Lehman
Brothers Revisited
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: Canary
in the Coal Mine
As we pass
the one year anniversary of the fall of Lehman Brothers, journalists,
politicians and market analysts have seized on the occasion to offer
seemingly sober assessments of what went wrong and what went right
in the lead up and aftermath of the biggest financial event since
Black Tuesday.
The most popular
storyline offered by these Monday morning quarterbacks is that the
mistaken decision to allow Lehman to fail resulted from the Bush
Administration's misplaced faith in the free markets. In this telling,
the real crises began in the days following the Lehman bankruptcy,
which unleashed a financial panic that would have caused complete
economic collapse if not for the subsequent federal intervention.
In reality,
Lehman's demise was simply the result of an unfolding crisis that
began years before. Popular belief aside, allowing the institution
to succumb to the overwhelming debts on its balance sheet was perhaps
the only correct decision made by government since this crisis began.
The propagandists' complete reversal of cause and effect now threatens
to spur the government to compound prior mistakes and bring on the
next phase of the financial crisis. Unfortunately, this chapter
will likely be much more dangerous than what we saw last fall.
In March of
2008, in the aftermath of the Bear Sterns "bailout" (which
itself was a major mistake), equity shareholders walked away with
a generous ten dollars per share, all creditors were made whole,
and most employees got jobs and bonuses from JP Morgan. As a result
of this largess, the Fed created a very serious problem for itself.
After Bear, the perception took hold that investment banks were
too "interconnected" to fail. The resulting moral hazard
decreased the financial stability of the banking system and exposed
taxpayers to open-ended risks. The Bush administration rightly determined
that a message needed to be sent that Bear was an isolated case,
and that capitalism still held sway on Wall Street. The fall of
Lehman, which was helped along by the unrealistic recalcitrance
of its chairman Richard Fuld, would be that clear signal.
However, politics
quickly trumped economics, and the Lehman trial balloon soon turned
into the Hindenburg. Washington had no stomach for the ensuing financial
carnage, and when other institutions began to topple, Bush, Paulson
and Bernanke abandoned their prior convictions and threw all they
had into the ensuing bailout bonanza. As a result, the moral hazard
that they had sought to avoid now exists on a scale unprecedented
in our history. Capitalism has been extinguished on Wall Street,
and our financial institutions now exist as public utilities. The
presidents of our biggest banks are now the highest paid civil servants
in the world!
Since market
forces are no longer allowed to allocate capital and control risk,
these decisions are now made by government regulators and are then
passed through to their subordinates on Wall Street. This perverse
organizational structure constitutes a new form of American fascism.
The pain of
allowing Lehman to fail will be dwarfed by the agony of bailing
out the rest of Wall Street, which is now a foregone conclusion.
Just because the Lehman bankruptcy created unpleasant consequences
does not mean it was a mistake. On the contrary, sometimes doing
the right thing hurts especially if it is done to avoid even
greater pain down the road. It just seems that our representatives
are incapable of asking for short-term sacrifice. There is no price
they are not willing to force the rest of us to pay to assure their
own reelection.
In reward for
its gross culpability in creating the financial crisis, the Federal
Reserve has been given extensive new powers. Given the damage it
was able to inflict in the past, I can only imagine the havoc that
will be wrought by the new "Super Fed."
If the current
policies continue, the America we know for which our forebears
risked so much will cease to exist. The constitution originally
established by our Founding Fathers has been under attack almost
since inception. Up until now, the greatest damage occurred during
Roosevelt's New Deal. However, the current assault on our birthright
could be a knockout blow. The last vestige of republican government
now hangs in the balance.
September
19, 2009
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.
Copyright
© 2009 Euro Pacific Capital
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