Showing posts with label default. Show all posts
Showing posts with label default. Show all posts

Monday, March 12, 2012

Greece Interrupted — Bond Swap is Not the End

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Greece is set to swap its privately-held government bonds today for new ones that will represent a three-quarters loss of the original investment. The deal will allow the country to receive 130 billion euros in funds from its second bailout. Like the money from the first bailout, those funds will eventually run out however.   

The Greek bond swap is the biggest debt writedown in history. Over 85% of  private investors (essentially banks, the deal does not include bonds held by the IMF or ECB) holding 117 billion euros ($234 billion) agreed to the "voluntary" exchange. The CEO of one major European bank described the transaction as about as voluntary as a confession during the Spanish Inquisition. The loss to bondholders is twofold consisting of a reduction in face value of 53.5% and then lower interest payments stretched over a longer period of time. All in all, private bondholders are taking an approximately 74% hit (assuming of course there isn't another writedown or Greece doesn't renounce its debt completely in the future).

Credit rating agency Moody's decided to call a spade a spade and declared Greece to be in default. Moody's line of reasoning in stating the obvious is that it considers a loss greater than 70% to be a "distressed exchange" (that's putting it mildly) and is therefore indicative of a default.  The matter is not merely academic, since there is a significant amount of credit default swaps (bond insurance) outstanding on Greek debt. On Friday, a committee of the International Swaps and Derivatives Association   the regulatory authority on credit default swaps  ruled that the Greek debt restructuring was a credit event, and this will trigger payouts. How much CDS holders will receive remains to be seen.

Commentary from the EU political leadership on the swap deal was more mixed than after the first Greek bailout (statements back then were upbeat and generally confident that the problem had been solved and Greece was on its way to recovery). French president Sarkozy stated, "Today the problem is solved. A page in the financial crisis is turning." Christine Lagarde, head of the IMF said, "The real risk of a crisis, of an acute crisis, has been, for the moment, removed." German officials were far more cautious however. The French may be correct as long as their words are taken literally. The problem is indeed solved for today. That doesn't mean it is solved for tomorrow.

It is actually highly unlikely that the situation in Greece will be turning around any time soon because of the massive reduction in its debt load from the bond swap. If Greece had a functioning economy, there would be hope. However Greece's economy is heavily dependent on government spending and in exchange for bailout money the IMF and ECB have demanded severe cuts in Greece's budget deficits. Greece is now entering its fifth year of recession, after GDP contracted by 7.5% in 2011. Investment fell by 21% last year after sliding 15% in 2010.  For Greece to continue to operate at all, continued bailout money will be needed. Greece has effectively gone from a welfare state to a state on welfare.

Not surprisingly, some analysts are sounding a note of caution. Predictions are that the financial bleeding in Greece will show up once again later this year. Problems may arise even sooner depending on when the next election takes place (now supposedly in May) and how much power the fringe parties gain. The bond market doesn't seem hopeful either. One year Greek government bond yields were last at 1143%.  Such yields represent collapse, not solvency.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

It's a 50% Default for Greece

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

EU leaders have agreed to seek a 50% reduction in Greek debt from bondholders. This supersedes the 21% reduction decided on in July that was supposed to resolve Greece's financial problems. Apparently $30 billion will be given to the banks as an inducement for them going along with the plan. The EU and IMF will also give Greece an additional 100 billion euros in bailout aid.

While the announcement was delivered with a sense of finality, the first bailout of Greece in May 2010 was supposed to solve Greece's debt problems and so was the second bailout this July. It has only taken three months since the  "everything is really fixed now" July announcement before a much bigger bailout and debt writedown proved to be needed. Until fairly recently, EU officials have constantly denied that this would be necessary or that Greece would default. Not paying 50% of your bond debt is not only a default, but it's a major default.

EU officials still seemed mathematically confused about the situation in Greece. EU President Van Rompuy claimed that the current deal will reduce Greece's debt to GDP ratio to 120% by 2020. If so, Greece is still likely headed for more trouble. Since it is estimated that Greece's debt to GDP ratio is around 160%, it should fall to 80% if all bondholders took a 50% hit. Perhaps all bondholders will not be taking a reduction after all. Both the IMF and ECB hold large amounts of Greek government debt and have in the past been reluctant to accept any writedown of their investments.

