PDA

View Full Version : Next bubble: $600 trillion? (TEOTWAWKI)



mamboni
21st April 2010, 08:51 PM
Next bubble: $600 trillion?
Cities, states, universities could sink from monster derivatives meltdown

April 19, 2010



Jerome R. Corsi
© 2010 WorldNetDaily



Bank of International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland


As interest rates begin to rise worldwide, losses in derivatives may end up bankrupting a wide range of institutions, including municipalities, state governments, major insurance companies, top investment houses, commercial banks and universities.

Defaults now beginning to occur in a number of European cities prefigure what may end up being the largest financial bubble ever to burst – a bubble that today amounts to more than $600 trillion.

The Bank of International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, now estimates derivatives – the complex bets financial institutions and sophisticated institutional investors make with one another on everything from commodities options to credit swaps – topped $604 trillion worldwide at the end of June 2009.

To comprehend the relative magnitude of derivative contracts globally, the CIA Factbook estimates the 2009 Gross Domestic Product, or GDP, of the world was just under $60 trillion.

Derivative contracts, therefore, have now reach a level 10 times world GDP, meaning even a 10 percent default in derivatives would equal world GDP.

The small 800-year-old town of Saint-Etienne in France has just defaulted on a $1.6 million contract owed to Deutsche Bank. The city entered into a complex currency swap arrangement to reduce the cost of borrowing some $30 million.

To cancel all 10 derivative contracts Saint-Etienne currently holds would cost the town approximately $135 million, more than six times the amount initially borrowed, largely because no bank or institutional investor would want to purchase contracts that are now on the losing side of the bet.

Saint-Etienne is only one of thousands of EU municipalities that bought into derivative contracts as a way to cut the costs of municipal borrowing.



A key problem with derivatives is that in the attempt to reduce costs or prevent losses, institutional investors typically accepted complex risks that carried little-understood liabilities widely disproportionate to the any potential savings the derivatives contract may have initially obtained.

The hedge fund and derivatives markets are so highly complex and technical that even many top economists and investment banking professionals don't fully understand them.

Moreover, both the hedge fund and derivatives markets are almost totally unregulated, either by the U.S. government or by any other government worldwide.

But losses on derivatives are not limited to government entities.

Harvard's billions

Obama administration economic guru Larry Summers may end up being best remembered for having destroyed almost single-handedly the Harvard University endowment fund as a result of misguided instructions he gave the fund's management during his tenure as Harvard University president from 2002 to 2006.

Summers, currently director of the White House National Economic Council, called for an aggressive investment strategy in which Harvard' endowment fund engaged in risky strategies, including derivative strategies that have burdened the nation' largest university endowment with billions of dollars in toxic assets.

As a result, the Harvard endowment, which peaked at $36.9 billion in June 2008, has since lost some 30 percent of its value, dropping to $26 billion, according to Bloomberg News.

In October 2009, Harvard University paid $497.6 million to investment banks to get out from $1.1 billion in interest rate swaps that were intended to hedge variable-rate debt for capital projects, Bloomberg reported.

In what amounted to Harvard's biggest endowment loss in 40 years, the university also agreed to pay $425 million over the next 30 to 40 years to offset an additional $764 million in credit-swap deals gone bad.

Citing failed interest rate swaps that forced Harvard to pay banks $1 billion just to terminate the junk contracts, Bloomberg reported the Harvard endowment's investments have become so toxic that even Summers won't explain what happened during his watch.

The Boston Globe squarely put the blame on Summers' doorstep, noting he came into office with a bold vision to expand the size of its science facilities by more than a third.

Average yearly expenditures for facilities jumped from under $150 million in 1995-2000 at Harvard, to $495 million from 2001-2005, to $644 million in 2009.

"Summers told the faculty not to think small," the Globe wrote. "Its ambitions were limited only by its imagination, he said. "Harvard could always come up with more money from its 'deeply loyal fans.'"

Unfortunately, deeply loyal fans and alumni with deep pockets were not enough to bail the university out from Sumner's ill advised investment advice.

Bloomberg reported that cash-strapped Harvard recently asked Massachusetts for fast-track approval to borrow $2.5 billion.

The damage done to Harvard is not limited to plans to expand the science facility into blue-collar Allston. Now, the university is faced with slashing faculty and staff.

Last year, more than 1,600 of Harvard's staff were offered early retirement, and more than 500 accepted.

"Loyal alumni have contributed generously to staunch the bleeding," the Globe wrote, "but huge deficits remain in spite of all the reductions. Harvard will be a smaller place when the dust settles, with less educational and scholarly reach. It will employ fewer people and will contribute less to local and national prosperity."

What are derivatives?

While the hedge fund market is small in comparison to derivatives, hedge funds in the U.S. are still a $1.5 trillion industry.

Hedge funds and derivatives share a common characteristic in that both were set up initially by professional investment advisers to assist them in managing the risk contained in institutional investment portfolios, including mutual fund assets or pension funds that typically involved hundreds of millions of dollars.

