The Emperor Is Naked: David Stockman
The
Gold Report
Recently:
David
Stockman on Crony Socialism
A "paralyzed"
Federal Reserve Bank, in its "final days," held hostage
by Wall Street "robots" trading in markets that are "artificially
medicated" are just a few of the bleak observations shared
by David Stockman, former Republican U.S. Congressman and director
of the Office of Management and Budget. He is also a founding partner
of Heartland Industrial Partners and the author of The
Triumph of Politics: Why Reagan's Revolution Failed and the
soon-to-be released The
Great Deformation: How Crony Capitalism Corrupts Free Markets and
Democracy. The
Gold Report caught up with Stockman for this exclusive interview
at the recent Recovery Reality Check conference.
The Gold
Report: David, you have talked and written about the effect
of government-funded, debt-fueled spending on the stock market.
What will be the real impact of quantitative easing?
David Stockman:
We are in the last innings of a very bad ball game. We are coping
with the crash of a 30-yearlong debt super-cycle and the aftermath
of an unsustainable bubble.
Quantitative
easing is making it worse by facilitating more public-sector borrowing
and preventing debt liquidation in the private sector both
erroneous steps in my view. The federal government is not getting
its financial house in order. We are on the edge of a crisis in
the bond markets. It has already happened in Europe and will be
coming to our neighborhood soon.
TGR: What should
the role of the Federal Reserve be?
DS: To get
out of the way and not act like it is the central monetary planner
of a $15 trillion economy. It cannot and should not be done.
The Fed is
destroying the capital market by pegging and manipulating the price
of money and debt capital. Interest rates signal nothing anymore
because they are zero. The yield curve signals nothing anymore because
it is totally manipulated by the Fed. The very idea of "Operation
Twist" is an abomination.
Capital markets
are at the heart of capitalism and they are not working. Savers
are being crushed when we desperately need savings. The federal
government is borrowing when it is broke. Wall Street is arbitraging
the Fed's monetary policy by borrowing overnight money at 10 basis
points and investing it in 10-year treasuries at a yield of 200
basis points, capturing the profit and laughing all the way to the
bank. The Fed has become a captive of the traders and robots on
Wall Street.
TGR: If we
are in the final innings of a debt super-cycle, what is the catalyst
that will end the game?
DS: I think
the likely catalyst is a breakdown of the U.S. government bond market.
It is the heart of the fixed income market and, therefore, the world's
financial market.
Because of
Fed management and interest-rate pegging, the market is artificially
medicated. All of the rates and spreads are unreal. The yield curve
is not market driven. Supply and demand for savings and investment,
future inflation risk discounts by investors none of these
free market forces matter. The price of money is dictated by the
Fed, and Wall Street merely attempts to front-run its next move.
As long as
the hedge fund traders and fast-money boys believe the Fed can keep
everything pegged, we may limp along. The minute they lose confidence,
they will unwind their trades.
On the margin,
nobody owns the Treasury bond; you rent it. Trillions of treasury
paper is funded on repo: You buy $100 million (M) in Treasuries
and immediately put them up as collateral for overnight borrowings
of $98M. Traders can capture the spread as long as the price of
the bond is stable or rising, as it has been for the last year or
two. If the bond drops 2%, the spread has been wiped out.
If that happens,
the massive repo structures that is, debt owned by still more
debt will start to unwind and create a panic in the Treasury
market. People will realize the emperor is naked.
TGR: Is that
what happened in 2008?
DS: In 2008
it was the repo market for mortgage-back securities, credit default
obligations and such. In 2008 we had a dry run of what happens when
a class of assets owned on overnight money goes into a tailspin.
There is a thunderous collapse.
Since then,
the repo trade has remained in the Treasury and other high-grade
markets because subprime and low-quality mortgage-backed securities
are dead.
TGR: Walk us
through a hypothetical. What happens when the fast-money traders
lose confidence in the Fed's ability to keep the spread?
DS: They are
forced to start selling in order to liquidate their carry trades
because repo lenders get nervous and want their cash back. However,
when the crisis comes, there will be insufficient private bids the
market will gap down hard unless the central banks buy on an emergency
basis: the Fed, the European Central Bank (ECB), the people's printing
press of China and all the rest of them.
The question
is: Will the central banks be able to do that now, given that they
have already expanded their balance sheets? The Fed balance sheet
was $900 billion (B) when Lehman crashed in September 2008. It took
93 years to build it to that level from when the Fed opened for
business in November 1914. Bernanke then added another $900B in
seven weeks and then he took it to $2.4 trillion in an orgy of money
printing during the initial 13 weeks after Lehman. Today it is nearly
$3 trillion. Can it triple again? I do not think so. Worldwide it's
the same story: the top eight central banks had $5 trillion of footings
shortly before the crisis; they have $15 trillion today. Overwhelmingly,
this fantastic expansion of central bank footings has been used
to buy or discount sovereign debt. This was the mother of all monetizations.
