Showing posts with label Institutional Bank Run. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Institutional Bank Run. Show all posts

Sunday, March 17, 2013

War on Savers: Cyprus’ $13 Billion Bailout to be Funded by Taxing Depositors

In Cyprus, abetted by the IMF, increasingly desperate politicians will now tax depositors in order to bailout banksters.  This is financial repression at its finest.

From Bloomberg,
Euro-area finance ministers agreed to an unprecedented tax on Cypriot bank deposits as officials unveiled a 10 billion-euro ($13 billion) rescue plan for the country, the fifth since Europe’s debt crisis broke out in 2009.

Cyprus will impose a levy of 6.75 percent on deposits of less than 100,000 euros -- the ceiling for European Union account insurance -- and 9.9 percent above that. The measures will raise 5.8 billion euros, in addition to the emergency loans, Dutch Finance Minister Jeroen Dijsselbloem, who leads the group of euro-area ministers, told reporters early today after 10 hours of talks in Brussels. The International Monetary Fund may contribute to the package and junior bondholders may also be tapped in a so-called bail-in, the ministers' statement said.

Officials have struggled to find an agreement that would rescue Cyprus, which accounts for just half of a percent of the euro region’s economy, without unsettling investors in larger countries and sparking a new round of market contagion. Finance Minister Michael Sarris said the plan was the “least onerous” of the options Cyprus faced to stay afloat.
The Cyprus government is supposed to vote on this today. However, such plan has already incited incidences of panic.

From Reuters,
The decision prompted a run on cashpoints, most of which were depleted by mid afternoon, and co-operative credit societies closed to prevent angry savers withdrawing deposits.

Almost half Cyprus's bank depositors are believed to be non-resident Russians, but most queuing on Saturday at automatic teller machines appeared to be Cypriots.
This is monumental. Governments today have become more brazen. They are not content with imposing implicit taxation channeled through inflation, but now take on the recourse of outright confiscation of private property. With inflation, lost purchasing power means lesser quantity of goods or services to acquire. With taxation, people simply lose money and the attendant services derived from it.

True, Cyprus maybe small, but this serves a trial balloon on what governments will resort to, as today’s crisis deepens or remains unresolved.

Yet politicians forget that when you tax something you get less of it. Incipient signs of consternation may translate to potential bank runs, not limited to Cyprus but to crisis stricken Euro nations. Depositors from the PIIGs could express fear of the same policies that could be implemented on them.

And since the deal was forged while the financial markets has been closed for the weekend, I expect some volatility in the marketplace at the week's opening.

Moreover, ravaging depositors will increase political risks that may escalate into social unrest. This also amplifies the sundering or progression the demise of the EU project.

Of course when people become distrustful of the institutions that are supposed to underwrite the safety of their savings, gold and precious metals will function as the main beneficiaries. 

Tuesday, June 05, 2012

Bloomberg Ticker lists Greece’s Drachma

Either this signifies as the proverbial writing on the wall or part of the orchestrated propaganda campaign for Greece to exit the EU

image

From the RT.com

Traders around the world have been staring at their Bloomberg screens, hardly believing their eyes. The electronic information platform has been showing details for possible Greek Drachma trading.

The Bloomberg helpdesk described it as "an internal function which is set up to test."

The news comes in the wake of the heated discussions over the future of the euro zone and the membership of Greece. While many experts insist that Greece should leave the Euro and default, some suggest it should remain the union and introduce a parallel currency to the Euro to repay the country’s debt.

The Head of the European Investment Bank Werner Hoyer said on Tuesday that Greece will be able to remain a member of the union. “Greece will have the opportunity to solve the huge problems that it is facing. Continuing support from the EU will contribute to this, in case, of course, the very Greeks would want that,” Hoyer said.

And a survey at the weekend showed that Greeks prefer to stick to the Euro and not revert to the old drachma.

The Greek Drachma details have now been taken down from the Bloomberg service.

It has been impressed upon the mainstream that the solution to Greece debt problems will only be through “drachmaization” (euphemism for devaluation or inflationism).

When it comes to the prospects of outright defaults there has been a mental black hole. Outright default under the EU umbrella has hardly been discussed or ever considered an option. That’s because the mainstream fervently disdains a private sector (free market) solution. Supposedly nobody wants austerity (fiscal discipline), and alternatively everybody wants free lunch (spending other people's money).

But illusions melt when confronted with reality.

