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Europe’s pipeline war

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Europe’s pipeline war 

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by Stefan Nicola 
Feb 9, 2007

The European Union and Russia are battling over the future of a pipeline aimed at diversifying Europe’s energy imports.
The so-called Nabucco pipeline, first planned in 2004, would transport natural gas to Austria from the Caspian region via Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania and Hungary. Stretching more than 2,000 miles, it will run from Erzurum, Turkey, to Baumgarten an der March, a major natural gas hub in Austria. Thus, Nabucco could be supplied with gas from Iran, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Egypt and Syria.
The EU and the United States back the project because it represents a diversion from the current methods of importing natural gas solely from Russia.Yet Russia has presented its own pipeline project: South Stream. The 550-mile, $15 billion South Stream pipeline would run under the Black Sea from Russia to Bulgaria, where it could branch off in several directions. The memorandum of understanding to build South Stream was signed in Rome in June 2007 by officials from Italy’s Eni and Russia’s Gazprom.

Since the beginning of the year, Russia has taken aggressive steps to have other partners join the South Stream project.

On Jan. 18, Bulgaria joined South Stream through its state-owned company Bulgargaz; European officials are especially irritated by the fact Bulgaria, a NATO and very recent EU member, received offers to join Nabucco but chose the Russian project instead. A week later, Serbia and Russia signed an agreement to route a northern branch of South Stream through Serbia. The accord also gave Gazprom a 51-percent stake in NIS, the Serbian oil monopolist, for an undisclosed price.

The pipeline, which is aimed at bringing Siberian gas to southern Europe, branches off in Bulgaria, with a southern spur supplying Greece and southern Italy and a northern branch running through Romania and Serbia toward northern Italy.

The project undermines the hopes for the prospective U.S.- and EU-backed Nabucco pipeline designed to ease Europe’s reliance on Russia. Ever since Russia temporarily shut gas to Ukraine until it agreed to pay higher prices, Europe has been looking to diversify its energy imports. However, Nabucco has run into problems because Iran and Syria remain politically unstable, and the Central Asian countries have promised huge amounts of gas to China as well as Russia. Turkmenistan agreed to supply Gazprom with 50 billion cubic meters per year, along with a contract to build a pipeline to China, scheduled to go into operation in 2009, to provide 30 billion cubic meters annually. While Turkmenistan says it can provide the extra 30 billion cubic meters for Nabucco, observers have in the past doubted they can shoulder the export burden.

A senior Russian official said Wednesday in Berlin the latest deals with Bulgaria and Serbia and the limited gas in Central Asia render Nabucco a project without a future.

“This is the death of Nabucco,” Duma Deputy Speaker Valery Yazev said last week in Berlin. “I don’t think there will be gas left for another pipeline.”

Europe, however, is not willing to surrender just yet.

“Nabucco is far away from being handed the final blow,” Reinhard Mitschek, the head of the Nabucco consortium, told Austrian newspaper Die Presse. “Besides RWE, further interested parties are knocking at our doors. They want to join the project because it has a lot of future potential,” he said.

Nabucco, held by Romania’s Transgaz, Bulgaria’s Bulgargaz, Austria’s OMV, Turkey’s Botas and MOL, on Tuesday took on a sixth partner, Germany’s RWE, forming a powerful team that may be joined soon by France’s Gaz de France.

“We believe that both RWE and Gaz de France represent a high additional value to the Nabucco project that proved its need for very strong economic and political support from the European companies and governments,” Benjamin Lakatos, director of MOL Gas Midstream, said in a statement

http://www.energy-daily.com/reports/Analysis_Europes_pipeline_war_999.html

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7 fev 2008 

Gazprom menace d’interrompre ses livraisons à l’Ukraine en raison d’un litige sur une dette de 1,5 milliard de dollars liée à des livraisons passées.

Written by eldib

February 9, 2008 at 10:03 am

The Rising Risk of a Systemic Financial Meltdown:The Twelve Steps to Financial Disaster

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The Rising Risk of a Systemic Financial Meltdown:

The Twelve Steps to Financial Disaster

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Why did the Fed ease the Fed Funds rate by a whopping 125bps in eight days this past January? It is true that most macro indicators are heading south and suggesting a deep and severe recession that has already started. But the flow of bad macro news in mid-January did not justify, by itself, such a radical inter-meeting emergency Fed action followed by another cut at the formal FOMC meeting.

To understand the Fed actions one has to realize that there is now a rising probability of a “catastrophic” financial and economic outcome, i.e. a vicious circle where a deep recession makes the financial losses more severe and where, in turn, large and growing financial losses and a financial meltdown make the recession even more severe. The Fed is seriously worried about this vicious circle and about the risks of a systemic financial meltdown.That is the reason the Fed had thrown all caution to the wind – after a year in which it was behind the curve and underplaying the economic and financial risks – and has taken a very aggressive approach to risk management; this is a much more aggressive approach than the Greenspan one in spite of the initial views that the Bernanke Fed would be more cautious than Greenspan in reacting to economic and financial vulnerabilities.To understand the risks that the financial system is facing today I present the “nightmare” or “catastrophic” scenario that the Fed and financial officials around the world are now worried about. Such a scenario – however extreme – has a rising and significant probability of occurring. Thus, it does not describe a very low probability event but rather an outcome that is quite possible.

