forgive me, I consider this to be a false dichotomy. Finance capitalism is a highly centralized system. The top players are few and have enormous weight to throw around. The dynamics of its crises are well-known as they have repeated themselves many times. The players are also experienced in the mechanics of its scams, even if these find different forms with each stage of development. They all try to make long-term plans, whether these work or not, even as they respond to short-term developments. That doesn't mean everything's predictable, of course, and no one group can ever hold certain control over events; not even if the entire financial class worked together could they do that, which is one reason why we're seeing this crisis. But between "a scrum" and "a ballet" there are many possibilities for planning, colluding and scamming. Thus Paulson, who installed a network of former Goldman Sachs colleagues at all of the key positions around him at the Treasury Department, was able to call nine bank presidents one day and sit down with all of them around the same table the next morning, when he gave each of their institutions a share in one-half of the first TARP tranche (about 150-200 billion dollars total). The ten men who met in October all know each other well, and one is Paulson's successor at Goldman Sachs. Together these institutions represent something like half or more of all of the derivative bets, half or more of all deposits and assets and liabilities. And most of the time, especially in the midst of crisis, they breathe together.
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Postby wintler2 » Sun Feb 22, 2009 11:14 pm

Hmm. Way out of my depth here on actual functioning of markets, but...
The top players are few and do have alot of weight to throw around, but 'opposing' them are many many thousands of other selfinterested market players who know that they profit by outsmarting and unbalancing the big guys. Isn't that what happened with shorting of financial stocks, resulting in the extraordinary step of the big guys getting a ban on shorting financials implemented in mid-08? Paulson & co have all the rules tilted or tilt-able their way, but that doesn't mean they win every time.

Also, I also don't think this is a crisis like previous ones, being due at least in part to a fundamental shortage (relative to demand) of the natural resources upon which the whole economic fiction floats. This economic depression is unarguably worsened by the fraud of Greenspan Bernanke et al, but if there was still an increasing supply of resources then some administrative sleight of hand could have cobbled the markets back together 12 months ago. Sadly there is less real wealth to commodify & monetarise, so the printing of more money/expansion of M1-3 is not keeping all the little piggies in the style to which they are accustomed.

I am not contesting that Paulson and his clones largely act together and can be relied upon to conspire for their own/their class benefit. I just don't think they are masters of their own or anyone elses destiny. Humans don't actually run this planet, we're just parasitising it, and the economy that has facilitated the process is entirely dependant upon the natural capital that is now running short. To believe Paulson & co are in control overestimates their power. Should we still hang them from lampposts for their imbecilic hubris and irresponsible greed? Absolutely. But don't expect mass hangings or any replacements to actually fix anything. 'Fixing' things will require cultural changes over generations the likes of which we can barely imagine.
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Postby freemason9 » Sun Feb 22, 2009 11:23 pm

JackRiddler wrote:.

First of all, we're not talking about conspiracy, we're talking about operations of class war, but I know that no matter how open and obvious, these will remain invisible to the willful blindness of Christian libertarians laden with investment advice. That is, Gary North.

Mr. North has no problems insinuating other "conspiracies," as after Sept. 11th, when he was among the first to advance idle speculations about numerical discrepancies in the passenger lists. Perhaps, in contemplating the trillions lost in equity by the patsy investors and depositors, and by the banks as institutions, Mr. North doesn't think much of the dozens or hundreds of billions reaped in dollars by the movers and managers as individuals. (Ironically enough, it's the equity that was largely a phantom of inflated valuations, and the dollars that still retain value, no matter where they landed.)

The bonus payments the Wall Street cliques gave themselves at the end of 2007 and again in 2008 sure look like peanuts -- what's $50 billion compared to the trillions in equity lost? -- but that's not at all how the recipients of these bonuses see it.

Come now, do people exist who would watch whole nations burn, just to get a relative smidgen of plunder for themselves? Even to the lazy student of history, the answer is obvious. Not only do they exist, they've been a driving force. The more successful ones are honored with post-facto titles like 'the Great', 'the Terrible', 'the Butcher'.

Consider the poacher of the largest and most magnificient of all land creatures: the elephant. Who lives nine decades, who remembers everything he sees, who knows himself in the mirror, who moans with all the pleasures and pains of earthly sentience, of fate. He weighs four or six tons. Surely the poacher wouldn't kill this divinity just for a pair of lousy tusks that don't even weigh 200 pounds between them, and leave the hulking corpse on the savannah to rot, too much even for the scavengers to benefit for long?

.