The clangor from repeated media blasts from these omniscient experts, who mostly hail from outside these crisis affected nations, has only been heightening the risks of such scenario and prompting for unintended consequences.

The local citizenry from these nations have been incited to withdraw money from their banking system, consequently send these elsewhere in the region or abroad for safekeeping from the risks of devaluations. The massive bank runs, thus, shows how ridiculous and out of touch with reality these proposals are.

Yet the addiction to inflationism has just so entrenched. Whether this clamor for the devaluation elixir will become a self-fulfilling prediction or not, remains to be seen.

Nevertheless inflation is a policy that WILL NOT and CANNOT last.

Sunday, June 03, 2012

Political Paralysis Paves Way to Bubble Bust Conditions

If politics continue to shackle central bankers, then the risks of a slowdown transitioning to a recession will get magnified.

The lucid example of political deadlock hounding the markets from the EU seems best captured by this Telegraph report[1]

The head of the European Central Bank hit out at the political paralysis gripping the region as he warned the eurozone's set-up was "unsustainable"

Mario Draghi said the central bank could not "fill the vacuum" left by member states' lack of action as it was claimed the zone is on the point of "disintegration".

Amid escalating talk of a potential bail-out for Spain, the president of the ECB said the central bank was powerless to stop the debt tornado. "It's not our duty, it's not in our mandate" to "fill the vacuum left by the lack of action by national governments on the fiscal front," he said.

Over at the worsening economic conditions in China, political debates over policy have once again been best illustrated by this comment from a former central banker turned representative for a think tank[2]

Americans and Europeans like it. Investors like it because they want to speculate on stocks. The whole world is hoping China will relax policy," Xia told Reuters.

"We will fall into a trap if we do. We will not be that stupid," Xia said, adding that the government should only stimulate economic growth in a "balanced and modest" way, while forging ahead with structural reforms to sustain growth over the longer term. China stimulus unnecessary, risks long-term damage

As a reminder, the current issue here has NOT been about a supposed “squeeze” on government spending and the supposed effects of low levels of capital from it.

The bank runs in the PIGS dismisses this false and self-contradictory logic, Spain experienced 100 billion capital flight during the first 3 months[3], as bank runs have been symptomatic of the fear of devaluations on the heightened prospects of a severance of EU ties.

clip_image001

The monumental capital flight has produced negative interest rates on the treasury yields of Switzerland[4] (see above) and also in Denmark.

Instead, the issue here has been the unwinding of MASSIVE malinvestments from EXCESSIVE government spending (welfare, bureaucracy, bailouts, and etc…) that has not only produced unsustainable loads of debt, but also resulted to the CROWDING out of the private sector investments. When government confiscates scarce private sector resources through taxation and spends it, the private sector losses ‘capital’ and opportunity from which to undertake productive activities. This is known as OPPORTUNITY costs; something which becomes a monumental blackhole to mainstream logic, whose ideas are premised on the laws of abundance.

Of course, add to this the misdirected resources from private the sector, particularly the real estate industry, whom had been induced by bubble ‘convergent interest rate’ policies.

The capital flight from crisis affected Euro nations has also been affecting the US where volatile money flows could exacerbate the current boom-bust dynamics. Add to this policy actions to address on such flows[5].

Yet the predicament of crisis afflicted EU nations has essentially been about vastly diminished competitiveness from asphyxiating bureaucracy and choking regulations, particularly in the labor markets[6].

Accounts of massive tax avoidance from current tax increases only debunk the supposed solution of increased government spending. Greeks have shown that they have not been amenable to paying NEWLY IMPOSED taxes[7].

If people truly believed that government spending is the solution then they would have volunteered payment for taxes. In reality, both the intensifying tax avoidance and capital flight defeats the silly statist illusory elixirs.

Even China today has been revealing signs of emergent bank runs[8] and such bank run seems to coincide with the recent depreciation of the yuan relative to the US dollar. This increases signs of uncertainty over China’s bubble economy.

Yet in general, current uncertainty has been aggravated by the political paralysis which has led central bankers to dither from pursuing further inflationist policies.

This Reuters article entitled “Central Banks to hold fire... for now[9]” nails it.

The intensifying euro zone crisis and uncertain global growth outlook have raised hopes for a policy response from major central banks but, while it could be a close call, they are likely to resist pressure to act in the coming week.

When central banks and the banking system stops or withholds from further inflating, the ensuing market reaction from a PREVIOUS inflationary Boom would be a Bubble Bust.

