Armageddon
machine
Increased regulation and low interest rates are driving
lending from the regulated commercial banking system into the unregulated
shadow banking system. The shadow banks, although free of government
regulation, are propped up by a hidden government guarantee in the form
of safe harbor status under the 2005 Bankruptcy Reform Act pushed through
by Wall Street. The result is to create perverse incentives for the
financial system to self-destruct.
Five years after the financial collapse precipitated by the Lehman Brothers
bankruptcy on September 15, 2008, the risk of another full-blown financial
panic is still looming large, despite the Dodd Frank legislation designed
to contain it. As noted in a recent Reuters article, the risk has just
moved into the shadows:
[B]anks are pulling back their balance sheets from the fringes of the
credit markets, with more and more risk being driven to unregulated
lenders that comprise the $60 trillion “shadow-banking” sector.
Increased regulation and low interest rates have made lending to homeowners
and small businesses less attractive than before 2008. The easy subprime
scams of yesteryear are no more. The void is being filled by the shadow
banking system. Shadow banking comes in many forms, but the big money
today is in repos and derivatives. The notional (or hypothetical) value
of the derivatives market has been estimated to be as high as $1.2 quadrillion,
or twenty times the GDP of all the countries of the world combined.
According to Hervé Hannoun, Deputy General Manager of the Bank
for International Settlements, investment banks as well as commercial
banks may conduct much of their business in the shadow banking system
(SBS), although most are not generally classed as SBS institutions themselves.
At least one financial regulatory expert has said that regulated banking
organizations are the largest shadow banks.
The Hidden Government Guarantee that Props Up the Shadow Banking System
According to Dutch economist Enrico Perotti, banks are able to fund
their loans much more cheaply than any other industry because they offer
“liquidity on demand.” The promise that the depositor can get his money
out at any time is made credible by government-backed deposit insurance
and access to central bank funding. But what guarantee underwrites
the shadow banks? Why would financial institutions feel confident lending
cheaply in the shadow market, when it is not protected by deposit insurance
or government bailouts?
Perotti says that liquidity-on-demand is guaranteed in the SBS through
another, lesser-known form of government guarantee: “safe harbor” status
in bankruptcy. Repos and derivatives, the stock in trade of shadow banks,
have “superpriority” over all other claims. Perotti writes:
Security pledging grants access to cheap funding thanks to the steady
expansion in the EU and US of “safe harbor status”. Also called bankruptcy
privileges, this ensures lenders secured on financial collateral immediate
access to their pledged securities. . . .
Safe harbor status grants the privilege of being excluded from mandatory
stay, and basically all other restrictions. Safe harbor lenders, which
at present include repos and derivative margins, can immediately repossess
and resell pledged collateral.
This gives repos and derivatives extraordinary super-priority over all
other claims, including tax and wage claims, deposits, real secured
credit and insurance claims. Critically, it ensures immediacy (liquidity)
for their holders. Unfortunately, it does so by undermining orderly
liquidation.
When orderly liquidation is undermined, there is a rush to get the collateral,
which can actually propel the debtor into bankruptcy.
The amendment to the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 2005 that created this
favored status for repos and derivatives was pushed through by the banking
lobby with few questions asked. In a December 2011 article titled “Plan
B How to Loot Nations and Their Banks Legally,” documentary film-maker
David Malone wrote:
This amendment which was touted as necessary to reduce systemic risk
in financial bankruptcies . . . allowed a whole range of far riskier
assets to be used . . . . The size of the repo market hugely increased
and riskier assets were gladly accepted as collateral because traders
saw that if the person they had lent to went down they could get [their]
money back before anyone else and no one could stop them.
Burning Down the Barn to Get the Insurance
Safe harbor status creates the sort of perverse incentives that make
derivatives “financial weapons of mass destruction,” as Warren Buffett
famously branded them. It is the equivalent of burning down the barn
to collect the insurance. Says Malone:
All other creditors bond holders risk losing some of their money
in a bankruptcy. So they have a reason to want to avoid bankruptcy of
a trading partner. Not so the repo and derivatives partners. They would
now be best served by looting the company perfectly legally as soon
as trouble seemed likely. In fact the repo and derivatives traders could
push a bank that owed them money over into bankruptcy when it most suited
them as creditors. When, for example, they might be in need of a bit
of cash themselves to meet a few pressing creditors of their own.