Kudos, Jack. I'm in full agreement; that North is one belt loop short of fully dressed. It wouldn't surprise me in the least if we discovered that there was one person responsible for the bulk of this most-recent financial calamity. Not one bit.

As for the insinuation that liberals somehow thirst for fascism, well, I don't know what to say. A liberal is an anti-fascist. Period.
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Postby isachar » Tue Feb 24, 2009 6:16 pm

Very good analysis by Paul Craig Roberts. Especially like his take on the fraudulent contracts. Hundreds of billions of taxpayer $ are being spent trying to back up or to assume these fraudulent contracts. Not a dime need have been.

http://www.counterpunch.org/roberts02242009.html

February 24, 2009

Doomed by the Myths of Free Trade
How the Economy was Lost
By PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS

The American economy has gone away. It is not coming back until free trade myths are buried six feet under.

America’s 20th century economic success was based on two things. Free trade was not one of them. America’s economic success was based on protectionism, which was ensured by the union victory in the Civil War, and on British indebtedness, which destroyed the British pound as world reserve currency. Following World War II, the US dollar took the role as reserve currency, a privilege that allows the US to pay its international bills in its own currency.

World War II and socialism together ensured that the US economy dominated the world at the mid 20th century. The economies of the rest of the world had been destroyed by war or were stifled by socialism [in terms of the priorities of the capitalist growth model. Editors.]

The ascendant position of the US economy caused the US government to be relaxed about giving away American industries, such as textiles, as bribes to other countries for cooperating with America’s cold war and foreign policies. For example, Turkey’s US textile quotas were increased in exchange for over-flight rights in the Gulf War, making lost US textile jobs an off-budget war expense.

In contrast, countries such as Japan and Germany used industrial policy to plot their comebacks. By the late 1970s, Japanese auto makers had the once dominant American auto industry on the ropes. The first economic act of the “free market” Reagan administration in 1981 was to put quotas on the import of Japanese cars in order to protect Detroit and the United Auto Workers.

Eamonn Fingleton, Pat Choate, and others have described how negligence in Washington DC aided and abetted the erosion of America’s economic position. What we didn’t give away, the United States let be taken away while preaching a “free trade” doctrine at which the rest of the world scoffed.

Fortunately, the U.S.’s adversaries at the time, the Soviet Union and China, had unworkable economic systems that posed no threat to America’s diminishing economic prowess.

This furlough from reality ended when Soviet, Chinese, and Indian socialism surrendered around 1990, to be followed shortly thereafter by the rise of the high speed Internet. Suddenly, American and other first world corporations discovered that a massive supply of foreign labor was available at practically free wages.

To get Wall Street analysts and shareholder advocacy groups off their backs, and to boost shareholder returns and management bonuses, American corporations began moving their production for American markets offshore. Products that were made in Peoria are now made in China.

As offshoring spread, American cities and states lost tax base, and families and communities lost jobs. The replacement jobs, such as selling the offshored products at Wal-Mart, brought home less pay.

“Free market economists” covered up the damage done to the US economy by preaching a New Economy based on services and innovation. But it wasn’t long before corporations discovered that the high speed Internet let them offshore a wide range of professional service jobs. In America, the hardest hit have been software engineers and information technology (IT) workers.

The American corporations quickly learned that by declaring “shortages” of skilled Americans, they could get from Congress H-1b work visas for lower paid foreigners with whom to replace their American work force. Many US corporations are known for forcing their US employees to train their foreign replacements in exchange for severance pay.

Chasing after shareholder return and “performance bonuses,” US corporations deserted their American workforce. The consequences can be seen everywhere. The loss of tax base has threatened the municipal bonds of cities and states and reduced the wealth of individuals who purchased the bonds. The lost jobs with good pay resulted in the expansion of consumer debt in order to maintain consumption. As the offshored goods and services are brought back to America to sell, the US trade deficit has exploded to unimaginable heights, calling into question the US dollar as reserve currency and America’s ability to finance its trade deficit.

As the American economy eroded away bit by bit, “free market” ideologues produced endless reassurances that America had pulled a fast one on China, sending China dirty and grimy manufacturing jobs. Free of these “old economy” jobs, Americans were lulled with promises of riches. In place of dirty fingernails, American efforts would flow into innovation and entrepreneurship. In the meantime, the “service economy” of software and communications would provide a leg up for the work force.

Education was the answer to all challenges. This appeased the academics, and they produced no studies that would contradict the propaganda and, thus, curtail the flow of federal government and corporate grants.

