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MBS
MONETIZATION & US DOLLAR
by Jim Willie CB
August 9, 2007
Fannie
Mae is being groomed to be the central clearing house for mortgages and
their bonds, sponsored by the USGovt and the US Federal Reserve. Fannie
Mae (FNM) just requested permission to take on much greater volume of
mortgages, in order to alleviate the secondary market flow of capital
funds. Since the accounting scandal which peaked in September 2004, a
limit was imposed on FNM on its holdings at $727 billion. In today’s
climate, marred by credit seizure to some degree, FNM is deeply missed
in its former prominent centrifuge role. A
key question arises on the general inflation impact, if and when FNM
expands its role and is the nexus (surely a hidden basement) of
grandiose illicit monetization of mortgage bonds. If the banking
maestros undertake to put a secretive floor on mortgage backed
securities (MBS), a solid bid to prevent further breakdown, then vast
amounts of new printing press money will enter the system. The mortgage
finance sector desperately needs a bid on subprime MBS bonds so as to
clear them upon liquidations. The bank wizards could start monetizing
them, and work their way up the quality ladder toward Alt-A loans which
are also in trouble.
###
OVERNIGHT PANIC UPDATE ###
Overnight,
in the US wee hours of Thursday morning, the Europeans suffered a shock
wave. The Euro Central Bank added €94.8 billion (US$130.2 billion)
into the money market funds as retail depositors forced a run on their
banks, in a MILD PANIC.
The overnight rates that banks charge each other to lend in dollars
jumped to the highest level in six years. The dollar London Interbank
Offered (LIBOR) rate rose to 5.86% today from 5.35% and in euros rose to
4.30% from 4.11%. The ECB response to the fastest increase in the dollar
bank rate since June 2004 signals that lenders are reducing the supply
of money as losses triggered by the US mortgage slump spread worldwide.
In addition to BNP Paribas halting withdrawals, and Dutch investment
bank NIBC Holdings said it had lost at least €137 million on subprime
investments, more evidence that credit markets are not stabilizing. A
Commerzbank commercial bond trader summed it up. “Liquidity in the market has completely dried up as investors are not
recycling their money back because of subprime concerns. Levels have
shot up dramatically since yesterday as issuers are trying to entice
investors back.” The ECB provided the largest amount ever in a
single fine-tuning operation, exceeding the €69.3 billion provided on
12 Sept 2001, the day after the terror attacks on New York. The US
Federal Reserve accepted $12 billion in overnight repurchase agreements
overnight simultaneously.
PNB
Paribas, the French bank conglomerate closed three funds associated with
US subprime toxic mortgages. The company made a bold plainly worded
comment, a severe criticism of this fraud-ridden credit sector. “The complete evaporation of liquidity in certain market segments of
the US securitization market has made it impossible to value certain
assets fairly regardless of their quality or credit rating. The
situation is such that it is no longer possible to value fairly the
underlying US ABS assets in the three above mentioned funds,…
therefore unable to calculate a reliable net asset value (NAV) for the
funds.” Export
of US bond fraud to Europe has led to renewed shock waves.
Back
in the Untied States, American International Group (AIG) announced that
residential mortgage delinquencies and defaults are becoming more common
among borrowers in the category just above subprime. AIG, the world’s
largest insurer and one of the biggest mortgage lenders, said total
delinquencies were 2.5% in its $25.9 billion real estate portfolio. It
offered details. They cite 10.8% of its subprime mortgages were 60 days
overdue, compared with 4.6% in the category with credit scores just
above subprime, indicating that the threat to the mortgage market may be
spreading. This no longer just a subprime problem, clearly.
The
financial market effects were huge overnight. The USDollar DX index
benefited with a 59 basis point rise to 80.81 in the Sept2007 contract.
Also in Sept contracts, the euro fell 105 bpt to 137.11, the pound
sterling fell 131 bpt to 202.20, the yen rose 89 bpt to 84.86,
which at the same time forced gold down 12.7 to 667.2 on the October
contract. The indicator on the Fed Funds futures expectations changed
dramatically. Up through the last few days, the December contract had
priced in roughly a 100% chance of a 25 basis point interest rate cut by
the USFed. Last night, the October Fed Funds contract jumped to a
similar level, pointing the way to a USFed rate cut of 25 bpts before
October. In the first two hours of Thursday New York trading, the Fed
Funds indicator has not changed. But the pound sterling gained back half
of what it lost in Europe, with the rest of the currencys gaining
minimally.
Art
Cashin of UBS is astute, able to sum things up succinctly. He said
yesterday “We don’t know what
it is we don’t know.” Today he added “We don’t know who doesn’t know.” The sentiment among some
pundits reeks of confusion. People who are paid to know what is
happening with the bond market are largely unaware. One cannot believe
what major banks are telling the public anymore. We have vast mispricing
of bond securities. My
view is that we are seeing outsized down then up then down moves, much
like preliminary earthquake tremors.