The pre-dawn news for the EFSF (European Financial Stability Fund), which is supposed to receive 440 billion euros, is that it will be leveraged up to a trillion euros. The U.S. has been pressing for two trillion. This money can be spent to bail out all the EU banks hurt by the Greek default, but only if they can't raise additional capital in the open markets. So the debt problem will be solved by incurring additional debt and borrowing against it. If this isn't a financial system ticking time bomb, nothing is.

The unanswered question is what is going with happen to Portugal (the next most likely crisis), Ireland, Spain and Italy. EU officials tried to minimize the situation by saying Greece is a special case. It would have been more accurate to say that its problems were more extreme and urgent. They are not unique.  The other countries are already somewhere on the path to insolvency and this will have to be dealt with in the future. The only question is how soon that future will arrive. 

 Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Markets Rally on Hopes of Huge EU Bailout

  
The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

In a replay of the 2008 Credit Crisis, global stock markets are now rallying strongly after a huge selloff last week. This pattern was common in late September and all during October three years ago. It seems to be replaying itself again in 2011. Huge moves down and up are common in severe bear markets.

As has happened many times so far, stocks are rallying on "hopes" of a resolution to the Greek debt problem and liquidity issues with EU banks. The Greek prime minister has stated confidently that Greece will definitely receive the next tranche of money from the first bailout and his comments got a lot of positive press attention. The mainstream press failed to inform the public that Greek officials have consistently made "misleading" statements during the debt crisis and their credibility might be considered questionable. The next payment from the first bailout has been delayed because Greece broke the promises it made for meeting fiscal objectives. Instead of listening to Greek officials, investors should consider that Greece has a CCC credit rating the lowest sovereign debt rating in the world. If any country is going to default anywhere, it's Greece.

The numbers describing Greece's situation also speak for themselves and clearly indicate the inevitability of default.  Greece's debt to GDP ratio was 127% in 2009 in the early stages of the crisis. By the end of 2010, it was 143%. Reuters and a number of other sources report it as now around 160%. This rapid rise is taking place as Greece is getting €110 billion bailouts (the second one is in the works). Clearly the bailouts are not solving the problem, but merely slowing down an explosion of debt. Historically, once a country's debt to GDP goes over 150%, default seems to become inevitable.

The market keeps predicting default in Greece by setting astronomical interest rates. The one-year government bond had a yield of 138% on September 26th, down from its high of 142% on September 14th. Two-year debt was yielding 71% yesterday and the ten-year bond 24%. How can any entity pay these interest rates and avoid default?

All sorts of schemes are being discussed by EU leaders to handle the current crisis. There are rumors of a default plan that involves Greece paying back only half of its debt. EU officials described these rumors as just speculation, although in some cases the denials were less than firm. They also denied any enlargement of the EFSF (European Financial Stability Facility) — the EU's 440 billion euro bailout slush fund — was underway. The current global stock market rally got started when CNBC News reported that the EFSF would be leveraged up to eight-times and the European Investment Bank would issue bonds to buy up sovereign debt. The specific reaction to this report from one EU official was that it was "just bizarre". The big-money investing operations can make quite a bit of profits by planting "just bizarre" stories though because they can juice the markets up for a day or two. Then some bad news story appears and markets drop right back down. We've seen this pattern over and over again in the last two months.

At some point, the Greek debt crisis will be resolved. Until then, the EU will kick the can down the road as long as it can. At this point though, the can looks like it was run over by a freight train and then tossed around by a tornado. Greek debt holders will have to take a significant haircut on their debt and this means that banks in Germany and France will have to be recapitalized. Then something will have to be done to prevent the emerging defaults in Portugal and Ireland (both have already been bailed out once) and prevent the situation in Spain and Italy from getting bad enough to need a bail out. This will take a lot of money,  much more than the €440 billion in the EFSF.  Where will this money come from? It's quite simple — it will be printed.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Debt Crisis -- Greece 2011 Compared to Argentina in 2001


The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Headlines such as "Hopes for Greek debt progress lift world stocks" and "Wall St opens higher on European hopes" are in the financial news today. Before investors buy into the hype, they should realize that the powers-that-be always deny an obvious and inevitable default before it takes place. Greece in 2011 is on a very similar trajectory to Argentina in 2001 and is well past the point of no return for a default just as Argentina was back then.
There are many similarities between the current Greek debt crisis and the Argentina debt crisis in 2001. Greece is not using its own currency, but a transnational one, while Argentina pegged its currency to the U.S. dollar.  A connnection to a greater currency allows only limited policy responses and prevents the usual money printing that would have take place when debt becomes too high. This in turn causes a gradual rise in inflation up to the point of hyperinflation (Greece and Argentina have both experienced hyperinflation in the past). While skyrocketing interest rates in Greece are implying there is massive inflation, the official inflation rate is under 3%. Yields on one-year Greek governments reached approximately 100% on Tuesday, telling a very different story.  

