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Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby Cid_Yama » Fri 04 Apr 2008, 12:43:05

<i>This at Automatic Earth:

Ilargi: As financial troubles in Europe grow, calls for transparency get louder. Since the EU has a common central bank, the ECB, that is not really a lender of last resort, and the national central banks have limited powers, transparency may be the only way to stop the bleeding before the patient succumbs. In the case of Spain, it may already be too late. All the more reason to stop the infection from spreading.

But if Europe chooses to do this, there will be consequences for Wall Street, and the US economy, as well. Much of the US banking system has been propped up by opaqueness: as long as there is no demand for mark-to market-numbers for all sorts of assets, we can all keep pretending they are worth whatever is convenient. That would become impossible, since most securities and derivatives are traded globally.

This could lead to a hostile cross-Atlantic environment.</i>

<b>Banks urged by EU to disclose "toxic products"</b>

Banks should step forward with all their problem investments in order to restore confidence in financial markets, the European Union's top financial regulator said on Friday.

"It would give confidence to the market if everybody was pretty certain that all these institutions had all of their toxic products on the table," EU Internal Market Commissioner, Charlie McCreevy told reporters.

What McCreevy calls toxic products are securitized instruments underpinned by home loans in the United States. As those loans defaulted, the market dried up and their value plunged, forcing many banks to write down billions of dollars in losses.

Banks fear more writedowns are likely and are loath to lend money to each other, thereby prolonging the credit squeeze on the interbank money market.

link

As I have said before, the banks are all in the same boat, but not on the same side. While the European Central Bank wants to Mark-to-Market these assets and get it over with, the Fed and US banks stand in horror, as their strategy has been to do everything possible to avoid these toxic derivitives being priced. As long as they are not traded or priced, the Banks can pretend they are worth whatever they want. The second the EU takes action to price these derivitives, that game is over, and US banks, and the Fed, who has been taking these things as collateral, will take an enormous hit and set the dominoes in motion. Because we created these toxic products, we are the most exposed, and there is no love lost between the US banking system and the rest of the world, who see the the US as the financial criminals who created this mess in the first place.
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby RdSnt » Fri 04 Apr 2008, 13:20:59

While I fully agree with the need of a new, very strong, mandate of transparency, I just don't see it happening.
The primary problem is that much of the toxic waste, and it involves much more than sub-prime mortgages, is that they have been re-packages more than once, and then have multiple levels of leverage applied to them. If you have heard the term "cheque kiting" well this is "debt kiting" on a massive scale.
Trillions of dollars of the paper has absolutely no value.
If the banks were forced to disclose this stuff fully, fraud charges would be the least of their problems.
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby Iaato » Fri 04 Apr 2008, 14:14:52

Cid, you bring up a good point that I've been trying to wrap my little pea brain around (haven't succeeded yet). It's clear that the US is going to take the "bailout and print" fork in the road, while Europe would rather take the honest approach, confess to their mistakes, and take their lumps.

I can think of a number of reasons for why the responses of Europe and the US to these bad derivatives are divergent. First, as Cid pointed out, the US is the author of the problem. International legal issues will explode when this stuff finally gets marked to market. Conversely, Europe is at the more innocent, receiving end of this creative fiction that wall street has been spinning. So they will be much happier to expose the US's dirty linens.

The second issue is that the Euro is an amalgam of different countries with varying allegiance to the joint currency. We need some Europeans to speak to this, because I don't know much about the situation other than the idea that German housewives, for instance, would rather go back to the Deutschemark. So I don't know if this economic collapse would be the optimal time to retreat to individual currencies? Given peak oil, I'm thinking that this is the fallback plan.

There are probably more issues here, but I'm getting ready to go skiabout again before I put my skis up for the season. This is an interesting topic.
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby Gerben » Fri 04 Apr 2008, 14:49:46

In the Netherlands we didn't want this currency. We had one of the strongest currencies in the world. We didn't get to vote about it or we would still have our Guilders. Then the French cheated by artificially strengthening their currency before the exchange rates were fixed. Finally the rules all parties had agreed upon were changed in a majority vote.

We got back on them by rejecting some treaty we all needed.

