Those Damned Derivative Thingies
by Chris Clancy
by
Chris Clancy
Recently by Chris Clancy: Around
With Ludwig
This essay
is a story about insurance, or rather, a story about a type of insurance
policy which underwent a mutation. This mutation was not spontaneous
– it was engineered. It was one of the biggest scams ever perpetrated.
Paradoxically,
the problem was that it worked too well and just got too big.
I hope you
stay with the story until its denouement. Maybe you’ll be gobsmacked.
If it moves you to go out and start looking for suitable lamposts
– then it’s understandable.
When a business
makes a loan to another party it can insure against the risk of
default. This would be prudent behaviour if the lender had concerns
about the borrower not repaying everything which was due.
Insurance companies,
like all industries, work to a set of fundamental principles. Two
of their most fundamental principles are indemnity and insurable
interest.
Indemnity simply
means that no-one should "profit" from making an insurance
claim. Instead, the money received should be enough to restore you
financially to the position you were in before the reason for making
the claim occurred.
Insurable interest
means that you cannot insure something unless you have a legitimate
interest in protecting yourself against something bad happening
to that thing. So, for example, you can insure your car or the life
of your spouse. You cannot, however, insure the car or the spouse
of a complete stranger since your only incentive would be the hope
that something bad happens to either or both. In fact, you would
have a very strong motive for making sure that something bad actually
does happen to either or both!
What has the
above got to do with the present mess?
Everything
unfortunately.
Understanding
the gravity
of the situation we are now in means getting to grips with the dreaded
"D" word – and I don’t mean "Depression" – I
mean "DERIVATIVES"! Few understand them. The following
quote
refers to Gordon Brown:
"He
… made the extraordinary confession that as Chancellor he 'didn't
know a lot about' sub-prime mortgages – a key banking practice that
sparked the economic collapse."
Mention of
the ‘D’ word is usually enough to turn most people off instantly
– therefore in what follows I have attempted to keep it as brief
and clear as I can and to avoid mentioning this heinous word. Instead
I’ll refer to them as Gherkins, Sprouts and Bananas.
The current
crisis was started by cheap money being kept cheap for too long.
It found its way into the housing market where things escalated
as a result of government encouragement for lenders to make bad
loans. The lenders who made the bad loans didn’t care since they
could sell them on to someone else.
The buyers
of these loans didn’t care either since they knew the government
would bail them out if they got into trouble. These loans were then
securitised; in other words, they were divided up into securities
(financial instruments) called "Gherkins" and then sold
on to the financial industry.
The financial
industry then employed very clever people to mix these securities
up in all sorts of permutations and combinations. By the time they
had finished splicing and dicing, mixing and matching a new generation
of financial instrument had emerged – these were called "Sprouts."
Why did they
do this?
It was done
to hide the fact that many of these securities were based on bad
loans. As such they could only attract a "junk" credit
rating which made them more difficult to sell on. By combining them
with good loans in incredibly complicated mathematical models, using
all sorts of weird and wonderful statistical techniques, this new
generation of financial instruments could all attract a triple-A
credit rating. Obviously this made these things highly marketable.
Sprouts were
sold in vast quantities all over the world. The buyers simply looked
at the credit rating. They didn’t know how these things were constructed.
They didn’t realize that the models were flawed – Austrian economics
tells us again and again that predictions involving human action
cannot be reduced to mathematical formulae. (If you’re into self-abuse
and really want to put yourself through it go here
for a simplified example of how to create a Sprout – and more).
Let’s return
to the world of insurance.
Organizations
which had purchased Sprouts in huge quantities wanted to reduce
their risk. Companies like AIG, for example, offered them insurance
policies. In return for regular monthly premiums they could insure
against their Sprouts going bad. This was quite legitimate since
they had an insurable interest – they owned what they were insuring
– and would be rightly indemnified in the event of default.
What happened
next was that the insurance policies themselves were then securitised
and another generation of financial instruments emerged called "Bananas."
These things
have been loosely described as "insurance policies." Nothing
could be further from the truth! These things had nothing whatever
to do with indemnity and insurable interest. The buyers of Bananas
were given the mysterious title of "counterparties." Nobody
actually knows who they are.
What was their
incentive in purchasing Bananas?
Put simply,
Bananas were a bet in which the die was loaded in favour of the
gambler, or counterparty. They were betting on the failure of bad
loans which were purchased and then re-packaged into Sprouts and
then sold on! For those in on the scam there was simply no reason
to buy Bananas unless they were confident that the sub-prime market
would collapse – which it did. They then claimed on their "insurance"
policies.
No. Don’t reach
for the bottle just yet. You’ll need a clear head for what comes
next. Because it actually gets worse.
Just to recap.
The housing food chain spawned three types of financial life form
– Gherkins (Mortgage Backed Securities), Sprouts (Collateralised
Debt Obligations) and Bananas (Credit Default Swaps).
In this must-read
article by James Lieber
(which I hope you pass on to as many people as possible) he argues
that it was Bananas which turned what should have been a recession
into a depression – that the failure of the sub-prime market and
its concomitant Gherkins and Sprouts by themselves would not have
landed us where we are now.
Why?
Because the
amount of money which is still out there waiting to be claimed on
Bananas is mind-boggling!
How did it
become so large?
The answer
is the word "replication." One Sprout could be "insured"
time and time again. This is why the thing became so large.
Lieber, writing
in Jan. 2009, estimated that the Banana liability was in the region
of $600 trillion. In fact, Ellen
Brown, writing in Sep. 2008, put total trade in Gherkins, Sprouts
and Bananas in excess of $1,000 trillion. The latter is called a
quadzillion. If so then we’ve made it – not billions or trillions
any more – now we’re into quadzillions!
And just where
has all this bailout money paid to financial institutions gone?
There’s no way of telling because the Fed’s not saying. How much
has gone straight into the pockets of the counterparties, whoever
or whatever they are?
I pray HR
1207 makes it all the way. Maybe it will yield up the truth
about what has been going on – the fact that it didn’t just happen
– it was quite deliberate. And let’s be clear, as Lieber points
out in his article, it simply could not have been done without collusion
between major players.
Is there a
way out of this nightmare? Well, call me an optimist, but there
must be. If people can devise a system whereby a tiny elite run
the world on money created out of thin air, and get away with it,
then surely we have the wit to devise a method of neutralising or
cancelling these things – of evaporating them into thin air!
Then go after
the counterparties who have already received money and prize every
stinking penny from their filthy money-grubbing fingers.
This is no
conspiracy theory – it’s fact. See here
and here
for two articles recently published on LRC – laugh or cry, it’s
up to you – but we’ve all been conned, scammed, stiffed or any other
word you can think of – yet again.
The greatest
scam in history has littered the world with banana skins. There’s
a lot more slipping and sliding to go before we emerge from this
one – if we ever do – and in one piece at that!
July
6, 2009
Chris
Clancy [send him mail]
is Associate Professor of Financial Accounting at Zhongnan University
of Economics and Law in Wuhan, Hubei Province, People's Republic
of China.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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