As the great dean of Austrian school of economics explained[10]

For the banks, after all, are obligated to redeem their liabilities in cash, and their cash is flowing out rapidly as their liabilities pile up. Hence, the banks will eventually lose their nerve, stop their credit expansion, and in order to save themselves, contract their bank loans outstanding. Often, this retreat is precipitated by bankrupting runs on the banks touched off by the public, who had also been getting increasingly nervous about the ever more shaky condition of the nation's banks.

The bank contraction reverses the economic picture; contraction and bust follow boom. The banks pull in their horns, and businesses suffer as the pressure mounts for debt repayment and contraction…

This, then, is the meaning of the depression phase of the business cycle. Note that it is a phase that comes out of, and inevitably comes out of, the preceding expansionary boom. It is the preceding inflation that makes the depression phase necessary.

Pieces of the jigsaw puzzles have been falling right in place into the boom bust picture.

And another thing, if there should be a global recession it is not certain that this will be deflationary, as this will depend on how central bankers react. The term deflation has been adulterated by deliberate semantical misrepresentations.

clip_image003

Not all recessions imply a monetary deflationary environment as alleged by a popular analyst. The US S&P 500 fell into TWO bear markets 1968-70 and 1974-1975 even as consumer price inflation soared (blue trend line).

If in case the same phenomenon should occur where stagflation becomes the dominant economic landscape, then a bear market in stocks will likely coincide with a bull market in commodities.

Yet for now everything remains highly fluid with everything dependent on the prospective actions by policymakers

clip_image004

As of this writing, reports say that the EU has been preparing for the $620 ESM Rescue fund for July[11]. If this is true then perhaps, this means the ECB will begin her next phase of massive monetization of debt.

Let me reiterate my opening statement of last week[12]

Like it or not, UNLESS there will be monumental moves from central bankers of major economies in the coming days, the global financial markets including the local Phisix will LIKELY endure more period of intense volatility on both directions but with a downside bias.

I am NOT saying that we are on an inflection phase in transit towards a bear market. Evidences have yet to establish such conditions, although I am NOT DISCOUNTING such eventuality given the current flow of developments.

What I am simply saying is that for as long as UNCERTAINTIES OVER MONETARY POLICIES AND POLITICAL ENVIRONMENTS PREVAIL, global equity markets will be sensitive to dramatic volatilities from an increasingly short term “RISK ON-RISK OFF” environment.

And where the RISK ON environment has been structurally reliant on central banking STEROIDS, ambiguities in political and monetary policy directions tilts the balance towards a RISK OFF environment.


[1] Armistead Louise Eurozone is 'unsustainable' warns Mario Draghi, Telegraph.co.uk, May 31, 2012

[2] See HOT: China’s Manufacturing Activity Falls Sharply in May June 1, 2012

[3] CNBC.com Spain Reveals 100 Billion Euro Capital Flight, June 1, 2012

[4] Bloomberg.com Switzerland Govt Bonds 2 Year Note Generic Bid Yield

[5] See The Coming Colossal Bernanke Bubble Bust May 30, 2012

[6] See Germany’s Competitive Advantage over Spain: Freer Labor Markets, May 25, 2012

[7] See Is Greece Falling into a Failed State? May 28, 2012

[8] See Is China Suffering from Bank Runs too? June 2, 2012

[9] Reuters.com Central Banks to hold fire... for now, June 2, 2012

[10] Rothbard Murray N. Economic Depressions: Their Cause and Cure, Mises.org

[11] See HOT: EU Readies $620 ESM Rescue Fund for July, June 3, 2012

[12] See The RISK OFF Environment Has NOT Abated, May 27, 2012

Saturday, June 02, 2012

Is China Suffering from Bank Runs too?

Writes the Zero Hedge, (bold highlights original)

The balance sheet recession that seems to have correctly diagnosed the problem facing Japan (and now Europe and the US) - explicitly causing debt minimzation as opposed to profit maximization - seems to be taking hold. However, it appears this death-knell for credit-created growth is now being seen in China - as AlsoSprachAnalyst interprets "people are not borrowing, but selling assets to pay down debts, and/or holding cash". What is most worrisome is that while the focus of the world has been on European bank runs (for fear of bank failure and redenomination risk), 21st Century Business Herald now notes that these bank runs have spread to China's industrial and construction-heavy city of Wuyishan. Queues were seen on various branches of China Construction Bank, Agricultural Bank of China, and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China.

