
Train Wreck - Flickr Creative Commons
Editor’s Note: Please avoid using overly long excerpts in MyFDL posts, just a few paragraphs maximum from any source. The excerpts here are excessive. -MyFDL Editor
We’ve all seem them. The iconic scenes of the train wreck or car wreck with the cars hanging off a cliff. Nobody dares move else they cause the whole thing to plummet into the abyss below. This is where the economy stands today according to Dr. Paul Craig Roberts in his current analysis.
And why nobody dare change the equation lest the whole thing comes apart at the seams. Why the FED has kept interest rates at zero or near zero for so long and dares not change this any time soon.
US banks also have a strong interest in preserving the status quo. They are holders of US Treasuries and potentially even larger holders. They can borrow from the Federal Reserve at zero interest rates and purchase 10-year Treasuries at 2%, thus earning a nominal profit of 2% to offset derivative losses. The banks can borrow dollars from the Fed for free and leverage them in derivative transactions.
As Nomi Prins puts it, the US banks don’t want to trade against themselves and their free source of funding by selling their bond holdings. Moreover, in the event of foreign flight from dollars, the Fed could boost the foreign demand for dollars by requiring foreign banks that want to operate in the US to increase their reserve amounts, which are dollar based. . . . . .
The very process of slowly getting out can bring the American house down. The BRICS–Brazil, the largest economy in South America, Russia, the nuclear armed and energy independent economy on which Western Europe ( Washington’s NATO puppets) are dependent for energy, India, nuclear armed and one of Asia’s two rising giants, China, nuclear armed, Washington’s largest creditor (except for the Fed), supplier of America’s manufactured and advanced technology products, and the new bogyman for the military-security complex’s next profitable cold war, and South Africa, the largest economy in Africa–are in the process of forming a new bank.
The new bank will permit the five large economies to conduct their trade without use of the US dollar.
In addition, Japan, an American puppet state since WW II, is on the verge of entering into an agreement with China in which the Japanese yen and the Chinese yuan will be directly exchanged. The trade between the two Asian countries would be conducted in their own currencies without the use of the US dollar. This reduces the cost of foreign trade between the two countries, because it eliminates payments for foreign exchange commissions to convert from yen and yuan into dollars and back into yen and yuan.Moreover, this official explanation for the new direct relationship avoiding the US dollar is simply diplomacy speaking. The Japanese are hoping, like the Chinese, to get out of the practice of accumulating ever more dollars by having to park their trade surpluses in US Treasuries. The Japanese US puppet government hopes that the Washington hegemon does not require the Japanese government to nix the deal with China.
Now we have arrived at the nitty and gritty.
The small percentage of Americans who are aware and informed are puzzled why the banksters have escaped with their financial crimes without prosecution. The answer might be that the banks “too big to fail” are adjuncts of Washington and the Federal Reserve in maintaining the stability of the dollar and Treasury bond markets in the face of an untenable Fed policy.
Let us first look at how the big banks can keep the interest rates on Treasuries low, below the rate of inflation, despite the constant increase in US debt as a percent of GDP–thus preserving the Treasury’s ability to service the debt. The imperiled banks too big to fail have a huge stake in low interest rates and the success of the Fed’s policy.
The big banks are positioned to make the Fed’s policy a success. JPMorganChase and other giant-sized banks can drive down Treasury interest rates and, thereby, drive up the prices of bonds, producing a rally, by selling Interest Rate Swaps (IRSwaps). A financial company that sells IRSwaps is selling an agreement to pay floating interest rates for fixed interest rates. The buyer is purchasing an agreement that requires him to pay a fixed rate of interest in exchange for receiving a floating rate.
The reason for a seller to take the short side of the IRSwap, that is, to pay a floating rate for a fixed rate, is his belief that rates are going to fall. Short-selling can make the rates fall, and thus drive up the prices of Treasuries. When this happens, as the charts at http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article34819.html illustrate, there is a rally in the Treasury bond market that the presstitute financial media attributes to “flight to the safe haven of the US dollar and Treasury bonds.” In fact, the circumstantial evidence (see the charts in the link above) is that the swaps are sold by Wall Street whenever the Federal Reserve needs to prevent a rise in interest rates in order to protect its otherwise untenable policy.
