Monday, October 5, 2015 |
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YOUR BEST SOURCE FOR THE UNBIASED MARKET COMMENTARY YOU WON'T GET FROM WALL STREET | |||
The Great Financial Revolution of Our Times | |||
by Martin Weiss | |||
Dear Subscriber,
Here's my diary of the events as they unfolded,
beginning on one of the most dramatic days of that era ... Monday, September 15, 2008.
September 16. A
large money fund, Reserve Primary Fund, has big losses in its
short-term loans to Lehman. So its share price, which is always
supposed to be fixed at $1, suddenly falls below the all-important
one-buck level. Within 48 hours, the fund is swamped with a
half-trillion dollars in liquidation orders, and soon the contagion
begins to spread to other money funds.
September 19. To
stem the panic, the U.S. Treasury announces the equivalent of federal
deposit insurance for money market funds, transferring still more
responsibility from the private to the public sector.
September 21. In order to qualify for government
support and bailout funds, America's two largest investment banks —
Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley — decide, virtually overnight, to
transform themselves into bank holding companies.
Week of September 22. Congress
starts to move swiftly to develop an emergency bailout plan, draft
legislation, get all the powers behind it, and exert enormous pressure
to suppress opposition.
October 3. The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act
of 2008 is passed with a 263-171 bipartisan vote in the House. Almost
immediately, $700 billion in bailout funds start flowing from the U.S.
Treasury Department straight into the coffers of giant U.S. banks on the
brink of failure.
But it's just the first of many
actions around the world — mostly in the United States and Western
Europe — that help transfer more trillions of dollars in toxic assets
from the books of bankrupt corporations to the books of federal
governments.
October 7. The global market for short-term corporate IOUs (commercial paper) has sunk into a sudden deep freeze.
This market is the oil that
lubricates the industrial and banking operations of the entire world.
Without it, the engine of the global economy grinds to a halt.
In response, the U.S. Fed announces a never-before-heard-of
"Commercial Paper Funding Facility." In other words, virtually any
major company in the world that cannot roll over its short-term debts
coming due is, in effect, invited to stop by the Fed's offices in
downtown Manhattan to pick up all the cash it needs.
Again, the ultimate
responsibility for meeting huge amounts of private-sector debt is
transferred from the corporate sector to the government sector.
October 8, 11 AM GMT.
It's rate-cutting time, and it's big: Almost every major central bank
in the world — including the U.S. Fed, the Bank of England, the
European Central Bank, plus smaller banks such as the Bank of Canada,
Swedish Riksbank and the Swiss National Bank — announce simultaneous,
coordinated interest-rate cuts of 0.5%.
For the Fed, it's the first leg of a 3-step move down to zero percent.But on the other side of the world, in Tokyo, it leaves the Bank of Japan (BOJ) stranded, virtually alone. Why? Because the BOJ has already cut its interest rates to zero long ago, and it has no more room to cut.
Ironically, for years, Japan's
zero-interest policy has been derided by every other self-respecting
central banker in the West as "foolhardy" or "amateurish." Now, they're
all moving swiftly through exactly the same gateway to the same "other
world" — with no plan regarding when or how to get back to normalcy.
Immediate result: Despite the
rate cuts, global stock markets plunge, and Japan is the biggest loser,
down more than 9% on the day.
Long-term results:
Most important of all, since
that fateful day seven years ago, all of the major governments of the
world have taken on an unprecedented burden — not only as the biggest
debtors on the planet, but also as the lenders of last resort for
nearly everyone else.
This is the great, hidden revolution of our times.
And therein lies a powerful build-up of forces that could unravel in ways that few investors understand.
Good luck and God bless!
Martin
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Monday, October 5, 2015
The Great Financial Revolution of Our Times
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