Federal Reserve losing control

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Re: Credit Default Swaps and Straw Men

Postby antiaristo » Mon Dec 01, 2008 11:38 am

.

Very kind of you Paz. Thank you.

HoL. Thank you for that. But the truth is, in the things that really matter, like family, I've been a disaster



Pazdispenser wrote:Below, you will find a portion of a comment posted by our esteemed antiaristo on Feb 18,2008. You will find th entire comment at the top of page 15 in this thread.

antiaristo wrote:
pazdispenser wrote:Here's the thing I dont understand: cui bono?


Cui bono? Let's just keep that at the back of our minds for a while.

.
<snip>
.

A few observations....

*This is DESIGNED to crash and burn, and to cause the maximum disruption possible. When you look at the banks involved (JPM, C, BoA) it looks like a suicide pact.

*The design is based on a series of loopholes (Just like 9/11) that have been opened up since Clinton revoked Glass-Steagel.

*This is not a FINANCE phenomenom. It is an INSURANCE phenomenom. The two are quite different in terms of risk management.

*This has all happened before. At Lloyds of London the traditional system of Names and unlimited personal liability was deliberately destroyed in a way that benefits the rulers (the Windsor family).
http://rigorousintuition.ca/board/viewtopic.php?t=8533

Those lessons have since been applied in the US capital markets. Over these past ten years.

Who gains? Who benefits from the demise of the American Republic?

One possibility is to look at the source of the pirates. Many seem to come from London. Many others are based in the Cayman Islands

Another possibility is to go back in time and look at who was usurped by the rise of the USA. Who was the previous "top dog" that got displaced?

Another possibility is to go forward in time and look at who might gain in a world without strong nation states. That would be strong families with lots of power and wealth.

http://rigorousintuition.ca/board/viewt ... 058#126058

Means, motive, opportunity.

.
<snip>
.

Now I do not deny that there are other powerful families. And I do not deny that those other powerful families are probably working hand in glove with the Windsors.

But the Windsors have one unique power. They are able to determine what is legal, and what is not legal. Which means that when one of those powerful families want to do something illegal they just make sure it happens under British jurisdiction. That makes it legal, should Her Majesty so wish.


And so, we have this very intriguing article in Business Spectator: http://www.businessspectator.com.au/bs. ... rror-LHRJP

Ive highlighted all the themes that anti has been trumpeting. It would seem his tune is quite true.........

snip............

Cui bono, indeed!



Well, what about this? From a COMPLETELY different context:


The MP in the Palace of Westminster (where the laws of the land do not apply, as it is a royal palace) has to be able to meet anyone, discuss anything, and keep on paper or electronic file information that remains confidential to the MP.

.......

Denis MacShane is Labour MP for Rotherham and was a Foreign Office minister, 2001-05


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstop ... Green.html


Get that, everyone?


in the Palace of Westminster (where the laws of the land do not apply, as it is a royal palace)


That applies to ALL royal palaces.

OK. What's that to do with the Federal Reserve "losing control"?

Find this interesting?

The Court of Directors

The Bank of England Act 1998, which came into force on 1 June 1998, changed the constitution and duties of the Court of Directors from that set out in the previous Act of 1946, strengthening the Bank's governance and accountability, as well as formalising the Bank's responsibility for the conduct of monetary policy.

The 1998 Act provides for the appointment, by the Crown, of a Governor, two Deputy Governors and sixteen Non-Executive Directors . The term of appointment for the Governor and two Deputy Governors is five years and for the Directors, three years, all of which are renewable.

Photographs and Involvements

Court meets at least once a month, and its functions are to manage the Bank's affairs other than the formulation of monetary policy, which is the responsibility of the Monetary Policy Committee . This includes determining the Bank's objectives and strategy, ensuring the effective discharge of the Bank's functions and ensuring the most efficient use of the Bank's resources.

http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/about/people/court.htm

The Bank of England is a COURT.

Which means, as for all royal palaces, that "the laws of the land do not apply".


How about a bit of context?


Image
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Postby rrapt » Mon Dec 01, 2008 5:39 pm

From Vigilant on 27 Nov...."Lawlessness and anarchy has been renamed "government" and equated with "law and order.""

This has been easily apparent for several years now, as has the largely successful mass brainwashing operation to make it all acceptable. I find that otherwise intelligent, naturally skeptical folks find it impossible to read or hear of govt criminality, and then react with anything but the usual "the 19 Arabs did it" response. The trick was to make serious response too emotionally and socially painful. Denial is so much easier. To me that is the worst part of this whole charade; making sure that the victims go along willingly. My daughter politely told me she was insulted that I would openly question the common assumptions attached to 9/11, collapse, etc.!! I didn't rejoin that I should be the one who feels insulted.