One of the original ideas behind derivatives was the realization that professional money managers, including those in banks, investment companies and hedge funds, needed to make bets to offset the possibility of taking losses.

A popular form of derivative contracts was developed to permit one money manager to "swap" a stream of variable interest payments with another money manager for a stream of fixed interest payments.

The idea was to use derivative bets on interest rates to "hedge" or balance off the risks taken on interest-rate investments owned in the underlying portfolio.

If an institutional investment manager held $100 million in fixed-rate bonds, for example, to hedge the risk, should interest rates rise or fall in a manner different than projections, a purchase of a $100 million variable interest rate derivative could be constructed to cover the risk.

Whichever way interest rates went, one side to the swap might win and the other might lose.

The money manager losing the bet could expect to get paid on the derivative to compensate for some or all of the losses.

In the strong stock and mortgage markets experienced beginning in the historically low 1-percent interest rate environments of 2003 through 2004, the number of hedge funds soared, just as the volume of derivative contracts soared from a mere $300 trillion in 2005 to the more than $600 trillion today.

Bloomberg reported the number of hedge funds tripled in the last decade to a record of 10,233 at the end of June 2008, according to the Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research Inc.

More than one-third of those funds could be "wiped out" in the economic downturn that began in December 2008, Bloomberg said.

The Bank of International Settlements, or BIS, in Basel, Switzerland, makes no estimate of how much of the $604 trillion in outstanding derivative contracts are today vulnerable to collapse.

Losses in derivatives played a major role in the bankruptcies of both AIG and Bear Stearns.

http://www.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=143057

jedemdasseine
21st April 2010, 09:01 PM
Like Zeno's paradox in monetary form. Infinite debt upon a finite planet. The buck can't be passed on forever. The disparity between real world goods and services and abstract financial products cannot be stretched indefinitely.

http://lh3.ggpht.com/_1yZDNu8eN84/S6X4KByBOrI/AAAAAAAAAFk/W73sVN4CS_0/s800/diminishing-marginal-productivity.png
Output is now negative.


A little off topic, but not really.....

Olmstein
21st April 2010, 09:04 PM
And where did the folks who created these derivatives go to school?

I love the irony.

cigarlover
21st April 2010, 09:35 PM
My last job was in Boston and most of our work was at Harvard. They own billions in Real Estate, have 26 billion left in the endowment and have to get rid of staff? I think 26 Billion is still one of the top 3 Endowments in the world.
I remember the last project my company did was a remote science facility for them. 500k to renovate a building so some lady could study butterflies.

mamboni
21st April 2010, 09:42 PM
Like Zeno's paradox in monetary form. Infinite debt upon a finite planet. The buck can't be passed on forever. The disparity between real world goods and services and abstract financial products cannot be stretched indefinitely.

http://lh3.ggpht.com/_1yZDNu8eN84/S6X4KByBOrI/AAAAAAAAAFk/W73sVN4CS_0/s800/diminishing-marginal-productivity.png
Output is now negative.


A little off topic, but not really.....


Absolutely on topic!!! Decreasing marginal utility of debt is the crux of it. And in that excellent plot you’ve posted you’ll note how margins oscillated over a fairly narrow range on either side of the trend line…until now. The marginal utility has gone strongly negative and the deviation is unprecedented in magnitude – literally off the chart! What does this mean: debt service has overtaken income from capital investment. We are in a debt spiral, the economy imploding into a massive black hole of debt principal that cannot be serviced, let alone paid off.

Ponce
21st April 2010, 09:45 PM
To me all that is only numbers without meaning because we are past PONR...Point Of No Return.

Horn
21st April 2010, 09:58 PM
To me all that is only numbers without meaning because we are past PONR...Point Of No Return.


All's they need to do is raise the Fed interest rate to around 35% overnight. :-\

mamboni
21st April 2010, 10:00 PM
To me all that is only numbers without meaning because we are past PONR...Point Of No Return.


All's they need to do is raise the Fed interest rate to around 35% overnight. :-\


I think they call that euthanasia. ::)

mamboni
21st April 2010, 10:02 PM
My last job was in Boston and most of our work was at Harvard. They own billions in Real Estate, have 26 billion left in the endowment and have to get rid of staff? I think 26 Billion is still one of the top 3 Endowments in the world.
I remember the last project my company did was a remote science facility for them. 500k to renovate a building so some lady could study butterflies.


The article insinuates that the $26 Billion of notional value may be loaded with toxic derivatives, aka financial instruments of mass destruction per Warren Buffet. Who knows what they really have and what their counterparty risks are.

JohnQPublic
21st April 2010, 10:12 PM
And on top of that, 99% of the "physical" gold markets are derivatives.

:lol

I started this in Jan. 2008: www.DerivativesCollapse.com (originally www.siv0.com)
By the end of the year there was not much more to say. We are done for many times over.

mamboni
21st April 2010, 10:17 PM
And on top of that, 99% of the "physical" gold markets are derivatives.

:lol

I started this in Jan. 2008: www.DerivativesCollapse.com (originally www.siv0.com)
By the end of the year there was not much more to say. We are done for many times over.