Start first with the recession that is now enveloping the US economy. Let us assume – as likely – that this recession – that already started in December 2007 – will be worse than the mild ones – that lasted 8 months – that occurred in 1990-91 and 2001. The recession of 2008 will be more severe for several reasons: first, we have the biggest housing bust in US history with home prices likely to eventually fall 20 to 30%; second, because of a credit bubble that went beyond mortgages and because of reckless financial innovation and securitization the ongoing credit bust will lead to a severe credit crunch; third, US households – whose consumption is over 70% of GDP – have spent well beyond their means for years now piling up a massive amount of debt, both mortgage and otherwise; now that home prices are falling and a severe credit crunch is emerging the retrenchment of private consumption will be serious and protracted. So let us suppose that the recession of 2008 will last at least four quarters and, possibly, up to six quarters. What will be the consequences of it?

Here are the twelve steps or stages of a scenario of systemic financial meltdown associated with this severe economic recession…

First, this is the worst housing recession in US history and there is no sign it will bottom out any time soon. At this point it is clear that US home prices will fall between 20% and 30% from their bubbly peak; that would wipe out between $4 trillion and $6 trillion of household wealth. While the subprime meltdown is likely to cause about 2.2 million foreclosures, a 30% fall in home values would imply that over 10 million households would have negative equity in their homes and would have a big incentive to use “jingle mail” (i.e. default, put the home keys in an envelope and send it to their mortgage bank). Moreover, soon enough a few very large home builders will go bankrupt and join the dozens of other small ones that have already gone bankrupt thus leading to another free fall in home builders’ stock prices that have irrationally rallied in the last few weeks in spite of a worsening housing recession.

Second, losses for the financial system from the subprime disaster are now estimated to be as high as $250 to $300 billion. But the financial losses will not be only in subprime mortgages and the related RMBS and CDOs. They are now spreading to near prime and prime mortgages as the same reckless lending practices in subprime (no down-payment, no verification of income, jobs and assets (i.e. NINJA or LIAR loans), interest rate only, negative amortization, teaser rates, etc.) were occurring across the entire spectrum of mortgages; about 60% of all mortgage origination since 2005 through 2007 had these reckless and toxic features. So this is a generalized mortgage crisis and meltdown, not just a subprime one. And losses among all sorts of mortgages will sharply increase as home prices fall sharply and the economy spins into a serious recession. Goldman Sachs now estimates total mortgage credit losses of about $400 billion; but the eventual figures could be much larger if home prices fall more than 20%. Also, the RMBS and CDO markets for securitization of mortgages – already dead for subprime and frozen for other mortgages – remain in a severe credit crunch, thus reducing further the ability of banks to originate mortgages. The mortgage credit crunch will become even more severe.

Also add to the woes and losses of the financial institutions the meltdown of hundreds of billions of off balance SIVs and conduits; this meltdown and the roll-off of the ABCP market has forced banks to bring back on balance sheet these toxic off balance sheet vehicles adding to the capital and liquidity crunch of the financial institutions and adding to their on balance sheet losses. And because of securitization the securitized toxic waste has been spread from banks to capital markets and their investors in the US and abroad, thus increasing – rather than reducing systemic risk – and making the credit crunch global.

Third, the recession will lead – as it is already doing – to a sharp increase in defaults on other forms of unsecured consumer debt: credit cards, auto loans, student loans. There are dozens of millions of subprime credit cards and subprime auto loans in the US. And again defaults in these consumer debt categories will not be limited to subprime borrowers. So add these losses to the financial losses of banks and of other financial institutions (as also these debts were securitized in ABS products), thus leading to a more severe credit crunch. As the Fed loan officers survey suggest the credit crunch is spreading throughout the mortgage market and from mortgages to consumer credit, and from large banks to smaller banks.

Fourth, while there is serious uncertainty about the losses that monolines will undertake on their insurance of RMBS, CDO and other toxic ABS products, it is now clear that such losses are much higher than the $10-15 billion rescue package that regulators are trying to patch up. Some monolines are actually borderline insolvent and none of them deserves at this point a AAA rating regardless of how much realistic recapitalization is provided. Any business that required an AAA rating to stay in business is a business that does not deserve such a rating in the first place. The monolines should be downgraded as no private rescue package – short of an unlikely public bailout – is realistic or feasible given the deep losses of the monolines on their insurance of toxic ABS products.

Next, the downgrade of the monolines will lead to another $150 of writedowns on ABS portfolios for financial institutions that have already massive losses. It will also lead to additional losses on their portfolio of muni bonds. The downgrade of the monolines will also lead to large losses – and potential runs – on the money market funds that invested in some of these toxic products. The money market funds that are backed by banks or that bought liquidity protection from banks against the risk of a fall in the NAV may avoid a run but such a rescue will exacerbate the capital and liquidity problems of their underwriters. The monolines’ downgrade will then also lead to another sharp drop in US equity markets that are already shaken by the risk of a severe recession and large losses in the financial system.

Fifth, the commercial real estate loan market will soon enter into a meltdown similar to the subprime one. Lending practices in commercial real estate were as reckless as those in residential real estate. The housing crisis will lead – with a short lag – to a bust in non-residential construction as no one will want to build offices, stores, shopping malls/centers in ghost towns. The CMBX index is already pricing a massive increase in credit spreads for non-residential mortgages/loans. And new origination of commercial real estate mortgages is already semi-frozen today; the commercial real estate mortgage market is already seizing up today.

Sixth, it is possible that some large regional or even national bank that is very exposed to mortgages, residential and commercial, will go bankrupt. Thus some big banks may join the 200 plus subprime lenders that have gone bankrupt. This, like in the case of Northern Rock, will lead to depositors’ panic and concerns about deposit insurance. The Fed will have to reaffirm the implicit doctrine that some banks are too big to be allowed to fail. But these bank bankruptcies will lead to severe fiscal losses of bank bailout and effective nationalization of the affected institutions. Already Countrywide – an institution that was more likely insolvent than illiquid – has been bailed out with public money via a $55 billion loan from the FHLB system, a semi-public system of funding of mortgage lenders. Banks’ bankruptcies will add to an already severe credit crunch.