While the Greeks are certainly underestimating their inflation rate (they have been caught lying and continually underreporting their debt figures and no numbers from the Greek Statistical Office can be trusted), it is relatively minor no matter what the actual number. Inflation is caused by a falling currency and hyperinflation by a collapsing currency. Since the euro is not dropping that much and Greece uses the euro, inflation is not showing up there. Argentina tying its currency to the dollar also created a very low inflation rate as long as the peg lasted.  There is no free lunch however (even though you may have repeatedly heard that there is from politicians). Profligate government spending eventually leads to major inflation. The inflation only showed up in Argentina after it decoupled its currency from the U.S. dollar and it will show up in Greece after it decouples from the euro. Instead of gradually building inflation, sudden major inflation will take place.
The Argentina crisis began when a new government was elected in December 1999 and had to deal with years of mismanagement from the previous administration. Greece elected a new government in October 2009 and shortly thereafter it revealed that it had a lot more debt and higher budget deficits than it had claimed. In both cases, sharp spending cuts were implemented and serious riots followed. By December  2000, Argentina had acquired bailout funding from the IMF. Markets rallied and press reports indicated everything was going be OK. Greece received its first bailout from the EU and the IMF in the spring of 2010 and markets rallied and press reports indicated that everything was going to be OK.  In both cases everything that followed wasn't going OK.
By the spring of 2001, events started spiraling downward in Argentina. In the spring of 2011, events started spiraling downward in Greece. In August 2001, Argentina received an increase in its standby loan agreement from the IMF. Greece received promises of a second bailout from the EU, but with some mandatory debt swaps as part of the deal. Argentina engaged in debt swaps in June of 2001. Interest payments on Argentina's debt eventually overwhelmed rescue attempts and on December 5, 2001, the IMF announced it would not disburse promised aid to Argentina. A collapse followed shortly thereafter. The EU is now questioning whether or not to continue to make disbursements to Greece. If the disbursements stop at any point, Greece will default shortly thereafter just as Argentina did.

No government is of course going to admit that it is going to default. If it did, no one would purchase its bonds and this would cause an immediate default.  It is not surprising that the Greek government is denying the obvious, EU leaders are grasping at straws to explain how a Greek default will be avoided, or that the mainstream media is trying to spin those straws into a golden fantasy of solvency. Argentina denied that it would default right up to the end as well, just like every other country (and major company) facing the same predicament has in the past. Despite the claims that, "this time is different", it never is.

Disclosure: None


Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Interest Rate Spread Widens as Greece Heads Toward Default

 
The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Global interest rates continue to diverge, with rates rising in the troubled eurozone countries and falling to new lows in Germany and the United States.  The same sort of divergence took place during the 2008 Credit Crisis with yields on safe-haven governments falling markedly, while yields on low-grade corporates soared.

Nowhere in the world is the current interest-rate spread more extreme than in the Eurozone (the epicenter of the current credit crisis). Greece is leading the pack with ever-rising yields on its government paper, while German rates keep falling. In Tuesday morning trade, two-year Greek government yields reached a high of 74.88% and ten-year yields a high of 25.01%. Yields on German 10-year bunds were moving in the opposite direction falling as low as 1.679%, even lower than Monday's record-low rate of 1.877% on 10-year U.S. treasuries.

Italy had an auction of 5-year bonds this morning and had to pay a 5.6% yield to get them out the door
compared to 4.9% in July.  Interest rates on the Italian 10-year were at 5.75%. They were over 6% before the ECB started buying Irish, Portuguese, Spanish and Italian bonds on August 8th to force down surging rates as contagion from Greece spread to other parts of the Eurozone. Before that, yields in Ireland had reached approximately 14%, they were over 13% in Portugal, and in Spain they were at similar levels to Italy. Intervention can only maintain below free market rates for so long however. Eventually, the ECB will run out of funds.