My belief, and it is just that so I won't go through the rigor of trying to justify it, is that this predator class - led by the Queen if you insist Anti - will eventually be defeated by another force, or class acting in favor of protecting the meek; you know, the ones who will inherit the Earth according to scripture. Including all living beings and some that we don't even recognise as living. Either way, the conflict we find ourselves in is not going to be controlled or resolved by lowly human action alone. Simply by standing back for a look at the whole picture makes it clear that something bigger is going on. Not that I advocate being a wimp about it though.
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Postby vigilant » Mon Dec 01, 2008 10:41 pm

rrapt wrote:From Vigilant on 27 Nov...."Lawlessness and anarchy has been renamed "government" and equated with "law and order.""

This has been easily apparent for several years now, as has the largely successful mass brainwashing operation to make it all acceptable. I find that otherwise intelligent, naturally skeptical folks find it impossible to read or hear of govt criminality, and then react with anything but the usual "the 19 Arabs did it" response. The trick was to make serious response too emotionally and socially painful. Denial is so much easier. To me that is the worst part of this whole charade; making sure that the victims go along willingly. My daughter politely told me she was insulted that I would openly question the common assumptions attached to 9/11, collapse, etc.!! I didn't rejoin that I should be the one who feels insulted.

My belief, and it is just that so I won't go through the rigor of trying to justify it, is that this predator class - led by the Queen if you insist Anti - will eventually be defeated by another force, or class acting in favor of protecting the meek; you know, the ones who will inherit the Earth according to scripture. Including all living beings and some that we don't even recognise as living. Either way, the conflict we find ourselves in is not going to be controlled or resolved by lowly human action alone. Simply by standing back for a look at the whole picture makes it clear that something bigger is going on. Not that I advocate being a wimp about it though.



As long as predators and non-predators exist on this planet, the meek will never overthrow the predators, nor will any agency acting on behalf of the meek.

Sorry to sound so "un" optimistic but nature deems it necessary for it to be the way it is for some reason. 5 billion years (give or take a few hundred million) have evolved this way, and I don't see it changing in the near future......

Predators kill and eat the meek, and thats the way it is. In more ways than one.

The predators (posing as God), have been telling mankind to ...
"have faith" and wait for God and his buddies, for they will deliver the predator to his "just" end sooner than later. Until then do not stoop and resort to the tactic of the predator, for that makes you no better than the predator. "

Perfect advice from the predator, to the prey....wouldn't you say???

Predator: "don't become angry and try to eat my wicked ass, simply stand on your faith, so that I may eat you there. You pray and have faith as I gnaw your leg off and enslave you, but don't stoop to my level and chop off my head for my behavior"........

Which "god" is it, that gives such advice, and does not smote off the head of the predator himself?

Its the devil himself, or haven't you noticed?
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 rrapt » Tue Dec 02, 2008 1:40 pm

[quote="vigilant"][/quote]

True, but remember, that brainwashing I mentioned affects all of us including you and me, smart as we are. So it is fun to try and separate fact and fiction, in part by identifying as much of the (possible) propaganda and setting it aside for use as filler later. Don't waste time with this if it interferes with your legitimate task of making a living; keep in mind that propaganda is good in that it simplifies life, gives satisfaction for a job well done, etc.

One common assumption I have tried setting aside lately is that of humans being the highest form of life, the smartest, the best communicators. Shelving this assumption really opens things up a lot. We have limitations and we use other life forms when we want to see beyond them. All? the "higher" life forms have their own limitations too so the relationship ends up as a give-and-take.

Circling back to topic, Rumsfeld as one of the "other" more predatory species, one that is not blessed with empathy incidentally, has been observed in short periods of regression where his training as a human failed momentarily. Many others of that caste experience this too; I have seen it several times on teevee. Wolfowitz for another example. But right now I don't assume that this particular class of predators, that we have watched gather power for the past several years, have the permanent upper hand. They have serious weaknesses, one of which is that they have been interbred into the native population and are directed from outside; that is there exists an earthbound hierarchy in that class but the decision makers are beyond that. In another dimension maybe?