Seventh, the banks losses on their portfolio of leveraged loans are already large and growing. The ability of financial institutions to syndicate and securitize their leveraged loans – a good chunk of which were issued to finance very risky and reckless LBOs – is now at serious risk. And hundreds of billions of dollars of leveraged loans are now stuck on the balance sheet of financial institutions at values well below par (currently about 90 cents on the dollar but soon much lower). Add to this that many reckless LBOs (as senseless LBOs with debt to earnings ratio of seven or eight had become the norm during the go-go days of the credit bubble) have now been postponed, restructured or cancelled. And add to this problem the fact that some actual large LBOs will end up into bankruptcy as some of these corporations taken private are effectively bankrupt in a recession and given the repricing of risk; convenant-lite and PIK toggles may only postpone – not avoid – such bankruptcies and make them uglier when they do eventually occur. The leveraged loans mess is already leading to a freezing up of the CLO market and to growing losses for financial institutions.

Eighth, once a severe recession is underway a massive wave of corporate defaults will take place. In a typical year US corporate default rates are about 3.8% (average for 1971-2007); in 2006 and 2007 this figure was a puny 0.6%. And in a typical US recession such default rates surge above 10%. Also during such distressed periods the RGD – or recovery given default – rates are much lower, thus adding to the total losses from a default. Default rates were very low in the last two years because of a slosh of liquidity, easy credit conditions and very low spreads (with junk bond yields being only 260bps above Treasuries until mid June 2007). But now the repricing of risk has been massive: junk bond spreads close to 700bps, iTraxx and CDX indices pricing massive corporate default rates and the junk bond yield issuance market is now semi-frozen. While on average the US and European corporations are in better shape – in terms of profitability and debt burden – than in 2001 there is a large fat tail of corporations with very low profitability and that have piled up a mass of junk bond debt that will soon come to refinancing at much higher spreads. Corporate default rates will surge during the 2008 recession and peak well above 10% based on recent studies. And once defaults are higher and credit spreads higher massive losses will occur among the credit default swaps (CDS) that provided protection against corporate defaults. Estimates of the losses on a notional value of $50 trillion CDS against a bond base of $5 trillion are varied (from $20 billion to $250 billion with a number closer to the latter figure more likely). Losses on CDS do not represent only a transfer of wealth from those who sold protection to those who bought it. If losses are large some of the counterparties who sold protection – possibly large institutions such as monolines, some hedge funds or a large broker dealer – may go bankrupt leading to even greater systemic risk as those who bought protection may face counterparties who cannot pay.

Ninth, the “shadow banking system” (as defined by the PIMCO folks) or more precisely the “shadow financial system” (as it is composed by non-bank financial institutions) will soon get into serious trouble. This shadow financial system is composed of financial institutions that – like banks – borrow short and in liquid forms and lend or invest long in more illiquid assets. This system includes: SIVs, conduits, money market funds, monolines, investment banks, hedge funds and other non-bank financial institutions. All these institutions are subject to market risk, credit risk (given their risky investments) and especially liquidity/rollover risk as their short term liquid liabilities can be rolled off easily while their assets are more long term and illiquid. Unlike banks these non-bank financial institutions don’t have direct or indirect access to the central bank’s lender of last resort support as they are not depository institutions. Thus, in the case of financial distress and/or illiquidity they may go bankrupt because of both insolvency and/or lack of liquidity and inability to roll over or refinance their short term liabilities. Deepening problems in the economy and in the financial markets and poor risk managements will lead some of these institutions to go belly up: a few large hedge funds, a few money market funds, the entire SIV system and, possibly, one or two large and systemically important broker dealers. Dealing with the distress of this shadow financial system will be very problematic as this system – stressed by credit and liquidity problems – cannot be directly rescued by the central banks in the way that banks can.

Tenth, stock markets in the US and abroad will start pricing a severe US recession – rather than a mild recession – and a sharp global economic slowdown. The fall in stock markets – after the late January 2008 rally fizzles out – will resume as investors will soon realize that the economic downturn is more severe, that the monolines will not be rescued, that financial losses will mount, and that earnings will sharply drop in a recession not just among financial firms but also non financial ones. A few long equity hedge funds will go belly up in 2008 after the massive losses of many hedge funds in August, November and, again, January 2008. Large margin calls will be triggered for long equity investors and another round of massive equity shorting will take place. Long covering and margin calls will lead to a cascading fall in equity markets in the US and a transmission to global equity markets. US and global equity markets will enter into a persistent bear market as in a typical US recession the S&P500 falls by about 28%.

Eleventh, the worsening credit crunch that is affecting most credit markets and credit derivative markets will lead to a dry-up of liquidity in a variety of financial markets, including otherwise very liquid derivatives markets. Another round of credit crunch in interbank markets will ensue triggered by counterparty risk, lack of trust, liquidity premia and credit risk. A variety of interbank rates – TED spreads, BOR-OIS spreads, BOT – Tbill spreads, interbank-policy rate spreads, swap spreads, VIX and other gauges of investors’ risk aversion – will massively widen again. Even the easing of the liquidity crunch after massive central banks’ actions in December and January will reverse as credit concerns keep interbank spread wide in spite of further injections of liquidity by central banks.