Bank runs represent as symptoms of a deflating fractional reserve banking inflated bubble. If the above account is true and escalates further, then serious challenges lie ahead, not only for China, but for the world.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Greeks Mount Civil Disobedience, Scorn Taxes

Raising taxes has been one of the major proposed elixir of “growth” by mainstream analysts for resolving the crisis in the Eurozone. More inflationism and more deficit spending as the other nostrums.

Unfortunately, economic reality and intentions by politicians and their institutional backers don’t seem to square. Greeks have mounted a civil disobedience campaign against paying taxes.

Here is the Financial Times (Alphaville) Blog,

The desperate cunning scheme to get Greeks to pay property taxes by bundling them with electricity bills didn’t last long. You guessed it, people stopped paying their electricity bills and now it looks like the power company – which had to be bailed out last month – has stopped even trying to collect the levy.

From Ekathimerini, the Greek daily (emphasis ours):

“Public Power Corporation (PPC) has already disengaged itself from involvement in the payment of the special property tax that had been incorporated into electricity bills.

“Well-informed sources suggest that the new bills the company is issuing do not include the property levy despite the law providing for the first installment concerning 2012.

The decision, the same sources say, appears to have the acquiescence of the Finance Ministry.

“Judging by the fact that unpaid bills in the first quarter of the year totaled some 1 billion euros, PPC believes it has become clear that households cannot afford to pay electricity bills that are burdened further by the extraordinary property tax in the current recession conditions.

The government had hoped to raise €1.7bn-€2bn from the levy in the fourth quarter of last year. But a massive unions-led civil disobedience movement against this “injustice” scuppered that and a ruling that it was illegal to disconnect people’s electricity supply for non-payment sent the collection rate even lower.

However, the memorandum of understanding with the IMF-EU signed in March demands that Athens collects a range of back taxes, such as the property tax from 2009 which was essentially never collected. So it will be interesting to see how the Troika reacts to these most recent developments.

Again, more signs of the ongoing self-liquidation process of Europe’s embrace of the Santa Claus principle.

Updated to add:

Greece banks reported a surge in deposit withdrawals last Monday, and capital flight or "buy orders received by Greek banks for German bunds" to the tune of € EUR800 million.

Also, tax revolts have also become apparent in Italy.

A recent report from the Telegraph.co.uk (hat tip: Cato's Dan Mitchell)

In the last six months there has been a wave of countrywide attacks on offices of Equitalia, the agency which handles tax collection, with the most recent on

Saturday night when a branch was hit with two petrol bombs.


Staff have also expressed fears over their personal safety with increasing numbers calling in sick and with one unidentified employee telling Italian TV: “I have told my son not to say where I work or tell anyone what I do for a living.”


In another incident last week Roberto Adinolfi a director with arms firm Finmeccanica was wounded by anarchists in Genoa. The group later said in a letter claiming responsibility that they would carry out further attacks.


Annamaria Cancellieri, the interior minister, said she was considering calling in the army in a bid to quell the rising social tensions.


“There have been several attacks on the offices of Equitalia in recent weeks. I want to remind people that attacking Equitalia is the equivalent of attacking the State,” she said in an interview with La Repubblica newspaper.


Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Video: How Will A Dollar Crash Look Like?

A 1981 movie by Alan J. Pakula entitled Rollover depicted the fictional breakdown of the US dollar system.

Together with some great splices by George4title of the recent events which includes US Congressman Paul Kanjorski's narrative of the September 15th 2008 "electronic bank run" in C-Span, the simulated dollar crash scenario from the movie evokes an eerie and distressing vicarious sensation...


[Hat tip: Casey Research "The Room" and George4title]

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Has The Global Banking Stress Been a Manifestation of Declining Confidence In The Paper Money System?

``The business cycle is brought about, not by any mysterious failings of the free market economy, but quite the opposite: By systematic intervention by government in the market process. Government intervention brings about bank expansion and inflation, and, when the inflation comes to an end, the subsequent depression-adjustment comes into play.” Murray N. Rothbard, Economic Depressions: Their Cause and Cure

While blood on the streets could essentially represent a once in a lifetime opportunity, one must understand too why it requires additional contemplation of the operational dynamics that lead markets to be consumed by fear.

Riots From Lehman’s CDS Settlement?

One of the stated reasons behind last week’s bloodbath has been attributed to the settlement of Credit Default Swaps contracts from the bankrupted Lehman Bros.