The trajectory of Greece's decline toward insolvency is instructive for the future of Ireland, Portugal, Spain and Italy in the near future and for other highly indebted countries such as Japan, the United States and the UK later in the decade. In early 2010, Greek 10-year rates spiked above 12%, but were then driven below 8% with the first bailout. Greece had a debt to GDP ratio around 120%. Severe budget cutting was implemented to hold the debt down. This caused the economy to contract sharply, which lowered tax revenues. Despite the first and now a second bailout a self-feeding spiral of ever-increasing interest rates began. Higher interest rates and a weakened economy have caused the debt to GDP ratio to reach the 140% level (according to official numbers, estimates are as high as 160%). Rates on credit default swaps now indicate a 98% chance of default.

What the immediate effects of a Greek default will be remain to be seen. There will certainly be damage to the Eurozone banking system, which is still in a weakened state from bad loans accumulated before the 2008 Credit Crisis. At some point, the euro will have to be restructured or
it will be weakened considerably. Economic damage will not be limited to Europe, but will affect other regions of the globe just as was the case in 2008.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Friday, September 2, 2011

Is Greece About to Default?


The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Yields on two-year Greek governments reach 46.84% last Friday. This is roughly comparable to yields on Argentine bonds in early December 2001 -- only a month before the country defaulted on its debt.

Similar interest rates occurred this spring in Greece before the second bailout package was put together. The bailout saved Greece from defaulting back then, but the bailout is now falling apart while the fiscal situation in Greece continues to deteriorate. The risk of default in the near future has returned, but the will to stop it this time around is much weaker than in the past.

Finland and a number of other countries have already demanded collateral from the Greek government for their contribution to the bailout and this reduces the money available that can be used by the Greek government to pay off its debts.  Then talks between the Greek government and the ECB, EU, and IMF broke down last Friday (September 2nd) because Greece admitted it will not meet its deficit reduction and privatization targets for the year. This potentially puts the next $8 billion tranche in bailout payments in jeopardy. The talks are supposed to resume in 10 days. Even more challenges will have to be faced this coming week.

Citizens of the fiscally solvent EU countries are getting tired of paying to support what they see as the profligate spending habits of the EU's weaker economies.  The bailout efforts have been lead by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, but support within her country has never been strong for them. Her ruling party has lost six regional elections this year, including one in her own home state this weekend. Any more pro-bailout efforts will only further weaken her politically.

At the same time that efforts are taking place to undermine the second bailout, more and more money is needed by Greece. Like many other heavily-indebted countries in the past, Greece is dealing with a destructive feedback loop of inexorably escalating interest costs that cause its debt to continue to rise regardless of what efforts it makes to control it. The Greek government claimed a debt to GDP ratio of 120% in 2010 during the first bailout talks. It is now estimated to be as high as 160%. Interest payments on that debt could be as high as 24% of GDP at current rates (the 10-year bond is yielding over 18%). Despite the first bailout and now the second bailout, interest rates keep going higher, the national debt keeps getting bigger and the problem keeps getting worse.  

Since someone elsewhere had to lend all the money that is in danger of not being paid back, Greek debt problems are not isolated to Greece, but are having a major impact on the big banks in France and Germany (the real reason Germany and France are so anxious to bail out Greece). The debt problem moreover is being spread through contagion to Spain and Italy, both of which are much larger economies and which are ultimately "too big to bail". This is casting a wider net of impacted banks. By the last week of August, credit default swaps (insurance on bonds) were rising to crisis levels for the Royal Bank of Scotland, BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank and Intesa Sanpaolo. The problem seems to be a shortage of liquidity, just as was the case in the fall of 2008.

It has also been reported that many European financial institutions have losses on bond holdings, despite the ECB actively supporting Spanish and Italian bond prices . The global banking system has approximately $2 trillion in exposure to Greek, Irish, Portuguese, Spanish and Italian debt. On Monday, the yield premiums on Italian and Spanish 10-year government bonds over the equivalent German Bund hit their highest in a month. Italian bonds traded at 5.5%, well above the 5% rate at which the ECB has been buying recently. Italy has to roll over 62 billion euros in bonds by the end of the month.