So my optimism shows though. These pricks are causing pain and will cause more, and they're taking all the money. Perhaps the best way to counter that is to refuse to go along with the propaganda blasting at us from all directions, past present and future.
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Postby freemason9 » Wed Dec 03, 2008 12:25 am

rrapt wrote:
vigilant wrote:


True, but remember, that brainwashing I mentioned affects all of us including you and me, smart as we are. So it is fun to try and separate fact and fiction, in part by identifying as much of the (possible) propaganda and setting it aside for use as filler later. Don't waste time with this if it interferes with your legitimate task of making a living; keep in mind that propaganda is good in that it simplifies life, gives satisfaction for a job well done, etc.

One common assumption I have tried setting aside lately is that of humans being the highest form of life, the smartest, the best communicators. Shelving this assumption really opens things up a lot. We have limitations and we use other life forms when we want to see beyond them. All? the "higher" life forms have their own limitations too so the relationship ends up as a give-and-take.

Circling back to topic, Rumsfeld as one of the "other" more predatory species, one that is not blessed with empathy incidentally, has been observed in short periods of regression where his training as a human failed momentarily. Many others of that caste experience this too; I have seen it several times on teevee. Wolfowitz for another example. But right now I don't assume that this particular class of predators, that we have watched gather power for the past several years, have the permanent upper hand. They have serious weaknesses, one of which is that they have been interbred into the native population and are directed from outside; that is there exists an earthbound hierarchy in that class but the decision makers are beyond that. In another dimension maybe?

So my optimism shows though. These pricks are causing pain and will cause more, and they're taking all the money. Perhaps the best way to counter that is to refuse to go along with the propaganda blasting at us from all directions, past present and future.


I like what you're saying, although I'm not entirely certain what it is.

But you might be right. In all likelihood, we'll never know for sure.
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Postby vigilant » Wed Dec 03, 2008 12:50 am

freemason9 wrote:
rrapt wrote:
vigilant wrote:


True, but remember, that brainwashing I mentioned affects all of us including you and me, smart as we are. So it is fun to try and separate fact and fiction, in part by identifying as much of the (possible) propaganda and setting it aside for use as filler later. Don't waste time with this if it interferes with your legitimate task of making a living; keep in mind that propaganda is good in that it simplifies life, gives satisfaction for a job well done, etc.

One common assumption I have tried setting aside lately is that of humans being the highest form of life, the smartest, the best communicators. Shelving this assumption really opens things up a lot. We have limitations and we use other life forms when we want to see beyond them. All? the "higher" life forms have their own limitations too so the relationship ends up as a give-and-take.

Circling back to topic, Rumsfeld as one of the "other" more predatory species, one that is not blessed with empathy incidentally, has been observed in short periods of regression where his training as a human failed momentarily. Many others of that caste experience this too; I have seen it several times on teevee. Wolfowitz for another example. But right now I don't assume that this particular class of predators, that we have watched gather power for the past several years, have the permanent upper hand. They have serious weaknesses, one of which is that they have been interbred into the native population and are directed from outside; that is there exists an earthbound hierarchy in that class but the decision makers are beyond that. In another dimension maybe?

So my optimism shows though. These pricks are causing pain and will cause more, and they're taking all the money. Perhaps the best way to counter that is to refuse to go along with the propaganda blasting at us from all directions, past present and future.


I like what you're saying, although I'm not entirely certain what it is.

But you might be right. In all likelihood, we'll never know for sure.


not sure how the above quote got contributed to me, I didn't write it.
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 rrapt » Wed Dec 03, 2008 2:02 pm

That was an error of mine vigilant. I quoted you and then deleted your text to save space. Should have left in at least a few of your words, just to make it clearer.
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failing your family...

Postby between two lines » Sun Dec 07, 2008 9:28 am

Yes, you have failed me. I am not a high maintenance daughter all i ever wanted was your time and love, but you seem to have spent so much more time talking about things that don't really matter if you have the love of your family around you. You are a very wise and clever man intellectually, but when it comes to knowing the real truth's about me you wouldn't have a clue, becuase you have never truely tried. Instead, always coming up with excuses, as there is always a means to a way, but you obviously never did want your family.
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Postby Canadian_watcher » Sun Dec 07, 2008 10:17 am

woah, that is heavy.
err.. debating with myself whether or not to say this...
okay, I'm going to.
- between two lines, this is for you -

Parents are just kids who got older. People, complete with flaws and strengths and weaknesses, that's all parents are. I'm a parent. I made mistakes. I'm a daughter of a father who made lots and lots of them.
My father died at the age of 59 this year. For the last year of his life, he suffered, deteriorating, alone. I was the only person who stepped up to help him and believe me I complained bitterly about it. It was too much work and stress for me, especially since he left to live a grand life in a big city, barely remembering that he was a father for nearly 30 years before his illness. I know how you feel.

