Is this the Big One?
By Jeff Faux
April 23, 2008
Opinion pieces and speeches by EPI staff and associates.
[ THIS ARTICLE ORIGINALLY APPEARED IN
THE NATION ON APRIL 14, 2008.]
Is This the Big One?
By Jeff
Faux
For more than a decade, we Americans have been living on an
economic San Andreas fault--a foundation of fracturing
competitiveness covered by unsustainable consumer spending with
money borrowed from foreigners. A financial earthquake was
inevitable. We don't know how high on the recession Richter scale
the current crisis will take us, but it increasingly looks like, as
they say in San Francisco, "The Big One."
Since the last Big One, the Great Depression of the 1930s, we have
had eleven small to medium recessions, lasting an average of ten
months. The most severe--two back-to-back downturns that began in
1979--drove price increases and the unemployment rate to double
digits.
We're not at those levels yet. But the structural supports
underneath our shop-till-we-drop economy are considerably weaker.
For starters, we have a historic depression in the housing market.
Americans' total mortgage debt now exceeds their home equity, for
the first time since 1945. Housing prices have dropped 10 percent
since last spring, followed by record foreclosures. Most economists
expect them to drop at least another 10 percent, which could leave
more than 14 million households--at least 16 percent of the
total--better off if they just walked away from their homes. Prices
could go even lower.
Until last year, housing prices in most places had risen rapidly
since the 1990s. This enabled middle-class homeowners with stagnant
wages and maxed-out credit cards to keep spending by refinancing
their mortgages. The housing boom also spawned the now infamous
subprime mortgage--a scheme devised by Main Street realtors and
Wall Street bankers to finance home buying with loans that let the
borrower buy in with little money down but carried high interest
rates. The expensive payments would be made later by refinancing
the mortgage as prices continued to rise. These subprimes were sold
to middle-class strivers upgrading to McMansions as well as to the
working poor.
The increased demand pushed housing prices further into the
stratosphere--until, inevitably, they fell back to earth. When the
subprime borrowers could no longer make their payments, foreclosure
signs went up, lowering the value of other houses in the
neighborhood. The refinancing spigot shut off, retail sales
sputtered and by January the economy was shedding jobs.
But it is not the squeeze on homeowners that is giving our central
bankers nightmares. It is the blowback of housing deflation on the
country's massively overleveraged financial markets, which has
seriously constricted the flow of credit--the lifeblood of the
world's largest debtor economy.
In a typical deal, subprime mortgages were sold to investment
companies, where they were commingled with prime mortgages to back
up new securities that could be touted as both safe and
high-yielding. This new debt paper was then peddled to investors,
who used it as collateral for "margin" loans to buy yet more stocks
and bonds. At each change of hands, fees and underwriting charges
added to the total claims on the original shaky mortgages. The
result was a frenzied bidding up of prices for a bewildering maze
of arcane securities that neither buyers nor sellers could
accurately value.
Giant Ponzi scheme? Not to worry, responded the Wall Street
geniuses. By spreading risks among more people, the miracle of
"diversity" was actually turning bad loans into good ones. Anyway,
banks were buying insurance policies against default, which in turn
were transformed into a set of even murkier securities called
"credit default swaps" and marketed to hedge funds, pension
managers and in some cases back to the banks that were being
insured in the first place. At the end of 2007 the market for these
swaps was estimated at $45.5 trillion--roughly twice as large as
all US stock markets combined.
This huge pyramid of debt was made possible by thirty years of
relentless deregulation of financial markets, culminating in the
1999 repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act, which had prohibited banks
from dealing in high-risk securities. In effect, Washington
regulators became passive enablers to Wall Street's financial binge
drinkers. When they crashed--for example, in the savings-and-loan
and junk-bond debacles of the 1980s, the Long-Term Capital
Management collapse of 1998 and the Enron and dot-com crashes of
the early 2000s--the government cleaned up the mess with taxpayers'
money and let them go back to the bar.
So here we go again. When subprime homeowners stopped paying, the
prices of the mortgage-backed securities used as collateral fell.
Banks demanded that their borrowers pay up or cover their margins.
