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The Fed has little influence on the curve, or credit spreads, and the
concept of a national credit market is nonsense.
Overview: The very old
saying that "Credit is suspicion asleep" provided the most succinct
explanation of pressures in the financial markets that concluded in severe
turmoil in August. In a world considered to be made almost perfect by
policymakers this was shocking. "Goldilocks" was the prevailing
condition, financial panic rapidly became the new paradigm, but these events
are not so new. Neither have been the ideas that were floated as the early
signs of trouble appeared that it was "isolated", or could be
"contained". Despite such comforts promised by the establishment
the transition showed, yet again, that risk appraisal was indeed asleep.
Going as far
back as Roman times history records many collapses
in financial markets, and while the names of the credit instruments may
change, the pattern has remained the same. A boom, with great confidence and
a sudden change from exuberance to dismay and panic, has usually been
followed by a cyclical contraction. Even the response by policymakers is so
reliable as to be predictable.
Through a number
of panics and contractions in the mortgage markets the "Genius" of
the Emperor virtually created the New Deal in Old Rome, much as Roosevelt's
"Brain Trust" created the New Deal in the US in the 1930s. It is ironical
that the socialists who invented the New Deal were so ignorant of their own
history that they didn't know that their counterparts had invented the same
nonsense almost 2,000 years earlier. There is a comment by Cicero
that problems in the credit markets in one part of the Empire inevitably
would spread to all trading ports in the Mediterranean.
Various agencies
created in Rome's
long-running New Deal intended to help or bail out everyone from merchants to
grain farmers to wine makers suggests that the hardships of a post-boom
contraction hit virtually all classes in society. Particularly when out of a
population of almost a million in the City almost half were on welfare.
Thus, the
observation that credit markets are three-dimensional. One is that a credit
contraction afflicts all classes of credit from low-grade to high-grade
borrowers, as well as those who are wards of the state with no ability to
borrow money to the state itself with the highest rating.
The next
dimension is in time, whereby shorter-dated loans usually have a lower rate
than longer-dated loans. Then in a boom the demand by speculators for
near-term money increases short rates faster than long rates and the curve
inverts. This is symptomatic of a boom but does not signal its demise. As
with the experience in the summer, it is when the curve reverses to steepening that the most blatant speculations begin to
fall apart.
It is worth
noting that while the Fed can briefly influence short-dated market rates of
interest it can't push long rates, so the policymakers have little influence
on the curve. The curve as it reverses to steepening
then becomes a sophisticated and impartial indicator of diminishing
speculative demand for funds.
The next
dimension of credit is the spread between low-grade and high-grade bonds,
which in the final phase of a boom becomes very narrow. In so many words, in
an over abundance of confidence investors buy risk to obtain a slightly
higher yield.
The other
historical aspect of credit is the third dimension of geography. Where the
foundation of manipulative economics rests upon personal fantasies about a
national economy the real world of credit has always been universal to
wherever credit is used and created. Credit is global and policymaking is a
parochial dream that can turn to a nightmare in the face of implacable market
forces. A credit expansion is like a tide as it lifts all ships in all
harbours - from the largest to the smallest. Contractions have been
undeniable and do quite the opposite.
At the bottom of
contraction it is typically real and cautious money rather than the borrowed
kind that accumulates very unpopular stocks, corporate bonds, and
commodities. Then, at the top inspired confidence leverages up on established
price trends and participants enjoy the high life. In so many words, bull
markets, like civilizations are born stoic and die epicurean.
Cicero's observations
that financial distress in Tyre, with an
unfavourable wind would inevitably be carried to Rome, has and will continue to be correct. Notions
that credit markets are national will continue to be absurd.
These implacable
forces, which by definition have always been well beyond the ambitions of
even the most earnest of committees, have been cyclical. And the
characteristics of change from contraction to expansion and back again have
been methodical.
Of critical
interest has been this year's changes in the credit
markets. Typically in the late phase of a boom the action runs for some 12 to
16 months against an inverted curve and while this indicates developing
strains in the financial markets it is not the killer, nor is the attendant
rise in short-dated market rates of interest, such as treasury bills. The
problem is that when the curve reverses to steepening
the most blatant speculations begin to fall, with many of them failing.
The curve had
reversed to steepening by the end of May, and June