Atm. ppl. dislike 'Europe' but not the Euro. I do a lot of business internationally and the Euro makes it all a lot easier.
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby pedalling_faster » Fri 04 Apr 2008, 19:13:48

i feel grateful to the European banks for pushing for full disclosure.

many American companies seem to have a more "sweep it under the rug" approach.
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby Tyler_JC » Fri 04 Apr 2008, 19:48:29

Here's the problem.

If Italy decides to drop the Euro, go back to the Lira, and then devalue the %&#! out of it...how do they pay their international debt?

Italy's debt is denominated in Euros.

Let's say their current national debt totals 1 trillion Euro. This is roughly 100% of GDP.

Now let's say Italy moves back to the Lira (1:1 with the Euro) and the Lira falls in value against the Euro by 25% (1.25:1 with the Euro).

Now the Debt/GDP ratio has hit 125% of GDP.

Worse yet, they must pay that debt in foreign currency (Euros) and anyone who has lent money to the Italian people expects to be paid in Euros. Businesses might pull investment out of Italy as the value of those investments falls in Euro terms.

The Lira would weaken further as people demand Euros in exchange for their ever weakening Lira...and so on.

The Italian Central Bank would be out of Euros in a hurry leading to a massive collapse in the Italian economy.

In short, leaving the Euro in order to devalue your currency is a great way to turn your country into Argentina. 8)
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby mos6507 » Fri 04 Apr 2008, 21:15:32

I have a prediction for you. Cid will be posting another prediction of a war of some kind on the horizon every five minutes. And none of his predictions will come true.
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby bobcousins » Sat 05 Apr 2008, 16:36:35

Also from Automatic Earth:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')largi: I called yesterday, March 7, The Day The Wheels Came Off. I was not joking. This first article spells it out loud and clear:


THE GAME IS OVER !!!


Automatic Earth is like the National Enquirer of finance, with as much credibility.

They even say "for entertainment only". But they are nowhere near as entertaining as The Onion.
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby Cid_Yama » Sat 05 Apr 2008, 16:49:08

Excuse me, you're an Idiot. The wheels did come off. If not for the frantic scrambling by the Fed over the following weekend(March 15-16) to prevent the bankruptcy of Bear Stearns (and the subsequent pricing of the Alphabet soup they were holding), the financial markets would have collapsed. They barely avoided taking the bullet that weekend. You haven't a clue about what you say. Go back to Oil Drum, Troll.

Can't you see? mos6507 is my assigned troll over here. The job is taken.
Last edited by Cid_Yama on Sat 05 Apr 2008, 18:12:03, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby lateStarter » Sat 05 Apr 2008, 17:02:38

Cid,

Watch out! 2 out of the 3 Amigos have already checked in against you. (Mos6507 and Tyler_JC). Be prepared for the additional broadside from PlantAgent. He may have already replied while I was typing this. According to the 3 Amigos, you are not allowed to criticize, insinuate, allude to, suggest, portend, or entertain any negative thoughts with regard to the US of A.
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby Cid_Yama » Sat 05 Apr 2008, 17:29:09

Actually, Tyler_JC grasps what's going on financially, and this goes beyond political partisanship.
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby Cid_Yama » Sat 05 Apr 2008, 17:33:24

<b>Securitization is officially dead</b>

It appears that the FASB has removed the concept of QSPEs, which is the enabling "piece" to make off-balance-sheet securitizations possible, from the FASB set of regulations, specifically, FAS 140.

As such it appears that all financial institutions will have to reclaim all SIVs back onto their balance sheets no later than the start of 2009.

This is a watershed event.

In short Investment Banks have ~6 months to get their act together and their capital up, and then they are going to have to start integrating these vehicles back onto their consolidated financial statements.

link
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby Tyler_JC » Sat 05 Apr 2008, 17:45:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cid_Yama', 'A')ctually, Tyler_JC grasps what's going on financially, and this goes beyond political partisanship.


Thanks for the support. :)

I don't think that the current economic mess is going to cause Europe to break off ties with the USA but it could mean a big decrease in the amount of American debt purchased by Europeans. It's already started.