Stocks have of course been negatively impacted by the problems in Greece and this will continue until there is some resolution. The German DAX had another mini-crash on Monday, falling 5.28% or 292 points. The drop in Paris was just under the 5% mark that defines a crash day. London held up somewhat better as it has during the entire crisis so far. U.S. markets were closed.

At this point, the only thing that can prevent a default by Greece is if its entire debt is bailed out by the EU and IMF (this would require a third and even fourth bailout package). This is not going to happen. The second bailout itself is highly unlikely to go through as planned. Without it, Greece will default this fall.  With it, a little more time will be bought before a third bailout is needed - and support for that measure doesn't currently exist and isn't likely to exist. The important question concerning Greek default seems not to be if, but when.

Disclosure: None
Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2000s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security. 

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Today's Stock Market Action Looks A Lot Like August 1998



The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Something is seriously bothering the stock market and the news that's out there isn't enough to justify what is going on. Such was the case in August 1998 as well. What caused the sudden bear market to appear out of nowhere in 1998 became fully evident only after the fact. The same could be the case in August 2011.

Perhaps the flash crash in October 1997 was a warning of things to come, just as the flash crash in May 2010 may have been a prelude to today's stock market drop. In the second half of July of 1998, stocks began to nosedive suddenly, just as they did in 2011. Some stabilization took place in the market toward the middle of August in 1998 and then a new deeper plunge began. Today, the Dow Jones industrials were suddenly down over 500 points this morning on what could only be considered minor bad news.

There were actually two problems causing the market debacle in 1998. Everyone knew about one of them - the Russian debt default and devaluation of the rubble, which took place on August 17th (less than half of the eventual market decline took place before this date).  Only Wall Street insiders knew about the second one - problems at Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM) - that almost brought down the financial system. 

Trouble in Russia was evident as early as October 1997 and it resulted from the fallout from the Asian financial crisis, which in turn started as a currency crisis in Thailand in July of that year. Today, Europe is undergoing a crisis with the euro that began in Greece in 2010. By August 1998, the Russian central bank had spent a great deal of its dollar reserves defending the ruble and decided to give up. The default had a number of ripple effects, but the most important one on LTCM wouldn't be known by the public until late September, only days before the market finally hit bottom.

After the Russian debt default, stocks plunged until the beginning of September. The market was close to its ultimate low at that point, but only because of the subsequent successful rescue of LTCM.  Stocks then rallied for approximately three weeks. A bailout of LTCM was arranged by the Federal Reserve on September 23rd. The market then sold off until early October hitting a new low and then the decline  was over.

In the rally that followed the stock market experienced huge gains led by a bubble in tech stocks. This was a consequence of the Fed lowering interest rates and pumping too much money into the financial system. The Fed had a lot of leeway to do both in 1998 and still there were serious negative results between 2000 and 2002 when the tech bubble collapsed. Inflation wasn't a concern back then because commodity prices had been declining for almost two decades and were around their lows. It should be assumed that a failure to have successfully rescued LTCM would have caused a much bigger drop in stocks (as happened when the Fed didn't bail out Lehman Brothers in September 2008).

The Fed has a lot less ability to maneuver in August 2011. Fed funds rates have been at zero since December 2008. The Fed has already expanded its balance sheet by approximately $2 trillion since the Credit Crisis began. Commodities are closer to their all-time highs now, not their lows. Another bailout like the one in 1998 (which was minor compared to what occurred during the Credit Crisis) could send inflation assets into a bubble. Gold is already trading over $1800 today and seems to be leading the way.  

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. Like all other postings for this blog, there is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Stocks Weaken With the Economy

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.


U.S. stocks are in sell off mode this morning with all major indices trading below their 200-day moving averages. If current trends continue, the Dow and S&P 500 will give a bear market trading signal next week.

Problems in Europe continue to be a drag on the markets. The prices of Greek debt credit default swaps (CDSs), a type of bond insurance, are rising rapidly again. Experts say they are now indicating a 57% chance of default. Meanwhile, strikes are planned throughout France because the government is trying to raise the retirement age to 62. Investors should assume that EU attempts to reduce the socialist gravy train will be fought tooth and nail by the populace everywhere on the continent. Good news came out of Australia however. Prime minister Kevin Rudd was forced out because of his unpopular 40% super-tax on the mining industry (a key part of the Australian economy).  Australia doesn't have the debt problems that exist in the U.S. and Europe.

