It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
by
Kevin Duffy
by Kevin Duffy
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The classic
1963 slapstick comedy, It’s
a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, begins when the occupants of
four vehicles learn about hidden treasure in the fictional town
of Santa Rosita, California. According to a dying man’s last words,
$350,000 (about $2.3 million in today’s dollars) is buried under
a mysterious "big W," less than a day’s drive away. When
the strangers can’t agree on how to share the loot, a wild race
for riches ensues.
In the 44 years
since, the mad dash for wealth without work has been repeated throughout
countless bubbles and manias. Witness the Japanese mania and U.S.
takeover bubble of ’89, the biotech bubble of ’91, the 2000 tech
bubble, and more recently the 2005 housing bubble – all ending in
tears. Fittingly, in the movie’s finale the protagonists fall off
a fire escape and all end up in the hospital.
Was the film’s
director, Stanley Kramer, prescient – metaphorically speaking –
or have we evolved to the current state of perfection in which the
investing masses are entitled to get rich simply by tuning in to
Jim Cramer’s Mad Money?
Fractional
reserve madness
The lure of
easy money begins with the government printing press. First, the
central banker buys an asset – typically a government debt instrument
– writes a check on itself and deposits it into the banking system.
Since the bank never "redeems" the check, this is equivalent
to creating money out of thin air. The banker, happy to receive
fresh "reserves," loans out all but a sliver. This new
money ends up back with the banks, is counted again as reserves,
mostly lent out, and so on and so on. Through this process of fractional
reserve banking, credit is expanded at a multiple of the initial
central bank deposit. Through such a system, the creation of money
and credit (the promise to pay money) looks like an upside-down
pyramid – essentially a pyramid scheme on top of a counterfeiting
operation.
As James Grant
has counseled, the inflation process gives a finite pool of capital
the illusion of an endless sea of liquidity, in effect "turning
all the traffic lights green."
Such a scheme
is a concoction of government privilege (or mercantilism), not laissez
faire. The so-called "capitalists" are no longer efficient
allocators of capital to its most productive uses, but beneficiaries
of and cheerleaders for a monetary fraud in which capital is debased,
taken for granted, and abused. As long as they remain chummy with
their friendly liquidity provider of last resort, they can act recklessly
without fear of igniting an economic forest fire – or if they do,
without fear of having to bear the costs. And as long as the value
of their collateral is constantly inflated, they never feel the
need to worry about default.
Liberated from
the gold standard straightjacket, the system has few restraints.
For starters, the counterfeiter has an incentive not to draw attention
to his racket. But the effectiveness of his ongoing propaganda campaign
has weakened this deterrent. The real inflationary action, however,
is in credit expansion. For example, in the last 6 years, the Federal
Reserve has grown its balance sheet less than $300 billion while
the nation’s money supply has expanded by $4.3 trillion, or 14 times
as much. In other words, the central banker can bait the hook, but
lenders and borrowers still have to take the bait.
This new money
is never evenly distributed, but instead gets funneled into whatever
narrow area happens to capture the public’s fascination. As prices
and valuations soar, greater doses of credit are required to keep
the game going. Either more marginal borrowers are drawn in at ever
more precarious levels or greater leverage must be applied to existing
borrowers. This is what ultimately doomed the housing bubble. In
the end, nearly anyone who could fog a mirror was getting an invitation
to join the party.
The trouble
with pyramid schemes is that they’re not designed to go in reverse.
Eventually, the number of willing dupes is exhausted. The same people
who panicked late to get into the game are just as likely to panic
when the music stops. The longer the music plays, the more leveraged
and unstable the inverted credit pyramid becomes. As the late economist
Hyman Minsky observed, "stability is unstable."
The trouble
with stability
The current
Federal Reserve experiment with stability began on January 3, 2001.
With the Nasdaq Composite down 55% from its March, 2000 peak and
a bursting technology bubble threatening to plunge the economy into
recession, the Fed began lowering rates. The impact was immediate.
The Nasdaq rallied 14% that day and stood 24% higher four weeks
later. The guru du jour, Abby Joseph Cohen, echoed the prevailing
faith in the Greenspan put: "I am assuming this will be a very
short-lived slowdown because policy makers have significant tools
at their disposal. The Federal Reserve in adjusting rates last week
stood up and said, ‘We are watching and will do more if necessary.’
That serves as a confidence builder."
Lost on the
bulls, such misplaced faith in central bankers is commonplace at
major tops. In April, 1929 Financial World reassured its
readers, "It may be well again to stress the all-important
point that the Federal Reserve has it in its power to change interest
rates downward any time it sees fit to do so and thus to stimulate
business."
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Time
– June 13, 2005
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The first quarter
of 2001 saw a spike in corporate bond offerings, including aggressively
priced zero coupon convertible bonds by Enron and Tyco International.
MCI WorldCom issued $10.8 billion in investment grade bonds – the
second largest bond offering on record at the time. Within 18 months
the company was bankrupt.
For two years
the Fed pounded the funds rate relentlessly from 6.40% to 1.24%.
Regardless, the tech balloon continued to deflate, with the Nasdaq
collapsing another 61% from its January, 2001 high to its October,
2002 low. The Fed was, however, successful in avoiding the bogeyman
of deflation as cheap credit lit a fire under the housing market.
From 2000 to 2005, homebuilding stocks leapt nine-fold. Lending
standards eroded and, as home prices moved out of reach of the average
American, "affordability products" such as interest-only
and negative amortization loans became the rage. As it turns out,
Time magazine pegged the top of the housing bubble with its
June 13, 2005 cover, "Home $weet Home: Why we’re going gaga
over real estate." Time captured the zaniness of the
times: "If home is where the heart is, it is now where ever
more of your cash is. And when love and money collide, things can
get a little crazy."
As the new
millennium unfolded, the engine of wealth creation shifted from
technology to finance. In 2000, technology claimed 99 members of
the Forbes 400 who accounted for 40% of the total wealth.
By 2006, real estate, investments and finance boasted 140 members
and a record 27% share of the billionaire market, while technology
slipped to 17%. (This share will certainly go higher when Forbes
tallies the numbers this October.)
Another sign
of the times (and hubris) is the naming rights on stadiums. From
2000 to 2007, the number of financial sector stadiums doubled from
12 to 24, while tech names slipped from 12 to 9. The Class of 2000
was notable for a number of corporate implosions such as PSINet
Stadium, CMGI Field, MCI Center, and Enron Field. In fact, 19% of
the sponsors eventually went bankrupt, including several airlines.
The Class of 2007 includes Chase Field, Wachovia Center, and Quicken
Loans Arena; 14 or 19% of today’s naming rights sponsors are banks.