Twelfth, a vicious circle of losses, capital reduction, credit contraction, forced liquidation and fire sales of assets at below fundamental prices will ensue leading to a cascading and mounting cycle of losses and further credit contraction. In illiquid market actual market prices are now even lower than the lower fundamental value that they now have given the credit problems in the economy. Market prices include a large illiquidity discount on top of the discount due to the credit and fundamental problems of the underlying assets that are backing the distressed financial assets. Capital losses will lead to margin calls and further reduction of risk taking by a variety of financial institutions that are now forced to mark to market their positions. Such a forced fire sale of assets in illiquid markets will lead to further losses that will further contract credit and trigger further margin calls and disintermediation of credit. The triggering event for the next round of this cascade is the downgrade of the monolines and the ensuing sharp drop in equity markets; both will trigger margin calls and further credit disintermediation.

Based on estimates by Goldman Sachs $200 billion of losses in the financial system lead to a contraction of credit of $2 trillion given that institutions hold about $10 of assets per dollar of capital. The recapitalization of banks sovereign wealth funds – about $80 billion so far – will be unable to stop this credit disintermediation – (the move from off balance sheet to on balance sheet and moves of assets and liabilities from the shadow banking system to the formal banking system) and the ensuing contraction in credit as the mounting losses will dominate by a large margin any bank recapitalization from SWFs. A contagious and cascading spiral of credit disintermediation, credit contraction, sharp fall in asset prices and sharp widening in credit spreads will then be transmitted to most parts of the financial system. This massive credit crunch will make the economic contraction more severe and lead to further financial losses. Total losses in the financial system will add up to more than $1 trillion and the economic recession will become deeper, more protracted and severe.

A near global economic recession will ensue as the financial and credit losses and the credit crunch spread around the world. Panic, fire sales, cascading fall in asset prices will exacerbate the financial and real economic distress as a number of large and systemically important financial institutions go bankrupt. A 1987 style stock market crash could occur leading to further panic and severe financial and economic distress. Monetary and fiscal easing will not be able to prevent a systemic financial meltdown as credit and insolvency problems trump illiquidity problems. The lack of trust in counterparties – driven by the opacity and lack of transparency in financial markets, and uncertainty about the size of the losses and who is holding the toxic waste securities – will add to the impotence of monetary policy and lead to massive hoarding of liquidity that will exacerbates the liquidity and credit crunch.

In this meltdown scenario US and global financial markets will experience their most severe crisis in the last quarter of a century.

Can the Fed and other financial officials avoid this nightmare scenario that keeps them awake at night? The answer to this question – to be detailed in a follow-up article – is twofold: first, it is not easy to manage and control such a contagious financial crisis that is more severe and dangerous than any faced by the US in a quarter of a century; second, the extent and severity of this financial crisis will depend on whether the policy response – monetary, fiscal, regulatory, financial and otherwise – is coherent, timely and credible. I will argue – in my next article – that one should be pessimistic about the ability of policy and financial authorities to manage and contain a crisis of this magnitude; thus, one should be prepared for the worst, i.e. a systemic financial crisis.

http://www.sott.net/articles/show/148484-The-Rising-Risk-of-a-Systemic-Financial-Meltdown-The-Twelve-Steps-to-Financial-Disaster

Written by eldib

February 9, 2008 at 10:00 am

Posted in USA

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The dollar’s reserve currency role is drawing to an end

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The dollar’s reserve currency role is drawing to an endby Paul Craig Roberts

Global Research, February 7, 2008


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It is difficult to know where Bush has accomplished the most destruction, the Iraqi economy or the US economy.In the current issue of Manufacturing & Technology News, Washington economist Charles McMillion observes that seven years of Bush has seen the federal debt increase by two-thirds while US household debt doubled.

This massive Keynesian stimulus produced pitiful economic results. Median real income has declined. The labor force participation rate has declined. Job growth has been pathetic, with 28 percent of the new jobs being in the government sector. All the new private sector jobs are accounted for by private education and health care bureaucracies, bars and restaurants. Three and a quarter million manufacturing jobs and a half-million supervisory jobs were lost. The number of manufacturing jobs has fallen to the level of 65 years ago.

This is the profile of a Third World economy.

The “new economy” has been running a trade deficit in advanced technology products since 2002. The US trade deficit in manufactured goods dwarfs the US trade deficit in oil. The US does not earn enough to pay its import bill, and it doesn’t save enough to finance the government’s budget deficit.

To finance its deficits, America looks to the kindness of foreigners to continue to accept the outpouring of dollars and dollar-denominated debt.

The dollars are accepted, because the dollar is the world’s reserve currency.

At the meeting of the World Economic Forum at Davos, Switzerland, last week, billionaire currency trader George Soros warned that the dollar’s reserve currency role was drawing to an end: “The current crisis is not only the bust that follows the housing boom, it’s basically the end of a 60-year period of continuing credit expansion based on the dollar as the reserve currency. Now the rest of the world is increasingly unwilling to accumulate dollars.”

If the world is unwilling to continue to accumulate dollars, the US will not be able to finance its trade deficit or its budget deficit. As both are seriously out of balance, the implication is for yet more decline in the dollar’s exchange value and a sharp rise in prices.

Economists have romanticized globalism, taking delight in the myriad of foreign components in US brand name products. This is fine for a country whose trade is in balance or whose currency has the reserve currency role. It is a terrible dependency for a country such as the US that has been busy at work offshoring its economy while destroying the exchange value of its currency.

As the dollar sheds value and loses its privileged position as reserve currency, US living standards will take a serious knock.

If the US government cannot balance its budget by cutting its spending or by raising taxes, the day when it can no longer borrow will see the government paying its bills by printing money like a Third World banana republic. Inflation and more exchange rate depreciation will be the order of the day.

Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan Administration. He is the author of Supply-Side Revolution : An Insider’s Account of Policymaking in Washington; Alienation and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown: Inside the Soviet Economy, and is the co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton of The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name of Justice.