Before
the charts for the October and December Fed Funds futures charts are
displayed, a final note. The major Wall Street broker dealers like
Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Lehman Brothers, and Bear Stearns are
getting away with corporate bond murder. The Wall Street broker dealers have credit default swaps trading at three
to five levels below investment grade, yet their corporate debt
ratings remain of investment grade. How much do they pay the debt
ratings agency for that??? The false pricing of asset backed bonds
extends far beyond the mortgage bond market, to the corporate bond
market. Given the colossal statistical fraud stated routinely by the
USGovt on the condition of the USEconomy, one can assuredly conclude
that the USTreasury Bond market is also falsely priced. With price
inflation running over 10%, according to Shadow Govt Statistics after
removing basic obvious gimmicks, the long-term USTBonds should not offer
anything close to a measly 5% yield. The October contract does not
indicate a 100% chance of a September rate cut, as mentioned on CNBC. It
is almost 70%, a sharp move up though.


FANNIE
AS MONETIZATION FUNNEL
My
take is that Fannie Mae will eventually become a funnel for
monetization, after functioning as a centralized efficient clearing
house. If new money is run off the press in the middle of the night, and
it enables redemption of a funnel of lower quality mortgage bonds, what
is the impact on inflation? First, inflation is technically the rise in
the money supply, the monetary aggregate. So obviously the system would
experience an influx of monetary inflation. The effect on price
inflation is not so clear. The objects of the influx of new money,
euphemistically called ‘liquidity’ by the financial markets, are
many. Would price inflation in the consumer sector flare up, enough to
hit the Consumer Price Index? Which of the many object targets would see
a lift of an artificial nature?
Fannie
Mae is being set up to be a facilitator in the absence of CDO & MBS
bond issuance in the secondary mortgage market. Funds for loans are in
short supply, as minor but widespread seizures are occurring in a system
which cannot seem to adapt in the current climate. Investors are losing
trust in the pricing of the MBS bonds. Lenders are choosing not to
originate a loan which they are likely to be forced to hold and not pass
on. A solution is sought, and
raised limits on Fannie might do the trick in such a solution. We are
moving back to the centrifuge concept. Jumbo mortgages used to be
deferred to Freddie Mac, which are defined as loans over $417k in size.
Given the similar limits on Freddie Mac, jumbos are seeing their
mortgage rate rise. They popped above 7%, roughly 40 basis points higher
than conforming 30-year rates. Strain is being seen throughout the
system.
NEW
IMPROVED FANNIE MAE
One
must wonder to what extent true reforms have taken place since their
executive corruption came to light and their phony accounting was
exposed. Fannie Mae admitted a mere $11.3 billion in accounting errors,
and were widely accused of committing fraud for the benefit of executive
stock options. Do not expect any honest or informative financial
statements, maybe just a sham annual report, hardly with complete
accounting and full disclosure of any illicit mortgage bond shenanigans
for the greater good executed and enabled by the banking leaders. The
authorities are likely growing in desperation to fix the system which
went amok under their endorsement of the housing boom, better labeled as
the bubble it always was. The fact that the FNM stock trades at all or
has avoided delisting is a total joke, since it does not satisfy basic
SEC rules. Muckymucks are heavily involved in the Fannie Mae enterprise,
whose board has been a country club of political and other corporate
henchmen.
Fannie
Mae is in possession of a vast array, a cornucopia of credit derivative
contracts. They gathered them in an uncontrollable fashion, from poor
management, attempts to participate in almost every conceivable
so-called protection. Imagine
kind of like Uncle Charlie’s garage after 40 years of packrat
accumulation of items, gathering like corrosive clutter, with vast
cobwebs linking types and insects eating away at the works, with
possible ooze of decomposition breaking down things on a chemical level.
The investment community has been almost totally in the dark on the vast
supply of credit default swaps, interest rate swaps, and REMIC
derivatives (leveraged off MBS bonds) that Fannie & Freddie own.
Credit default swaps act like loan portfolio insurance contracts,
protecting against default. Interest rate swaps enable a delicate
balance to be struck between long-term and short-term interest rates,
paying a benefit upfront to the higher yielding security. My guess is
FNM accounting will change from a dark place to an apparent reformed
entity, but with a vast black hole, never to require full disclosure. It
will never face liquidation of its worthless mortgage bonds or of its
deeply underwater derivatives. FNM will be a bond cemetery which nobody
can visit.
