Global Banking System Still Quietly Bankrupt
Stock-Markets / Credit Crisis 2010 Apr 12, 2010 - 01:17 PM GMTBy: Mike_Shedlock
Inquiring minds are reading an excellent post by John Hussman about Stock   Market Valuations, Extend and Pretend Banking, Public Policy on Housing   Bailouts, and Solvency of the Banking System. Here are a few snips from Extend and   Pretend. 
Over the past 12 years or so, I've been repeatedly astonished at the   tendency of investors to do things that they should have known to avoid simply   with the use of a calculator and basic arithmetic. We've used numerous metrics   during this period to show that the estimation of long-term market returns (7-10   years and beyond) doesn't require calculus or statistics, but fairly direct   methods to normalize earnings, plus a bit of arithmetic. Rich valuations are   predictably followed by sub-par returns. As a result, investors have earned an   average annual total return of just 2.4% in the S&P 500 over the past 12   years, while enduring two separate instances where they have lost about half of   their money as part of the ride. Essentially, we have gone nowhere in an   interesting way. At present, investors have priced the market at a level that   makes a continuation of this experience likely for several years to   come.
    
    As of last week, the S&P 500 remained strenuously overvalued on   the basis of normalized fundamentals. From that perspective, even if the trough   we observed in March 2009 was the ultimate price low of the secular bear market   since 2000, it's not likely to represent the ultimate valuation trough. Given   the current state of valuations, and the likelihood of several years of   additional credit deleveraging, it seems that economic conditions, valuations,   and the typical duration of secular bear markets converge on the likelihood of   several more years of interesting but unrewarding market volatility. Secular   bull market periods tend to begin with quite low multiples to normalized   earnings (historically, on the order of 7), which is what provides the platform   for a very long period of subsequent gains.
    
    Extend and Pretend
    
    With regard to credit   conditions, the U.S. financial system continues to pursue a strategy of "extend   and pretend." ... The impact of "extend and pretend" is to create a gap between   the reported value of assets and the value they would have on the basis of the   cash flows that those assets can reasonably be expected to generate over their   maturity.
    
    Moreover, regulatory changes over the past year have affected   what actually gets reported as "troubled." As the New York Times recently   observed, " A bank owed, say, $4 million on a property now worth $3 million   would previously have had to classify the entire loan as troubled. Now it can do   that to the $1 million difference only."
    
    As for policy efforts to reduce   delinquencies, I've long argued that it is a bad idea for policy makers to   announce delinquency prevention plans that have, as their centerpiece, publicly   subsidized reductions in mortgage principal. It's one thing to extend the loan   in a way that preserves its present value, by swapping a claim on future   appreciation in return for principal reduction, but it's quite another to offer   to cut the principal outright. The reason is that instead of confining the   assistance to presently troubled borrowers, you create a whole new set of   borrowers who then choose to be troubled in order to get the assistance.   According to a University of Chicago study, "strategic defaults" - where people   choose to default on their mortgages even though they can afford to pay -   accounted for 35% of all residential defaults in December 2009, up from 23% in   March 2009. Offering public subsidies for this behavior, when too many   homeowners are already legitimately struggling, does not smack of a bright   idea.
    
    The real concern from my perspective remains the potential for a   second wave of delinquencies beginning in data as of the first quarter of 2010   and extending well into 2011. ...
    
  In short, my impression is that   investors are deluding themselves about the solvency of the banking system.   People learned in the 1930's that when you don't require the reported value of   assets to have a clear and tangible link to the value that the assets would have   in liquidation, bad things happen. Yet this is what regulatory and accounting   rules are allowing for the banking system at present. While I do believe that   bank depositors are safe to the extent of FDIC guarantees, my impression is that   the banking system is still quietly insolvent.
There is much more in the article including a   series of charts on bank loans, real estate loans, and credit card   loans.
    
    Global Banking System Extend and   Pretend Insolvency
    
    I happen to agree with John Hussman on all   points mentioned. Moreover, it is not just the U.S. banking system that is   insolvent, the global banking system is nothing but a giant extend and pretend   operation including the PIIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, Spain), China,   the UK, and even Canada as soon Canada's gigantic housing bubble   crashes.
    
    Just as U.S. housing policy encourages more walk-aways, the EU's   subsidized loans to Greece (See Grecian Formula 16 Now On Sale) practically guarantees the EU   will need to offer the same deal to Spain and Portugal at a minimum.
    
    Note   too, that European banks have their own extend and pretend game going in regards   to loans based in Euros to the Baltic states. Those loans cannot possibly be   paid back.
    
    George Soros is talking about a pound devaluation for the U.K.   Please see Former Fed Gov. Poole Blasts Fed's Favoritism; Soros Bought More   Gold, Says Pound Devaluation is Option for details.
    
    Canada did not   avoid a crisis because their banks were better or smarter or used less leverage.   Canada avoided a crisis because for whatever reason, their housing bubble did   not yet blow sky high. However it will, and Canada's banking crisis is yet to   come.
    
    To understand why, please see California USA vs. Ontario Canada - Which State (Province) Is In   Worse Shape? Canadian Banks vs. US Banks Comparison.
    
    There are so   many reports on bubbles in China that I hardly know where to begin. Here are a   couple of them. GMO has a white paper on 10 Signs of Speculative Mania in China. In response to that   paper, please consider an Email from a Chinese on China's Real Estate   Bubble.
    
    Finally, in the US, please consider an interactive map of the   $3+ trillion public pension plan deficit, state by state: Interactive Map of Public Pension Plans; How Badly Underfunded are   the Plans in Your State?
    
    In short, consumer and bank debt simply   cannot be paid back in a global wage arbitrage economy, with massive consumer   and corporate debt and no source of jobs.
    
    Escape Velocity
    
    Amazingly, Larry Summers   says that problems with healthcare, education, and even long term fiscal   deficits are being addressed. That is proof economists are starting to believe   their own nonsense on extend and pretend.
    
    "I think the economy appears to   be moving towards escape velocity." said Summers.
    
    One thing that has   reached escape velocity is Larry Summers' imagination.
  
By Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.comClick Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List
Mike Shedlock / Mish is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management . Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction.
Visit Sitka Pacific's Account Management Page to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific.
 I do weekly podcasts every Thursday on HoweStreet  and a brief 7 minute segment on Saturday on CKNW AM 980  in Vancouver. 
  
  When not writing about stocks or the economy I spends a great deal of time on photography and in the garden. I have over 80 magazine and book cover credits. Some of my Wisconsin and gardening images can be seen at MichaelShedlock.com . 
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