Meanwhile my daughter is busily pushing me away so that she can have independence from a mother who has always been there for her. She isn't doing this in any unnatural way - this is just how it is. She idolizes the absent father in her life, too, even though his actions and inactions hurt her. I see the handwriting on the wall. She will try to please him and search for his affection much more than she will try to please me and search for mine. As she gets more and more independent, the devotion I showed her throughout her life turns back on me, leaving me wondering now if I should have taken more time for myself. AFter all, there's no winning for any of us, is there? She will not recognize love where it was given, I will lose the ivestment I made, and her father will never capitalise on the adoration that he doesn't seem to recognize. Have you read Sartre? No Exit?

So what I'm saying is that life takes its course. Don't regret the love and attention you DIDN'T get.. spend your time on the people whose love and attention you DID Get. When your father shows remorse, accept it with love. when your mother seems boring, realize that it's because she gave up much more than she should have in order to balance things out for you. If you have no mother, remember those who did parent you - even if this was yourself alone. Appreciate those people with words and actions. Yourself included.

And whenever you can, be kind. If I have one regret about my last year with my father it is that I should have been more kind. I was good to him, especially considering htat he'd never been overly good to me. But I could have been better. There's always room for that.

I'm not lecturing. I'm offering a path to peace within yourself. it's what I would say to my own daughter and have, indeed, said to myself.

I'll likely delete all this in the 10 hours or so, so read it now :)
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Postby antiaristo » Sun Dec 07, 2008 2:01 pm

OK Victoria.

No more posting after this.

I got your letter back in September 2003.
My case had just been accepted by the European Court of Human Rights.
I didn't know what to do, so I wrote this to the Court:



J S Phillips Esq
European Court of Human Rights
Reference no. 23188/03
27 September 2003

Dear Mr Phillips,

Thank you for your kind acknowledgement of 1 September.

I accept that you will deal with the matter “as soon as practicable” but wonder what I should do in the meantime? The issue is a straightforward theft and the decision a logical formality. But the same was true of the “Golden Share” held by the British government, and the European Court of Justice took seven years to pronounce on that matter.

So what should I do in the meantime, useless and without direction as I am? Is it safe for me to make contact with my children? You do understand why I have left them alone and without a father these near nine years? You do understand why I used an answering machine when in Ireland during 1995/96, and why the caller would invariably hang up when the machine cut in? You do understand why I will never work again in my chosen profession, and why I have had no work and no income since May 1994? You do understand the accumulated effects all these years of pain and suffering and desolation are designed to produce on my sanity and my will to carry on living?

So I would be grateful if you could supply the answers that my eldest daughter is seeking. For after all these years, and still so very little light at the end of the tunnel, I simply cannot.

RSVP
Yours sincerely,



John Cleary
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Postby isachar » Sun Dec 07, 2008 3:48 pm

Canadian_watcher wrote:woah, that is heavy.
err.. debating with myself whether or not to say this...
okay, I'm going to.
- between two lines, this is for you -

Parents are just kids who got older. People, complete with flaws and strengths and weaknesses, that's all parents are. I'm a parent. I made mistakes. I'm a daughter of a father who made lots and lots of them.
My father died at the age of 59 this year. For the last year of his life, he suffered, deteriorating, alone. I was the only person who stepped up to help him and believe me I complained bitterly about it. It was too much work and stress for me, especially since he left to live a grand life in a big city, barely remembering that he was a father for nearly 30 years before his illness. I know how you feel.

Meanwhile my daughter is busily pushing me away so that she can have independence from a mother who has always been there for her. She isn't doing this in any unnatural way - this is just how it is. She idolizes the absent father in her life, too, even though his actions and inactions hurt her. I see the handwriting on the wall. She will try to please him and search for his affection much more than she will try to please me and search for mine. As she gets more and more independent, the devotion I showed her throughout her life turns back on me, leaving me wondering now if I should have taken more time for myself. AFter all, there's no winning for any of us, is there? She will not recognize love where it was given, I will lose the ivestment I made, and her father will never capitalise on the adoration that he doesn't seem to recognize. Have you read Sartre? No Exit?