TGR: Following
that path, what happens if there are no buyers? Do the governments
go into default?
DS: The U.S.
Treasury needs to be in the market for $20B in new issuances every
week. When the day comes when there are all offers and no bids,
the music will stop. Instead of being able to easily pawn off more
borrowing on the markets say 90 basis points for a 5-year note
as at present they may have to pay hundreds of basis points
more. All of a sudden the politicians will run around with their
hair on fire, asking, what happened to all the free money?
TGR:
What do the politicians have to do next?
DS: They are
going to have to eat 30 years worth of lies and by the time they
are done eating, there will be a lot of mayhem.
TGR: Will the
mayhem stretch into the private sector?
DS: It will
be everywhere. Once the bond market starts unraveling, all the other
risk assets will start selling off like mad, too.
TGR: Does every
sector collapse?
DS: If the
bond market goes into a dislocation, it will spread like a contagion
to all of the other asset markets. There will be a massive selloff.
I think everything
in the world is overvalued stocks, bonds, commodities, currencies.
Too much money printing and debt expansion drove the prices of all
asset classes to artificial, non-economic levels. The danger to
the world is not classic inflation or deflation of goods and services;
it's a drastic downward re-pricing of inflated financial assets.
TGR: Is there
any way to unravel this without this massive dislocation?
DS: I do not
think so. When you are so far out on the end of a limb, how do you
walk it back?
The Fed is
now at the end of a $3 trillion limb. It has been taken hostage
by the markets the Federal Open Market Committee was trying to placate.
People in the trading desks and hedge funds have been trained to
front run the Fed. If they think the Fed's next buy will be in the
belly of the curve, they buy the belly of the curve. But how does
the Fed ever unwind its current lunatic balance sheet? If the smart
traders conclude the Fed's next move will be to sell mortgage-backed
securities, they will sell like mad in advance; soon there would
be mayhem as all the boys and girls on Wall Street piled on. So
the Fed is frozen; it is petrified by fear that if it begins contracting
its balance sheet it will unleash the demons.
TGR: Was there
some type of tipping that allowed certain banks to front run the
Fed?
DS: There are
two kinds of front-running. First is market-based front-running.
You try to figure out what the Fed is doing by reading its smoke
signals and looking at how it slices and dices its meeting statements.
People invest or speculate against the Fed's next incremental move.
Second, there
is illicit front-running, where you have a friend who works for
the Federal Reserve Board who tells you what happened in its meetings.
This is obviously illegal.
But frankly,
there is also just plain crony capitalism that is not that different
in character and it's what Wall Street does every day. Bill Dudley,
who runs the New York Fed, was formerly chief economist for Goldman
Sachs and he pretends to solicit an opinion about financial conditions
from the current Goldman economist, who then pretends to opine as
to what the economy and Fed might do next for the benefit of Goldman's
traders, and possibly its clients. So then it links in the ECB,
Bank of Canada, etc. Is there any monetary post in the world not
run by Goldman Sachs?
The point is,
this is not the free market at work. This is central bank money
printers and their Wall Street cronies perverting what used to be
a capitalist market.
TGR: Does this
unwinding of the Fed and the bond markets put the banking system
back in peril, like in 2008?
DS: Not necessarily.
That is one of the great myths that I address in my book. The banking
system, especially the mainstream banking system, was not in peril
at all. The toxic securitized mortgage assets were not in the Main
Street banks and savings and loans; these institutions owned mostly
prime quality whole loans and could have bled down the modest bad
debt they did have over time from enhanced loan loss reserves. So
the run on money was not at the retail teller window; it was in
the canyons of Wall Street. The run was on wholesale money that
is, on repo and on unsecured commercial paper that had been issued
in the hundreds of billions by financial institutions loaded down
with securitized toxic garbage, including a lot of in-process inventory,
on the asset side of their balance sheets.
The run was
on investment banks that were really hedge funds in financial drag.
The Goldmans and Morgan Stanleys did not really need trillion-dollar
balance sheets to do mergers and acquisitions. Mergers and acquisitions
do not require capital; they require a good Rolodex. They also did
not need all that capital for the other part of investment banking the
underwriting business. Regulated stocks and bonds get underwritten
through rigged cartels they almost never under-price and really
don't need much capital. Their trillion dollar balance sheets, therefore,
were just massive trading operations whether they called it
customer accommodation or proprietary is a distinction without a
difference which were funded on 30 to 1 leverage. Much of the
debt was unstable hot money from the wholesale and repo market and
that was the rub the source of the panic.
Bernanke thought
this was a retail run à la the 1930s. It was not; it was
a wholesale money run in the canyons of Wall Street and it should
have been allowed to burn out.
TGR: Let's
get back to our ballgame. What is to keep the U.S. population from
saying, please Fed save us again?
