A con game is being set up—some regulators are smart enough to know that the next crisis is unavoidable, so a decoy, a Fall Guy, has been set up that absolves them of blame.
In late 2014, financial regulators began issuing warnings via mainstream media that there is a whole industry—they called it “Shadow Banking,” which threatens the stability of the global financial system. Shadow banking is banking, except that it is outside the direct control of financial regulators.
The initial illusion is that the real story is in the subtext: “Give us more control over Shadow Banking otherwise we could have another global financial crisis.” However, no request for such control is spotted. So, keep peeling the onion, and one may perceive a con game being set up—some regulators are smart enough to know that the next crisis is unavoidable, or at least highly likely, so a decoy, a Fall Guy, has been set up that absolves them of blame. Just in case.
To arrive at what seems like a conspiracy theory, one must first discuss fundamentals.
Whether we are focusing on a single corporation, or an entire sovereign economy, or indeed, even the world economy, a financial crisis is a reflection of an underlying malaise.
To understand that, let us look at a simple illustration: Assume that a corporation is solely in the business of owning and leasing out $1 billion worth of container ships. In one unfortunate accident, $300 million worth of ships sink. The salvage operation is uneconomic. There is a loss of $300 million of wealth. Someone, somewhere, must bear the total cost. It could be the insurer. If the ships were uninsured, the corporation bears that loss. If the corporation is funded with equity alone, the equity holders lose 30% of their value. If the corporation is funded with 20% equity and 80% debt, it is insolvent, and even the debtholders have lost one-eighth of their value.
The underlying malaise is that valuable ships have sunk. Somebody’s financials, in aggregate, must reflect that cost. The loss of the ships is the economics of it. Financial statements need to reflect the real-world economics.
The economic crisis in 2009 was not set off by asset destruction. However, overinvestment in a sector causes value loss. If social engineering causes more houses to be built than can be economically justified, eventually reality steps in, and the capital stock loses value.
Now, in a free and dynamic economy, value shifts often occur. When rent-paying, physical-location travel agencies lose business to internet-based offerings of the same service, there is a value shift, but not a dead loss. In the years leading up to 2009, there was an absolute value loss. Once the deadweight value loss had accumulated to the point where the bubble burst, it had to show up on financial statements somewhere. Banks that instigated the overinvestment at the Government’s behest, took some of the loss themselves, palmed some off to investors who bought into that risk, and sold some of it to Government agencies that underwrote that risk. The sum total of “someone, somewhere” must bear the aggregate value loss in some proportion.
Shadow banking that concerns the regulators is in the business of making loans to those who invest. Certainly, banking can facilitate mal-investment. However, banks, shadow banks, and their clients are not in the business of creating losses. Losses are unanticipated outcomes, the cost of operating in a dynamic economy.
A derivative is essentially a wager. If I bet you, $50 that it will rain in Chicago tomorrow, and it doesn’t, I lose $50, and you gain $50. That’s a zero-sum game. Some wagers between banks, shadow banks, and their clients are exceptionally large, but in a credit netting system, their outcomes are netted off; in any event, they can only create large transfers of wealth and value.
It is the Government, which sets up a favoritism system, and the central bank, which bastardizes interest rates, which create conditions for endemic net value losses.
Those then are the fundamentals.
The IMF released its Global Financial Stability Report in October 2014. In November 2014, the G-20 Financial Stability Board (FSB) released a data-rich report on Shadow Banking.
News outlets from the Guardian to the New York Times, from News Limited to the Australian Financial Review, pounced on both reports. As recently as 14 January 2015, Bloomberg was reporting, “The scale of it [shadow banking] is almost unfathomable: $75 trillion worldwide. The Financial Stability Board says it poses “systemic risks” to the global financial system. It’s growing at phenomenal rates in China and India and booming in Western banking capitals as well,” and, further, “With so much money sloshing around outside the official system, shadow banking makes it harder for countries like China and India to control their economies by changing interest rates or jiggering the money supply.”
It was just too easy for news outlets to pick at the salacious, newsworthy bits and send out exactly the messages that the regulators wanted to, which were:
The short answer is yes.
Sovereign debt. Over US$61 trillion of debt stands issued by major world Governments. On top of that, there are guarantees, non-sovereign state, provincial, city, and county debt that add substantially to the burden. Since the bulk of the money is not invested in any current or future income-producing asset, it is, economically, unrepayable.
Imagine a manufacturing corporation, which has issued large amounts of interest-paying debt. But instead of investing in plant and machinery, it donates the money so raised. Even if the donations are, in the perspective of some, to noteworthy causes, like subsidizing healthcare, and sponsoring the arts; for the corporation, the day of reckoning is inevitable.
For each sovereign, however, there are three ways out of this situation:
One is the “lose office if in Government” scenario (e.g. Greece, Queensland) and Two is an instant panic, riots-in-the-streets, scenario. In Austerity, the return-budget-to-surplus pain hits those who lose benefits, and those who lose income via unemployment. Default hurts the institutions who invested in the government bonds, and they pass the damage on to specific, identifiable investors. Theft is executed by cheapening the currency, as the U.S. Federal Reserve and the ECB are currently undertaking—taking value from savers, basic-goods-biased consumers (the poor), the old, and the unemployed, to repay bondholders in nominal terms. In Theft, the precise spread of pain is unpredictable.
Nevertheless, whether Austerity, Default, or Theft—the mechanism does not alter the fact that someone, somewhere, (in aggregate) will bear the loss of value that has already piled up. Then the media will look for blame. And the agencies that can foreshadow this occurrence, have set up the perfect Fall Guy for the media narrative: Shadow Banking—the shady sharks of high finance, the wheeler dealers, the derivative contracts, the clandestine lenders that actually try to give savers a true interest rate, the unlit operations of the hedge funds operating out of the Cayman Islands.
With strident righteousness, the derelict mobsters—politicians, central bankers, and their sycophantic economists, will make their getaway, and start pouring the next round of a heady drink called Stimulus.
This time, many more than a few innocent practitioners, the Fall Guys, quickly tried and condemned by the court of brainwashed public opinion, will land in jail for decades. Overzealous prosecutors, anxious for trophy heads, federal judges, as ignorant of economics as they are knowledgeable of law, and mainstream media, playing to the public outcry baying for blood, will unleash a bloodcurdling symphony that will make elephants stampede and send tigers scurrying back into their dens. It won’t help that some of the Fall Guys will have broken a law or two; one, maybe two, will even be guilty of fraud. An entire industry will be tainted. With strident righteousness, the derelict mobsters—politicians, central bankers, and their sycophantic economists, will make their getaway, and start pouring the next round of a heady drink called Stimulus; it was the tonic that flattened the Roman Empire.
Groundhog Day, replete with déjà vu, beckons.
What are you thoughts on people having their money outside of the banking and investment cartel system altogether like with insurance based plans like annuities and/or whole life policies? Insurance is a system that is outside and prior to the Fed, and is not based on fractional reserves but on 100% reserves. This is especially true for whole life policies which, depending on your circumstances can be very flexible and do better then risky conventional investments.
Thanks for the question, Lorin. When money is cheapened and inflation is understated, even CPI-indexed policies could suffer capital losses in terms of true worth, the non-indexed fiat money return could suffer even more. But my concern in this piece is not to try and outline investment strategies, but to point out that the regulators have already prosecuted a false case against those outside the main system, for the crises (plural) that will periodically plague the expansionist fiat money system, and the ignorant mainstream media has bought it hook, line and sinker.