Cyprus Lifts the Curtain
by
Peter Schiff
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This week financial
analysts, economists, politicians, and bank depositors from around
the world were outraged that European leaders, more specifically
the Germans, currently calling many of the shots in Brussels and
Frankfurt, could be so politically reckless, economically ignorant,
and emotionally callous as to violate the sanctity of bank deposits
in order to fund a bailout of Cyprus. The chorus of condemnation
may have been the deciding factor in giving the Cypriot parliament
the confidence to unanimously vote down the measures in hopes that
Berlin will cave or Russia will swoop in with a bailout.
The decision
to inflict pain on both large and small depositors was almost universally
described as a historic blunder. But the mistake was to do so in
a manner that was not camouflaged by financial smoke and mirrors.
In truth, rank and file depositors have been paying, and will continue
to pay, for all manner of bailouts and stimulus. (Read about the
Stimulus Trap in my just
released newsletter). Whether it's through lower interest payments
on deposits, inflation, higher taxes, higher borrowing costs, or
the accumulation of unsustainable sovereign debt, Cypriots will
bear the burden of past profligacy. But the new plan for Cyprus
was far too transparent, simple, and direct to survive in a world
dependent on deceit and obfuscation. It was dead on arrival.
All over the
world, most notably in the United States, Britain and Japan, central
bankers are actively pursuing inflation targets of two to three
percent. But isn't inflation, which allows governments to pay off
debt through the creation of new money that transfers purchasing
power from savers to borrowers, just a deposit tax in disguise?
(Read
more about Japan's plan to do just that). British citizens of
all means have been living with such a three percent stealth tax
for the past three years, and it is expected to stay that high for
at least two more years. Yet a one-time tax of 6.75% in Cyprus is
seen as the ultimate act of betrayal?
Many are lamenting
that Cyprus' membership in the EU prevents it from devaluing its
own currency to get out of the jam. How would such a course be morally
superior? Taking actual losses on deposits is no different than
taking losses through devaluation and inflation. Both result in
the loss of purchasing power. Asking for a depositor haircut at
least deals with the problem honestly and immediately. Although
it's not quite as honest, devaluation can also be effective.
The same dynamic
holds true with bailout funds. Suppose the EU were to come through
with more funds? All that means is that Cypriots will have to pay
more in future debt and interest repayments. In so doing they would
saddle future generations with a burden that they had no hand in
creating. How is that fair?
And it's not
as if depositors at Cypriot banks, many of whom are reported to
be Russian citizens seeking tax havens, were not complicit in the
risk taking. Bloomberg reports that over the past five years euro
deposits at Cyprus banks returned more than 24 percent cumulatively,
almost double the returns on comparable German accounts. The banks
were able to offer such returns because they were exposed to riskier
assets (i.e. Greek government bonds). What's so wrong with asking
those who took greater risks to earn higher returns to give something
back when their decisions go bad?
Cypriot citizens,
as members of the EU, had the choice to put their deposits in any
EU bank. Even after paying the taxes that had been proposed in the
bailout, long-term depositors would have made more money by keeping
their savings in the high yielding Cypriot banks than low yielding
German banks. So what kind of sadistic Rubicon are we crossing?
The predominating
fear internationally was not that mom and pop Cypriots would have
trouble making ends meet, or that Russian mobsters would have lost
any of their questionable fortunes, but that a run on banks in Cyprus
would lead to similar panics in Greece, Spain, and then the world
at large. As a result, the troubles of an insignificant economy
are seen to threaten the entire global financial edifice. This is
just the latest sign that our current system rests upon nothing
but confidence...which in the end can be ephemeral.
Despite the
surmounting mathematical challenges faced by the overly indebted
countries, investors have confidence that central banks will be
able to engineer a return to sustainable economic growth without
creating runaway inflation or triggering a renewed recession through
premature tightening. This would be a tall order in even the best
of circumstances. But if a small issue like Cyprus can shake that
confidence...how strong can it be? Read
how this confidence in central bank support has been the driving
force in stock market rally.
Interestingly,
the troubles in Cyprus have encouraged many to boast about the comparative
health of American banking institutions and the superior sanctity
of our own depositor protections. Both of these strengths are illusory,
and as a result, what happens in Cyprus will not necessarily stay
in Cyprus.
This month
the Federal Reserve released the results of "stress tests" that
it conducted on the major U.S. banks. While the media heralded the
overwhelming success, in which 14 of 16 institutions received gold
stars, they did not mention how the tests failed to test how the
banks would perform if interest rates were to return to their historic
norms.
Currently,
the ultra-low rates provided by the Federal Reserve, which provide
a low cost of capital and sustain profits on highly leveraged bond
and mortgage portfolios, are a key element keeping banks in the
black. All of that would be threatened in a rising rate environment.
And while the tests did assume that rates would rise from the current
1.9% on the 10 year Treasury, there were no considerations for yields
surpassing 4%. They assume that interest rates will stay near historic
lows, no matter how bad (or good) the economy gets, how high inflation
rises, or how much money the government borrows.
The Fed saw
yields rising to 4% (by the end of 2015) only under their most optimistic
forecast. In the scenarios involving economic deterioration, they
predicted yields would come down dramatically from current levels.
At no point did researchers ask the most fundamental questions:
What if all the money that has been created over the past few years
leads to an increase in inflation that forces interest rates past
4% even if the economy remains weak -- do they not remember the
stagflation of the 1970s? Or what if the continued fiscal cowardice
in Washington leads to a diminishment of bond investors' enthusiasm?
Given our past
experience with bursting bubbles, would it not have been wise for
the Fed to consider whether banks could withstand the bursting of
the Treasury bond bubble, which many suggest is the biggest bubble
of them all? But since the Fed did not recognize the smaller bubbles
until after they burst, it is not surprising that they are equally
blind to this one? The Fed, after all, does not have a history of
learning from its mistakes. However, I believe the oversight is
no accident. The Fed knows that major banks would fail if the bond
market crashed, but it does not want to shake the confidence that
is essential to the current economy.
This episode
also puts into starker focus the inadequacy of deposit insurance.
By offering the illusion of systemic safety in bank deposits, government
guarantees encourage recklessness by banks and depositors. They
provide the same incentives that federal flood insurance does in
convincing homeowners to build on flood zones. Consumer choice and
risk aversion are powerful forces that could bring needed discipline
to banking. The FDIC in the U.S. is in the same situation as insurance
giant AIG before the crash of 2008.
While the FDIC
currently has about $25 billion available to bail out failing banks
in the event of isolated events (mainly held in U.S. treasuries
that would need to be sold), it insures more than $10 trillion in
deposits. Clearly it lacks the resources to cover major losses in
a systemic failure. A failure of just one of the nation's forty
largest banks could swamp the resources of the FDIC. I believe that
a significant spike in Treasury yields, to say 6%, would result
in the failure of several major banks. Bank of America and Citibank
for example each have over $1 trillion in deposits. Where would
the FDIC get the money to make the depositors whole in such a situation?
The government would be unlikely to pass a major tax increase to
fund an FDIC bailout. More likely the Fed would print the money.
In that event, depositors may not lose their money, but their money
will lose much of its purchasing power. In the end, honest losses
could prove to be much smaller.
March
22, 2013
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and author of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse. His
latest book is The
Real Crash: America's Coming Bankruptcy, How to Save Yourself and
Your Country.
Copyright
© 2012 Euro Pacific Capital
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