So what I'm saying is that life takes its course. Don't regret the love and attention you DIDN'T get.. spend your time on the people whose love and attention you DID Get. When your father shows remorse, accept it with love. when your mother seems boring, realize that it's because she gave up much more than she should have in order to balance things out for you. If you have no mother, remember those who did parent you - even if this was yourself alone. Appreciate those people with words and actions. Yourself included.

And whenever you can, be kind. If I have one regret about my last year with my father it is that I should have been more kind. I was good to him, especially considering htat he'd never been overly good to me. But I could have been better. There's always room for that.

I'm not lecturing. I'm offering a path to peace within yourself. it's what I would say to my own daughter and have, indeed, said to myself.

I'll likely delete all this in the 10 hours or so, so read it now :)


Lovely words of wisdom. Thanks.

Maturity is reached when we stop blaming our parents for who they (and we) are, and when we assume for ourselves the responsibility for who we are.

We must always admire those few who - after drawing their attention - refuse to be crushed by those who deal in repression, deception and theft. It is a heavy burden. Via con Dios Snr. Anti.

Seek forgiveness and love, oppose fear and repression.
"The simplest evidence is the most unbearable." - Brentos 7/3/08
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Postby peachtree pam01 » Sat Dec 20, 2008 4:32 pm

isachar said:

"Maturity is reached when we stop blaming our parents for who they (and we) are, and when we assume for ourselves the responsibility for who we are. "

I could not agree more. Victoria, All parents are fallible, none are perfect. Anti has suffered greatly while separated from his daughters. I hope you will soften your heart, and realize how short life is - don't waste a moment of it in holding a grudge.......

Well, hello to everyone, I have not posted for some time, but have been lurking all along. It has been fascinating reading this long thread which reminds one of watching an on-going train wreck but with horrendous consequences...

Thanks to all the posters who have contributed so much.

Wishing all RI forum members a better 2009 than 2008.

Peachtree Pam
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Postby Byrne » Tue Dec 30, 2008 12:01 pm

Federal Reserve sets Stage for Weimar-style Hyperinflation


By F. William Engdahl, 15 December 2008




The Federal Reserve has bluntly refused a request by a major US financial news service to disclose the recipients of more than $2 trillion of emergency loans from US taxpayers and to reveal the assets the central bank is accepting as collateral. Their lawyers resorted to the bizarre argument that they did so to protect 'trade secrets.' Is the secret that the US financial system is de facto bankrupt? The latest Fed move is further indication of the degree of panic and lack of clear strategy within the highest ranks of the US financial institutions. Unprecedented Federal Reserve expansion of the Monetary Base in recent weeks sets the stage for a future Weimar-style hyperinflation perhaps before 2010.

On November 7 Bloomberg filed suit under the US Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requesting details about the terms of eleven new Federal Reserve lending programs created during the deepening financial crisis.

The Fed responded on December 8 claiming it's allowed to withhold internal memos as well as information about 'trade secrets' and 'commercial information.' The central bank did confirm that a records search found 231 pages of documents pertaining to the requests.

The Bernanke Fed in recent weeks has stepped in to take a role that was the original purpose of the Treasury's $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). The difference between a Fed bailout of troubled financial institutions and a Treasury bailout is that central bank loans do not have the oversight safeguards that Congress imposed upon the TARP. Perhaps those are the 'trade secrets the hapless Fed Chairman,Ben Bernanke, is so jealously guarding from the public.

Coming hyperinflation?

The total of such emergency Fed lending exceeded $2 trillion on Nov. 6. It had risen by an astonishing 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. They did so knowing that on the following day a dramatic shock to the financial system would occur because they, in concert with the Bush Administration, had decided to let it occur.

On September 15 Bernanke, New York Federal Reserve President, Tim Geithner, the new Obama Treasury Secretary-designate, along with the Bush Administration, agreed to let the fourth largest investment bank, Lehman Brothers, go bankrupt, defaulting on untold billions worth of derivatives and other obligations held by investors around the world. That event, as is now widely accepted , triggered a global systemic financial panic as it was no longer clear to anyone what standards the US Government was using to decide which institutions were 'too big to fail' and which not. Since then the US Treasury Secretary has reversed his policies on bank bailouts repeatedly leading many to believe Henry Paulson and the Washington Administration along with the Fed have lost control.

In response to the deepening crisis, the Bernanke Fed has decided to expand what is technically called the Monetary Base, defined as total bank reserves plus cash in circulation, the basis for potential further high-powered bank lending into the economy. Since the Lehman Bros. default, this money expansion rose dramatically by end October at a year-year rate of growth of 38%, has been without precedent in the 95 year history of the Federal Reserve since its creation in 1913. The previous high growth rate, according to US Federal Reserve data, was 28% in September 1939, as the US was building up industry for the evolving war in Europe.

