Showing posts with label Bank of America. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bank of America. Show all posts

Monday, July 16, 2012

Not Frank Ocean or Love And Hip Hop Atlanta, It’s LIBOR Stupid

What I attempt to tackle in this tractate is very important. No it is not about Love and Hip Hop Atlanta, Frank Ocean being Gay or his new release, it pertains to the LIBOR banking scandal. Now I know many may not care because it is not on the prior topics, but believe me it is more impactful and important on your daily lives than any of the scolisims listed as direct objects in the second sentence of this paragraph.

My interest in global economics began rather gratuitously, when I was given a book to read by one of my dormitory mates some three decades ago while an undergraduate at Morehouse College called “Tragedy and Hope” by Caroll Quigley. Since that time I have been well served, in particular given the saving and Loans crisis, Enron, financial crisis of 2008, the Lehman Brothers and AIG crises, and recently with loss of funds in MF Global and what have occurred with respect to PFGBest. Now there is the LIBOR scandal, which I think will be even more than or at least as disastrous as the massive amount of US debt held by foreign nations and the Eurozone crisis. Never had I imagined corruption would be so visible albeit I wrote and predicted such several times in 2008.

I attempted to find out the pulse of this from the African American perspective; however, after reading The Root, The Loop 21, The Grio, and a few other supposedly mainstream African American political and economic news outlets, I was astonished to find they had not written about LIBOR at all. Maybe I expected too much. Maybe their writers could not move beyond writing about Republicans, President Obama, or Mitt Romney, or worse that what they considered important and news worthy was frequently limited to Frank Ocean coming out of the closet, Reality TV and the mishaps of Celebrities ad nausea. Maybe they did not or have not studied global finances historically or read books like Ahmed Piquant “Lords of Finance” or Michael Panzer’s “When Giants Fail.”

LIBOR (the London Inter-Bank Offered Rate) is a benchmark off which to price commercial loans, mortgages, and other forms of lending. It has been a staple in the news as of late due to the admission by Barclays bank admitting that it deliberately understated the interest rates at which it could borrow between September 2007 and May 2009. So astonishing was this revelation that Barclays Chairman Robert E. Diamond Jr. resigned although he informed the British Parliament that he did not know that his bank was manipulating the index on which a major portion of international trade is based, in particular the rate at which banks loan money to other banks. Strange since the Wall Street Journal reported these occurrences four years ago.

Now most, or at least some who are well read are knowledgeable tacitly of Bernie Madoff and Enron’s Ken Lay, however the Libor interest rate scandal is even bigger because it not only involving hundreds of trillions in international derivatives trade, it impacts each of us directly in our pockets daily. For if the banks submitted artificially low Libor rates during the financial crisis in 2008, as Barclays has admitted, it would have led cities and states to receive smaller payments from financial contracts they had entered with their banks. Moreover, if such is the case, then by bankers’ manipulation of this major interest rate linked to hundreds of millions of dollars, then cities, states and municipal agencies nationwide, may have lost money in their public pension system and budget short falls as a consequence may have let to layoffs and even the loss of services due to closing parks, swimming pools, fire stations or other public sector offerings. Especiallly given the current economic conditions across the country and given that municipalities had borrowed based on rates derived via the manipulating the Libor rate of an estimated a $800 trillion derivatives market. The rate manipulation was occurring at a time in which the money was needed it the most – during a recession.

A coterie of banks are involved in setting Libor each day, including Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Deutsche Bank, Citigroup, and HSBC and Barclays. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York learned in April 2008 (Timothy F. Geithner served as the head of the New York Fed during this period), that some banks were reporting false interest rates.

All of the aforementioned is fact. We know about LIBOR because last month, Barclays admitted to regulators that it tried to manipulate Libor before and during the financial crisis in 2008, and paid $450 million to settle and also noted that other banks were doing the same, but none of them have been accused of wrongdoing. This even with a corpus of E-mail records of market manipulation so lucid that if the top executives were unaware it was simply because they did not want to.

On the personal level, the LIBOR rate influences what consumers, businesses and investors pay on a wide range of financial contracts from mortgages and interest rate swaps to credit cards and student loans. For the average monthly mortgage, I would estimate that it cast a family anywhere from $50 to $100 extra each month.  Umair Haque explained it the following way in a blog post for the Harvard Business Review: “Let me couch this for you in the pedestrian terms of financial hydraulics — the tawdry terms which seem to substitute for thinking in what's become of our thin, shallow economic and political discourse. The most basic function of a financial system is to price money. If a financial system can't undertake that simple task effectively — if the price of money is fixed like a roulette wheel stuck on red — all else must necessarily fail: investment must become malinvestment, speculation must precede creation, "profit" must become divorced from benefit, and wealth is effectively transferred from poor to rich, in a form of quiet but lethally effective institutionalized theft.”