Panicked selling by borrowers further lowered the securities'
prices, triggering more margin calls and more defaults. Massive
losses piled up at places like Citigroup, Countrywide, Merrill
Lynch and Morgan Stanley, and cascaded back into the insurance
companies. At the end of February, the huge insurer American
International Group reported the largest quarterly loss, $5
billion, since the company started in 1919.
After some delay, the Federal Reserve Board last summer started
lowering interest rates on loans to the banks. But in a phrase from
the bank crisis of the 1930s, it was like "pushing on a string."
The bankers' problem was not that money was too expensive to lend
out; it was that they were afraid they wouldn't get their money
back. When they did lend, they jacked up the rates to compensate
for the higher perceived risks--even to solid customers. The Port
Authority of New York and New Jersey suddenly had to borrow money
at 20 percent. The State of Pennsylvania couldn't finance its
college student loan program. Fannie Mae, the fund created by the
federal government to support perfectly sound middle-class housing,
struggled to sell its bonds.
In mid-March, after anguished discussions between Federal Reserve
officials and Wall Street moguls, the Fed agreed to provide $400
billion in new cash loans to banks and investment firms. Days later
came the shock of eighty-five-year-old Bear Stearns going belly up.
In an unprecedented deal, the Fed immediately lent JPMorgan Chase
the money to buy Bear Stearns, taking suspect mortgage-backed paper
as collateral. Bear's stockholders had already taken a hosing when
the stock crashed. The big winners were the company's creditors and
insurers, who were saved from the consequences of their bad
business judgment.
We are now staring into the abyss. The Bear Stearns bailout has
created a presumption of a safety net under any major stockbroker,
in addition to any major bank. Rumors are that Lehman Brothers and
Citigroup may be next. The Fed could handle a Lehman crash. But the
collapse of Citigroup, the world's largest bank, would be
catastrophic, bankrupting businesses, other banks and consumers and
cutting off credit for state and local governments. And it could
stretch the Fed to the limit of its resources.
There is a widespread assumption that there is no bottom to the
pockets of the Federal Reserve. Not quite. The Fed has a finite
amount of actual assets--mostly Treasury obligations backed by the
"full faith and credit" of the government, which is a commitment to
raise taxes if necessary to pay the debt. These assets total about
$800 billion, some $400 billion of which have been obligated to
back up loans. If the loans default, the Fed has to sell the
Treasury notes in order to settle. If there are enough of these
failures, the Fed could exhaust its assets. It would then have to
resort to really "printing money"--issuing promissory notes not
backed up by anything--or get bailed out by the Treasury, putting
taxpayers further in the hole. Long before the Fed is down to the
last of its stash of Treasury notes, more skittish domestic and
foreign investors will flee the dollar. Interest rates would
balloon and prices of oil and other imports would skyrocket. Credit
would freeze, investment would plummet and tens of millions of
Americans would be out on the street, with neither a job nor a roof
over their heads.
Unlikely? Yes, still. Unthinkable? Not anymore. Estimates of Wall
Street's losses already run well up to $500 billion. A 20 percent
drop in housing prices would translate into a $4 trillion drop in
the value of housing assets. A large chunk of that loss would
destroy the value that underlies the mortgage-backed securities the
Fed has now agreed to guarantee.
But well short of such a worst-case scenario, the country seems
headed for major economic damage that will severely test whatever
we have left of safety nets. It took five years from the time the
recovery began in 1983 for the unemployment rate to return to
pre-recession levels. Once we reach the bottom of this trough, it
could be a very long time before American consumers, whose spending
accounts for some 70 percent of our economy, crawl out of the debt
hole and back into the shopping mall. The Japanese have still not
recovered from their similar housing/debt crash in the early
1990s.
Virtually everyone who has studied Japan in the 1990s and the
United States in the 1930s concludes that in both cases the
government acted too late with too little in order to stop the debt
dominoes from tumbling through the entire economy.
