Will Credit Crunch Crisis Calm Down Before The Real Stock Market Crash ?
Stock-Markets / Financial Crash Aug 23, 2007 - 08:33 PM GMT
After basically being up on and off 24/7 for two weeks – I am amazed at the speed of the onset of the credit crisis. I also had a feeling last night, thinking about all this chaos, that it is rather bizarre. Weird and eerie is another view. There is no doubt that we have seen real fear like never since 1929 in credit markets. That almost spread to equities, with some scary drops – like 600 and 800 point down days in the Hang Seng and the Nikkei.
As happened in the February 27 crashes, the US markets were the ones that more or less held ground- So far. As that seemed to continue to be the case, again, the Asian markets seemed to calm, and also the European markets. Now, I would also suggest that the US ‘Working Group on Markets' and the BOJ market management teams both put serious floors under equities. Many times in the past two weeks we would see the Dow headed for a really bad day, but all of a sudden a serious reversal. I particularly remember that day when the Dow was rapidly down 150 points, but made most of that up in the last hour and ended down something like a few points. You are not going to tell me that the traders really did that one. A floor was put in.
I am not really one of these people who believe in conspiracies, but that does not mean that the Working Group on Markets is not what is seriously mitigating things. Hey, they admit they do it. They certainly have the horsepower and brains to pull it off, with Paulson and so on, market traders par excellence.
The only trouble is, how many times can this work? I think it is rather clear that, now that mortgage derivatives have been scattered world wide, and are being written down to 10 cents on the dollar, some more anarchy must ensue. We may have sort of weathered the first real test, but at great cost, and likely many hidden losses out there. We are not out of the woods yet by any imagination. The bad derivatives are about $2trillion worth of subprime and Alt A (one level higher). 20% of these are in arrears. Then we have the trouble spreading to even good mortgage derivatives, as investors flee these regardless of quality. That has caused jumbo loans (exceeding 400k US) to become hard to get and at 9%! Good luck to the high end real estate market.
Obviously, mortgages are not all going to lose 90% of their value, or are they? Maybe, if we have a real depression, and that is quite possible given the scope of this credit crisis – way larger than the LTCM episode – maybe if we have a real depression most mortgage derivatives will lose 90% value. We are talking something in the range of $10 trillion worth of new mortgages in the last 5 years that are becoming a big weight around all the holders of the paper.
Crisis has spread everywhere
Now, we get into the issue that the credit crisis spread to other areas and hammered confidence. The Fed used the discount rate to encourage lenders to loosen up. They lowered the rate .5% to 5.75, and allowed 30 days, instead of overnight – plus the option to roll forward as needed. That should have helped the situation. However, not too many took the Fed up on the deal, so we had an orchestrated campaign, where Citi, Morgan, Wachovia and another borrowed $500 million apiece Wednesday from the Fed under those terms.
Then, this is supposed to encourage others to take advantage of the discount rate. The trouble is, banks and institutions are not. Why is that? Because they don't want to lend the credit to others in trouble, and then assume the risk. So, it does little good to lower the rate, and even have campaigns to take advantage of it, if lenders have lost confidence in the liquidity of the system, and that is a real problem.
So, unless central banks are willing to just underwrite the entire credit system, and cover all impending mortgage losses, (buyers of everything as last resort, like MBS – Fed) we will likely not see any confidence return to credit markets. This is the thing the ECB has been quite afraid of. So has the Fed. The trouble is, if the CBs do underwrite all the losses (monetize them) then the only healthy market left, sovereign debt like US treasuries, will collapse too. Then we are in total disaster, as the USD might just let go finally…and we now go to a combination of a liquidity crisis followed by a collapsing USD – that is if the Fed wanted to monetize all these trillions of losses. So that can't happen. People who think central banks will totally cover all these trillions of losses and hold up equity markets overestimate their power and willingness to do that.
The ONLY solution that has done anything so far, is to prevent a real equity sell off. That is another problem. We already have hedge funds and banks going under. New revelations of these instantly hit stocks. This is likely to continue
Flight to safety in a panic
The episode in the US treasury market early this week, where yields dropped 1 to 2% in a panic flight to safety in US T bills/bonds/notes was quite something. In fact, it was almost never seen before. Well, as stocks seem to calm down, that is not a good sign at all that things are done unwinding. Rather, it just shows the fragility of the situation.
One quote in an article stated, as I recall, ‘people just wanted to get out of Money Market Funds and into Treasuries'. I don't remember the link. It's been a big rush of data and articles, and I have been a very busy bee trying to keep up. I'm sure that you have too, as have the banks and Fed and ECB and practically everyone.
I want to comment on the UST market and stocks, but first another thing about how bad this credit crisis is. It is NOT over. The commercial paper market (short term credit for companies like 30 to 90 days) is swapped between banks and companies and institutions to cover short term funding needs. The market in the US alone is $2trillon. $50 billion has to roll over each week.