Yep, it is on, and I do not even belive most of the world, especially my folk (African Americans) even care or want to understand this issue.  Sure it is about economics but it is not complex.  The problem is having the will and impetus to want to understand and know something. Again as I have stated many times before, Carter G. Woodson was correct: “If you can control a man's thinking you do not have to worry about his action. When you determine what a man shall think you do not have to concern yourself about what he will do. If you make a man feel that he is inferior, you do not have to compel him to accept an inferior status, for he will seek it himself. If you make a man think that he is justly an outcast, you do not have to order him to the back door. He will go without being told; and if there is no back door, his very nature will demand one.” 

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

The One World Corporation

As I listen to the inside the beltway bickering of sound bites from “taxes on private jets” to “cut, cap and balance,” I cannot grasp that no one has simplified this discussion regarding debt and deficits. The way it is presented, many act as if debt and deficit are the same things when they are not, while just forgetting to explain that the real issue is our sovereign debt crisis as a nation and not liquidity. This means that the US economic woes are a function of structural problems we have while operating in a global economy.

For example, around the globe, the real problem is not the governments (albeit they play a major role) but rather the banks and the possibility they may run out of money. In Ireland for example, it is more likely that banks will run out of loot before the government. Here at home, Bank of America recently made a bond issuance of $2.5 billion in new bonds. Why, because they are short on loot, running out of money and because the bank's stock just fell to fresh multi-year lows.

Both banks and governments are responding to the global debt crisis by adding more debt on top of debt. Adding debt to more debt is a pyramid scheme, a Ponzi scheme for to keep the pyramid intact, more loot is needed to keep those on top and under them making money. All kidding aside, looking a Greece for example, the fact is that Greece will never be able to pay back the debt it owes bond holders and the global markets.

It is not hard to see, but when you have a basically dumb-downed and ignorant electorate, the obvious gets lost in this age where talk and opinion takes the place of news and information. Or else it would be front and center that in the last year, the US dollar has fallen 12% in value which has led to making China the top seller of US treasury bonds worldwide. This means that the US government is an insolvent nation financially. We have accumulated a trillion dollar deficit three years in a row and a double dip in the housing market. Add to this the rising cost of oil and gas due to manipulation by speculators, mainly by the Goldman Sachs Commodity Index, and then it is easy to see what the outcome will be – a global economy run by a single corporate institution in the form of one world bank.

Ireland, which total debt is 100 percent of GDP, is insolvent. Greece, Italy, Spain, France and the US are all approaching the same boat. Why because the IMF, World Bank, Federal Reserve, Bank for International Settlements in Basle, Switzerland (a private bank owned and controlled by the worlds' central banks which were themselves private corporations) and similar agencies only work to see banks get paid, not that governments or democracy survive and prosper. If the US is to survive, it must function on a national credit system, which would lead to a sovereign nation state based on a system of our currency – the dollar. This would result in a non-inflationary credit system run by the state. But banks don’t want that, as Andrew Jackson and Lincoln found out centuries earlier.

If this does not occur, then we will continue, as a nation to involve ourselves in wars, for that will be the only way to make money. We will be in Pakistan, which will put us in conflict with China (which may involve India and Russia) and even in our own hemisphere in South America.
What is saddening is that most Americans do not have a clue, especially African Americans who often cannot see the trees for the forest through our own doing. History shows us that when the US economy goes awry, we feel it first and hardest. For we have limited if any knowledge of the collateralized debt obligations, complex financial papers/instruments, or the sophisticated computerized risk models that got us as a nation in this predicament. But we can spend, and buy and not save although property depreciations due to the foreclosure crisis will wipe out a significant amount of our wealth as a community and may cost us alone upwards of $190 billion dollars. After all everybody know we are the most vulnerable, especially loan companies, except for us.

Folk, America is broke. We the people are broke. The only thing I see on the horizon is debt on top of debt. But like all pyramid schemes, ours will fall or be found out too and our republic as we know it will be no longer and instead, a part of a new entity – the one world corporation.