Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

Why the Credit Crisis Happened

Jul 8th, 2008 | By Dan Denning | Category: Politics & Economics

According to the Bank of International Settlements, the credit crisis shares roots with most other major boom-and-bust stories of the last 100 years: A series of positive supply shocks encouraged consumers to borrow and buy beyond their means. Now the supply shocks are all negative, bringing the binge to an abrupt end, says Dan Denning in The Daily Reckoning Australia

“The unsustainable has run its course,” is the title of the introduction to the Bank for International Settlements’s 78th annual report. The intro traces some famous historical manias and their inevitable conclusion, including the long recession of 1873, the Great Depression, and the Japanese and Asian crises of the early 1990s. Don’t read it if you’re depressed.

“In each episode,” we are told, “a long period of strong credit growth coincided with an increasingly euphoric upturn in both the real economy and financial markets, followed by an unexpected crisis and extended downturn.” Guess where we are now in the cycle?

One really important point in the Bank for International Settlements’s paper is that what happens at the periphery can happen at the centre too. For example, many people can’t figure out how the collapse of a tiny market (the U.S. subprime market was just a small portion of the total global financial system) could throw the entire system into a state of crisis and self-doubt.

The answer is that the subprime crisis was just one example of a global phenomenon in which the plunging price of money led to an explosion in financial speculation. With the price of money being so low, there was almost no penalty for bad risk taking and failure.

That isn’t that unusual really. If you change the incentives in the financial world by making money free (negative real interest rate) and you combine it with the phenomenon of securitisation, where debt can be packaged up and sold off, then you can see that it was in the financial interests of banks and investment bankers to make as many loans as possible.

It is not in the best interest of an economy for businesses to engage in financial speculation instead of real economic activity. That’s why our central bankers are to blame for this crisis. It will be realised eventually.

But for now, it now turns out that the huge expansion in credit and debt instruments didn’t result in new wealth or productive assets at all (except in China). That’s why asset values are falling all around the world, and why many people will come out of the boom poorer than they went to it. But it didn’t always look that way.

At first, as the Bank for International Settlements paper points out, all the supply shocks associated with globalisation were positive. That is, stuff got cheaper while shares and property went higher! Cheap goods started rolling out of the factories in Asia and onto the shelves in Australia and America. With interest rates and energy and retail prices low savings rates declined.

Now, of course, all the supply shocks are negative. Food is up. Fuel is up. The price of money is up, too. The two largest consequences of the easy money period where much lower savings rates (and higher personal debt rates) in Anglo-Saxon economies…and a huge boom in fixed capital investment in China (the fuel for the Aussie resource boom).

To review, Westerners have seen their wages fall, their factories flee, their portfolios plummet, and their houses swoon. China owns a lot of U.S. dollars and a lot of factories that make stuff for people who can’t afford to buy it, while also belching out a lot of smog. The old model has one foot in the grave and the new model is just a twinkle in globalisation’s eye.

Perhaps that is all a bit simplistic. But that’s the current state of play.

Source:Bank for International Settlements Report Looks at Origins of Credit Crisis


AdvertisementNew 5-currency Index CD from EverBank©. Apply today.

The new Debt-Free Index CD is comprised of equal parts Singapore dollar, Japanese yen, Swiss franc, Australian dollar and Brazilian real. Why these currencies? All 5 economies have a strong balance of payments—a factor that could aid performance against the U.S. dollar.

Of the 5 economies, only Australia has a trade deficit—and the gap appears to be narrowing. Concerned about investing in a weak U.S. dollar? Consider this new Index CD, it is available in 3- and 6-month terms with a $20,000 minimum deposit. Apply today here

This CD is FDIC insured against bank insolvency, but please keep in mind that you could lose principal as a result of currency fluctuation.



Tags: , ,

By Dan Denning

Related Articles



About the Author

Dan DenningDan Denning is a contributing editor to Diggers & Drillers and a regular columnist for Money Weekly, a Taiwanese financial publication. From 2000 to 2006, Dan was the editor of Strategic Investment of Agora Publishing. His reporting and analysis for The Daily Reckoning is read by more than 500,000 people regularly.

See All Posts by This Author

The Daily Reckoning Australia

The Daily Reckoning Australia offers an independent and critical perspective on the Australian and the global investment markets. We don't tell you what the news is. You can find that out anywhere for free. Instead, we try and tell you what news is worth paying attention to and what it might mean for your money. We deliver you straightforward, humorous and useful investment insights from a worldwide network of analysts, contrarians, and successful investors.

See All Posts from This Publication

Leave Comment