Well, in the last two weeks, a backlog of $90 trillion has accumulated and NOT rolled over. This is the next set of dominoes to fall. The EU is having similar trouble, and one German banker said there is the making of a serious German banking crisis – because short term paper is not rolling over. So what does everyone do now? The system is collapsing right before our eyes.
If a company, bank, whoever, cannot roll over their short term paper, they are insolvent. This is a very big deal. I could go on and on about other sectors of the credit market being dead in the water right now. The efforts of the Fed to save things with the discount window appear not to be working. I have said before that Central banks are really trying to get ahead of this mess, but they are not really succeeding. Get ready for phase two of the developing liquidity/credit crisis. One guy said the unwinding will not be denied. Probably, we have only seen the beginning of it, and what a beginning it was/is. The scale of this is just huge.
Not working
So, the Fed gets the three biggest US banks to borrow a measly $500 million apiece in the discount window, but that is peanuts, and clearly there are few takers – if the Fed had to do this big hullabaloo about those small potatoes, Wednesday afternoon in an announcement through those banks.
Treasuries and stocks
Now we get to Treasuries and stocks. The episode early this week when treasuries dropped indicated many things. One is the lack of confidence overall in the evolving credit mess/crisis. Another is lack of confidence in Money Market Funds.
I have put out alerts and public articles talking about how money market funds (MMFs) have grown vast since their invention in the 70's. The idea was to have some safe money in a fund where you can park short term money, but not have to lock it up say in a CD. It was to be a pool of liquid capital, but get a bit more interest. The creator of the idea recently said that MMFs have lost their original focus and are NOT what he created then.
Rather, MMFs now compete against each other, and so, take on more risk to get better yields. People mistakenly think most of these are FDIC insured, but they are not. Well, guess what? MMFs have gone heavily into the CP market and mortgage derivatives to boost yields. And we all know what is happening to that sector.
You think, well, but that is probably only like 5% of what they have. Wrong. It is more like 20 to 30%. Does that scare you? It should. There are going to be some very big surprises in MMFs going forward when they reveal what their capital losses are. They are all praying the credit markets calm down before they have to report the bad news.
The same goes for Hedge funds. There is a big pool of redemptions that have to be accomplished. Hedge funds are hoping that equity markets recover so they can unload all the built up redemptions. I have seen stories how MMFs and Hedge funds have been putting off investors from redemptions, by many devices, such as saying they had to fill out papers. The people get them in the mail, fill them out, then wait. Two weeks after they started this process with the fund, they call, having heard nothing. The fund tells them they filled out the papers wrong. Or they filled out the wrong papers. So they get to start all over again. This buys the funds about a month…..See how this goes?
So, naturally, people lose faith in funds. The thing that scares people the most is NOT being able to get their money. Perhaps the fund will freeze redemptions – that is happening all too frequently right now. I also believe we have seen nothing yet.
It gets worse. I just put out an alert to subscribers that your retirement funds, pension funds, and so on, are all into – guess what? MBS, CDOs, (mortgage derivatives) and are in the same boat as the MMFs, and everyone else who played with this toxic mess that is only about $2 to $5 trillion…. The list goes on and on. You need to check out your pension funds and MMFs.
Now, I have only written so far about the $2 to $5 trillion of mortgage derivatives in trouble. I can't cover all the other areas of pending trillions of losses and make this article less than book size.
Treasuries and Stocks
A bit of panic, wouldn't you say? People fled to US Treasuries and out of MMFs and other funds. There are good reasons for them to do so.
Now let's look at this picture over a longer timeline.
Here we see that when there is flight to liquidity/safety like this, the DJW (Dow Jones World stock index) dropped like a stone last time. I expect the same or worse this time, particularly considering how BAD the emerging liquidity crisis is. That was not the case back then. That one was due to 911 and the NASDAQ crash prior. And remember, this world equity bubble is a liquidity/credit driven one, and based a lot on derivatives which are turning out to be a very bad mechanism, to say the least.
When the real unwinding comes this time, we will really see something. So far, stocks have only barely reflected the critical situation in credit/liquidity right now. I expect this to change soon.
By Christopher Laird
PrudentSquirrel.com
Chris Laird has been an Oracle systems engineer, database administrator, and math teacher. He has a BS in mathematics from UCLA and is a certified Oracle database administrator. He has been an avid follower of financial news since childhood. His father is Jere Laird, former business editor of KNX news AM 1070, Los Angeles (ret). He has grown up immersed in financial news. His Grandmother was Alice Widener, publisher of USA magazine in the 60's to 80's, a newsletter that covered many of the topics you find today at the preeminent gold sites. Chris is the publisher of the Prudent Squirrel newsletter, an economic and gold commentary.
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