was the sixteenth month since inversion started in February, 2006. With this,
our observation in July was that the contraction had started and that it
would likely be the biggest train wreck in the history of credit markets.
The initial
crisis came as a severe shock to market participants, policymakers and
interventionist academics. Although the panic ran a brief course and ended
later in August, the overall condition should not be considered as
"fixable" or that the summer's turmoil was enough to naturally
clear market imbalances.
An era of wild
asset inflations, including stock and metal markets, matured in the summer of
1873 and following the initial panic, The Economist (October 4, 1873), wisely
observed "The panic may be over, but the results of the panic are not
over." The initial bear market lasted for five years and the business
contraction lasted one year longer. The writer at The Economist offered
appropriate advice on any shocking panic, especially as signaled
by changes in the credit markets that started in May of this year.
Over most of the
past two years the mantra has been that the Fed had again provided
"Goldilocks" conditions and that within this "liquidity"
was driving the markets up. In reality it was the usual leveraging up of all
the hot games that provided the appearance of liquidity, and the health of
the play depended upon rising prices. Of course, the threat to any impetuous
boom is that any break in prices brings the margin clerk on to the stage.
The job
descriptions of the central banker and the margin clerk are very different. The
central banker's job is to get the accounts over-leveraged, and the latter is
compelled to get and keep the accounts onside - no matter what! Seriously, it
is ironical that the way it really works is that the world of policymaking
has always fostered unsustainable speculation and then at the top hands the
baton of power in the credit markets to Mr. Margin.
This contrasts
with macroeconomics which considers that contractions are due to
"exogenous" events, which essentially means that if you didn't put
it in your computer model then it can't happen. The equivalent in investing
has been quantitative modeling and one such
"quant" described the credit shock as not just one
"10,000" year event, but that there were 3 days of them.
Conventional
wisdom holds that interventionist policymakers will "fix" the
problems. A thorough review of history suggests that policymaking with its
chronic accommodation is a large part of the problem and the contraction
could be severe enough to "fix" interventionist meddling.
In the 1600s Amsterdam was the
commercial and financial center of the world, and
some Dutch terms for finance have meaning today. The term "easy"
money still has the same connotation, and soon so will its opposite -
"diseased" money. The October 20th edition of The Economist cover
story was "Central banks have worked miracles for 30 years. Don't count
on that continuing."
Well they got
the last part right, but rather than calling the thirty years a miracle the
practical Dutch would have called it "easy" money, and also had the
vocabulary for its consequence.
Dimensional
Update: As part of rejuvenated markets the yield curve flattened as the 10s
to 2s came in to 48 bps on October 18 and has steepened a little to 60 bps. Also
providing modest warning is that the BBB corporate bond spread, over
treasuries, has widened from 129 bps to 137 bps.
However, the
event that provided an outstanding warning on the August panic was the
initial signal as the BBB subprime mortgage bond
turned down in June and the killer was when the AAA subprime
bond plunged from 99 ½ to 91 in the first two weeks of July.
The rebound took
the top-rated bond to 97 ½ in late August from where it declined to
96.25 on October 18. In
the past 5 trading days it has slumped to 88.25 - taking out the low of
August, which is a strident warning.
Although we have
been discussing price it should be emphasized that the plunge also reflects
severely widening credit spreads and one chart shows the crash in the
"A" subprime bond and the slump in the
S&P.
The other chart
shows how the crash in the BBB subprime bond has
afflicted the preferred shares of Royal Bank - Canada's biggest.
Related Article: Our report
titled "The Unholy Trinity" (July 23) reviews that arbitrary
manipulations have culminated in the biggest credit bubble in history. Culpability
starts with the Fed and its prerogative of artificial money as well as
interest rates and continues with the creation by Wall Street and Academe of
synthetic securities such as subprime mortgage
bonds. Then math models are contrived to provide an artificial price, as well
as artificial credit ratings from formerly august rating agencies.
This can be
reviewed on the Institutional Advisors website at www.institutionaladvisors.com/pdf/070723_HOYE-UNHOLY_TRINITY.pdf
AAA Subprime Bond
 
SUBPRIME
CONTAGION
Preferred shares
of Canada's
largest bank
 
BBB Subprime mortgage bond
 
- Freddie Mac says that "the subprime slump is contained"
- Fund manager says "The whole subprime mess has been basically looked over and is
not taken as a big concern."
-
Bloomberg, June 26
By :
Bob Hoye
Institutional
Advisors
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Copyright © 2003-2008 Bob Hoye
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