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BEST OF DOUG NOLAND
February 21, 2008
Today, with bursting bubbles in corporate and municipal finance
joining the mortgage bust, the U.S. Bubble economy has quickly fallen
desperately short of sufficient Credit and liquidity. And the greater
the Credit market dislocation and broad-based tightness of Credit, the
bleaker become economic prospects and the more intense the Revulsion to
Wall Street’s Credit instruments. The days of free-flowing cheap finance
for home buyers, state and local governments, LBO firms, commercial real
estate speculators, college students, risky auto buyers, and high-risk
Credit card holders are over - and they will not be returning for some
time to come.
When I have previously underestimated the "resiliency" of the U.S.
Credit Bubble and economy, it was in each instance a failure to
appreciate the capability of Wall Street finance to expand to ever
greater degrees of Bubble excess. Today, with "contemporary finance"
mired in a historic collapse, I am confident that the Credit system is
today only in a position to surprise on the downside. It is this
framework that shapes my view of a rapidly escalating Credit crisis
feeding an arduous economic adjustment period.
And while it could undoubtedly prod a highly speculative stock
market, there is no resolution to the "monoline" dilemma that would
meaningfully influence the trajectory of the unfolding Credit and
economic bust. As we’ve been saying for awhile now, confidence in Wall
Street finance has been irreparably shattered. Trust has been broken in
"AAA" ratings, "mark-to-model," CDO structures, myriad risk models,
Credit insurance, counter-party risk, and various instruments and
vehicles for intermediating risk in the markets. Moreover, old fashioned
lending will not come close to sufficing the demands of a highly
imbalanced Bubble economy, especially with bankers nervous and
retrenching. Again, we’re witnessing nothing less than the Breakdown of
Wall Street Alchemy – one that took a turn for the worst this week.
In a disconcerting development, recent market developments seem to
confirm that the leveraged speculating community and the GSEs are poised
as the next shoes to drop – the next Dominoes in an Escalating
Contagion. Along with the "monolines" and mortgage insurers, the "Credit
default swap market" and GSE mortgage Risk Intermediation were at the
epicenter of the most egregious Systemic Risk Distortions and
Accumulations. They are now quickly moving to the forefront of Current
Acute Fragilities. Simplifying highly complex circumstances, the various
risk models that empowered the greatest leveraging of risk in the
history of finance no longer function as expected - or as required to
maintain highly leveraged exposures to a multitude of escalating risks.
And it was all just only a matter of time. The overriding flaw was to
ignore that a runaway Bubble in market-based finance ensured that
various market and Credit risks all coalesced into One Massive,
Unmanageable, Highly Correlated, Unhedgable, Undiversifiable Association
of Interrelated Systemic Risks.
Doug Noland is a market strategist at Prudent Bear Funds. Their
website is www.prudentbear.com. |