By the first week of December, that expansion of the monetary base had jumped to a staggering 76% rate in just 3 months. It has gone from $836 billion in December 2007 when the crisis appeared contained, to $1,479 billion in December 2008, an explosion of 76% year-on-year. Moreover, until September 2008, the month of the Lehman Brothers collapse, the Federal Reserve had held the expansion of the Monetary Base virtually flat. The 76% expansion has almost entirely taken place within the past three months, which implies an annualized expansion rate of more than 300%.

Despite this, banks do not lend further, meaning the US economy is in a depression free-fall of a scale not seen since the 1930's. Banks do not lend in large part because under Basle BIS lending rules, they must set aside 8% of their capital against the value of any new commercial loans. Yet the banks have no idea how much of the mortgage and other troubled securities they own are likely to default in the coming months, forcing them to raise huge new sums of capital to remain solvent. It's far 'safer' as they reason to pass on their toxic waste assets to the Fed in return for earning interest on the acquired Treasury paper they now hold. Bank lending is risky in a depression.

Hence the banks exchange $2 trillion of presumed toxic waste securities consisting of Asset-Backed Securities in sub-prime mortgages, stocks and other high-risk credits in exchange for Federal Reserve cash and US Treasury bonds or other Government securities rated (still) AAA, i.e. risk-free. The result is that the Federal Reserve is holding some $2 trillion in largely junk paper from the financial system. Borrowers include Lehman Brothers, Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase, the US's largest bank by assets. Banks oppose any release of information because that might signal 'weakness' and spur short-selling or a run by depositors.

Making the situation even more drastic is the banking model used first by US banks beginning in the late 1970's for raising deposits, namely the acquiring of 'wholesale deposits' by borrowing from other banks on the overnight interbank market. The collapse in confidence since the Lehman Bros. default is so extreme that no bank anywhere, dares trust any other bank enough to borrow. That leaves only traditional retail deposits from private and corporate savings or checking accounts.

To replace wholesale deposits with retail deposits is a process that in the best of times will take years, not weeks. Understandably, the Federal Reserve does not want to discuss this. That is clearly also behind their blunt refusal to reveal the nature of their $2 trillion assets acquired from member banks and other financial institutions. Simply put, were the Fed to reveal to the public precisely what 'collateral' they held from the banks, the public would know the potential losses that the government may take.

Congress is demanding more transparency from the Federal Reserve and US Treasury on its bailout lending. On December 10 in Congressional hearings by the House Financial Services Committee , Representative David Scott, a Georgia Democrat, said Americans had 'been bamboozled,' slang for defrauded.

Hiccups and Hurricanes

Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and 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.

In early December the Congress oversight agency, GAO, issued its first mandated review of the lending of the US Treasury's $700 billion TARP program (Troubled Asset Relief Program). The review noted that in 30 days since the program began, Henry Paulson's office had handed out $150 billion of taxpayer money to financial institutions with no effective accountability of how the money is being used. It seems Henry Paulson's Treasury has indeed thrown a giant 'tarp' over the entire taxpayer bailout.

Further adding to the troubles in the world's former financial Mecca, the US Congress, acting on largely ideological grounds, shocked the financial system when it refused to give even a meager $14 billion emergency loan to the Big Three automakers-General Motors, Chrysler and Ford.

While it is likely that the Treasury will extend emergency credit to the companies until January 20 or until the newly elected Congress can consider a new plan, the prospect of a chain -reaction bankruptcy collapse of the three giant companies is very near. What is being left out of the debate is that those three companies account for a combined 25% of all US corporate bonds outstanding. They are held by private pension funds, mutual funds, banks and others. If the auto parts suppliers of the Big Three are included, an estimated $1 trillion of corporate bonds are now at risk of chain-reaction default. Such a bankruptcy failure could trigger a financial catastrophe which would make what has happened since Lehman Bros. appear as a mere hiccup in a hurricane.

As well, the Federal Reserve's panic actions since September, by their explosive expansion of the monetary base, has set the stage for a Zimbabwe-style hyperinflation. The new money is not being 'sterilized' by offsetting actions by the Fed, a highly unusual move indicating their desperation. Prior to September the Fed's infusions of money were sterilized, making the potential inflation effect 'neutral.'