Not much activity there since 2008. That's unfortunate: it looks like it has a lot of potential and it's time has finally arrived. We're in the thick of it now and the fireworks are about to begin.


Good night all!
Bombers scannned me.

Horn
21st April 2010, 10:18 PM
I hear Japan has some good schools.

Maybe with the proper set of stem cells we could send our children there?

I'm sorry, that was despicable. :-X

Book
21st April 2010, 10:21 PM
http://www.rumormillnews.com/pix4/weimar_germany_inflation2.jpg

ZOG is now doing a Weimar upon the USA. They will all flee to Israel soon.

:oo-->

uranian
21st April 2010, 11:48 PM
~80% of derivatives contracts are in interest rate swaps, i.e. about keeping interest rates low to flatter fiat. also these numbers only make sense in context; 10x world GDP is a fun context, ~$100,000 for everyone on the planet is another. my personal fave is that if you 0.6 quadrillion one dollar bills and piled them atop one another, you'd have a tower that reached the sun, and back again.

the end of the hungarian pengo (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hungarian_peng%C5%91#Hyperinflation)looked like this (those are banknotes he's sweeping):

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0e/Inflaci%C3%B3_utan_1946.jpg

Neuro
22nd April 2010, 12:37 AM
Can't Harvard just start selling diploma's on the internet... I am sure millions of people would be interested in having a PhD from Harvard. But they better hurry up before the goodwill is gone. ;)

Carl
22nd April 2010, 04:59 AM
The diminishing marginal utility of debt

A great article.

Why inflation is a distraction.

The discussion among so many gold experts centers around the conceptual idea that gold is rising as a result of inflationary pressures. At the heart of this argument is the money printing operations of Central Banks. Most point to the V bottom in so many asset classes as proof of their argument. They also point to the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet and expansion of the monetary base.

For those that believe in the above, you have been sold a bill of goods by the MSM.

The worlds financial system is in far dire shape today than it was when Lehman collapsed. The Treasuries of most developed countries have reached debt saturation levels, where a 100 to 200 BPS rise in borrowing costs will force a debt implosion. The ability to service such immense debt levels at every level of government has reached its end game. Cities will go, then states, and then countries, all of them a victim of compound interest.

Our V shaped recovery was a two pronged attack by the Central Bank of the US and the Central Bank of China. One country has a huge inflation problem, the other does not. Inflation has taken off in China as its major cities have the most expensive real estate in the world. It is causing unrest there. The United States has merely seen a suspension of accounting rules to hide insolvency. Debt backed assets have not recovered. Lending has not recovered. Households have not recovered. The only thing keeping the United States from civil unrest is corporate and government fraud. If you ever look under the hood of the FED’s balance sheet or that of any major money center bank you will see nothing but bankrupt entities.

Today, you could libel any of these major banks on the front page of the Wall Street Journal about their finances. They will not sue you, for they cannot allow discovery. If you think the Federal Reserve is afraid of an audit, imagine what JP Morgan or Morgan Stanley must feel like. Now, I know the argument is that these banks are audited independently by the big accounting firms, but you must then explain why they glossed over or completely ignored REPO 105’s? The large banks are criminal enterprises plain and simple. I have seen it first hand, as they are not above the law, they are the law.

What is happening right now are test runs to see the consequences of debt failure. Iceland did not end well. The people voted and the government ignored the vote. The people are now voting with their feet and leaving the country. Greece is next but more precarious. Greece is to the Union, as California or Illinois is to the States. The capital has begun to flee. An artificial rate is no panacea as the weak links will all then line up for the benevolence of the strong. It does not matter, for if Greece gets help, Spain, Ireland and Portugal are next in line. If California goes, New York, Nevada and Illinois will line up.

The problem is structural. This is the confusion where people point to an era of the 70’s as a comparison. It is not. It is the mid 1930’s where you can expect a wave of defaults of the highest magnitude. Soaring interest rates are mathematically impossible. Let me repeat that. Soaring interest rates are mathematically impossible. JGB’s at 3% and Japan uses every dime via issuance to pay interest. Greece cannot go to 7% borrowing costs for the same reason. Interest payments on US debt are somewhat manageable but it faces both a duration problem and a funding problem. The numbers are growing so large that the money needed to fund operations threatens to crowd out private industry. Rising rates will exacerbate the problem and then force ever more capital to pay off interest, requiring even more borrowing.

So how long can we keep this up? The answer to that is unknown because there is lawlessness with respect to both corporate and sovereign balance sheets. Greece was hiding its fiscal state off balance sheet, much like all of corporate America and the US government. Households have never had that luxury, so they are going bankrupt in record numbers.

Is there a way out? Yes, but it is not worth discussing because banks will become largely irrelevant. Is there a way to protect yourself? Yes, you call the banks bluff and you simply stop paying. Move to a state that is non-recourse or simply leave the country. You do not have the luxury of masking insolvency.

http://goldtent.net/wp_gold/2010/04/10/the-diminishing-marginal-utility-of-debt/