It appears
the Fed experiment in monetary stimulus from 2001 to 2003 didn’t
just ignite a housing bubble, but fomented a full-blown credit bubble.
Credit
assembly line shifts into high gear
More than in
any previous cycle, a sophisticated assembly line has developed
to facilitate the creation of credit and expansion of leverage.
The days of the neighborhood banker on a first name basis with his
customer are long gone. Loans are now originated, packaged into
securities by Wall Street, endorsed by insurance companies and ratings
agencies, and sold to investors. The assumption is that each of
the gatekeepers is unbiased and financially sound. Yet commercial
banks such as Citigroup have assets-to-equity of 12 times, investment
banks are typically levered 25-to-1, and bond insurers like Ambac
and MBIA guarantee 80 to 90 times their capital. If a chain is only
as strong as its weakest link, there is plenty that could go wrong
with the great intermediation of credit creation.

Investment
banks have reveled in an elevated role during this credit cycle.
In the past six years, the Fed grew its balance sheet 50%, money
supply expanded 60%, and the Top Five investments banks increased
total assets by 160%. In the latest quarter, the total assets of
Goldman Sachs exceeded total bank credit at the Fed for the first
time. Structured finance has become a lucrative business as nearly
$500 billion in collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) were issued
in 2006 alone, a 60% increase. To at least one cynic, Barron’s
editor Thomas G. Donlan, "The work of Wall Street often is
to introduce people who should not borrow to people who should not
lend."

