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| Guest Commentary by Clif Droke - April 13th, 2008 |
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Click Here To Print This Article Now we
know the real reasons for the credit “crisis” I’ve
purposely kept my comments concerning the credit crisis at a minimum since it
began dominating the daily news headline.
My reasoning for this is because I knew the crisis was overblown and
overstated in the press and that there had to be a very good reason for
it. The only problem is I
didn’t know exactly what the reason was. Time
tells all, however, and I knew that sooner or later the truth must out! One
thing experience has taught is that every notable market crash, panic, bear
market or financial crisis is the result of careful planning and forethought by
the monetary authorities. With
trillions of dollars at stake, nothing happens without their tacit or explicit
approval and there is simply no such thing as a crisis that happens by
“coincidence.” For
happenstance to be allowed to run its course in with trillions in derivates out
there would be certain death for the financial system. As the economist Dr. Stuart Crane was
fond of saying, “Things [in the monetary world] don’t just happen
to happen. They happen because they
were planned to happen.” Another
thing Dr. Crane used to say was that you can always tell the underlying reason
for any crisis by waiting to see what the results of that crisis are. In the final analysis, the results, as
he pointed out, are in what the crisis fomenters expected to yield as the fruit
of their labors. And it’s no coincidence
that in every case, a financial crisis always yields the following results: 1.) Greater consolidation
within the banking and financial industry with the smaller players being merged
into the bigger players, or else swept away; 2.) Greater regulator powers
for the monetary authorities. There
has never been an exception to this outcome in the history of Well,
lo and behold, the results of this latest financial crisis are starting to
become apparent. The following news
article was published over the weekend and it points very conclusively to one
of the main reasons for the late crisis.
I quote the following article in part: Treasury Dept. Seeks New By
Edmund L. Andrews WASHINGTON
— The Treasury Department will propose on Monday that Congress give the
Federal Reserve broad authority to oversee financial market stability, in
effect allowing it to send SWAT teams into any corner of the industry or any
institution that might pose a risk to the overall system. The
proposal is part of a sweeping blueprint to overhaul the country’s
hodge-podge of regulatory agencies, which many specialists say failed to
recognize rampant excesses in mortgage lending until after they triggered what
is now the worst financial calamity in decades. According
to a summary provided by the administration, the plan would consolidate what is
now an alphabet soup of banking and securities regulators into a trio of
overseers responsible for everything from banks and brokerage firms to hedge
funds and private equity firms. While
the plan could expose Wall Street investment banks and hedge funds to greater
scrutiny, it avoids a call for tighter regulation. The plan would not rein in
practices that have been implicated in the housing and mortgage meltdown, like
packaging risky subprime loans into securities carrying
AAA ratings. The Fed
would also be given some authority over Wall Street firms but only when an
investment bank’s practices posed a threat to the financial system over
all.” I
nearly fell over when I saw the following paragraph in this news article: “Under
the proposal, the S.E.C. would merge with the Commodity Futures Trading Commssion, which regulates exchange-traded futures for oil,
grains, currencies and the like.” The SEC merging with the CFTC??? So much could be said about this but
I’ll hold off on commenting until more details become available. The
article continues, “Yet another proposal in the blueprint would, for the
first, time create a national regulator for insurance
companies, an industry that is now regulated by state governments.
Administration officials argue that a national system would eliminate
inefficiencies of having 50 different state regulators, who have jealously
guarded their powers and are likely to fight any encroachment by the federal
government.” The
proof is always in the pudding, and there are more than a few figgy surprises in this one. It does at least validate what
I’ve long suspected was a manufactured crisis, which flies in the face of
the commonly held belief that the crisis was unavoidable or else systemic and
beyond the control of the financial authorities. Nonsense! The authorities had this
“crisis” under their control the whole time and the latest revelations
only serve to underscore this fact. Discussion
abounds concerning the Fed’s contribution to the credit crisis when,
during the final years of Greenspan’s reign as Chairman, credit expansion
was ballooning at a parabolic rate.
This is the reason most commonly ascribed to creating the credit problem
and it gives one the erroneous impression that the simple act of credit
expansion is a recipe for guaranteed disaster in itself. Yet what few commentators ever discuss
is that credit expansion is a two-part process: while unmitigated credit growth
may set up a future crisis, it is only when the Fed starts tightening the
spigot and money contracts that the problems actually begin. Tight money is the real culprit here. Consider
the insights provided many years ago by Dr. Crane on how the Fed creates
financial crises: “In
March 1929 there was a little meeting in “Then
one day in October the banks called all of their loans on all of their margins
at the same minute. Every bank in
the money desk – and these were call loans, callable on demand. People had their stock on margin,
borrowing 90%. Now they went to the
banks and the banks weren’t lending, they were calling. They run to the market and
everyone’s trying to sell.
The banks had shut the money off.
The call desks were closed.
The money desk shut down….and all these people were running around
trying to sell because they had to sell 10% down and they were wiped out. All of the people who weren’t on
the inside were gone.” Some
things never change, it would seem. A
commonly heard statement among confused investors is, “I don’t
understand it! A few weeks ago,
investors greeted bad news with selling and the major averages went lower. Now, bad news is greeted with buying and
the indices completely ignore the bad news!” The
answer to this conundrum is simple.
How the stock market responds to news (good or bad) is determined by
internal momentum. When the
market’s main internal momentum gauges are up (as reflected in the rate
of change of the number of stocks making net new highs), the market is more
likely to respond to good news favorably and to ignore negative news. When the internal momentum is downward
trending (as it was in December-January), the market is vulnerable to bad news. The
market’s internal momentum structure is changing and is one reason why
investors who are basing their investment decisions on the financial climate
that prevailed in the previous few months are in for a lot of frustration. In the month of April we’ll be
looking at how the shift in market internal momentum will affect us and how we
can profit from it. Clif Droke is the editor of the daily Gold & Silver Stock Report. Published daily since 2002, the report provides forecasts and analysis of the leading gold, silver, uranium and energy stocks from a short-term technical standpoint. He is the author of several books on financial markets, including “Stock Trading with Moving Averages.” For more info visit www.clifdroke.com. |
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