The “free market” economists, who provided the propaganda and disinformation to hide the act of destroying the US economy, were well paid. And as Business Week noted, “outsourcing’s inner circle has deep roots in GE (General Electric) and McKinsey,” a consulting firm. Indeed, one of McKinsey’s main apologists for offshoring of US jobs, Diana Farrell, is now a member of Obama’s White House National Economic Council.

The pressure of jobs offshoring, together with vast imports, has destroyed the economic prospects for all Americans, except the CEOs who receive “performance” bonuses for moving American jobs offshore or giving them to H-1b work visa holders. Lowly paid offshored employees, together with H-1b visas, have curtailed employment for older and more experienced American workers. Older workers traditionally receive higher pay. However, when the determining factor is minimizing labor costs for the sake of shareholder returns and management bonuses, older workers are unaffordable. Doing a good job, providing a good service, is no longer the corporation’s function. Instead, the goal is to minimize labor costs at all cost.

Thus, “free trade” has also destroyed the employment prospects of older workers. Forced out of their careers, they seek employment as shelf stockers for Wal-Mart.

I have read endless tributes to Wal-Mart from “libertarian economists,” who sing Wal-Mart’s praises for bringing low price goods, 70 per cent of which are made in China, to the American consumer. What these “economists” do not factor into their analysis is the diminution of American family incomes and government tax base from the loss of the goods producing jobs to China. Ladders of upward mobility are being dismantled by offshoring, while California issues IOUs to pay its bills. The shift of production offshore reduces US GDP. When the goods and services are brought back to America to be sold, they increase the trade deficit. As the trade deficit is financed by foreigners acquiring ownership of US assets, this means that profits, dividends, capital gains, interest, rents, and tolls leave American pockets for foreign ones.

The demise of America’s productive economy left the US economy dependent on finance, in which the US remained dominant because the dollar is the reserve currency. With the departure of factories, finance went in new directions. Mortgages, which were once held in the portfolios of the issuer, were securitized. Individual mortgage debts were combined into a “security.” The next step was to strip out the interest payments to the mortgages and sell them as derivatives, thus creating a third debt instrument based on the original mortgages.

In pursuit of ever more profits, financial institutions began betting on the success and failure of various debt instruments and by implication on firms. They bought and sold collateral debt swaps. A buyer pays a premium to a seller for a swap to guarantee an asset’s value. If an asset “insured” by a swap falls in value, the seller of the swap is supposed to make the owner of the swap whole. The purchaser of a swap is not required to own the asset in order to contract for a guarantee of its value. Therefore, as many people could purchase as many swaps as they wished on the same asset. Thus, the total value of the swaps greatly exceeds the value of the assets.*

The next step is for holders of the swaps to short the asset in order to drive down its value and collect the guarantee. As the issuers of swaps were not required to reserve against them, and as there is no limit to the number of swaps, the payouts could easily exceed the net worth of the issuer.

This was the most shameful and most mindless form of speculation. Gamblers were betting hands that they could not cover. The US regulators fled their posts. The American financial institutions abandoned all integrity. As a consequence, American financial institutions and rating agencies are trusted nowhere on earth.

The US government should never have used billions of taxpayers’ dollars to pay off swap bets as it did when it bailed out the insurance company AIG. This was a stunning waste of a vast sum of money. The federal government should declare all swap agreements to be fraudulent contracts, except for a single swap held by the owner of the asset. Simply wiping out these fraudulent contracts would remove the bulk of the vast overhang of “troubled” assets that threaten financial markets.

The billions of taxpayers’ dollars spent buying up subprime derivatives were also wasted. The government did not need to spend one dime. All government needed to do was to suspend the mark-to-market rule. This simple act would have removed the solvency threat to financial institutions by allowing them to keep the derivatives at book value until financial institutions could ascertain their true values and write them down over time.

Taxpayers, equity owners, and the credit standing of the US government are being ruined by financial shysters who are manipulating to their own advantage the government’s commitment to mark-to-market and to the “sanctity of contracts.” Multi-trillion dollar “bailouts” and bank nationalization are the result of the government’s inability to respond intelligently.

Two more simple acts would have completed the rescue without costing the taxpayers one dollar: an announcement from the Federal Reserve that it will be lender of last resort to all depository institutions including money market funds, and an announcement reinstating the uptick rule.

The uptick rule was suspended or repealed a couple of years ago in order to permit hedge funds and shyster speculators to rip-off American equity owners. The rule prevented short-selling any stock that did not move up in price during the previous day. In other words, speculators could not make money at others’ expense by ganging up on a stock and short-selling it day after day.

