
Great Depression Online
Long Beach, CA
February 11, 2011
Inside This Issue You Will Discover…
*** The Stock Market’s Divine Right
*** The Next Shoe to Drop
*** Meredith Whitney’s Critics Are Conmen
*** And More
The Stock Market’s Divine Right
Yesterday the DOW did something completely unexpected…it
went down. It was the first time since January 28th that the
DOW closed lower than the day before. How could this happen?
With Bernanke juicing financial markets, and all,
is it not the stock market’s divine right to only go up?
A rising stock market, remember, was supposed to just be
one of the fringe benefits of QE2. The real purpose was
raising bond prices. Alas, what Bernanke wants and what he
gets are two different things entirely. For bond prices are
not going up, they’re going down. And conversely bond yields
are going up.
~~~~~~The Greater Depression~~~~~~
Our view of the Great Depression of the 1930s is a little
different from that of most people. In our eyes, Franklin Roosevelt
wasn’t a hero, he was a villain. Nearly everything he did served to
extend and deepen the economic downturn.
With the exception of supporting the 21st Amendment for the
repeal of Prohibition, Roosevelt’s involvement in the economy was an
unmitigated disaster. But in popular memory, that failure is
obscured by U.S. success in WW2, over which Roosevelt presided.
Today, unfortunately, Obama and his minions are taking
Roosevelt as a model and are straining to repeat his mistakes.
Because the distortions in today’s economy are far greater than
those in the 1920s and 1930s, and since the public now relies upon
government far more than it did in those days, I don’t see any way
around a more serious depression – the Greater Depression. It’s
been going on since 2008, will get much worse, and has years left to
run.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In fact, since QE2 was announced back on November 03, 2010,
10-Year Treasury yields are up nearly 50 percent. What this
means is it costs the government 50-percent more to take out a
10-year loan than it did just three months ago. But rising
yields are of little concern to the Feds in the short term.
However, municipalities may not be so lucky.
The Next Shoe to Drop
Back in December, financial analyst Meredith Whitney told
the world on 60-Minutes that the municipal bond market was the “next
shoe to drop” in the ongoing financial crisis. Whitney even
suggested there could be 50 to 100 sizable municipal bond defaults
reaching hundreds of billions of dollars this year.
With dropping tax revenues and rising borrowing costs
Whitney’s analysis seems very possible. Yet, for some reason,
other analysts were infuriated.
Something fishy is going on. You can smell it.
The criticism Whitney has received reeks like rotting mackerel on
the deck of Long Beach’s Veterans Memorial Pier. What gives?
To answer this question, and many more, we bring you
today’s guest essay by Mark Crovelli, Columnist for LewRockwell.com.
Enjoy,
M.N. Gordon
Great Depression Online
---
Meredith Whitney’s Critics Are Conmen
Imagine for a second that you are a financial analyst,
financial advisor, institutional investor, or trader who specializes
in municipal bonds. Your goal, presumably, is to determine which
municipalities in the United States are creditworthy enough to
justify lending money to them.
Ideally, you hope to be able to pick up bonds that are dirt
cheap, have a high rate of return, and that have very low chance of
defaulting. This goal is usually difficult to achieve, because
bonds with the lowest risk of default usually have the lowest rate
of return, and vice versa for those with the highest rate of
default.
Under certain circumstances, however, it is sometimes
possible to pick up low-risk bonds at bargain-basement prices. If,
for example, thousands of banks are forced to sell off their bond
portfolios to cover losses they are suffering on other toxic assets
on their balance sheets (mortgage backed securities, for instance),
bond traders like yourself can take good bonds off their hands for a
pittance.
As another example, if people become unreasonably bearish
about the creditworthiness of municipal governments and start
liquidating their bond portfolios, (because, say, a financial
analyst that people trust makes a completely idiotic call), you can
pick up the bonds they are stupidly selling at ridiculously low
prices.
As a professional investor, you love it when these rare
events present themselves. Since you know the market, and you have
an insider’s view into the creditworthiness of municipal
governments, you want nothing more than to be able to buy up good,
dirt-cheap bonds and make a veritable killing off the interest.
Early retirements are secured in such ways.
Given that you stand to make a fortune by buying up bonds
that people stupidly sell under rare circumstances, is it
conceivable that you would go on television and try to talk people
out of selling their bonds cheaply to you? The answer, of course,
is that you would never do such a thing as a professional investor.
That would be like a homebuyer going out of his way to publicly
talk sellers into charging him higher prices, or an art dealer going
on television to tell his artists to charge him more. Bankruptcy
and unemployment are secured in such ways.
Yet this is precisely what we are being asked to believe
about bond traders, financial analysts, and other supposedly
enlightened personalities in New York and Washington, who have
smeared Meredith Whitney in droves in the wake of her bombshell call
on the municipal bond market. Whitney is predicting “50 to 100
sizable defaults” in the municipal bond space this year alone.
The tamping down of Whitney’s call has been truly
remarkable, given that the majority of the people blasting Whitney
stand to make an absolute fortune if she is wrong. Indeed, the only
groups who do not stand to make money off of Whitney’s call, if she
is wrong, are the municipal governments themselves and investors who
are too dumb or slow to take advantage of it.
Think about it. If Whitney is right about this call, smart
investors will all get out of municipal bonds immediately, if they
are not out of them already. If she is wrong, however, and people
flee municipal bonds unreasonably just on the basis of her
reputation (she accurately predicted the collapse of Citigroup
before anyone), the smart investors will still get out of municipal
bonds immediately so that they can buy back the same bonds in eight
months for half the price. Either way, smart investors will get out
now, and they will not try to talk other people out of selling.
This is especially true if Whitney is wrong, because smart
investors will want other people to sell off massively so that they
can buy back the bonds as cheaply as possible.
Given this, the fact that so-called professional investors
are trying to smear Whitney and stop a sell-off reeks of a con. At
best, they are trying to prop up a collapsing market long enough to
get themselves out. In other words, they are public liars at best.
At worst, they realize that Whitney is right, are holding massive
amounts of this toxic paper, and are praying to God for either a
miracle or a bailout.
This is not going to turn out well for the little guys who
are taken in by this con and hold onto their municipal bonds.
Especially since Meredith Whitney is right.
Sincerely,
Mark Crovelli
LewRockwell.com
P.S. Mark Crovelli, a
Columnist for LewRockwell.com, writes from Denver, Colorado and can
be contacted at Mark.Crovelli@gmail.com.
Learn the Difference Between Recession and Depression
Return from Meredith Whitney's Critics Are Conmen to the Great Depression Online.
We Respect Your Privacy
We Will Not Share Your Email
With Anyone Else
How To Protect Your
Wealth And Profit During Financial Disaster