According to Wikipedia.org ``A credit default swap (CDS) is a credit derivative contract between two counterparties, whereby the "buyer" makes periodic payments to the "seller" in exchange for the right to a payoff if there is a default or credit event in respect of a third party or "reference entity"” In essence, CDS contracts function like an insurance where bond or loans are insured by the underwriters “sellers” and paid for by those seeking shelter from potential defaults “the buyers”.

In Lehman’s case its $128 million bonds (Bloomberg) was reportedly priced at 8.625 cents to a dollar which meant that insurance sellers had to pay its counterparties or buyers at 91.375 on a US dollar or cough up an estimated $365 billion (washingtonpost.com) to settle for each of the contracts which covered more than 350 banks and investors worldwide.

Generally this won’t be a problem for banks that has direct access to the US Federal Reserve, except for its booking additional accounting losses. But for institutions without direct channels to the US Fed this implies raising cash by means liquidating assets, hence the consequent selloffs.


Figure 4: New York Times: CDS Market Shrinking But Still Gargantuan

Although the CDS market has been said to decline from more than $60 TRILLION to $54 TRILLION, the sum is staggering.

According to the New York Times, ``The 12 percent decline, to $54.6 trillion, still left the market vastly larger than the total amount of debt that can be insured. The huge total reflects the way the market is structured, as well as the fact that someone does not need to actually be owed money by a company to be able to buy a credit-default swap. In that case, the buyer is betting that the company will go broke.

``Within that huge market, many contracts offset one another — assuming that all parties honor their commitments. But if one major firm goes broke, the effect could snowball as others are unable to meet their commitments.”

In other words if the present crisis could worsen and lead to more bankruptcies of major institutions this could put the viability of CDS counterparties at risk. Hence, it’s not the issue of settlement but the issue of sellers of CDS of defaulted bonds having enough resources to pay for their liabilities.

For instance, while news focused on politicians bickering over $700 billion bailout, the US Congress passed $25 billion loan package (USA Today) to the US automakers. Yet despite this, the S&P raised the risks potential of bankruptcies for the big three; General Motors, Ford and Chrysler (Bloomberg). Presently these automakers have been pressuring the government to release the funds recently appropriated for by the US Congress (money.cnn.com).

Some analysts warn that CDS exposures to GM bonds are worth some $ 1 trillion even when GM’s market capitalization is today less than $3 billion. They suggest that a bankruptcy could entail another bout of market upheaval. Maybe.

While this week’s market riots can’t be directly attributed as having been caused by the Lehman CDS settlement, they may have contributed to it.

Spreading Credit Paralysis

What seems to be more convincing is what has been happening at the world credit markets. Remember this crisis began with the advent of the credit crunch in July of 2007. And after the Lehman bankruptcy, events seem to have rapidly deteriorated.

Credit stress indicators as seen in likes of LIBOR (London Interbank Offered Rate) and TED spread have sizably widened even as the US Federal Reserve introduced a new program aimed at surgically bypassing the commercial market by providing direct funding to affected financial companies by directly acquiring unsecured commercial papers and asset backed securities, called the Commercial Paper Funding Facility (CPFF)


Figure 5: Danske Bank: Commercial Paper and Asset Backed Securities Plunges

As you can see in Figure 5, the commercial paper (CP) market for financial institutions have effectively dried up (see redline) just recently. Aside from the Asset Backed Commercial paper (ABSP) which continues to fall from last year, the CP market’s decline has coincided with the recent crash in global equity markets.

Remember, the commercial paper market is a fundamental source of funding for working capital by corporations. Hence with the apparent difficulties to access capital, the alternative option for companies with no direct access to the Federal Reserve or for companies that have exhausted their revolving capital, is to sell into the markets their most liquid instrument regardless of the price.

This could be the reason why the VIX index has soared to UNPRECENDENTED levels simply because financial companies had NO CHOICE but to monetize all assets at whatever price to keep their businesses afloat!

And this has spread about to every financial center from Hong Kong, Singapore, Japan and others, including the Philippines. According to a report from Bloomberg, ``Rising Libor, set each day in the center of international finance, means higher payments on financial contracts valued at $360 trillion -- or $53,500 for each person worldwide --including mortgages in Britain, student loans in the U.S. and the debt of companies like CIIF in Makati City, the Philippines.”