The swap sales create the impression of a flight to the dollar, but no actual flight occurs. As the IRSwaps require no exchange of any principal or real asset, and are only a bet on interest rate movements, there is no limit to the volume of IRSwaps.
How long can the manipulations continue? When will the proverbial hit the fan?
If we knew precisely the date, we would be the next mega-billionaires.
Here are some of the catalysts waiting to ignite the conflagration that burns up the Treasury bond market and the US dollar:
A war, demanded by the Israeli government, with Iran, beginning with Syria, that disrupts the oil flow and thereby the stability of the Western economies or brings the US and its weak NATO puppets into armed conflict with Russia and China.
The oil spikes would degrade further the US and EU economies, but Wall Street would make money on the trades.
An unfavorable economic statistic that wakes up investors as to the true state of the US economy, a statistic that the presstitute media cannot deflect.
An affront to China, whose government decides that knocking the US down a few pegs into third world status is worth a trillion dollars.
More derivate mistakes, such as JPMorganChase’s recent one, that send the US financial system again reeling and reminds us that nothing has changed.The list is long. There is a limit to how many stupid mistakes and corrupt financial policies the rest of the world is willing to accept from the US. When that limit is reached, it is all over for “the world’s sole superpower” and for holders of dollar-denominated instruments.. . . . .
Fed chairman Bernanke has spoken of an “exit strategy” and said that when inflation threatens, he can prevent the inflation by taking the money back out of the banking system. However, he can do that only by selling Treasury bonds, which means interest rates would rise. A rise in interest rates would threaten the derivative structure, cause bond losses, and raise the cost of both private and public debt service. In other words, to prevent inflation from debt monetization would bring on more immediate problems than inflation. Rather than collapse the system, wouldn’t the Fed be more likely to inflate away the massive debts?Eventually, inflation would erode the dollar’s purchasing power and use as the reserve currency, and the US government’s credit worthiness would waste away. However, the Fed, the politicians, and the financial gangsters would prefer a crisis later rather than sooner. Passing the sinking ship on to the next watch is preferable to going down with the ship oneself. As long as interest rate swaps can be used to boost Treasury bond prices, and as long as naked shorts of bullion can be used to keep silver and gold from rising in price, the false image of the US as a safe haven for investors can be perpetuated.However, the $230,000,000,000,000 in derivative bets by US banks might bring its own surprises. JPMorganChase has had to admit that its recently announced derivative loss of $2 billion is more than that. How much more remains to be seen. According to the Comptroller of the Currency the five largest banks hold 95.7% of all derivatives. The five banks holding $226 trillion in derivative bets are highly leveraged gamblers. For example, JPMorganChase has total assets of $1.8 trillion but holds $70 trillion in derivative bets, a ratio of $39 in derivative bets for every dollar of assets. Such a bank doesn’t have to lose very many bets before it is busted.
Assets, of course, are not risk-based capital. According to the Comptroller of the Currency report, as of December 31, 2011, JPMorganChase held $70.2 trillion in derivatives and only $136 billion in risk-based capital. In other words, the bank’s derivative bets are 516 times larger than the capital that covers the bets.
So if anyone moves, over the rocks she goes.Now for the sixty four dollar question ? How much does anyone know of this in Washington ? I’ll bet the next (secret) bail out that just about everyone knows. Even – and maybe especially – the tea party republicans. But no one is talking. Because if anyone lets the cat out of the bag, it tips over the train.
All this talk of austerity is simply a feeble attempt to keep the train from going over the side. And to make damn sure the dollar remains the reserve currency. So now we are at the point where we switch seats in the train every four years and try to make sure nobody goes forward or backward in the train.



13 Comments

This is also where the troubles in the Eurozone are seen as an advantage to the US with the Euro becoming less and less attractive and there for the European bond market less and less attractive and forcing investors to US bonds. Helping to hide this whole mess a little longer.