The credit
rating agencies not only sign off on the soundness of the gatekeepers
(all investment grade, of course), but on the securitizations themselves.
(They also designed the structures with the help of Wall Street.)
Without their blessing, institutions such as insurance companies
and pension funds would be restricted from investing. Yet the rating
companies get paid by the credit issuers – a clear conflict. In
fact, structured finance now accounts for over half of Moody’s ratings
revenue.
The credit
assembly line would not be complete without the end demand of the
loan holder. In particular, many public pension funds which got
addicted to the strong returns of the late 1990s bull market have
been climbing the risk ladder in order to keep employer contribution
rates low. Driven by the mantra that diversification into "alternative
investments" can deliver the holy grail of higher returns with
reduced risk, pensions have moved aggressively since 2000 to place
funds with highly compensated managers who have the ability to add
leverage and trade more actively.
Condo
flipper passes torch to professional speculator
From our
perch, it appears the slowly deflating housing bubble has simply
morphed into a massive professional speculator bubble, driven by
commercial real estate, hedge funds, and private equity.
The number
of real estate sector funds has doubled since 2000 and now exceeds
the number of technology funds. Commercial mortgage-backed securities
(CMBS) issuance is expected to exceed $350 billion this year, credit
spreads are widening, and leverage is increasing. According to Moody’s
estimates, the average loan-to-value on CMBS was 111.6% in the first
quarter, up from 90% in 2003.

Signs of excess
are everywhere with regard to hedge funds and private equity. More
bells are ringing than at an Austrian downhill. Exhibit A: the highly
successful IPO of Fortress Group and the proposed IPO of Blackstone
Group. Steve Schwarzman, CEO of Blackstone, recently graced the
cover of Fortune as "the new king of Wall Street."
U.S. private equity firms raised $160 billion in 2006 and are on
pace to double that take this year. During the tech bubble, venture
capital inflows went parabolic as well, peaking at $91 billion in
the year 2000. The same investment banks who acquired tech underwriters
in 2000 and subprime loan originators in 2006 are now busy snapping
up hedge funds. According to Bridgewater Associates, hedge fund
borrowings were $1.46 trillion last year, up from just $177 billion
in 2002.

In addition,
investment banks are no longer content to play with other peoples’
money ("OPM"). They are putting record amounts of their
own capital at risk. For example over two-thirds of Goldman Sachs’
net revenue now comes from trading and principal investments versus
one-third five years ago.
Living
on planet leverage
On April 30th,
The Wall Street Journal featured a cover article about the
copious amounts of leverage employed by the professional speculator
community. They quoted a senior credit analyst at Standard &
Poor’s: "There’s leverage everywhere – whether at corporations
or broker dealers or hedge funds or private equity funds. It sort
of feels like something’s got to give." The conclusion of the
two WSJ journalists: "We’re living on planet leverage."

The American
consumer has been living on planet leverage for quite some time,
having taken on another $5.5 trillion in debt just the past six
years – an 85% increase. Despite generation-low interest rates and
a housing boom for the ages, homeowners’ equity is at all-time lows
and the consumer’s balance sheet has never been more stretched.
Cracks are
already appearing in the credit façade. Year-to-date, the
Bearing Credit Bubble Index (a proprietary composite of 22 credit-related
stocks) has underperformed the S&P 500 by over 10%. Sub-indices
closest to the mortgage finance bubble are particularly weak, with
homebuilders 16.3% and subprime lenders 54.8%.
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BusinessWeek
– February 19, 2007
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The trouble
with liquidity
Liquidity remains
the rallying cry of the bulls, just as it has at the top of every
bubble. But they confuse cash on the sidelines with ready access
to credit. As BlackRock CEO Laurence Fink recently warned, "Probably
the greatest issue that’s confronting the world’s investors is we
are trading liquidity for illiquidity." With mutual fund balances
and mutual fund cash levels at record lows, the fuel to power stock
prices higher is depleted. The strain of liquidity that has financial
markets on steroids is cheap credit, a fair weather friend who will
turn tail at the first sign of trouble.
Perhaps the
ultimate contrary indicator of this credit cycle will be BusinessWeek’s
February 19, 2007 cover story, "It’s a Low, Low, Low, Low-Rate
World." BW’s authors gushed, "Borrowers, of course,
are deliriously happy. Even the shakiest companies are seeing their
debt costs plunge… Most remarkably, the craziness isn’t likely to
stop anytime soon." Sound familiar? Simply substitute "home
buyers" for "companies" and this quote could have
easily appeared two years ago at the top of the housing bubble.
As the actors
in this madcap movie continue to chase that illusive pot of gold
buried under the "big W," we can’t help but be reminded
of the advice of InvesTech Research editor James Stack: "Never
confuse an economic miracle with a liquidity bubble."
As the great
Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises warned, "There is no means
of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit
expansion."
This
article was adapted from a speech given to the Committee for Monetary
Research & Education (CMRE) on May 10, 2007 in New York City.
May
22, 2007
Kevin
Duffy [send him mail]
is a principal of Bearing Asset Management.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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