That means higher interest rates for US consumers regardless of what kind of magic the Fed tries to pull.

And yet someone is buying US government 30-year bonds at 4.5%!

Inflation is running higher than that figure depending on how you calculate it.

And if you're a foreign investor, forget it. You might as well keep your Euros or Pounds under your pillows.

This isn't sustainable. The US government is going to have to offer real interest rates on its debt or stop overspending because foreigners aren't going to sit by and let their investments slowly evaporate.

Not that I'm saying anything new here...
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby mos6507 » Sun 06 Apr 2008, 04:43:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('lateStarter', '
')Watch out! 2 out of the 3 Amigos have already checked in against you.


Congratulations Cid, you have disciples willing to fight for you.
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby bobcousins » Sun 06 Apr 2008, 05:58:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cid_Yama', 'E')xcuse me, you're an Idiot. The wheels did come off. If not for the frantic scrambling by the Fed over the following weekend(March 15-16) to prevent the bankruptcy of Bear Stearns (and the subsequent pricing of the Alphabet soup they were holding), the financial markets would have collapsed. They barely avoided taking the bullet that weekend.


You contradict yourself. If collapse was prevented, then by definition the wheels didn't come off.

PO.com is for crazy people, and theoildrum is for sane people, is that how it works?
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby skeptik » Sun 06 Apr 2008, 06:28:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bobcousins', '[')
PO.com is for crazy people, and theoildrum is for sane people, is that how it works?
Yup..pretty much as far as I can see. I don't think The Oil Drum would tolerate golem for more than 5 minutes. They do at least insist on staying on topic - Peak Oil and the other issues which it effects and which feed into it, and a high level of civility.

peakoil.com is I think too tolerant of trolls which detract from its credibility. Discussion forums should never be allowed to become a free for all democracy. I'm all for totalitarianism, strict censorship and arbitrary executions by the moderators - pour encourager les autres. Otherwise a certain segment of society will engage in outrageous online behaviours which it never would do in 'flesher' society, for fear of getting a punch in the mouth.
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby wisconsin_cur » Sun 06 Apr 2008, 08:07:51

There was this radical idea a few centuries ago, that people (at least landed white males) are capable of discerning information and make decisions for themselves. As time went on we decided to extend that, first to white males without land, then black males (with some significant regional discrepencies across time) and then we decided women too we capable of thinking for and making decisions for themselves.

If the cost of this progress is that I have to exercise the effort to decide which posters to listen to and which to ignore then I am willing to undertake the effort. I am lazy, but I am not that lazy.

I have learned a lot from individuals who could not meaningfully contribute "on topic" at the oil drum. We are not just talking about resource depletion but the impact of that on our societies, towns and lives. That is a broad spectrum and needs an open forum. If the cost of that is some trash talk, big deal. Suck it up. Deal with it. Free speech is messy but it is the best problem to have given the alternatives.

I love the oil drum, I learn a lot from it. It does not, however, help me think about how I need to respond to best prepare me and mine for the days to come, at least not in the same way as PO.com
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby Twilight » Sun 06 Apr 2008, 10:47:51

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Iaato', 'T')he second issue is that the Euro is an amalgam of different countries with varying allegiance to the joint currency. We need some Europeans to speak to this, because I don't know much about the situation other than the idea that German housewives, for instance, would rather go back to the Deutschemark. So I don't know if this economic collapse would be the optimal time to retreat to individual currencies? Given peak oil, I'm thinking that this is the fallback plan.


My interpretation reading the Eurosceptic British press is there is a widespread perception that in an economic crisis the EU will act like a policy straitjacket. After all, what is it supposedly against?

- Deficit spending
- Protectionism
- Vertically integrated national champion industries
- State aid and market intervention
- Lots of other things considered unsportsmanlike

Once you have stopped laughing at the hypocrisy, a problem becomes obvious. It is only to be expected that some governments will approach the challenge of impending economic collapse with lots more of the above. Yet the man from Brussels and Strasbourg will say "No New Deal for you!" So imagine how your posited German housewife (who I am sure is an independent professional woman in her own right) would react to that and being asked for a handout.