But the American political system seems as seized up as the credit
markets. As the Federal Reserve tries desperately to put an
overdosed Wall Street on life support, President Bush remains
dizzily detached, periodically repeating his moronic mantra against
government intervention in the free market. At a press conference
that is impossible to parody, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson
announced the Administration "plan" to safeguard the nation against
a future crisis. It boiled down to a hope that the finance industry
would do a better job of policing itself and that individual states
would see to any new laws that might be needed. In what the New
York Times dryly reported were his "most extensive comments to date
about the credit and market problems," Paulson, formerly co-chair
of the investment firm Goldman Sachs, firmly told reporters that he
was not interested in finding "scapegoats." No kidding.
In response to pressure from Democrats, the White House at the end
of January did reluctantly agree to a fiscal stimulus. But Bush
demanded that it be limited to the only economic policy he
understands: tax cuts. Democrats caved, and the government started
printing up $160 billion in a one-time rebate to consumers and
businesses, which will be sent out in May. Too little, too late,
and likely to be spent paying down debt and buying more Chinese
imports.
Senate majority leader Harry Reid has proposed a second round of
stimulus--this time through public investment, putting people to
work rebuilding bridges, schools and other infrastructure. But no
one is talking about a level of fiscal injection needed to
counterbalance the drop in consumer and business spending.
If we use the 1979-83 experience as a guide, we'd need some $600
billion to $700 billion in deficit spending. But in those days, the
United States was still a creditor nation. Thanks to three decades
of trade deficits, topped by the costs of the Iraq War, we now
depend on foreign lenders, increasingly worried about the value of
their US bonds. As Lee Price, chief economist of the House
Appropriations Committee, put it, "We need as big a stimulus as our
foreign lenders will allow us to get away with."
To give some relief to those at the bottom of this tottering
financial edifice, Barney Frank and Chris Dodd, chairs of,
respectively, the House Financial Services and Senate Banking
committees, are proposing updated versions of a Depression-era
housing rescue program. The government would furnish $300-$400
billion to buy up existing home mortgages at prices marked down to
reflect the current lower values. The plan could refinance 1-2
million homes. It may not be enough, but it probably represents the
outer limit of what is possible in the twilight year of a White
House whose economic competence is in the twilight zone.
Given the way Washington works, the Frank/Dodd proposal would need
business support. Yet despite the fact that it would bring
desperately needed trust back to the system, the capos of the Wall
Street mob are unenthusiastic. Being forced to acknowledge losses
on their books could toss a few more of them out of their jobs at a
time when the supply of golden parachutes may be getting thin.
Better to hunker down and whimper for more welfare from the
Fed.
Some are already getting direct bailouts from big government. But
it's not coming from the US government. Foreign-government-owned
"sovereign wealth funds" are now buying sizable equity shares to
shore up battered firms. Citigroup, where the Saudis are already
the chief stockholder, sold roughly $20 billion of itself to Abu
Dhabi, Singapore and Kuwait. The Chinese just bought 10 percent of
Morgan Stanley, and Merrill Lynch sold a 9 percent stake to
Singapore. With oil above $100 a barrel, more of Wall Street is
certain to wind up owned in the Middle East. Some members of
Congress still warn that these countries are looking for political
influence in America's financial heart, rather than optimizing
their rate of return. They are probably right, but the nationalist
fires that flared up against Dubai ownership of US ports in 2006
have largely been banked. Beggars can't be choosers.
Another hope is that the Europeans, the Chinese, whoever, will take
over our role as the world's consumer of last resort. As the
recession slows US imports, countries that have grown fat on
exports to us will certainly have to shift more of their growth to
their own domestic market. But to expect that the leaders of other
nations would put their own economies at risk by running up trade
deficits in order to save us Americans from the consequences of our
own folly seems stunningly naïve.
So if this is not The Big One, it is likely to be A Big One--and a
long one.
We could still get lucky, of course. Republicans facing re-election
might persuade Bush to support a big fiscal stimulus and housing
rescue. Home prices may miraculously stabilize. Tomorrow, bankers
may wake up like Scrooge on Christmas morning and just start
lending. The Chinese may start importing American-made cars...
Otto von Bismarck once remarked, "There is a Providence that
protects idiots, drunkards, children and the United States of
America." Let's hope it's still true.
Jeff Faux is founder and a distinguished fellow
at the Economic Policy Institute in Washington, D.C.
[ POSTED TO VIEWPOINTS ON APRIL 23, 2008. ]
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