And this difficulty of raising money today has equally led to hedge funds redemptions especially by institutional investors which may have contributed to the carnage, from Wall Street Journal,

``Larger investors, like pension funds, which had in some instances borrowed money to invest in hedge funds, are pulling out because the credit crunch makes it difficult to raise money.

``Investors can't redeem their money from hedge funds at will; often they have quarterly windows when they can do so. Many investors had until Sept. 30 to tell hedge funds they wanted out. While the funds are typically not required to redeem the money until the end of the year, the redemptions were greater than some funds expected. That caused a scramble to raise cash to pay the investors back. And one quick way to raise cash is often to sell holdings of stock.

Some of these hedge fund liquidations have been even traced to the collapse in Hong Kong’s market (the Hang Seng Index lost 16% week on week), according to Xinhua.net, ``In a sign of redemption pressures on the investment funds, the Hong Kong unit of Atlantis Investment Management said it has suspended redemptions in its Atlantis China Fortune Fund -- a hedge fund with outstanding performance -- due to market volatility.”

Institutional Bank Run

As you can see banks refusing to lend to each other, deterioration in money market, collapse in the commercial paper market, massive hedge fund redemptions and fears of credit derivative counterparty viability could be diagnosed as an institutional bank run.

Honorary Professor at the Frankfurt School of Finance & Management Thorsten Polleit makes our day to come up with a lucid explanation at the Mises.org,

``What spells trouble, however, is an institutional bank run: banks lose confidence in each other. Most banks rely heavily on interbank refinancing. And if interbank lending dries up, banks find it increasingly difficult, if not impossible, to obtain refinancing (at an acceptable level of interest rates).

``An institutional bank run is particularly painful for banks involved in maturity transformation. Most banks borrow funds with short- and medium-term maturities and invest them longer-term. As short- and medium-term interest rates are typically lower than longer-term yields, maturity transformation is a profitable.

``However, in such a business, banks are exposed to rollover risk. If short- and medium-term interest rates rise relative to (fixed) longer-term yields, maturity transformation leads to losses — and in the extreme case, banks can go bankrupt if they fail to obtain refinancing funds for liabilities falling due.

``Growing investor concern about rollover risks has the potential to make a bank default on its payment obligations: interest rates for bank refinancing go up, so that loans falling due would have to be refinanced at (considerably) higher interest rates.

While banks are protected from depositors run by deposit insurance, what protects banks from an institutional run?

The European Experience

Ireland broke the proverbial ice in declaring a blanket guarantee on a wide-ranging arrangement that covered deposits and debts of its six financial institutions aimed at ``easing the banks’ short-term funding’ (Financial Times) among European countries.

This created a furor among its neighbors which contended that the ‘Beggar-thy-neighbor’ policies risks fomenting destabilization of capital flows. The reason is that the public would naturally tend to gravitate on the countries or institutions that issue a guarantee on their deposits, hence lost business opportunities for those that don’t do so.

Instinctively the radical policy adopted by Ireland evolved into a domino effect; despite the protests, every EU nations followed to jointly increase their savers to €50,000 (breakingnews.ie).

The problem is according to the Economist (with reference to Ireland or to those who initially went on a blanket deposit guarantee), ``it is not entirely clear how governments would pay these bills, if they ever came due. The chances of governments having to make good on all deposits seems remote, but the figures involved are eye-popping. In Ireland, for instance, national debt would jump from about 25% of GDP to about 325% if the value of its banks’ deposits and debts were taken on to the government’s books, according to analysts at Morgan Stanley, an investment bank. Similarly in Germany, national debt would jump to almost 200% of GDP if it included bank deposits (and about 250% if it included all the debts of its banking system). This may explain why interest rates on Irish government bonds have been rising in recent days.” (emphasis mine)

In other words, should losses consume a substantial portion of the resources of Ireland’s banking system, taxpayers will be on the hook and bear the onus for such unwarranted policy actions. As you can see, desperate times call for desperate measures regardless of the consequences. Nonetheless, Ireland expanded its deposit guarantees to cover 5 foreign owned banks (Economic Times India) presumably to avoid the Iceland experience, again despite the objection of most its neighbors.

Yet, strong pressures to guarantee the domestic banking system at all costs have taken a strain on the solvency of its neighbor Iceland.