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8021

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Comments :

More half-truths and utter claptrap

by Paperinoisback 

Reading this article one would think that the whole problem of US deficit spending and the crisis of the dollar only happened because of managerial mistakes made since 2002 by the Chimp. This is baloney. THE WHOLE OF THE DOLLAR ECONOMY IS FOUNDED ON A SCAM (not that the Euro is much different, of course), since Bretton Woods. What we are witnessing today is simply the natural outcome of this aberration, prompted by the growth of alternative economies and the loosening of the US political clasp on the rest of the world. And the main reason why this process is still not complete is the oil question.

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Soros is never wrong…

by Legolas_Greenleaf

especially when it comes to currency matters. He’s widely considered a god on Wall Street, justly so, having “beat the street (by a wide margin) for 20 consecutive years.

Guess where he is putting his fortune? Yuans, rubles, rupees, and gold.

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Oh yes!

by poiuytr

The US wont see the end of 2008. Not in its present state, that is. I’m shocked at how quickly it came. Jan 2008 saw the effective end of US banking. Amazing! But all this was clear mid-2006 when the US monopoly on the west currency was shot to hell.

Now it’s time to begin moving off euro cause that’s the next piece of rubbish to go.

Written by eldib

February 7, 2008 at 6:33 pm

Posted in USA

Tagged with , ,

What Do the Pentagon’s Budget Numbers Mean?-The Chaos in America’s Vast Security Budget

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What Do the Pentagon’s Budget Numbers Mean?

The Chaos in America’s Vast Security Budget
 

By: WINSLOW T. WHEELER

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06/02/2008

The new 2009 defense budget has just been released. The more you look into the numbers, the more things become unclear, very unclear. Most of the numbers being released today are inaccurate or incomplete, or both. Other numbers will change as the year progresses, but we do not know if they will go up or down.

The Department of Defense (DOD) says its budget request for the next fiscal year–2009 – is $515.4 billion. George W. Bush’s budget as shown today by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) says the Pentagon request is $518.3 billion, a $2.9 billion difference. OMB is right; the Pentagon “forgot” to include some permanent appropriations (also called “entitlements” or “mandatory” spending) for retirement and some other non-hardware spending. The $518.3 billion is incomplete; it does not include $70 billion requested to pay for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But that number too is inaccurate. It does not include enough money to fight the wars for more than a few months in 2009. If the violence in Iraq stays at its recently reduced levels–or even declines – that $70 billion should be about doubled to get through the entire year. If things fall apart in Iraq and continue to deteriorate in Afghanistan, as is very likely, that 70 billion should be about tripled. In either case, the amount requested in the budget for the wars is off by $70 to $140 billion.

This barely scratches the surface of the numbers in the Pentagon’s budget that are cooked by the military services, civilian managers, and budget personnel. But, to add to the confusion and obfuscation, there are other national security costs, and uncertainties, in other agency budget requests.

The Department of Energy (DOE) has requested $17.1 billion for nuclear weapons research, storage, and related activities. Programs sure to be rejected by the Democratic Congress have been included, and Congress loves to add pork to DOE’s budget, just as it does to the Pentagon’s budget. How much? It could be as much as 10 percent, but it is not clear if Congress will add the money for its pork or force DOE to pay for it out of the programs DOE requests.

The President is requesting an additional $3.2 billion for miscellaneous defense costs in other agencies, such as the General Services Administration’s National Defense Stockpile, the Selective Service, and the FBI’s international activities. Quite minor and usually ignored, these accounts are not usually the subject of gimmicks from OMB or enough attention in Congress to mean significant changes.

If you add all the official estimates from OMB for the above, you get a total of $608.6 for 2009. That total equates to a category in the president’s budget called “National Defense.” It includes the programs that should be included, beyond just the Pentagon, to calculate what we spend for our security. But none of the numbers are right; not only are they incomplete, as indicated above, but $608.6 billion is not the number OMB shows for the combined total for these activities, $611.1 billion. The budget materials released today do not seem to explain. Your guess is as good as mine.

There is more–both spending and confusion; lots more.

Any inclusive definition of U.S. security spending should surely also include the budget for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS): add $40.1 billion. With DHS being one of the worst managed federal agencies–according to both conventional wisdom and OMB’s rating of federal agencies called the scorecard of the “President’s Management Agenda” – there is no telling just what will happen to its budget request. Will it go up because homeland security is important, or will it go down because DHS is incompetent?

There are also important security costs in the budget of the State Department for diplomacy, arms aid to allies, UN peacekeeping, reconstruction aid for Iraq and Afghanistan and foreign aid for other countries. Surely, these contribute to U.S. national security; add $38.4 billion. Recently, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates argued that the nation spends too little on diplomacy and aid to other nations. Will this help boost Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice’s budget, or will Congress take a few whacks at politically unpopular “foreign aid” in an election year, as it usually does?

Surely, U.S. security expenses include the human costs of past and current wars; add another $91.3 billion for the Department of Veterans Affairs. Does this budget under-predict the costs for veterans from current and past wars as has been the case for the last few years? Very probably, but by how much is currently unknown.

We should add the share of the interest for the national debt that can be attributed to national defense spending, but few agree what that share is. One reasonable calculation argues that the “National Defense” budget category constitutes about 21 percent of federal spending, and that percent of the 2009 deficit should be calculated. That would be $54.5 billion. However, that number is certainly too small as the deficit is likely to grow with spending not yet counted for the wars and economic stimulus. Moreover, some argue that spending for the wars has come on top of other spending and, thus, a larger percentage of the deficit should be charged to national defense.

There’s more; add the cost to the Treasury for military retirement and that are not counted in the DOD budget; that’s $12.1 billion. Some would also add the interest earned in Treasury’s military retirement fund, another $16.2 billion.

