U.S. Banks Overrun By Dirty, Rotten Scoundrels |
By Bill Bonner |
Published
03/10/2009
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Currency , Futures , Options , Stocks
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Unrated
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U.S. Banks Overrun By Dirty, Rotten Scoundrels
Dirty, Rotten Scoundrels. The world is full of them.
Our theme today comes from a movie, in which Michael Caine teaches Steve Martin how to be a gigolo. The idea is to identify rich, vulnerable women...seduce them...and then take their money.
In today's world, becoming a real gigolo is social climbing. The average man - even one from a good school and a good family - is an oaf. Next to him, the gigolo, with his suave manners and dandyish airs, is like a Venetian palace next to a double wide.
Besides, the gigolo gives value for money. A woman gets little thrill or merit from landing a Wall Street hustler; no matter how rich, he is almost always boorish and preoccupied. But the gigolo brings refinement and taste to a woman; he makes her feel exceptional because he is exceptional. To a woman of a certain age, his attentions are a welcome as bad lighting.
We only bring it up because it is the front-page story at the Financial Times this morning. Whether life imitates art, or the other way around, we don't know; but yesterday a poor gigolo was sentenced to six years in a German hoosegow for taking advantage of Susanne Klatten. The two met at a health spa - where the hunter scouted his prey. Then, after he had made his advances...without too much resistance, it appears... he made up some cock-and-bull story about having an accident in which a child was hurt. According to him, the mafia was after him. And if he didn't come up with $7 million to pay them off, he was going to have his fine bones broken - or worse.
Naturally, his rich mistress produced the money. But then he got greedy and wanted more. He threatened to show some embarrassing photos to her husband. And then she called the cops.
All of this might have gone unnoticed had the woman involved not been the richest woman in Germany, heiress to the BMW fortune.
Ms. Klatten, no doubt, regrets the affair. Her spirit might have been willing to put up a fight, but her flesh was weak...as it with us all. But she is hardly the only woman - or man - to be robbed by dirty, rotten scoundrels.
"Help needed as investing frauds rise," says a piece in the International Herald Tribune. The IHT focuses on another swindler - Arthur Nadel, accused of bilking investors out of as much as $300 million. But the point of the article is that while jobs are scarce - even bank robbers can't find a bank worth robbing - 'receivers,' court appointed liquidators, can name their price: It's a "job that has become increasingly in demand in such huge investment fraud cases as the Bernard Madoff scandal and the one against the Texas tycoon, Allen Stanford."
But first, let's turn to the headlines...then we'll come back to the dirty, rotten scoundrels.
Yesterday, the Dow lost another 80 points. Oil continued its rise - to $47. And gold reversed downward, losing $24. Maybe the correction in gold isn't over...we'll see.
The Wall Street Journal is now wondering out loud if the Dow could fall to 5,000. And so is Barron's. It's a 'bearish possibility,' says the WSJ. But Barron's voices what we think is still the dominant emotion of this market. "Will the Dow fall to 5,000?" it asks. "We don't think so," it replies.
Not only are the papers discussing our Dow target, they're also beginning to catch on to what is really happening.
The economy is in the grip of a "depression dynamic," says Bloomberg. For the first time sine WWII, the global economy is shrinking...it continues...led by the United States of America.
"Job losses hint at vast remaking of U.S. economy," adds the New York Times.
David Rosenberg of Merrill Lynch looks that the numbers: There are now 12.5 million people out of work in the United States - a 25-year high. This is a lot more joblessness than the typical recession produces, he notes. "In just five months we have lost 50% more than we usually do in a classic 10-month recession."
Oh, for an old-fashioned 10-month recession! This is not a recession at all - it's a depression, in which the economy will be restructured, not merely re-inflated.
*** In a speech yesterday, Helicopter Ben stated that a recovery would "remain out of reach" if the major financial institutions were allowed to fail.
If the banking sector is stabilized, said he, a recovery later this year is not out of the question.
Once the banks find their footing, the Fed chairman says, "then I think there is a good chance the recession will end later this year and 2010 will be a period of growth.
At the risk of sounding redundant: this is a depression. Not a recession. But nothing like a nice, healthy dose of deluded optimism from the head of the Federal Reserve to get you through a Tuesday.
*** Depressions seem to bring out the dirty, rotten scoundrels. Richard Fuld - formerly head of Lehman Bros. - was in Paris this week. A friend reports seeing him at a wedding reception held at the exclusive Automobile Club on the Place de la Concorde. We didn't ask questions. But we're happy to see Mr. Fuld still has the joie de vivre to go out...socialize...and have a good time.
Some guys would have been laid low by his experience; they would cower in a bolthole somewhere...unable to show their faces in public...embarrassed and ashamed. After all, Fuld sank one of the world's great financial institutions...and brought billions worth of losses to millions of people. If he were Japanese, for example, he would have at stepped in front of a bullet train or removed his own intestines. But dirty rotten scoundrels just go to fancy weddings.
Of course, we have no particular reason to single out poor Dick Fuld. The scoundrels are so thick on the ground, you can scarcely jump out of a window on Wall Street these days without falling on one of them.
Forbes says the entire U.S. financial industry is "effectively insolvent," thanks to their errors and omissions. But now that everyone is pointing his finger at capitalists...we take their part. We're suckers for lost causes and underdogs. Yes, they are dirty rotten scoundrels...but the people who now pretend to save us from them are even dirtier and rottener.