From the same Economist magazine article, ``While governments on mainland Europe were trying to save their banks, Iceland was trying to save the country after it had overextended itself trying to bail-out its banking system. Its economy had been doing well, but its banks had expanded rapidly abroad, amassing foreign liabilities some ten times larger than the country’s economy, many funded in fickle money markets. Since the country nationalised Glitnir, its third-largest bank, last week the whole Icelandic economy has come under threat. Its currency is tumbling and the cost of insuring its national debt against default is soaring. As of Monday it was desperately calling for help from other central banks and was considering radical actions including using the foreign assets of pension funds to bolster the central bank’s reserves. These stand at a meagre €4 billion or so, according to Fitch, a rating agency, and in effect are now pledged to back more than a €100 billion in foreign liabilities owed by its banks.”

Iceland, a country of about 300,000 population and the 6th richest in per capita GDP (nationmaster.com), behaved like a hedge fund whose banking system immersed on the carry trade during the boom days. They borrowed short and invested long (overseas) or the maturity transformation (see Polleit) and additionally took on currency risk. In fact many of their home mortgages have been pegged to foreign currencies which has aggravated both the conditions of bankers and borrowers, from the New York Times,

``Some Icelanders with recently acquired mortgages face a double threat. Home prices have been falling, and analysts expect them to decline further. But many of these mortgages were taken out in foreign currencies — marketed by the banks as a way to benefit from lower interest rates abroad, as rates in Iceland rose into the double digits over the last year.

``Now, with the Icelandic krona plunging, homeowners have to pay back suddenly far more expensive euro- or dollar-value of their mortgages — a kind of negative equity, squared.”


Figure 6: Ino.com: Iceland’s Krona Plunge Against the US dollar (left) and the Euro (right)

In addition, Iceland’s guarantees initially extended to only local depositors and did not to cover overseas investors many of which came from UK, hence ensuing threats of lawsuits. But as of this writing Iceland seems to have reached a deposit accord with UK and Netherlands (Bloomberg).

Moreover, another critical problem is that Iceland found no aid from its Western allies even as a NATO member and had to rush into the arms of political rival Russia which promised a loan for €4 billion (US $5.43 billion)! This is a dangerous precedent for central banks. Of course while this might seem like isolated case- in Asia Japan earlier rushed to offer loans to South Korea when the latter’s currency got pounded, aside from eyeing to create a scheme under the IMF to assist EM countries (Japan Times) and the urgency to revive the Asian counterpart of IMF (AFP)- such risks could worsen if the crisis deepens.

With the nationalization of Iceland’s top banks, taxpayers will also be responsible for the realized losses from the outsized liabilities, from which we agree with London School of Economics Professor Willem Buiter who says, ``The acquisition by the government of a 75 percent stake in Glitnir and the recent nationalisation of Landsbanki were therefore a mistake. Rather than hammering its tax payers and the beneficiaries of its public spending programmes, rather than squeezing the living standards of its households through a sustained masstive real exchange rate depreciation and terms of trade deterioration, and rather than creating a massive domestic recession/depression to try and keep its banks afloat, it should now let Glitnir, Landsbanki and Kaupthing float or swim on their own. The interests of domestic tax payers and workers should weigh more heavily than the interests of the creditors of these banks.”

Here are some lessons:

-Iceland through its nationalization of banks now suffers from the risks of currency, market, rollover and payment losses having to overextend themselves overseas and whose policies will eventually take a heavy toll on its citizenry.

-It’s not about the interest of taxpayers but of the interest of a few who control and become too entrenched into the system and whose risks has now become systemic.

-The Iceland experience of isolation in times of need reveals that central banks can’t always guarantee assistance to one another.

-In times of turmoil, national policies such as the action taken by Ireland can have negative externality effects- incur immediate political and future economic and financial costs.

-The risks of an institutional bank run which threatens the entire global banking system is clearly a top concern for European banks who seem to be acting out of desperation.

-Blanket guarantees (which had been limited to some countries so far) and nationalization of the banking industry will most likely be the ultimate tool used by central banks when pushed to the wall.

Global Liquidity Shortages and Falling Forex Reserves

In today’s turmoil, foreign currency reserves held by emerging markets appear to have been used as defense mechanism against a shortage of US dollar in the present environment in order to defend local currencies.

As affected US and European banks continue to raise capital and shrink balance sheets by selling assets and hoarding and conserving cash resulting to a lack of liquidity into the system, despite the massive infusion in the system by the global central banks led by the US Federal Reserve, this may also be construed as a symptom of the ongoing ‘institutional bank run’.


