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MAY
10TH - CREDIT COLLAPSE
by Paul J. Lamont
May 10, 2007
On
May 10th 1837, the banks of New York suspended gold and
silver payments for their notes. Fear ignited bank runs throughout the
United States. The young country fell into a 7 year depression. How
could two decades of prosperity end so suddenly? According to America:
A Narrative History: “monetary inflation had fueled an era of
speculation in real estate, canals, and railroad stocks.” Cracks in
the dam were visible much earlier, as the stock market peaked in
inflation-adjusted value three years prior. According to Rolf Nef, debt
levels in the private sector rose to 150% of GDP. In late 1836, the Bank
of England concerned with inflation raised interest rates. As rates rose
in England, credit tightened, and U.S. asset prices began to fall. On
May 10th, investors panicked and scrambled for cash. “By
the fall of 1837 one third of the work force was jobless, and those
still fortunate to have jobs saw their wages fall 30-50% within 2 years.
At the same time, prices for food and clothing soared.” Murray
Rothbard in A History of Money and Banking in the United States
described the impact on financial institutions: “unsound banks were
finally eliminated; unsound investments generated in the boom were
liquidated. The number of banks fell during these years by 23
percent.”
2007
Much
like in 1837, the stock market peaked in inflation-adjusted value years
ago (in 2000). Private debt levels are now over 250% of GDP. Dr. Marc Faber has
recently described the current environment as “a buying frenzy or buying panic during which investors
collectively believe that they can play the asset inflation game until
it stops and then all get out profitably at the same time.” Others are
noting similarities to the credit boom of the 1830s. Edward Chancellor, author of Devil Take the Hindmost: A History
of Financial Speculation, has recently penned a second book titled Crunch
Time for Credit. According to Chancellor, “The growth of credit
has created an illusory prosperity while producing profound imbalances
in the British and American economies...When credit ceases to grow, the
weakened state of these economies will become apparent." Chancellor
warns: "It will also become clear that the credit boom, by
inflating asset prices and boosting profits, has lead to inappropriate
balance sheets (both for the private sector and in general). At some
stage, balance sheets will have to be adjusted to face a new reality.
The process of adjustment is likely to be painful. It may well end in
either an extraordinary deflation...or an extraordinary inflation."
As our readers know, we first expect deflation as the asset bubble
fizzles. The economy has already started the painful adjustment process
in one asset class: real estate.
Mortgage Default Crisis
Just Starting
The
investment herd now believes that residential real estate can fall in
value without creating any spillover effects into the rest of the
economy. They have forgotten our financial institutions are largely
based on real estate loans. As
you can see from the chart below, of total loans created since 2002,
20%-50% have been adjustable rate mortgages ‘ARMs’.

In
the Reset Schedule below from Credit Suisse, over a trillion dollars in
ARMS will adjust in rates over the next 5 years.

We
expect more foreclosures as these rates rise. Currently here in Alabama,
18.2% of subprime loans are delinquent according to the Mortgage Bankers
Association. As Wells Fargo CEO Richard Kovacevich said in December
about the subprime market: ``I am not a forecaster of the future; I'm a
historian. And history says this will blow up. It always has. And there
will be some blood on the street.'' But whose blood?
Investors ‘Shocked’
UBS,
the Swiss bank and largest wealth manager in the world, reported
on May 3rd that they were closing their hedge fund arm Dillon
Read Capital Management at a cost of $300 million. The reason? It lost
$124 million in the first quarter due to the defaults in the subprime
market. Looking back at our last report from April
19:
“Current
‘thinking’ is that financial institutions have passed on much of the
mortgage risk to hedge funds. However when hedge funds fail, ‘prime
brokers’ historically have been forced to accept the hedge fund’s
losing positions. Illiquid arrangements (for instance credit
derivatives) will then be the responsibility of the prime brokers. They
will be forced to sell at any price as they try to prevent losses on
their own books.”
To
reiterate: In a crisis, a financial institution’s capital cannot be
separated from a hedge fund arm, proprietary trading desk or prime
brokerage unit. In a forgotten lesson of history, investment bank
Goldman Sachs’ Trading Corporation failed due to trading losses in
1929. Goldman Sachs was only resurrected by refocusing the company on
investment banking and abandoning trading altogether. But after a long
bull market, memories get foggy. Almost 70% of Goldman Sachs’ profit
in 2006 was earned from trading and principal investments. Goldman Sachs
and Morgan Stanley are also the two largest prime brokers, whose service
includes providing leverage to hedge funds.
How You Should Prepare
Investors
should remove investment risk from their portfolio by holding cash. But
they should also be moving accounts to financially healthy institutions.
Sometime in the near future, as in 1837, there will be a realization
point that preservation of funds is paramount in a deleveraging economy.

©
2007 Paul J. Lamont
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Contact
Information
Paul J. Lamont
Lamont Trading Advisors, Inc.
502 Bank Street
Decatur, AL 35601
Tel/Fax: (256) 850-4161
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