At least Dick Fuld got rich honestly - by misleading investors. Even Bernie Madoff made his money, too, the old-fashioned way - like a gigolo - by defrauding investors, one at a time.
But now the whole thing has been turned over to the big boys. Now we're getting theft and fraud on a much bigger scale. Trillions of dollars are being given out by politicians and functionaries. AIG, for example, has been described as 'where taxpayers' money goes to die.' But it doesn't die in AIG - it goes to pay off debts to the biggest boys left in the room - Merrill and Goldman Sachs. 'In the room, in the deal,' they say on Wall Street. Goldman was actually in the room with Tim Geithner and the feds - the only investment bank present - when the decision was made to 'rescue' AIG. Goldman may not have mentioned it at the time, but AIG owed Goldman billions of dollars. Now, the taxpayers bailout AIG so that Goldman can get its money.
*** "Our world is broken," writes Gillian Tett in the Financial Times this morning.
The FT is doing a series on the "Future of Capitalism." A lot of ponderous blah blah, as near as we can tell.
Yesterday, Martin Wolf - whom finance ministers and leading economists read in order to find out what to think - had a nice turn of phrase. Derivatives, he said, did not - as advertised - transfer the risk to those people most able to manage it. "They transferred the risk to those least able to understand it."
But when Wall Street's vaults were open, what did they find? They hadn't transferred it at all! So much risk was left in the hands of the people who created it that - when it blew up - it flattened the entire investment banking industry.
The blah blahers misunderstand their subject. Invariably, they see capitalism as a machine-like 'system' that has lost a gear or gotten a flat tire. They spend their ink wondering how to fix it. Invariably, the solutions come at someone else's expense.
Nationalize the banks. Tighten regulation. More bailout money. The usual claptrap.
Why do we say 'claptrap?' Because all these worthy fixes only make the problem worse...while, of course, giving more power and money to the scoundrels.
Already trillions of dollars have been spent supposedly fixing the machine. The latest estimate we saw was $11.7 trillion; we were so flummoxed by the number we forgot to find out where it came from. No matter. The important thing is this: they've spent trillions so far...and the machine is broker than ever. They can spend trillions more, it won't 'fix' the machine. Because it's not a machine...
"It is like saying to someone that the emperor has no clothes on...and then you find he had no underpants either," says Warren Buffet.
Buffett, too, has been surprised by how broke the machine is. He told investors last October that he was buying stocks...and they should too. Since then, the stock market has lost about 25% more of its value. The Sage of the Plains says he doesn't regret his letter from last autumn, he just wishes he had written it a few months later. He also says he sees an "economic Pearl Harbor" coming...
Economic 'Pearl Harbor?' C'mon Warren...that's a negative and silly way to look at it. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor was vicious, unprovoked and underhanded. Here in the building in London with the gold balls - no kidding, our office building has gold balls on the roof - we always look on the bright side. But you don't have to crane your neck to see the bright side of the worldwide financial meltdown...and it has nothing in common with Pearl Harbor. What's going on is that capitalism is going through a phase...a very healthy phase of 'positive collapse.'
We know we've given our version of the events leading up to this crisis. We will give it again.
The feds encouraged people to borrow...lend...and spend. People did it. And then they over-did it. And when they finished overdoing it they discovered that they had built way too many houses...and that the houses were priced far beyond what people could afford to pay for them. What followed was a crash in the housing market. It was not too much later that the financial industry realized that its collateral was being undermined. That's when all Hell broke loose. Suddenly, practically every asset in the world was called into question. How much did it owe? To whom? What if it couldn't pay?
The credit crunch was misinterpreted by the authorities. They thought it was a liquidity problem. So, they put out trillions of dollars to 'solve' the problem.
The problem was caused by too much spending...and they still think that if we spend a few trillions more...the problem will disappear.
Of course, it won't happen, because the real problem is debt. And there are only three ways to solve that problem: You can default. You can inflate. Or, you can work your way out (maybe).
The feds favor inflation. But $50 trillion has disappeared from the world's asset markets. So far, the feds haven't been able to keep up.
Give them time.
Buffett has faith. "Five years from now," he says, "I can guarantee you that the machine will be running fine. We have the greatest economic machine that man has ever created."
Buffett is a genius; everybody knows it. But like the FT's capitalism improvers, he misunderstands how capitalism works. Machine? It is nothing of the sort. Capitalism is not a collection of nuts and bolts, gears and switches. Instead, it is a moral 'system.' 'Do unto others as you would have them do unto you,' is all you need to know about it.
And like any moral 'system,' it rarely gives the capitalists what they hope for...or what they want. It gives them what they deserve. And right now, it's giving it to them good and hard.
Laissez-faire! Let the bad times roll!
Incidentally, the Oracle of Omaha made an appearance in our award- winning documentary, I.O.U.S.A., along with former Treasury Secretaries Paul O'Neill and Robert Rubin, former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker and more economic luminaries. If you missed the film the first time around, now is your chance to see what these economic heavy-hitters have to say about the state of the U.S. and global economy - and learn how to save your retirement. It's all in our Emergency 'Personal Bailout' Bundle, which includes the I.O.U.S.A. DVD, companion book and a special report that details how you can bailout your own finances - and accrue enough wealth to retire early.
Bill Bonner is the President of Agora Publishing. For more on Bill Bonner, visit The Daily Reckoning.
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