Get the point? The articles that newspapers all over the country publish today will be filled with numbers to the first decimal point; they will seem precise. Few of them will be accurate; many will be incomplete, some will be both. Worse, few of us will be able to tell what numbers are too high, which are too low, and which are so riddled with gimmicks to make them lose real meaning.

Winslow T. Wheeler is the Director of the Straus Military Reform Project of the Center for Defense Information and author of The Wastrels of Defense. Over 31 years, he worked for US Senators from both political parties and the Government Accountability Office on national security issues.

http://www.counterpunch.org/wheeler02052008.html

Written by eldib

February 6, 2008 at 8:41 am

Posted in USA

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Persian Gulf Arab policymakers have little choice but to reform currency policy to prevent economies from overheating.

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Persian Gulf Arab policymakers have little choice but to reform currency policy to prevent economies from overheating

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According to Middle-East-Online.com, Arab central banks are struggling to persuade financial markets that they won’t tinker with their dollar pegs, as their currency policies are increasingly costly to defend and may have become unsustainable.

After a flurry of public disagreements over currency reform last year, Persian Gulf Arab central bankers are trying to close ranks, talking up the pegs as a source of stability and playing down the dollar’s weakness as a temporary phenomenon.

But markets are still betting on the chances that Persian Gulf currencies will be revalued, or that governments may even scrap their long-standing system of fixed exchange rates altogether.

Persian Gulf policymakers have dutifully tracked a series of US interest rates cuts, including two totaling 125 basis points in the past fortnight alone, to deter investors from betting that their currencies will appreciate.

But while the United States worries about an economic slowdown, the booming Persian Gulf states face a serious inflation problem which would usually demand rate rises, not cuts.

Unsurprisingly, the market speculation refuses to go away. Kuwait uncoupled its dinar from the dollar last May and pressure is growing on the remaining Persian Gulf Arab states to follow suit as their economies fall out of step with the United States’.

Policymakers may hold their ground for a while, and put on a show of unity as they are supposed to be preparing for a common currency in the Persian Gulf, but the price will be high. Inflation has become a political hot potato in the Persian Gulf. It has overtaken official lending rates in five of the six Persian Gulf states preparing for monetary union.

Arguments that the status quo brings stability have begun to ring hollow as governments are forced to raise wages, and impose controls on rents and food prices to contain public discontent.

Banks are complaining about lending curbs, and migrant workers have rioted over the dwindling value of their earnings back home as the dollar’s weakness holds down Persian Gulf currencies due to the pegged exchange rates.

Inflation is at 16-year highs in Saudi Arabia and Oman, a 19-year peak in the United Arab Emirates and just off record levels in Qatar. The regional policymakers are intervening directly in loans, property and commodity markets to offset rate cuts. But there is a limit to what they can do when borrowing costs have fallen through the floor.

Central bankers, including the UAE’s Sultan Nasser Al-Suweidi, have said the dollar pegs are not to blame for soaring real estate prices, the main driver of inflation across the region.

New housing supply will take the heat out of price rises, central bankers, including Qatar’s Sheikh Abdullah bin Saud Al-Thani, have contended. But real estate price inflation cannot be blamed fully on supply constraints, when the negative interest rates across the Persian Gulf spur demand for credit.

Mortgage lending in the UAE, which opened its property market to foreign investment as early as 2002, almost doubled in the year to June to 45.7 billion dirhams ($12.45 billion).

Saudi Arabia is fighting inflation at 6.5 percent with an official lending rate of 5.5 percent. This week it said it would raise state employees’ salaries by 5 percent and subsidize everything from shipping costs to driving license fees.

Other Persian Gulf countries have also introduced social welfare policies, from ceilings on rent rises in the UAE, Oman and Qatar to food subsidies in Kuwait and a 70-percent wage rise for some Emirati federal government employees.

Qatar said it would boost its port capacity to allow more imports and control the price of building materials to fight inflation at 13.7 percent in September, just off a record.

“Non-market measures such as higher subsidies, allowances, irrational wage increases, caps on rents are mostly ’soon to be inflationary’,“ Merrill Lynch said in a note. “With rising costs hidden by subsidies and transfers, domestic demand will continue to grow unabated,“ it said.

With their hands tied, Persian Gulf Arab policymakers have little choice but to reform currency policy to prevent their booming economies from overheating.

http://www.iran-daily.com/1386/3056/html/focus.htm

Written by eldib

February 6, 2008 at 8:37 am

Fragile Dollar Hegemony: Iran’s Oil Bourse could Topple the Dollar

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Fragile Dollar Hegemony: Iran’s Oil Bourse could Topple the Dollar

by Mike Whitney

Global Research, February 4, 2008

Two weeks ago George Bush was sent on a mission to the Middle East to deliver a horse’s head. We all remember the disturbing scene in Francis Ford Coppola’s “The Godfather” where Lucca Brassi goes to Hollywood to convince a recalcitrant movie producer to use Don Corleone’s nephew in his next film.

The “Big shot” producer is finally persuaded to hire the young actor after he wakes up in bed next to the severed head of his prize thoroughbred. I expect that Bush made a similar “offer they could not refuse” to the various leaders of the Gulf States when he met with them earlier this month.

The media tried to portray Bush’s trip to the Middle East as a “peace mission”, but that just a smokescreen. In fact, three days after Bush left Jerusalem, Israel stepped-up its military operations in the occupied territories and resumed its merciless blockade of food, water, medicine and energy to the 1.5 million people of Gaza. Clearly, Bush had green-lighted the operations or Israel’s aggression would have been seen as a slap in the face of the President of the United States.