As a former Treasury official, I am amazed that the US government, in the midst of the worst financial crises ever, is content for short-selling to drive down the asset prices that the government is trying to support. No bailout or stimulus plan has any hope until the uptick rule is reinstated.

The bald fact is that the combination of ignorance, negligence, and ideology that permitted the crisis to happen still prevails and is blocking any remedy. Either the people in power in Washington and the financial community are total dimwits or they are manipulating an opportunity to redistribute wealth from taxpayers, equity owners and pension funds to the financial sector.

The Bush and Obama plans total 1.6 trillion dollars, every one of which will have to be borrowed, and no one knows from where. This huge sum will compromise the value of the US dollar, its role as reserve currency, the ability of the US government to service its debt, and the price level. These staggering costs are pointless and are to no avail, as not one step has been taken that would alleviate the crisis.

If we add to my simple menu of remedies a ban, punishable by instant death, for short selling any national currency, the world can be rescued from the current crisis without years of suffering, violent upheavals and, perhaps, wars.

According to its hopeful but economically ignorant proponents, globalism was supposed to balance risks across national economies and to offset downturns in one part of the world with upturns in other parts. A global portfolio was a protection against loss, claimed globalism’s purveyors. In fact, globalism has concentrated the risks, resulting in Wall Street’s greed endangering all the economies of the world. The greed of Wall Street and the negligence of the US government have wrecked the prospects of many nations. Street riots are already occurring in parts of the world. On Sunday February 22, the right-wing TV station, Fox “News,” presented a program that predicted riots and disarray in the United States by 2014.

How long will Americans permit “their” government to rip them off for the sake of the financial interests that caused the problem? Obama’s cabinet and National Economic Council are filled with representatives of the interest groups that caused the problem. The Obama administration is not a government capable of preventing a catastrophe.

If truth be known, the “banking problem” is the least of our worries. Our economy faces two much more serious problems. One is that offshoring and H-1b visas have stopped the growth of family incomes, except, of course, for the super rich. To keep the economy going, consumers have gone deeper into debt, maxing out their credit cards and refinancing their homes and spending the equity. Consumers are now so indebted that they cannot increase their spending by taking on more debt. Thus, whether or not the banks resume lending is beside the point.

The other serious problem is the status of the US dollar as reserve currency. This status has allowed the US, now a country heavily dependent on imports just like a third world or lesser-developed country, to pay its international bills in its own currency. We are able to import $800 billion annually more than we produce, because the foreign countries from whom we import are willing to accept paper for their goods and services.

If the dollar loses its reserve currency role, foreigners will not accept dollars in exchange for real things. This event would be immensely disruptive to an economy dependent on imports for its energy, its clothes, its shoes, its manufactured products, and its advanced technology products.

If incompetence in Washington, the type of incompetence that produced the current economic crisis, destroys the dollar as reserve currency, the “unipower” will overnight become a third world country, unable to pay for its imports or to sustain its standard of living.

How long can the US government protect the dollar’s value by leasing its gold to bullion dealers who sell it, thereby holding down the gold price? Given the incompetence in Washington and on Wall Street, our best hope is that the rest of the world is even less competent and even in deeper trouble. In this event, the US dollar might survive as the least valueless of the world’s fiat currencies.

*(An excellent explanation of swaps can be found here.)

Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He is coauthor of The Tyranny of Good Intentions.He can be reached at: PaulCraigRoberts@yahoo.com
"The simplest evidence is the most unbearable." - Brentos 7/3/08
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Postby Luposapien » Thu Mar 05, 2009 3:33 pm

Ran across this at Cryptogon. Didn't see it posted yet, so thought I'd throw it into the Mother of All Financial Crisis Threads:

Fed Refuses to Release Bank Data, Insists on Secrecy (Update2)

By Mark Pittman and Craig Torres

March 5 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve Board of Governors receives daily reports on bailout loans to financial institutions and won’t make the information public, the central bank said in a reply to a Bloomberg News lawsuit.

The Fed refused yesterday to disclose the names of the borrowers and the loans, alleging that it would cast “a stigma” on recipients of more than $1.9 trillion of emergency credit from U.S. taxpayers and the assets the central bank is accepting as collateral.

Fed secrecy was the focus of a Senate Banking Committee hearing today in which the panel’s top two members said the central bank’s reluctance to identify companies benefiting from the American International Group Inc. bailout risks undermining public confidence in the government.