TARGETS
FOR MONETIZATION
Fannie
Mae will become the device to fund mortgages, just like what it
originally did a few years ago. They will recycle money back to the
lenders and bankers, but more responsibly, we will be assured. In the
process, however, FNM lies in the path of official but undoubtedly
denied federal monetization, in progress for some time, if rumor is
true. To accomplish the task, the USFed and Dept Treasury would print
money and buy their MBS bonds, replacing them with valuable cash.
Whether FNM takes on the leveraged subprime CDO bonds is a big big
question, my guess NO. Why? Because all subprime mortgage CDO bonds are
worthless, or soon to be recognized as worthless. It is unclear whether
FNM will take CDO bonds of supposed 'AAA' rating, since they contain so
much toxic sewage derived from subprime fecal droppings. If
FNM supports the MBS bonds, then the CDO bonds can sort out their prices
effectively. The subprime CDO bonds will all get killed off, but
'AAA' CDO bonds will retain some equilibrium value.
WHO
PAYS? WHAT PAYS?
Many
folks in private communications have shared their disgust that taxpayers
would foot the bill for the whole monetization enterprise. What a grand
misconception! They have not paid for anything in years. For twenty
years, the Asians and Persian Gulf nations have paid, by means of
lending money via USTBond purchases. Trade
partners have been the vast credit supply source, as part of the
baseless Macro Economy mythology promoted and justified by Sir Alan
Greenspan. This is the essence myth of what my previous work has
dismissed in the Bretton Woods II, to provide firm backing of the
USDollar. The backing was more like a thin sheet of paper built on
trust, which is fast disappearing. By holding gigantic mountains of
USTBonds, they hold the markers just like an unhappy syndicate lender.
To the extent that they continue to purchase USTBonds, they are indeed
paying the US bills! The ultimate
cost is born in the indirect effect doled out to the USDollar. It
relies more than we know on trust and faith in the US system and its
custodians. Both are on the run, as their handiwork looks more like a
blight on the landscape.
MISCONCEPTION
Some
mistakenly believe in the gold community that the fast US$ money growth
automatically sends the gold price upward due to more supply weighing
down US$ value. This notion, in my view, misses most main factors. If
the majority of new US$ money is devoted to bubbles which get killed off
quickly, then destruction of money is the intermediate term outcome of
monetary inflation, in bizarre US style. Inflation has been exported for
three decades. It just aint that simple. The debt deflation underway has
a climax ring to it. The main wellspring for the launched gold price has
been believed to be the US Federal Reserve and its unbridled monetary
inflation. The gold price will zoom higher from the lost confidence in
the US financial system and failed integrity in the USFed and Dept of
Treasury. They have failed. The monetary crisis will lift gold, not so
much price inflation from the flood of money. The recent events point to
continued asset losses in debt securities, with associated shocks which
eat at system confidence and leadership confidence.
WHERE
DOES THE MONEY GO WHICH RESCUES MORTGAGE BONDS ???
DESTINATION
OF NEW MINTED MONEY
If
scads of USDollars fly off the printing press, created for the purpose
to buy mortgage bonds, strange mechanisms are to play into the totally
discombobulated financial sector of the USEconomy. Homeowners are not
involved in this game, only financial entities. A modest attempt will be
made here to take a hack at the avenues taken for the upcoming
infusions.
Fannie
Mae owns MBS bonds, which when purchased by phony US$ printed money,
will serve as a powerful secondary mortgage market supply of available
money for loans. The primary
result of monetization and redemption of their MBS bonds, which
constitutes a new firm floor by means of an official artificial bid,
will be money sent back into the lending industry. The beneficiary
will be borrowers who need to close a home loan, lenders who need to
fund a loan, home sellers who need to realize cash from the sale of
their homes, and homeowners who need to draw on equity. The
result is support to the housing prices and mortgage bonds, not broad
systemic price inflation. The deflation in housing will be lessened,
maybe abated, but not stopped.
Numerous
types of financial firms will be shipping their damaged mortgage
portfolios and conceivably their damaged mortgage bonds to Fannie Mae.
The investors of bonds transferred to Fannie Mae are impossible to fully
catalog, but principal players can be identified.
BANKER
BROKERS like Goldman, Merrill,
Lehman, Bear Stearns own MBS bonds. They will use the money from MBS
bond sales to Fannie Mae to buy their own stocks, to buy USTBonds, to
meet credit derivative margin requirements, to reduce their asset to
capital ratios, to invest in credit market hedges to protect themselves
from this shaky situation.
BIG
BANKS will use the money to issue
new loans, to reduce their asset to capital ratios, to invest in hedges,
and to buy back own stocks, since they are far more corrupt.
LENDERS
will use the money to issue new loans, to stay in business, to meet debt
to asset creditor requirements, to invest in hedges which protect their
ongoing business. Rather than buy their own stock, they might even short
their own doomed stocks (just kidding).