DS: This time,
I think the people will blame the Fed for lying. When the next crisis
comes, I can see torches and pitch forks moving in the direction
of the Eccles building where the Fed has its offices.
TGR: Let's
talk about timing. On Dec. 31, the tax cuts expire, defense cuts
go into place and we hit the debt ceiling.
DS: That will
be a clarifying moment; never before have three such powerful vectors
come together at the same time fiscal triple witching.
First, the
debt ceiling will expire around election time, so the government
will face another shutdown and it will be politically brutal to
assemble a majority in a lame duck session to raise it by the trillions
that will be needed. Second, the whole set of tax cuts and credits
that have been enacted over the last 10 years total up to $400500B
annually will expire on Dec. 31, so they will hit the economy like
a ton of bricks if not extended. Third, you have the sequester on
defense spending that was put in last summer as a fallback, which
cannot be changed without a majority vote in Congress.
It is a push-pull
situation: If you defer the sequester, you need more debt ceiling.
If you extend the tax expirations, you need a debt ceiling increase
of $100B a month.
TGR: What will
Congress do?
DS: Congress
will extend the whole thing for 60 or 90 days to give the new president,
if he hasn't demanded a recount yet, an opportunity to come up with
a plan.
To get the
votes to extend the debt ceiling, the Democrats will insist on keeping
the income and payroll tax cuts for the 99% and the Republicans
will want to keep the capital gains rate at 15% so the Wall Street
speculators will not be inconvenienced. It is utter madness.
TGR: It is
like chasing your tail. How does it stop?
DS: I do not
know how a functioning democracy in the ordinary course can deal
with this. Maybe someone from Goldman Sachs can come and put in
a fix, just like in Greece and Italy. The situation is really that
pathetic.
TGR: Greece
has come up with some creative ways to bring down its sovereign
debt without actually defaulting.
DS: The Greek
debt restructuring was a farce. More than $100B was held by the
European bailout fund, the ECB or the International Monetary Fund.
They got 100 cents on the dollar simply by issuing more debt to
Greece. For private debt, I believe the net write-down was $30B
after all the gimmicks, including the front-end payment. The rest
was simply refinanced. The Greeks are still debt slaves, and will
be until they tell Brussels to take a hike.
TGR: Going
back to the triple-witching hour at year-end, if the debt ceiling
is raised again, when do we start to see government layoffs and
limitations on services?
DS: Defense
purchases and non-defense purchases will be hit with brutal force
by the sequester. As we go into 2013, there will be a shocking hit
to the reported GDP numbers as discretionary government spending
shrinks. People keep forgetting that most government spending is
transfer payments, but it is only purchases of labor and goods that
go directly into the GDP calculations, and it is these accounts
that will get smacked by the sequester of discretionary defense
and non-defense budgets.
TGR: I would
think to unemployment numbers as well.
DS: They will
go up.
Just take one
example. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics monthly report,
there are 650,000 or so jobs in the U.S. Postal Service alone. That
is 650,000 people who pretend to work at jobs that have more or
less been made obsolete and redundant by the Internet and who are
paid through borrowings from Uncle Sam because the post office is
broke. Yet, the courageous ladies and gentlemen on Capitol Hill
cannot even bring themselves to vote to discontinue Saturday mail
delivery; they voted to study it! That is a measure of the loss
of capacity to rationally cognate about our fiscal circumstance.
TGR: In the
midst of this volatility, how can normal people preserve, much less
expand their wealth?
DS: The only
thing you can do is to stay out of harm's way and try to preserve
what you can in cash. All of the markets are rigged or impaired.
A 4% yield on blue chip stocks is not worth it, because when the
thing falls apart, your 4% will be gone in an hour.
TGR: But if
the government keeps printing money, cash will not be worth as much,
either, right?
DS: No, I do
not think we will have hyperinflation. I think the financial system
will break down before it can even get started. Then the economy
will go into paralysis until we find the courage, focus and resolution
to do something about it. Instead of hyperinflation or deflation
there will be a major financial dislocation, which means painful
re-pricing of financial assets.
How painful
will the re-pricing be? I think the public already knows that it
will be really terrible. A poll I saw the other day indicated that
25% of people on the verge of retirement think they are in such
bad financial shape that they will have to work until age 80. Now,
the average life expectancy is 78. People's financial circumstances
are so bad that they think they will be working two years after
they are dead!
TGR: Finally,
what is your investment model?
DS: My investing
model is ABCD: Anything Bernanke Cannot Destroy: flashlight batteries,
canned beans, bottled water, gold, a cabin in the mountains.
TGR:
Thank you very much.
Reprinted
from The Gold Report with
permission from David Stockman.
May
11, 2012
Former
Congressman David A. Stockman was Reagan's OMB director, which he
wrote about in his best-selling book, The
Triumph of Politics. He was an original partner in the Blackstone
Group, and reads LRC the first thing every morning.
Copyright
© 2012 The
Gold Report
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