So, what was the real purpose of Bush’s trip? After all, he has no interest in peace or in honoring his commitment to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian crisis. So, why would he choose to visit the Middle East just as his second term as president is winding down and there is no chance of success?
Sometimes personal visits are important; especially when the nature of the information is so sensitive that the message has to be made face to face. In this case, Bush went to the trouble of traveling half-way around the world to tell the Saudis and their friends in the Gulf States that they were going to continue linking their oil to the dollar or they were going to “sleep with the fishes”.For the last two months, various sheiks and finance ministers have been moaning and groaning about the falling dollar—threatening to break from the so-called “dollar-peg” and covert to a basket of currencies. Bush’s trip appears to have rekindled the spirit of brotherly cooperation. The grumbling has ceased and everyone is back “on board”. The regional leaders now seem considerably less bothered by the fact that inflation is gobbling up their economies and driving labor, food, energy and housing through the roof. Reuters summed it up like this: “After a flurry of public disagreements over currency reform last year, Gulf central bankers are trying to close ranks, talking up the pegs as a source of stability and playing down the dollar’s weakness as a temporary phenomenon.”

Looks like Bush smoothed things over.

In the last two weeks, the Gulf leaders have watched nervously while the Federal Reserve has slashed rates by a whopping 125 basis points. The cuts are steadily eroding the $1 trillion of capital the sheiks have invested in US Treasuries and securities.

“Inflation is at 16-year highs in Saudi Arabia and Oman, a 19-year peak in the United Arab Emirates. Gulf policymakers are intervening directly in loans, property and commodity markets to offset rate cut.” (Reuters)

Property values have skyrocketed. Commercial property in the UAE has doubled since the beginning of 2007. The inflation-bomb has forced other Gulf states to provide food subsidies for their people and a “70% wage rise for some Emirati federal government employees.”

Disgruntled migrant workers rioted in Dubai recently, demanding to be fairly compensated for the sharp increase in prices. The Saudi riyal has climbed to a 21-year peak.

Currency traders expect another 8% rise in the dirham and riyal by April and they are predicting that interest rates will compel Central bankers throughout Gulf states to covert to either the euro or a basket of regional currencies. So far, however, the loyal Saudi princes have continued their support for the dollar.

Defending Dollar Hegemony

So, how important is it that oil continue to be denominated in dollars? Would the United States wage war to defend the dollar’s status as the world’s “reserve currency”?

The answer to this question could come as early as this week, since the long-awaited Iranian Oil Bourse is scheduled to open between February 1-11. According to Iran’s Finance Minister Davoud Danesh-Jafari, “All preparations have been made to launch the bourse; it will open during the 10-day Dawn (the ceremonies marking the victory of the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran) The bourse is considered a direct threat to the continued global dominance of the dollar because it will require that Iranian “oil, petrochemicals and gas” be traded in “non-dollar currencies”. (Press TV, Iran)

The petrodollar system is no different than the gold standard. Today’s currency is simply underwritten by the one vital source of energy upon which every industrialized society depends—oil. If the dollar is de-linked from oil; it will no longer serve as the de-facto international currency and the US will be forced to reduce its massive trade deficits, rebuild its manufacturing capacity, and become an export nation again. The only alternative is to create a network of client regimes who repress the collective aspirations of their people so they can faithfully follow directives from Washington. As to whether the Bush administration would start a war to defend dollar hegemony; that’s a question that should be asked of Saddam Hussein. Iraq was invaded just six months after Saddam converted to the euro. The message is clear; the Empire will defend its currency.

Similarly, Iran switched from the dollar in 2007 and has insisted that Japan pay its enormous energy bills in yen. The “conversion” has infuriated the Bush administration and made Iran the target of US belligerence ever since. In fact, even though 16 US Intelligence agencies issued a report (NIE) saying that Iran was not developing nuclear weapons; and even though the UN’s nuclear watchdog, the IAEA, found that Iran was in compliance with its obligations under the Nuclear Nonproliferation (NPT) Treaty; a preemptive US-led attack on Iran still appears likely.

And, although the western media now minimizes the prospects of another war in the region; Israel is taking the precautions that suggest that the idea is not so far-fetched. “Israel calls for shelter rooms to be set up in a bid to prepare the public for yet another war, this time, one of raining missiles.” (Press TV, Iran)

The next war will see a massive use of ballistic weapons against the whole of Israeli territory,” claimed retired general Udi Shani. (Global Research

http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=7982)

Russia also sees a growing probability of hostilities breaking out in the Gulf and has responded by sending a naval task force into the Mediterranean Sea and the North Atlantic.According to an article on the Global Research site:“The flagship of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet, the Moskva guided missile cruiser, joined up with Russian naval warships in the Mediterranean on January 18 to participate in the current maneuvers….The current operation is the first large-scale Russian Navy exercise in the Atlantic in 15 years. All combat ships and aircraft involved carry full combat ammunition loads.Global Research, http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=7983

France is also planning military maneuvers in the Straits of Hormuz. Operation “Gulf Shield 01,” will take place off the coast of Iran and will employ thousands of personnel in combined arms operations that will include simulated attacks on oil platforms.”Exercises are scheduled to take place from Feb. 23 to March 5, and will involve 1,500 French, 2,500 Emirate, and 1,300 Qatari personnel operating on land, at sea and in the air, the ministry said…”Around a half-dozen warships, 40 aircraft and dozens of armored vehicles will be in the war games”, Fusalba said.http://www.defensenews.com/story.php?F=3346953&C=mideast
Additionally, within the last week, three of the main underwater cables which carry Internet traffic have been cut off in the Persian Gulf and three-quarters of the international communications between Europe and the Middle East have been lost. Large parts of the Middle East have been plunged into darkness.Is this merely a coincidence or is something else going on just below the surface?Ian Brockwell, of the American Chronicle said:”On the assumption that the cables cut were no accident, we must ask ourselves who would do such a thing and why. Clearly Iran, who were most affected, would gain nothing from such an action and are perhaps the target of those responsible?…Maybe this is a prelude to an attack, or perhaps a test run for a future one?

