How the Global Monetary System Could ‘Blow Up’
Aug 1st, 2008 | By Bill Bonner | Category: Politics & EconomicsThe housing bill is a drastic act to cover up the economic mistakes of the last five years, says Bill Bonner in The Daily Reckoning.
Bill has previously said that the U.S. government’s over-active dollar printing press is the cause of today’s market woes. Now this $300 billion ‘miracle’ bail out will require the Fed to inflate the money supply further.
With the U.S spending money it doesn’t have, it is becoming increasingly reliant on foreigners for its financing needs. When these overseas lenders find that their U.S. investments are no longer safe, the whole financial system could blow up.
Here’s Bill to explain why…
Yesterday, George W. Bush signed the housing bill – in which up to $300 billion is to be spent bailing out naïve homeowners, caddish mortgage lenders and Wall Street geniuses. It is packaged as a reserve against catastrophe. If everything is hunky dory from here on, only a few billion here and there will be spent. If housing continues to sink, on the other hand, the bill starts toting up. The Congressional Budget Office gave the odds at only 1-in-20 that $100 billion of this money would be spent propping up mortgages. The bill also allows the feds to give money to state and local governments, so they can buy houses and fix them up themselves.
We’re happy to see the federal government taking some dramatic action. It reaffirms our faith in our fellow man – he’s an idiot; as we knew all along. And it confirms our opinion of the political class – they’re grifters, chiselers and opportunists.
Here is a case where many, many people did dumb things. Homeowners bought houses they couldn’t afford. Lenders lent them the money to do it. And then investors bought the loans as if they were good investments. Naturally, the whole thing blew up.
The smartest thing to do would be to let it happen. As quickly as possible. Get it over with.
But “change” is the one thing people most don’t want – not when it involves paying for past mistakes. The homeowners don’t want to give up their houses. The lenders don’t want to go out of business. Investors don’t want to lose money. And so they all hope for a miracle. And along comes the miracle worker himself – Uncle Sam.
What makes it possible for the federal government to perform miracles, as Ben Bernanke might explain it, “is a little technology called the printing press. [The feds] can create new dollars at almost zero cost.”
How do the feds get any real money? They can only take it away from real people. The net effect to the economy is zero. The only way they can add to the total supply of money is to…well…add to the supply of money. They have to create it – out of thin air. Otherwise, they are just taking money from people who didn’t make mistakes in order to keep people who did make mistakes from being forced to own up to them.
As we said yesterday, we haven’t seen any real estate agents offering to return the commissions they made by selling houses to people who couldn’t afford them. Nor have we seen any Wall Street slicks returning their bonuses – much of it earned by sinking people so deep in debt they could never get out. This $300 billion spending bill helps us all forgive and forget the whole thing – by making someone else pay for it.
But wait…there’s a wrinkle… Who’s really paying? Since Americans don’t have any money, the U.S. government – and consumers too – look overseas for financing. Every day, about $2 billion goes out of the United States and ends up abroad. But the U.S. government…and the U.S. economy…desperately needs that money in order to keep spending beyond their means. This new $300 housing bill is just more of the same – the U.S. spending more money it doesn’t have and depending on the kindness of strangers overseas to pay for it.
But why do the foreigners lend? Why do they want U.S. dollar credits, when the dollar has lost so much purchasing power in the last five years?
They’re probably making a big mistake. But when you have that much money, it’s not easy to invest it. The U.S. Treasury market is the biggest in the world. And why not lend money to the U.S. government? At least, you’re sure that the feds will pay you back – even if they have to create the money to do it out of thin air.
Ah…there’s the rub. There’s no assurance that the dollars you get back will be worth as much as the dollars you lent. And there’s the pin to this post-Bretton Woods monetary hand-grenade. At any moment, the foreigners could conclude that the “safety” they’re looking for in Treasury bonds is a swindle…and that it’s actually “too risky” to hold them. Then, they’ll pull the pin and the whole thing will blow up.
Source: The Pin in the Monetary Hand Grenade
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Best-selling investment author Bill Bonner is the founder and president of Agora Publishing. Owner of both Fleet Street Publications and MoneyWeek magazine in the UK, he is also author of the free daily e-mail The Daily Reckoning and three best-selling books, Financial Reckoning Day: Surviving The Soft Depression of the 21st Century, Empire of Debt: The Rise of an Epic Financial Crisis and Mobs, Messiahs and Markets..

Ahhh, but there is another way. We recognize that the financial system is kaputt. The banks are bankrupt. Look at their stock prices over the last 5 years. Look at the BOGNONBR (http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/BOGNONBR), the amount of non-borrowed reserves held by Fed member banks (it is approaching -$150 billion, i.e., all their reserves are borrowed).
Right now CDO ABS paper is selling for $0.22 on the dollar. Structured investment vehicles are also selling discounted paper. No one wants it. Credit default swaps are going bust, which effects municipalities, and feeds right back into the CDO and SV problems.
The BIS etimated $1.14 QUADRILLION in total notional derivatives for Q2 2008. This is the white elephant in the room: derivatives gambling. 15-20 x the world’s GDP is tied up in ways no one can figure out. The housing bubble was just another bubble to blow up the derivatives bubble. The overall derivatives bubble needed more funds, so they turned to the mortgage brokers, who willingly supplied them with paper. EVRERYONE knew what was going on. Including the Feeral Reserve. In fact they encouraged and promoted derivatives (especially Greenspan).
Our only hope is to recognize that the system is bankrupt, and replace it with a better one. How do you unravel a $QUADRILLION worth of nebulous gambling-like contracts? You don’t, not while simultaneously saving nations and their people. You need to call it what it is, bankrupt, and start over.
http://www.TakeBackTheFed.com
http://www.xFed.mobi (mobile)