Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Lying or Incompetent? You Decide!

A very interesting Wednesday, yes? Plenty to cover this evening.

Full Employment is Directly Related to Bubbles
Up front any long time readers know that I think the FED should be abolished. I do not want to re-hash all of my reason for thinking that way.

That said, say I did believe a central bank was a necessity. The mandate as stated by the FED is "Stable prices and full employment" or a balancing act of those two. Of course the FED has a hand in many more pies than this, but say I believe them.

The following graph lifted from The Mess That Greenspan Made should be required reading for the FED:

Notice that the information technology jobs dropped and kept dropping after the dotcom bust and have been depressed ever since. This contributed to the last "jobless recovery". The construction jobs outlook will follow the same path as well.

This is one of the biggest dangers of malinvestment during bubbles. Not only do asset prices eventually crash, but a host of related industries (and hence jobs) crash as well. The FED should indeed target bubbles if their mandate includes full employment. Of course we really know their prime concern is fiat credit expansion, but I thought I would play devil's advocate tonight.

Cheap Trick
I am not talking about the great 1980's band! If I was I would say "The Flame" rocks!
"I'm going crazy, I'm losing sleep...."

Many market watchers have been surprised to see "investors" gobbling up government debt like challenge winners eating food rewards in the late stages of the show "Survivor". Why would anyone stash cash at the FED either for no return or even negative returns as the 1 month T-Bill goes negative? The answer is complex if you like or very simple. I prefer simple so I offer this from Zero Hedge:
Suspending Money Market Redemptions Is Now Legal; SEC Approves New Money Market Regulation In 4-1 Vote
You can read the whole thing but in summary:
-Money Market funds can suspend redemptions as long as some definition of "extraordinary circumstances" are met, which are not spelled out so they may as well be any reason
-Strict limits on assets in funds steer all cash towards government debt
This of course will force MM funds to buy government debt by the boatload or even cause investors to just bypass the middle man and buy it themselves.

Did I mention how much debt the US has to sell this year?

PS for "investors";
What makes you think the government will return your money under "extraordinary circumstances"? Answers welcome in the comments section.

Lying or Incompetent? You Decide!
The big news of the day had to be the AIG bailout hearings in Washington. I am not going to recap the entire day's events. There are many great takes in the blogroll. Some items worth a closer look include:

-Update: Unredacted AIG Schedule A Released And Initial Data Spread
Seems less than stellar collateral was accepted by the FED during all this, shocking I know, as by law they cannot do so.

-AIG, Paulson and Giethner
Lots of good nuggets by Market Ticker.

To me the whole thing boils down to this:

Between the AIG full par payouts and then the move to keep disclosures from being made public we have been told by the players themselves no less that:
-Ben Bernanke
-Hank Paulson
-Tim Giethner
All had either NO role in these matters or never had a direct involvement in discussions for some or all of the biggest bailout in the history of the world.

This presents us with an easy decision to make and the players themselves fell into an old chess trap (Mish has used this term before, I know):
Zugzwang:
Zugzwang (German for "compulsion to move"), is a term originally used in chess which also applies to various other games. The concept finds its formal definition in combinatorial game theory. It describes a situation where one player is put at a disadvantage because he has to make a move – the player would prefer to pass and make no move. The fact that the player must make a move means that his position will be significantly weaker than the hypothetical one in which it were his opponent's turn to move.
This can also be described as "any move sucks".

This applies to the current fiasco in that the players involved would have you believe one of two things, either of which is grounds for immediate dismissal and charges if possible (Hanky P has a get out of jail free card, remember that beauty of a move!):

1-Bernanke, Paulson, and Geithner in their respective places at the table at the time, had no direct influence on the AIG decision process. They all cite various reasons for this.

2-They are all lying.

If you buy option #1, then the trio are clearly incompetent and had no idea what their own people were doing in regards to the biggest bailout in history. I guess it is easy to let Goldman just do what they want directly!

If option #2 fits your mind, then we will need a clear smoking gun to catch them. As they are all loaded for bear with regards to lawyers, I would doubt any such damning evidence exists.

I will leave it at that. What else do you really need to consider? I have a poll up where you can vote your opinion, so try it out!

Side note:
EconomicDisconnect loves chess! I will always open as white with the Barcza, and will defend as black with either the Sicilian Scheveningen or King's Indian Defense.

Have a good night.

10 comments:

GawainsGhost said...

Ha ha ha, GYC. You know Bobby Fisher opened every game he ever played with P-K4. Till he got to the world championship against Spasky. He forfeited the first two games, then showed up at the third and opened with P-KB4!

It destroyed the Russian mentally. As he had no idea of how to respond to it. And so Fisher took the crown.

1972. I remember that year well, and that match as I was heavily into chess at the time. It was historic, to say the least.

You're right about Exiles. It is an incredibly depressing but beautifully written book, much like the poem on which it is based.

I've always found it amazing how such grandeur can be found in so much misery. Such is the way of life, I guess. And of poetry, no doubt.

EconomicDisconnect said...

Gawains,
I have to admit that I was unaware that Fisher employed the Sicilian to such a degree. I know he used the Barcza a few time, but Mikail Tal was a mster of it, as well as the Botvinnik which I will also open with as a change up.

I was always fond of Dylan Thomas poetry and I loved the Spoon River Anthology by EL Masters.

MVF said...

Did you actually SEE the Geitner/AIG hearings? Most of the time, its a dog and pony show where some cowering puss sits up there and says "mistakes were made"...

Not Geitner - the normall strange, awkward, squirelly, quirky dude was defiant as all get go - several times cornering the questioners where they were like uhh, ahh, err.

Reminded me of the "few good men" scene.

Q. I want the truth
A. YOU CANT HANDLE THE TRUTH.
Q. Did you order the code red
A. YOUR GOD DAMN RIGHT I DID!!!*

*Of course, that last part didnt happen. Basically we know Geitner is lying (i.e. your option #2), but we cant ask the right questions in order to get him to answer. Still, it was pretty riveting stuff!

Anonymous said...

Holy cow--there's a lot of geniousity going on here tonight! I was going to comment on the Cheap Trick video but I don't want to sound stupid, LOL. OK, I will--the hair on guys in the 80's was cute. Ha ha!

As for your question--I though the government owns everything we have anyway because they forced us to borrow up the wazoo. They're just letting us hold onto it so we feel better and don't riot yet.

EconomicDisconnect said...

MVF,
great observations. I wish I could have watched it today.

Sonic,
All we have, or ever will have is because of the benevolence of the government, lol!

You had better be careful, first the piltes intructor was cute, now 80's hair band spandex clad singers are cute, next you are going to think Ben Bernanke's bald head is a "nice look". HA

Anonymous said...

Bernanke? AACK! Now you've gone TOO far, GYSC!!

I dunno--you kind of got me into a great mood with the all music dedications. I've really been singing for 2 weeks. It's nice (well, not for people who have to listen, haha!).

Anonymous said...

Of course they are lying.
Ben,Tim,Hank et al are merely pawns. And yes, obviously there are others far more wealthy than them behind the scenes calling the shots.

These would be the major stake holders of the Fed, GS, JPM and other large entities. Do you think these owners don't voice their desires to the hired help?

Ben gets in front of Congress and gives a "dog ate my homework" response to the inquiries. Come on folks... Ben has a Ph.D. in economics and certainly appears intelligent enough to realize the implications of his past and present policies. The real situation is take Ben is a mafia soldier shielding his bosses.
Ben, Tim & Obama are following orders.

Look at events now and in the past under this context and it all makes much more sense.

watchtower said...

GYSC it's looking like you might get a crack at $15.50 silver.

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