Defining a Very Great Depression

That means once banks begin finally to lend again, perhaps in a year or so, that will flood the US economy with liquidity in the midst of a deflationary depression. At that point or perhaps well before, the dollar will collapse as foreign holders of US Treasury bonds and other assets run. That will not be pleasant as the result would be a sharp appreciation in the Euro and a crippling effect on exports in Germany and elsewhere should the nations of the EU and other non-dollar countries such as Russia, OPEC members and, above all, China not have arranged a new zone of stabilization apart from the dollar.

The world faces the greatest financial and economic challenges in history in coming months. The incoming Obama Administration faces a choice of literally nationalizing the credit system to insure a flow of credit to the real economy over the next 5 to 10 years, or face an economic Armageddon that will make the 1930's appear a mild recession by comparison.

Leaving aside what appears to have been blatant political manipulation by the present US Administration of key economic data prior to the November election in a vain attempt to downplay the scale of the economic crisis in progress, the figures are unprecedented. For the week ended December 6 initial jobless claims rose to the highest level since November 1982. More than four million workers remained on unemployment, also the most since 1982 and in November US companies cut jobs at the fastest rate in 34 years. Some 1,900,000 US jobs have vanished so far in 2008.

As a matter of relevance, 1982, for those with long memories, was the depth of what was then called the Volcker Recession. Paul Volcker, a Chase Manhattan appendage of the Rockefeller family, had been brought down from New York to apply his interest rate 'shock therapy' to the US economy in order as he put it, 'to squeeze inflation out of the economy.' He squeezed far more as the economy went into severe recession, and his high interest rate policy detonated what came to be called the Third World Debt Crisis. The same Paul Volcker has just been named by Barack Obama as chairman-designate of the newly formed President's Economic Recovery Advisory Board, hardly grounds for cheer.

The present economic collapse across the United States is driven by the collapse of the $3 trillion market for high-risk sub-prime and Alt-A home mortgages. Fed Chairman Bernanke is on record stating that the worst should be over by end of December. Nothing could be farther from the truth, as he well knows. The same Bernanke stated in October 2005 that there was 'no housing bubble to go bust.' So much for the predictive quality of that Princeton economist. The widely-used S&P Schiller-Case US National Home Price Index showed a 17% year-year drop in the third Quarter, trend rising. By some estimates it will take another five to seven years to see US home prices reach bottom. In 2009 as interest rate resets on some $1 trillion worth of Alt-A US home mortgages begin to kick in, the rate of home abandonments and foreclosures will explode. Little in any of the so-called mortgage amelioration programs offered to date reach the vast majority affected. That process in turn will accelerate as millions of Americans lose their jobs in the coming months.

John Williams of the widely-respected Shadow Government Statistics report, recently published a definition of Depression, a term that was deliberately dropped after World War II from the economic lexicon as an event not repeatable. Since then all downturns have been termed 'recessions.' Williams explained to me that some years ago he went to great lengths interviewing the respective US economic authorities at the Commerce Department's Bureau of Economic Analysis and at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), as well as numerous private sector economists, to come up with a more precise definition of 'recession,' 'depression' and 'great depression.' His is pretty much the only attempt to give a more precise definition to these terms.

What he came up with was first the official NBER definition of recession: Two or more consecutive quarters of contracting real GDP, or measures of payroll employment and industrial production. A depression is a recession in which the peak-to-bottom growth contraction is greater than 10% of the GDP. A Great Depression is one in which the peak-to-bottom contraction, according to Williams, exceeds 25% of GDP.

In the period from August 1929 until he left office President Herbert Hoover oversaw a 43-month long contraction of the US economy of 33%. Barack Obama looks set to break that record, to preside over what historians could likely call the Very Great Depression of 2008-2014, unless he finds a new cast of financial advisers before Inauguration Day, January 20. Required are not recycled New York Fed presidents, Paul Volckers or Larry Summers types. Needed is a radically new strategy to put virtually the entire United States economy into some form of an emergency 'Chapter 11' bankruptcy reorganization where banks take write-offs of up to 90% on their toxic assets, that, in order to save the real economy for the American population and the rest of the world. Paper money can be shredded easily. Not human lives. In the process it might be time for Congress to consider retaking the Federal Reserve into the Federal Government as the Constitution originally specified, and make the entire process easier for all. If this sounds extreme, perhaps revisit this article in six months again.

http://www.engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net/F ... ation.html
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Postby JackRiddler » Sat Feb 21, 2009 3:18 pm

.

a going-through-a-classic bump.