If (when ?) the Euro collapses, it leaves few place for investors to go.
The real disaster story of 2012 is not the celestial aliganments that terrified the Mayans but the economic alignment – China, the US and the EU are all lined up to tumble together.
Scarier than any Mayan prediction: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qOP2V_np2c0&feature=player_embedded
I have no doubt that this kind of thing has been going on for the last 20 years or so and is why nobody in Washington has any desire to rock the boat in any way.
Paul does have a solution, but there ain’t no one willing to think about.
Yeah Paul…when Pigs fly and hell freezes over. Simultaneously.
…X 2
Lets just cut the “what USG can/can not do” BS and go/get to the chase/catch scene.
Who is going to take the hit(s)? Why not the usual/actual suspects?
Gee…imagine that…the usual/actual suspects taking the bump(s) and hit(s).
USG/WH money politics and politicians who do them would need to/must be chained/shut down 1st.
Which is also likely why it (the cut to the chase) has not been/is not being done.
Why stop a good money making/shake down politics/political scheme? Uhmmm…why indeed.
It would be to see pigs and hell and politicians do what they simply do not/can not do.
I don’t understand the problem. Roberts seems concerned that the the US Government will not be able to keep interest rates down much longer, at which point it will no longer be able to afford to roll its debt over, because it will not be able to afford the interest.
And eventually something or other “… wakes up investors as to the true state of the US economy, a statistic that the presstitute media cannot deflect.” And then there’s “An affront to China, whose government decides that knocking the US down a few pegs into third world status is worth a trillion dollars.” All of which I sure hope doesn’t happen.
Well to me it’s just another example of how Washington’s priorities are totally FUBAR. And attempting to keep this train wreck of an economy afloat with political/economic kabuki dance is the biggest waste of time and money imaginable.
Thanks cmauk, good stuff. I can hardly believe that all these bankers and hedgefunds can play Globalopoly with their imaginary astronomic quantities of money, that they say to themselves is real, (the derivative fairy said so) and we ‘just trying to make a living folks’ are supposed to believe it.
I want one of those fancy ‘golden goose’ computers too. The one that is hooked to the other seven or eight, that everyday says that everyone made 2% today and Joe made an extra 1%.
I often think of Jack Nickolson on the witness stand, “you can’t handle the truth”, the truth of which is true.
We’re all blindfolded and hog tied into this international financial ‘golden goose’ robbery system, whether we assented to it or not. Whether we understand it or not. Its time to look at ourselves. Not only is the king without clothes, we’re all running around naked hoping no one notices. What comes after Trillions? We need to pick a number and say thats it, no more ‘fairy’ money.
OT, but I continue to be amazed that the mods permit you to copy so much of others’ work into your diaries; some of us have been challenged for far less copying.
When I read Roberts’ piece a few days ago, some big surprises were there, including his contention that ‘that government-directed short-selling has been going on for a long time.’ Collusion, which I guess was the point of the entire piece. He might have added that regular folks may just as well stay out of the markets since there is such vast asymmetrical information, so much high-speed insider trading, etc.
But his explanation of the manipulation of gold prices was new to me, not that I know a thing about the metals market. But I had hoped he would have mentioned the floating whispers that China is buying a lot of gold in anticipation of creating a yuan backed by gold, thus making toast of the dollar.
On the other hand, are the moves by the BRIICs about creating a situation wherein there are ‘diverse reserve currencies’, hoping that theirs may become ‘the’ reserve currency? I don’t know much about all this, but poking around from story to story makes me wonder. As did Iran’s (failed, tabled?) to create its own oil bourse.
All excellent questions. I read about the China gold buy some place else just the other day but cannot remember where.
At least countries are trying to change the game in more subtler ways than they used in the 1930s.
And the only currency I would choose these days as a reserve currency would be the British Pound. It’s the only one that hasn’t been on a roller coaster ride.
“All of which I sure hope doesn’t happen.” I hope it does. The sooner the better. But I have very little to lose.
Thanks for the info. Recc’d.
The more people who can say this the more dangerous the situation becomes.