America’s Lost Decade(s)-Complements of Obama, Bernanke and Geitner


Japan’s “lost decade” was caused by hiding bad assets, inflating values, and failing to recognize losses. “Hide the problems.” “Kick the can down the street.” Bank capital was suspect because bank assets were suspect. This societal attempt not to “lose face” resulted in a stagnant decade and higher interest rates for Japanese borrowers.

Fast-forward to the U.S. today. Fannie and Freddie, the efficient government instigators of the subprime residential debt bubble, are government toxic waste dumps. Tim Geithner in a little publicized Christmas Eve surprise, removed the $400 Billion in federal bailout limits from Fannie and Freddie. Currently the government, that’s your tax dollars, are behind everything these toxic twins do, without limit!

Why worry? What do they do? One thing is HAMP, the Home Affordable Modification Program. This is the $75 Billion program to keep people in the over-leveraged, over-priced homes that they can’t afford. It supports the inflated values of mortgage assets on the books of the banks so they won’t be required to write down the value of these assets with the corresponding hit to capital.  As previously reported, including Christmas Eve Time Bomb, the program is a dangerous tilt at windmills! It only postpones the inevitable day of reckoning.

What happens to the Fannie-Freddie mortgages once made? Well, the majority go into the secondary market in packages against which bonds are issued, mortgage backed securities, MBS. Well, you argue, the market should fairly price these instruments. Unfortunately the Fed is the market, at least the great majority of the market, 75-80%. Where does it get the $1.45 Trillion to do this? Well, it prints the money. Yes, the Fed has doubled the monetary base.

Why then don’t we now have runaway inflation? Most of that excess liquidity is sitting on the banks’s balance sheets as bank reserves. The banks have not started lending it into the commercial market. There is little increase in the velocity of money, little economic activity. When the economic recovery gathers steam, inflation will raise its ugly head–on steroids!

To control that inflation the Fed would normally sell assets sitting on its balance sheet, typically government bonds. Problem is that now a lot of the securities sitting on the Fed’s books are the Fannie-Freddie toxic waste. Who’s going to buy that crap? And, at what price?

In an intriguing NRO post today, Fed Hedge, Stephen Spruiell points out that whoever the next Fed chairman is he will fail. He will have no where to turn when the stuff hits the fan. We will face runaway inflation with no exit, no remedy. Defaults, foreclosures, double-digigt interest rates. Borrowing will stop, business will atrophy.

So it really doesn’t matter who the next Fed chairman is. This gives populist bent Senators cover to oppose Bernanke’s confirmation. When the inevitable explosion occurs, they will say “told you so!”

Tom Motherway

Tom Motherway

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