“If the American taxpayer’s money is at stake, and it is, big time, I believe the American taxpayers, the people, and this committee, we need to know who benefited, where this money went,” said Senator Richard Shelby of Alabama, the committee’s top Republican. “There is no transparency here. We are going to find out.”

The bank provides “select members and staff of the Board of Governors with daily and weekly reports” on Primary Dealer Credit Facility borrowing, said Susan E. McLaughlin, a senior vice president in the markets group of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in a deposition. The documents “include the names of the primary dealers that have borrowed from the PDCF, individual loan amounts, composition of securities pledged and rates for specific loans.”

Information Shared

The Board of Governors contends that it’s separate from its member banks, including the Federal Reserve Bank of New York which runs the lending programs. Most documents relevant to the Bloomberg suit are at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which isn’t subject to FOIA law, according to the Fed. The Board of Governors has 231 pages of documents, which it is denying access to under an exemption under trade secrets.

“I would assume that information would be shared by the Fed and the New York Fed,” said U.S. Representative Scott Garrett, a New Jersey Republican. “At some point, the demand for transparency is paramount to any demand that they have for secrecy.”

Bloomberg sued Nov. 7 under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act, requesting details about the terms of 11 Fed lending programs.

The Bloomberg lawsuit said the collateral lists “are central to understanding and assessing the government’s response to the most cataclysmic financial crisis in America since the Great Depression.”

Fed Vice Chairman Donald Kohn told the Senate panel today that revealing the names of AIG’s counterparties would make companies less likely to do business with any recipient of government aid, risking further turmoil at the insurer and financial markets.

‘Deeply Troubled’

“I don’t consider that an adequate” response, “to put it mildly,” Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd, a Connecticut Democrat, told Kohn at the hearing. “The public is deeply, deeply troubled.”

Shelby told the Fed vice chairman that “your answer here is very disturbing.”

“People want to know what you’ve done with this money,” he said.

Kohn said the Fed wouldn’t reveal the counterparties in Maiden Lane III, a company formed by the central bank to purchase collateralized debt obligations on which AIG’s financial products unit had written credit-default swaps.

“The Fed and the Treasury can be secretive for a while, but not forever,” Shelby said.

The Fed stepped into a rescue role that was the original purpose of the Treasury’s $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program. The central bank’s loans don’t have the oversight safeguards that Congress imposed upon the TARP.

Commercial, Consumer Loans

Total Fed lending exceeded $2 trillion for the first time Nov. 6 after rising by 138 percent, or $1.23 trillion, in the 12 weeks since Sept. 14, when central bank governors relaxed collateral standards to accept securities that weren’t rated AAA. Fed lending as of Feb. 25 was $1.92 billion.

On Feb. 23, the Fed disclosed a breakdown by broad categories for $1.81 trillion of collateral pledged by banks and bond dealers as of Dec. 17 after Congress demanded more transparency from the central bank.

The largest portions of collateral being held by the Fed at that time were $456 billion in commercial loans, $203 billion in consumer loans and $159 billion in residential mortgages, according to the central bank’s Web site. It didn’t identify any loans or provide their credit ratings and said it will update the figures about every two months.

Government loans, spending or guarantees to rescue the country’s financial system total more than $11.7 trillion since the international credit crisis began in August 2007, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. In return, banks left collateral with the central bank that effectively acts as a credit line that lenders can draw on without posting additional assets.

Bloomberg News, a unit of New York-based Bloomberg LP, on May 21 asked the Fed to provide data on collateral posted from April 4 to May 20. The central bank said June 19 that it needed until July 3 to search documents and determine whether it would make them public. Bloomberg didn’t receive a formal response that would let it file an appeal within the legal time limit.

‘Unprecedented Crisis’

On Oct. 25, Bloomberg filed another request, expanding the range of when the collateral was posted. It sued Nov. 7.

In response to Bloomberg’s request, the Fed said the U.S. is facing “an unprecedented crisis” in which “loss in confidence in and between financial institutions can occur with lightning speed and devastating effects.”

Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and then Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said in September they would meet congressional demands for transparency in a $700 billion bailout of the banking system.

The Freedom of Information Act obliges federal agencies to make government documents available to the press and public. The Bloomberg lawsuit, filed in New York, doesn’t seek money damages.

Banks oppose any release of information because that might signal weakness and spur short-selling or a run by depositors, the Fed argued in its response.

“You could make everything a trade secret,” said Lucy Dalglish, executive director of the Arlington, Virginia-based Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

The case is Bloomberg LP v. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 08-CV-9595, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan).
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