Posted: April 07, 2008
10:19 pm Eastern
© 2008
"Yes, we bailed out the economy," said Fed Chairman Ben
Bernanke in Senate testimony on Thursday, referring to the Fed's role in
responding to the Bear Sterns collapse. But since when is it the Fed's job
to authorize spending taxpayer money, which
violates the long-standing separation between Fed and Treasury duties?
Testimony presented to the Senate Banking Committee by the players in the
Bear Stearns/JP Morgan bailout exposed, moment by moment, just how
vulnerable our financial system is to collapse.
I sat spellbound watching Bernanke use terms like "severe" and
"extremely difficult to contain" when referring to the damage
that would have resulted in the collapse of Bear Stearns, the fifth largest
investment bank in America.
"Given the exceptional pressures on the global economy and
financial system, the damage caused by a default of Bear Stearns could have
been severe and extremely difficult to contain," said Bernanke.
Those words should send chills down every spine in America.
I might understand such damage occurring if one of our major commercial
banks failed. But an investment bank?
"The fate of Bear Stearns was the result of a lack of confidence,
not a lack of capital," continued Christopher Cox, chairman of the
SEC, making it abundantly clear the real problem was the lack of confidence
in Bear Stearns.
Alan Schwartz, Bear Stearns CEO, echoed the Cox comments by adding that
what brought Bear Stearns to its knees was not a lack of capital or
liquidity, but a lack of confidence. Schwartz added "unfounded"
rumors caused that loss of confidence.
Jamie Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan, asserted, "A Bear Stearns bankruptcy
could well have touched off a chain reaction at other major financial
institutions that would have shaken confidence in the credit markets that already have been
battered."
Dimon, while not explaining the degree to which the institutions are
connected through the $135 trillion credit and interest-derivative market,
knows full well the domino effect a Bear Stearns collapse would have
triggered.
Is our system truly this vulnerable? Can a handful of rumors cause a
collapse? Can the loss of confidence send a cascade of destruction through
the economy taking down everything in its path? Can an avalanche of debt
wipe out good, honest, hardworking people and their investments?
Apparently!
This dynamic group of financial market saviors went into battle mode on
the weekend of March 15 and birthed a taxpayer-sponsored bailout to keep
the financial markets from imploding.
With the stroke of the pen and the creation of $30 billion from the FED;
Bear Stearns, and thus the world, was saved. Now these titans appear before
the Senate with nothing more than excuses.
It was more like a circus than a serious hearing.
After watching three hours of explanations and obfuscations this was the
message I came away with:
- The system we violated with bad practices was going to fail.
- The entire world would have been negatively impacted by such an
occurrence.
- We stopped it from happening, so end the stupid questions and just
say thank you.
Instead of seeing a group of contrite and humbled men whom had just
looked into the abyss of all our worst financial nightmares, I witnessed
more of the arrogance that brought us to this point in the first
place.
My fears were not dissolved or resolved by the hearings.
It is clear that if they didn't act, according to all who testified, the
consequences would have been "dire." The entire system hung in
the balance on March 15. But should it have?
Can we as a nation afford to go about business as usual while the heat
is temporarily off when there may well be other Bear Stearns, which with a
few well-placed rumors and a little bit of nervousness may create another
end-of-the-world financial scenario requiring more intervention?
These hearings did yield some useful information. On top of the $29
billion rescue of Bear Stearns, the FED also made a $25 billion loan to JP Morgan. The way I
do the math, JP Morgan ended up with all the assets and liabilities of Bear
Stearns, allowing the assets to shore up their balance sheet, while the
liabilities increased by merely $1 billion.
From day one I firmly believed, and still do, this whole Bear Stearns
crisis was a way to save a much bigger player in our financial world, JP
Morgan. Just take a look at the exposure JP Morgan has in credit and
interest derivatives. According to Weiss Research, 387 percent of their
capital is exposed. Yet our Fed, with the blessing of the secretary of the
treasury and the cooperation of the SEC just gave them $54 billion?
Is this the reward for being such good stewards of investor and depositor
money?
Overnight the value of JP Morgan stock surged, creating new cap value
far in excess of any liability JP Morgan would have incurred by taking over
Bear Stearns.
They have already realized billions in profit and for what?
These hearings on Capitol Hill Thursday, just like all hearings our
elected officials hold, was a joke!
No lessons were learned, and nothing will be done to address the
underlying problems that caused the mess in the first place. Every time
questioners got remotely close to exposing the truth surrounding this shady
transaction, the confidentiality agreement between the FED and JP Morgan
was invoked.
We will never know what really happened the day the financial world
almost ended.
So expect to see more tactics politicians allow the Central Bank to
employ to keep you "safe." Political expedience will just give
you more of what you want. More credit, easier requirements and
artificially low interest rates as the FED inflates the next balloon. First
it was equities in the '90s, followed by the bust in early 2000. Next it
was real estate, followed by the housing slump we are now in. Who knows
what the balloon du jour will be, but you can bet your bottom dollar there
will be another.
In the end, our cost of living and our taxes will go up. We will have to
work harder and harder for less and less as the Federal Reserve and their
congressional enablers continue to inflate a system with more and more fiat
money.
The average American must realize the only person who will take care of
them is them. Thus, live within your means, save money and diversify your
investment portfolio and savings
accounts so when the day comes
that we do have a collapse you will be prepared.
One thing is for certain. A collapse will come sooner or later. No
balloon can be inflated forever.
Note: Our founders fought and died in 1776 and again in 1812 to ensure
we would never have a central bank controlling the nation's finance. Our Constitution
expressly reserved the right for Congress to create money. Lincoln said
doing so would save the people interest. And yet today your life, and in
large part the world, is controlled by central bank in the hands of some
very powerful people.
Craig R. Smith
Article courtesy
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