HEDGE
FUNDS will use the money to meet
creditor margin calls, to pay down their huge debt, to invest in wise
conservative hedges like credit default swaps, to stave off liquidation.
PENSION
FUNDS & INSURANCE FIRMS will
use the money to buy shorterm USTBonds as they move backward on the risk
scale, to buy short-term EuroBonds (nice euro currency premium lift over
time), and short-term UK Gilt bonds which contain a higher yield than
TBonds (nice sterling currency premium lift potential), as they swear
off risky MBS bonds altogether, even AAA perhaps for a period of time.
FOREIGN
BANKS & FUNDS will support the
USTBonds, and swear off all US-based asset backed bonds like mortgages,
since they perceive them to be ridden with fraud. They might refuse to
purchase US corporate bonds and commercial bonds. They too are dealing
with asset to capital ratios and debt to asset ratios.
FOREIGN
CENTRAL BANKS will use continue to
support the USTreasurys in their traditional USDollar support as the
world reserve currency.
END:
WRECKED CONFIDENCE IN US DOLLAR
The
conclusion is that the monetized MBS bond money, if and when redeemed by
the US banking authorities, will not directly cause price inflation. The
money will be devoted to other things to keep the system running, to
protect their own individual interests. However, the entire process will
become revealed. What is highly
likely, more akin to a dire dark cloud, is that the the international
reaction will be to lose confidence in the USFed and Dept of Treasury.
If the USGovt and USBank system installs a formal or hidden bid on MBS
bonds, integrity will slowly vanish as leadership is globally
challenged. MY EXPECTATION IS FOR A SLOW BLEED, A GRADUAL EROSION IN THE
USDOLLAR, NOT A COLLAPSE. The initial stages of the panic will be a move
into what is perceived as SAFE HAVEN. The USDollar and the USTreasurys
are neither safe nor stable, certainly no haven.
The
impact ultimately will not be a burdened taxpayer from heavy taxes to
pay for MBS bonds. Instead, the USDollar will decline for another 2 to 3
years at least. The effect will be imported
cost inflation for another several years, the opposite of the
exported inflation the USEconomy has gotten away with for two decades.
The most visible cost will be higher energy costs and higher metal
costs. To the US consumers, food prices are just a consequence of higher
energy costs to farmers. Food prices will rise, aggravated by the
fruitless attempt to produce ethanol, more than a few drops in the
bucket.
The
US will continue to be a global powerhouse in farm production and
export. In fact, with finances resembling Third World, and with debt
like Third World, it might expect the USEconomy to revert back to an
Agrarian Economy. The recent Minneapolis bridge collapse accentuates the
infrastructure resembling the Third World also. An Assn of Civil
Engineers recently rated the US infrastructure which includes bridges a
‘D’ and estimated the total upgrade cost to be $1.6 trillion. That
amount is roughly what has been blown in the Iraq & Afghan Wars.
Priorities for the United States are moronically directed. Economic
guidance for the United States has been destructive, since reliance upon
inflation has been the central cog. We are fast entering constant crisis
mode, which erodes confidence in all things related to the US financial
system. The gold market will eventually be the sanctuary. Investors will pursue gold, not because of price inflation, but because
of the pervasive sense of lost control. The many produced bubbles
are breaking apart. The creation of new unbacked money to fix the
system, to plug the holes in the many bond dikes, to address the need to
paper over the mushrooming problems, are fast resembling the Weimar
Republic. Now that bubble architectural engineer Greenspan has left
town, the policy bagholder is Ben Bernanke, the mumbler, the hamstrung
chairman. In futility and benign neglect, he awaits further assured
destruction before taking action. Its custodians seem a cross between
Keystone Cops and Crime Syndicate thugs and Ideologue Heretics and Ivory
Tower Morons.
TRADE
PARTNERS
Lastly,
foreigners are not standing still. China cited their ‘financial
nuclear threat’ option, to sell vast blocks of USTreasurys in response
to Congressional trade sanctions. They focus on currency reform, when
unfixable wage differentials is the problem. Then there is Iran, which
sells crude oil in euro terms nowadays. They demanded last month that
Japan pay for oil no longer in USDollars. Then there is the entire
Persian Gulf group of Gulf Coop Council members. Kuwait broke ranks in
moving away from a direct US$ peg. Lately, the United Arab Emirates has
embarked on a rally cry mission to urge all GCC members to abandon the
US$ peg. Look for Persian Gulf support of USTBonds to be on the wane in
coming months. The only sizeable USTBond support coming out of Asia has
been China. US leaders choose to step on their toes and spit in their
faces. Then there is Russia, angry over US missile deployment in Eastern
Europe, a violation of a treaty.

©
2007 Jim Willie, CB
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Willie CB is a statistical analyst in marketing research and retail
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