Figure 7: yardeni.com: Falling reserve growth

The chart courtesy of yardeni.com shows the declining growth rate of forex accumulation from developing and industrial countries. Since September, the growth rate is likely to have turned negative as more economies use their spare reserves to cushion the fall of their currencies.

From Bloomberg, ``Latin American central banks are being forced to draw on record foreign reserves built up during the six-year commodities rally to stop their currencies from sinking in the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression..

``The worst currency meltdown in Latin America since the emerging-market economic crises of the 1990s is causing companies' dollar debts to swell as well as sparking derivatives losses, and may stoke inflation. The decision to intervene came after central banks in the U.S., Europe and Canada cut interest rates in a coordinated effort to boost confidence…

``Brazil and Mexico join Argentina and Peru in selling dollars. Central banks in Chile and Colombia have so far used derivatives contracts to arrest the decline of their currencies, without touching reserves.

So it’s not just Latin Americans selling their US dollar surpluses but likewise in India ($8 billion in one week-hindubusinessline.com) and South Korea (estimated $25 billion since March).

Moreover current deficit economies including the US are likely to be at greater risks since it would need surpluses from foreign investors to fund the imbalances.

While the US continues to see strong inflows from central banks into US treasuries, our favorite fund flow analyst Brad Setser says that Central banks have either been shifting into US dollars from the euro or their reserve managers have also lost confidence in the international banking system or is moving into the safest and most liquid assets via the treasuries.

As per Mr. Setser. ``I would bet that this is more a flight away from risky dollar assets toward Treasuries than a flight into the dollar.”

Conclusion

I don’t like to sound alarmist, but all the present actions seem to indicate of the genuine risk of a failure in the global banking system. And this probably could be the reason behind why the recent turmoil in the financial markets has been quite intensive and amplified.

So the most likely steps being undertaken by global regulators in the realization of such risks (why do you think global central banks cut rates together?) will be to rapidly absorb or nationalize troubled banks (if not the entire industry) and continue to inject massive liquidity and lower interest rates aside from outright guarantees on deposits and loans in the hope to restore confidence to a faltering Paper Money system. In short, they intend to reinflate the impaired banking system.

Yet even under such conditions we can’t be sure if governments can provide sufficient shelter for the depositors and users of the system if conditions should deteriorate further. Present capital in the domestic system won’t probably be enough when the economic functions (clearing and settlement, payment processing, credit intermediation, currency exchange, etc.) of external banking system becomes dysfunctional, even under the context of our government guarantees (which will largely depend on its balance sheet and the ability for the citizenry to carry more public liabilities). Moreover, the international division of labor will likely be curtailed, leading to societal hardships and risks of political destabilization.

The key is to watch the conditions of the credit spreads, commercial paper and money market. Any material improvement in the major credit spread indicators will likely ease the pressure on regulators and relieve the pressure on most markets. Thus, while the potential for a rebound in the stockmarket seems likely given the severely oversold conditions, the vigor and sustainability will greatly depend on the clearing of the flow of global credit.

But on the optimistic part, the markets have already painfully reflected on the necessary adjustments of prices. While it is doubtful if we have reached the level of market clearing enough for the economic system to be able to pay for its outstanding liabilities given the amount of leverage embedded, it may have relieved additional pressures for a repeat performance of this week’s gore.

Of course, any action that government does which may coincide with a recovery is likely to be deemed as government’s success by liberals, it is not. The markets have already violently reacted.

Next, global depressions are aggravated by protectionism. This means that for as long as globalization in trade and finance can be given the opportunity to work, it may be able to accrue real savings to enough to recuperate the system. Besides, technology can vastly aid such process.

Another, this crisis episode is likely to generate a massive shift in productivity and wealth. The losses absorbed by crisis affected nations will impact their economies by reduced productivity on greater tax obligations. Thus, we are likely to see a faster recovery on economies that survived the ordeal with less baggage from government intervention. That is why we believe that some emerging markets including most of Asia should recover faster.

Moreover it isn’t true that if the banking industry goes the entire economy goes. As example, the Philippines has a large informal economy which is largely a cash economy. True, a dysfunctional international banking system abroad can create economic dislocations which may result to hardships but markets can be innovative.

As a final note, don’t forget that historical experiments over paper money have repeatedly flunked. We don’t know if this is signifies as 1) a mere jolt to the system or 2) the start of the end of the Paper money system or 3) the critical mass that would spur a major shift in the present form of monetary standard.