The collapse of . . . Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers and AIG were all
directly because repo and derivatives partners of those institutions
suddenly stopped trading and ‘looted’ them instead.
The global credit collapse was triggered, it seems, not by wild subprime
lending but by the rush to grab collateral by players with congressionally-approved
safe harbor status for their repos and derivatives.
Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers were strictly investment banks, but
now we have giant depository banks gambling in derivatives as well;
and with the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act that separated depository
and investment banking, they are allowed to commingle their deposits
and investments. The risk to the depositors was made glaringly obvious
when MF Global went bankrupt in October 2011. Malone wrote:
When MF Global went down it did so because its repo, derivative and
hypothecation partners essentially foreclosed on it. And when they did
so they then ‘looted’ the company. And because of the co-mingling of
clients money in the hypothecation deals the ‘looters’ also seized clients
money as well. . . JPMorgan allegedly has MF Global money while other
people’s lawyers can only argue about it.
MF Global was followed by the Cyprus “bail-in” the confiscation of
depositor funds to recapitalize the country’s failed banks. This was
followed by the coordinated appearance of bail-in templates worldwide,
mandated by the Financial Stability Board, the global banking regulator
in Switzerland.
The Auto-Destruct Trip Wire on the Banking System
Bail-in policies are being necessitated by the fact that governments
are balking at further bank bailouts. In the US, the Dodd-Frank Act
(Section 716) now bans taxpayer bailouts of most speculative derivative
activities. That means the next time we have a Lehman-style event, the
banking system could simply collapse into a black hole of derivative
looting. Malone writes:
. . . The bankruptcy laws allow a mechanism for banks to disembowel
each other. The strongest lend to the weaker and loot them when the
moment of crisis approaches. The plan allows the biggest banks, those
who happen to be burdened with massive holdings of dodgy euro area bonds,
to leap out of the bond crisis and instead profit from a bankruptcy
which might otherwise have killed them. All that is required is to know
the import of the bankruptcy law and do as much repo, hypothecation
and derivative trading with the weaker banks as you can.
. . . I think this means that some of the biggest banks, themselves,
have already constructed and greatly enlarged a now truly massive trip
wired auto-destruct on the banking system.
The weaker banks may be the victims, but it is we the people who will
wind up holding the bag. Malone observes:
For the last four years who has been putting money in to the banks?
And who has become a massive bond holder in all the banks? We have.
First via our national banks and now via the Fed, ECB and various tax
payer funded bail out funds. We are the bond holders who would be shafted
by the Plan B looting. We would be the people waiting in line for the
money the banks would have already made off with. . . .
. . . [T]he banks have created a financial Armageddon looting machine.
Their Plan B is a mechanism to loot not just the more vulnerable banks
in weaker nations, but those nations themselves. And the looting will
not take months, not even days. It could happen in hours if not minutes.
Crisis and Opportunity: Building a Better Mousetrap
There is no way to regulate away this sort of risk. If both the conventional
banking system and the shadow banking system are being maintained by
government guarantees, then we the people are bearing the risk. We should
be directing where the credit goes and collecting the interest. Banking
and the creation of money-as-credit need to be made public utilities,
owned by the public and having a mandate to serve the public. Public
banks do not engage in derivatives.
Today, virtually the entire circulating money supply (M1, M2 and M3)
consists of privately-created “bank credit” money created on the books
of banks in the form of loans. If this private credit system implodes,
we will be without a money supply. One option would be to return to
the system of government-issued money that was devised by the American
colonists, revived by Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War, and used
by other countries at various times and places around the world. Another
option would be a system of publicly-owned state banks on the model
of the Bank of North Dakota, leveraging the capital of the state backed
by the revenues of the into public bank credit for the use of the local
economy.
Change happens historically in times of crisis, and we may be there
again today. |