As the long-running arguments over the Stability and Growth Pact, Common Agricultural Policy and ownership unbundling of energy networks show, ultimately everyone wants to keep their entitlement and receive an exemption from anything onerous. This is not helped by the fact that many of the people sitting in those fancy buildings are ultimately answerable not only to their domestic governments, but to their respective political parties.

There is naturally the question of how long the ECB should continue to prop up failing economies. For the sake of argument, let us assume it ends up holding half a trillion euros of worthless Mediterranean property bubble debt. Who is the ECB? Will the people of Germany, France and others take kindly to the thought that they are keeping the doors open on criminally mismanaged foreign banks for the greater good of Europe? Domestic banks, maybe they can swallow that. But if rightly or wrongly a perception spread that they were propping up Spain or Ireland? That would certainly cause problems at the ballot box in Britain!

Tyler's argument that leaving the monetary union to solve foreign debt problems would mean self-destruction is persuasive. So if they are trapped, I wonder what the implications would be for the stronger nations leaving the weaker ones to fall on hard times and tightening up open borders in defiance of the EU? That is what I see as more likely. We could just end up with relative extremes of wealth across the continent, a standard Euro in one country becoming precious in another. In principle little different to regional variations in Russia today.
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby MrBill » Mon 07 Apr 2008, 06:18:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Gerben', 'I')n the Netherlands we didn't want this currency. We had one of the strongest currencies in the world. We didn't get to vote about it or we would still have our Guilders. Then the French cheated by artificially strengthening their currency before the exchange rates were fixed. Finally the rules all parties had agreed upon were changed in a majority vote.

We got back on them by rejecting some treaty we all needed.

Atm. ppl. dislike 'Europe' but not the Euro. I do a lot of business internationally and the Euro makes it all a lot easier.



France, Italy, Spain, Portugal and Greece 'cheated' by devaluing their home currencies, and lying about their public finances, before joining the ERM. That made the deutschmark and guilder stronger than their fundamentals would suggest and therefore less competitive after the introduction of the euro. However, since the euro's inception it has forced Germany and Holland to become more productive, and hence hold down inflation and improve their competitiveness in the long-run.

France, Italy, Spain, Portugal and Greece's problem is that they squandered this one off chance to improve their competitiveness with the stimulous from lower euro interest rates compared to their legacy rates. Now they are not competitive and that stimulous has worn off. They are now stuck with a strong euro that suits Germany and Holland, but is likely too strong for those Club Med countries.

As for the other comments comparing and contrasting US banks with European banks it should be made clear that although there is only one ECB to coordinate monetary policy each central bank within the ERM is responsible for supervision of their own banks. The ECB is by law not allowed to be a lender of last resort. It is not allowed to buy the debt of its member states. Fiscal policy is still independent within member countries, but 'nominally' subject to Maastricht Criteria limits.

Any bailout of domestic European banks would run afoul not of the ECB, but of the EU's competition watchdog. The credit crisis is a global phenonmenon and therefore its in the ECB's best interest to work with other central banks - including the Fed - towards a solution. As we know some European banks have been hit just as hard as some US banks. One cannot pretend that all US banks are unsound and that all European banks are healthy. That is simply not the case.

There is a very clear rationale behind marking trading assets to market. However, on a practical level if there is no liquid market then that means marking them effectively to zero. Below any reasonable assumption of their salvage or intrinsic value. That means huge write-offs; more bank losses; more provisioning; less liquidity; and ultimately less lending to the real economy. That may be desirable on one level, but it would be the start of a global depression on the other hand.

If it is a global depression you desire then the quickest way to get there is to market to market assets to zero in the banking sector as that would immediately translate non-performing loans with some salvage value into debt defaults and bankruptcies.
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Re: Cross Atlantic interbank war on horizon

Postby Tyler_JC » Mon 07 Apr 2008, 13:07:18

By "Italian Central Bank" I was talking about the hypothetical new central bank of Italy that would have to be created if they left the EU and the Euro.

The ECB would then be bailing out another country, not a member state because Italy would be a non-member in this future scenario.

Again, highly unlikely because of the cost of that kind of radical move.
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