In the U.S., the economic numbers continue to be less than impressive. After the disastrous New Homes Sales report yesterday indicated a 33% drop in sales in just one month, the Durable Goods report showed a 1.1% decline in May. Weekly claims fell to 457,000, still well within recession levels, and this got some positive commentary from the cheerleading section of the press. The stock market didn't seem impressed however. While weekly claims have been much better this year than the depression levels they were at early in 2009, they have yet to indicate that the U.S. has recovered from the recession that began in December 2007.

The technical picture for stocks turned south again this Wednesday with the Dow and S&P 500 falling and closing below their 200-day moving averages. The tech heavy Nasdaq dropped below its 200-day yesterday, but managed to close just above it. It looks like it will close below it today. The small cap Russell 2000 is trading below its 200-day today for the first time since earlier this month. The 50-day moving averages for all the indices are still above their respective 200-days in a typical bull market pattern. The 50-days are all falling however and in the case of the Dow and S&P 500, it looks they will be crossing below their 200-days next week. This is a classic bear market signal.  Investors should be watching this carefully.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. Like all other postings for this blog, there is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Meltdown Microcosm - U.S Future Can be Seen in Iceland Today

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. In addition to the term helicopter economics, we have also coined the term, helicopternomics, to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government and to update the old-fashioned term wheelbarrow economics.

Our Video Related to this Blog:

What happens when you create an economy based on the shaky foundation of foreign debt? While this sounds like a question about the U.S. economy, it is actually something that has been asked recently about Iceland. While the U.S economy has been built on foreign borrowing for about 25 years, Iceland only pursued this course of action after the mid-1990s and it is already experiencing a financial meltdown. Things are so bad that the country itself risks bankruptcy. In response to the crisis, draconian emergency powers, which would be the envy of any totalitarian state, have been granted to the authorities. The currency no longer floats, some stock trading has been suspended and banks are closed. Want to get access to your money or get it out of the country? Lot's of luck.

The rot in Iceland's financial system that has built up over the years was hardly a secret. The top four banks in Iceland have liabilities greater than $100 billion, while the entire GDP is only $14 billion. However, unlike much of the rest of Europe and the United States, Iceland banks do not own toxic mortgage securities. The problem instead is simply one of too much leverage (the U.S. also has this problem). Heavily exposed banks are collapsing under the weight of debts incurred during the 2000's lending boom, which artificially increased the average citizens wealth 45% in only five years. While all highly leveraged enterprises will inevitably fail, the Icelandic government still refuses to admit this is the cause of the country's problems. The prime minister has claimed that the "banks were victims of external circumstances". Governments throughout history have of course always blamed external (and frequently internal) forces for economic calamities and never their own policy failures and mistakes. Iceland is no different, nor is the U.S.

While the financial bubble developed over many years in Iceland, the final decline has been sudden. The surprise nationalization of Glitnir, the nation's third largest bank, a week ago precipitated a large drop in stocks prices and a plummeting currency. It order to stabilize the krona, the government stopped its convertibility and fixed the exchange rate to 175 per dollar. Stock trading was also suspended. To avoid capital flight, banks were closed down. Emergency powers were given to the government that allows it to take over any company, limit the authority of boards of directors, and to call shareholder meetings at will. If this sounds like communism, that's because it is. And all this is happening in a country with a democratic history going back to 930 when the national parliament, the Althing, was established.

Any American that thinks that similar things can't happen in the United States is being naive. In desperate times, governments take desperate actions. The U.S. government after all confiscated gold and closed down all the banks in the 1930s to help stabilize the economy. This time around, AIG Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac have already been nationalized by the formerly capitalist U.S. government. Treasury Secretary Paulson stated only yesterday that partial nationalization of banks was an option under the Wall Street bailout bill. Just like in Iceland, governments shut banks, stock trading is suspended, and currency is frozen during a financial crisis. Democratic states can become totalitarian and capitalism can transform overnight to socialism. If you haven't prepared for these developments beforehand, it will be too late to do so once they actually occur.

NEXT: Will Double Digit Crashes Follow Triple Digit Losses?

Daryl Montgomery
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. Like all other postings for this blog, there is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.