Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Derivatives and banking skullduggery

History ready to repeat?

In October 2009, a Frontline program outlined the rise of derivatives. Titled "The Warning"
it follows the history of Brooksley Born, who was appointed as head of the CFTC (Commodity Futures Trading Commission) in 1993, and the rise of the derivatives market.

Brooksley Born , as head of the CFTC, reported directly to President Clinton. She recognized the danger that the explosive growth in the unregulated derivatives market represented to the financial sector of the US economy. This documentary follows her efforts to get some oversight and regulation into this marketplace, and the ways in which her best efforts were undermined publicly and privately by Clinton's staff.

Alan Greenspan, Larry Summers, Robert Rubin, and Arthur Levitt, members of the President's Working Group, supported the financial lobbyists along with the Republican and Libertarian Ayn Rand "Free Traders" to mount a hysterical response to Brooksley Born's regulatory ideas. Brooksley Born's attention was drawn to this secretive 'dark' market by the exposure of serious fraud by Bankers Trust, when they were sued by Proctor and Gamble.

Born talked regulation. Bankers lobbied Clinton's advisors and Congressmen.

The upshot was a Congressional freeze on the CFTC, preventing Brooksley Born from implementing any changes to the regulatory procedures of the derivatives market.

When the freeze was implemented, Brooksley Born resigned from the CFTC.

Six weeks later, a major hedge fund crashed. Long Term Capital Management (LTCM) melted down in the exact scenario that Brooksley Born had foreseen.

The Congressional prohibition on regulation was only the beginning. During the 8 years of the George W. Bush presidency, this market was completely ignored as it grew from $60,000 billion in 1998, to a monster $595,000 billion by 2007, and caused the crash that brought down the economy.

Let me do that one more time. The derivatives market grew by 148,750% during the George W. Bush Presidency, and nobody noticed. The Wall Street Journal, useless publication that it is, didn't notice. Fox News didn't notice. MSNBC didn't notice. The New York Times didn't notice.

And this situation is still the 800 pound gorilla in the living room that everybody is pretending not to notice. Regulatory efforts are stalled.

Brooksley Born is predicting further upheaval if there is no regulation forthcoming on derivatives. Geithner, Summers, and the other players have reversed their original antipathy, and now suggest they are in favor of regulation. Lip service, perhaps? Because nothing has happened to get the whole system more transparent..

Here's something to think about. The size of the US economy, the Gross Domestic Product for a year, which is the sum of all the goods and services produced, is around $14 trillion. The outstanding derivatives are between $600 trillion and $1,000 trillion. You thought the bailout, at $0.7 trillion was large? Wait for the derivatives to come home to roost!

There are some further interesting items that have not yet been investigated.

It seems that Goldman Sachs and J P Morgan may have used the lack of transparency in the Dark Liquidity market to actually sink their competition, Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch, by providing false ratings on the values of their derivatives, and false reports on their corporate health, which caused their liquidity to dry up in the marketplace. http://www.marketrap.com/article/view_article/91172/did-the-markit-group-a-black-box-company-partially-owned-by-goldman-sachs-and-jp-morgan-chase-devastate-markets

There have been warning signs for years that all is not well in the financial sector. In 1970, bankers would never have considered betting against their clients, or pursuing practices that ripped them off. By the 90's, they were fleecing them in complex transactions. When Proctor and Gamble sued Bankers Trust in 1994, the evidence against Bankers Trust included some 3,600 recorded conversations from the trading floor, where traders openly talked about ripping off Proctor and Gamble, amongst other clients, who were all regarded as too dumb to know what was going on. http://www.businessweek.com/1995/42/b34461.htm

This practice seems to be continuing. Goldman Sachs just had an almost perfect quarter. They lost money on only one trading day, despite working a high risk sector in a very volatile marketplace. http://www.zerohedge.com/article/absolute-perfection-goldman-loses-money-just-one-trading-day-q3

Here is an excerpt from one of the comments on that article that talks about derivatives, the problems, and how they work.

"Various articles have mentioned that there is likely $600-$1,000 trillion (yup, a quadrillion!?) of derivatives out there, all of it unregulated and virtually undocumented. It boggles my mind that I could sit down with one of my neighbors and basically write a derivatives contract on a napkin that if one of our other neighbor's houses burns down, then the person that wrote the contract with me would have to pay me say $200,000. If 9 other people wanted to bet that it wouldn't burn down, I could write derivatives to collect $2 million if it burned down. I don't even have to have the money to pay my side of the contract if the house doesn't burn down. It doesn't matter a bit if I have no interest in my neighbor's house or am not a party to their insurance policy."

Read the whole article and the comments. Then ask yourself, why isn't more of this being investigated?

Maybe the answer is that the revelations of a real investigation would create global economic panic, destroying the dollar as the global reserve currency, sinking the US economy?

If you have a better answer, leave a comment.

2 comments:

  1. Great piece of writing, Richard! You need to start working as an economic columnist for some big paper, magazine, or Web site.

    It's always been smoke and mirrors, at least since 1913, when the Fed was created. But there wasn't that much smoke and there weren't that many mirrors, and underneath the smoke and mirrors were a bunch of people working really hard and making real things with real resources. But nowadays there's a whole forest fire of smoke, and there are millions of mirrors that are carefully computer controlled, their angles synchronized to create the most elaborate, abstract, esoteric financial system imaginable.

    We can only hope that the people playing with the smoke and mirrors have new tricks, to add even more mirrors as the smoke increases.

    To take down the whole apparatus of smoke and mirrors might be fatal.

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  2. Thanks, Jeff.

    As communications get better and cheaper, the Government has become more opaque, driven by their need to launder (spin) information.

    Currently, the lack of transparency of the Obama White House is probably a legacy of the damage of the GWB years, where the chickens are still coming home to roost.

    This implies that the news is so bad, that if it came out, it would sink the US dollar and tank the global economy.

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