The Federal
Reserve ran another "stress test" on major financial institutions
and has determined that 15 of the 19 tested are safe, even in the
most extreme circumstances: an unemployment rate of 13%, a 50% decline
in stock prices, and a further 21% decline in housing prices. The
problem is that the most important factor that will determine these
banks' long-term viability was purposefully overlooked – interest
rates.
In the wake
of the Credit Crunch, the Fed solved the problem of resetting adjustable-rate
mortgages by essentially putting the entire country on an teaser
rate. Just like those homeowners who really couldn't afford their
houses, our balance sheet looks fine unless you factor in higher
rates. The recent stress tests assume market interest rates stay
low, the federal funds rate remains near-zero, and 10-year Treasuries
keep below 2%. Why are those safe assumptions? Historic rates have
averaged around 6%, a level that would cause every major US bank
to fail!
The truth is
that higher rates are the biggest threat to the banking system and
the Fed knows it. These institutions remain leveraged to the hilt
and dependent upon short-term financing to stay afloat. While American
families have had to stop paying off one credit card by moving the
balance to another one, this behavior continues on Wall Street.
In fact, this
gets to the heart of why the Fed is keeping interest rates so low.
Despite endorsing phony economic data that shows the US is in recovery,
the Fed knows full well that the American economy cannot move forward
without its low interest-rate crutches. Ben Bernanke is trying desperately
to pretend that he can keep rates low forever, which is why that
variable was deliberately left out of the stress tests.
Unfortunately,
rates are kept low with money-printing, and those funds are starting
to bubble over into consumer prices. Bernanke acknowledged that
the price of oil is rising, but said without justification the he
expects the price to subside. This shows that Bernanke either doesn't
know or doesn't care that the real culprit behind rising oil prices
is inflation. McDonald's, meanwhile, is eliminating items from its
increasingly unprofitable Dollar Menu. A dollar apparently can't
even buy you a small order of fries anymore.
Unless the
Fed expects us to live with steadily increasing prices for basic
goods and services, it will eventually be forced to allow interest
rates to rise. However, if it does so, it will quickly bankrupt
the US Treasury, the banking system, and any Americans left with
flexible-rate debt.
That is why
the Fed feels it has no choice but to lie about inflation. If it
admits inflation exists, then it may be pressured to stop it. However,
if it stops the presses, it will bring on the real crash that I
have been warning about for the past decade. Just as the Fed's response
to the 2001 crisis led directly to the 2008 crisis, its response
to 2008 is leading inevitably to either deep austerity or a currency
crisis.
Imagine this
scenario:
When the banks
fail as a result of higher interest rates, the FDIC will also go
bankrupt. Without access to credit, the US Treasury will not be
able to bail out the insurance fund – which only contains $9.2
billion as of this writing. So, not only will shareholders and bondholders
lose their money next time, but so too will depositors!
Americans are
much less self-sufficient than they were in the Great Depression.
One only needs to look at Greece to see how a service-based economy
deals with this kind of economic collapse – crime, riots, vandalism,
and strikes.
There are a
few countermeasures left in the government's arsenal, including
selling the nation's gold, but there comes a point at which the
charade can go on no longer. The sharply widening current account
deficit shows that we are becoming even more dependent on imports
that we cannot afford. Just as homeowners had a good run pulling
equity from their overvalued properties, Washington and Wall Street
will soon find the music turned off. And there will be no one there
to help them clean up the mess left behind.
I propose a
new rule of thumb: until true economic growth resumes in the distant
future, the fed funds rate should also be used as the "Federal
Reserve credibility rate." We'll use a scale of 1-20, which
is approximately how high rates went under Paul Volcker to restore
confidence in the dollar. So, until the end of this crisis, if the
fed funds rate is near-zero, all the Fed's statements, forecasts,
and stress tests should be given near-zero credibility. When rates
rise to 5%, the Fed's words can be assumed to be ¼ credible.
When they hit 20%, that would be a Fed whose words you could take
to the bank – if you can still find one.
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