(... Seem to have missed some true human drama in this thread ...)
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Postby anothershamus » Sat Feb 21, 2009 3:43 pm

I am posting this in all the financial threads because of the relative importance that I believe it has. T



Examples: Confidence Destroyed

""We're near the cliff's edge, very close to capitulation, the mood is very gloomy," said Jean-Claude Petit, head of equities at Barclays Wealth Managers France.

"I not sure that governments and central banks are realising what's really going on," he said.

What's "really going on" is that our entire financial system has turned into a gigantic clown car. There hasn't been any recognition that the fundamental problem over the last two decades has been fraudulent lending - giving money to people on loan that the lender knows full well has no real chance of being able to pay it back.


Image

The FX dislocations that we've seen over the last few days have perplexed me and in addition been cause for great alarm. This is not without foundation. After much study I think I've figured out what's going on - we are witnessing the capital flight that I feared might happen in some of my Tickers from last year.

These moves are hedge funds and others that are leaving The United States with their money. It is flowing out of the United States.

Nor is this limited to hedge funds - it has become essentially impossible to sell Fannie and Freddie paper overseas now too:

"Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Asian investors won’t buy debt and mortgage-backed securities from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac until they carry explicit U.S. guarantees, similar to those given on bonds issued by Bank of America Corp. or Citigroup Inc.

The risks are too great without a pledge that the U.S. will repay the debt no matter what, according to Hideo Shimomura, chief fund investor in Tokyo for Mitsubishi UFJ Asset Management Co., and other bondholders and analysts in Japan, China and South Korea interviewed by Bloomberg. Overseas resistance may hamper U.S. efforts to hold down home-loan rates and rebuild the nation’s largest mortgage-finance companies.

The problem is that we can't guarantee these securities. If we attempt it we will literally double the outstanding debt of the United States overnight. This will in turn destroy the bond market, spiking yields higher, which in turn will crush what's left of the credit markets (including and especially housing.)

Policy-makers must understand: This is a confidence problem and they are responsible for it. The people pulling the levers of power, including Bernanke, the OTS, OCC, President Obama and Geithner (and their predecessors, have intentionally and systematically obscured the facts and looked the other way while various people within Wall Street repeatedly misrepresented the quality of the securities they were peddling and, in many cases, the health of their firms. Do I really need to go back and cite "The economy is fundamentally sound" or "I'm going to burn the shorts" again? None of these people have been held to account for their falsehoods by our government and as a consequence the market is doing the job that government refuses to do, with the result being a market collapse.

We as Americans and in fact investors all over the world have suffered trillions of dollars in harm, a consequence that accrued to us as a direct and proximate consequence of the intentional and willful acts of these government officials and "captains of Wall Street."

Now the people with the money are quite literally leaving. They're finished with the liars and games and are taking their ball and going home, voting with their wallets. The damage being done to our capital markets is reaching critical levels and threatens to stoke a positive feedback loop that is nearly impossible to stop.

Should our policymakers not step up and put a stop to the lies and fraud in the immediate future the other actions they are taking will mean exactly nothing. A "mini-crash" of another 20-30% down in the S&P 500 (which would take us into the 600s) will destroy another 2-3 million American jobs and bankrupt hundreds of midsize and large companies, along with tens of thousands of small firms. An all-on market panic, which is looking increasingly likely and may initiate as soon as today, will result in the bankruptcy of 30% or more of the S&P 500 and an unemployment rate that will exceed 15% within the next twelve months on "official statistics", and U-6 numbers above 25% - rivaling The Great Depression.

There is no more time for game-playing. Our policy-makers were not elected to protect the malefactors and fraudsters; they were elected to protect the people.

Confidence has been lost across the board. If our government does not act decisively and quickly to restore confidence, forcing the fraud into the open and prosecuting those involved, along with setting forth a concrete path of action specifically addressing the issue of "nationalization" (in any of its various forms of dress) for financial institutions capital flight will accelerate, our financial institutions stock prices will continue on their trip to zero and our markets will crash.


My personal confidence is shaken and on the verge of being destroyed, at which point I may as well take my wealth and depart the system entirely with it, buying a piece of arable land, some chickens and goats, a passel of firearms with many cases of ammo and, just in case, some horses so I can still get around if we suffer a catastrophic economic collapse.

Yes folks, I do think it could get that bad, and it could happen very quickly if our government does not step up - now - to address the above.


Full link here: http://market-ticker.denninger.net/archives/813-Examples-Confidence-Destroyed.html
)'(
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