Communication has always been an important factor in military action, and cutting these cables might affect Iran´s ability to defend itself.” (American Chronicle,

http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/51085)

Despite the lack of media coverage, tensions are mounting in the Gulf and the probability of a US-led attack on Iran is still quite high. Bush is convinced that if he doesn’t confront Iran, then no one will. He also believes that if he doesn’t militarily defend the dollar, then America’s days as “the world’s only superpower” will soon be over. So, the real question is whether Bush will realize that America is already hopelessly bogged-down in two “unwinnable” conflicts or if he will “go with his gut” once again and lead us into a ruinous region-wide conflagration.

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=7998

Baisse des taux de la Fed : « Bush et Bernanke vont couler le dollar »

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Baisse des taux de la Fed : « Bush et Bernanke vont couler le dollar »

8el22ar.jpg

30 janvier 2008 (LPAC) – En réponse à la nouvelle baisse des taux opérée par la Fed hier – de -0,5 % après les -0,75 % du 22 janvier – l’économiste américain Lyndon LaRouche a lancé un avertissement cinglant :

« Bush et Bernanke vont couler le dollar ». « Il faut le dire clairement et on doit l’empêcher.

Le président Bush doit être renvoyé en cure de désintoxication. Cette politique mène tout droit à l’Allemagne de Weimar, 1923, hyperinflation II le retour, c’est une folie absolue qu’un gouvernement suive cette politique. »

« Comme on dit dans le jargon, ces mecs sont complètement fadas » a t-il dit. « Ils semblent aller vers une politique hyperinflationniste de taux zéro, mais ils ne survivront même pas jusqu’à là.

Le pays pourrait ne pas y survivre. » « Cette crise a montré un président des Etats-Unis cliniquement fou. Il promeut le dollar « à la Ezra Pound », il faut l’interner à St Elizabeth ! »

(Ezra Pound était un poète fasciste promouvant Mussolini ainsi que les théorie monétaires britanniques pour le dollar, alors même qu’il était interné à l’hôpital St Elizabeth de Washington – l’équivalent de St Anne à Paris).

Face à cela, il a proposé la seule réelle alternative :

un taux d’intérêt à deux vitesses, avec des taux bas pour les activités économiques de base et un taux élevé pour les spéculateurs qui entendent profiter du différentiel de taux entre l’Europe et les Etats-Unis.

_______________________________________________________ 

Comment défendre le dollar

Appuyés par l’arrogance du gouverneur de la BCE Jean Claude Trichet, certains intérêts britanniques ont déclaré la guerre à l’économie américaine. Ils ont induit cet idiot de Président américain, son idiote de Présidente de la Chambre, et cet idiot de Directeur de la Réserve Fédérale Ben Bernanke à déprécier le dollar, pendant que Trichet & co. se vantent d’avoir amené le dollar à s’autodétruire. Si les Etats-Unis adoptaient mes recommandations pour la défense du dollar, les spéculateurs qui misent sur l’hypocrisie de Trichet pourraient se retrouver le nez dans leur propre faillite, une expérience qui ne manquerait pas de les inciter à mieux se tenir dans les prochaines semaines.


Les Etats-Unis doivent abandonner les politiques hyperinflationnistes insensées de Ben « helicopter money » Bernanke au profit d’une politique d’émission monétaire à deux vitesses, par le Trésor américain, pour combler les besoins en capitaux. Le coût général de l’émission monétaire par le Trésor américain (soit le département du Trésor, soit l’actuel système de la Réserve Fédérale) doit être une politique à deux vitesses : a) Un prix pour le marché ouvert, assurément supérieur à celui de la BCE, et b) un prix spécial protégé pour les crédits à long et moyen terme destinés à couvrir les besoins de base, comme les crédits hypothécaires des ménages qui seraient alors protégés par l’autorité fédérale, ainsi qu’aux banques agréées par ces autorités ou par celles des différents Etats. Les taux accordés à la catégorie « b » devraient être fixés entre 1 et 2 % l’an. L’intention ici n’est pas de faire du tort aux gouvernements de nos voisins européens et à leurs autorités financières, et particulièrement les agences multinationales, mais de les encourager à reconnaître à nouveau les effets bénéfiques des modes de coopération civilisés entre Etats, en cohérence avec la Paix de Westphalie qui régit encore aujourd’hui, les rapports entre les nations d’Europe.

Cette correction dans le comportement du Président américain et du Directeur de la Réserve Fédérale est un élément indispensable de la défense des Etats-Unis et de son peuple contre la dépression hyperinflationniste qui est en train de dévaster la communauté transatlantique dans son ensemble. Sans les mesures spécifiques que j’ai prescrites ici, les Etats-unis seront bientôt en banqueroute et notre peuple ruiné par les politique folles de Bernanke, Bush et Pelosi.

Les spéculateurs européens doivent prendre garde, le tigre américain est blessé, mais a toujours ses griffes et ses crocs. Qu’ils continuent leur coup contre les Etats-Unis, et de nombreux spéculateurs européens trop avides se réveilleront appauvris mais assagis. Si j’étais Président, je garantirais qu’un tel changement s’opère de la veille au soir. Les américains qui ne soutiennent pas ma politique souffriront si durement et si soudainement qu’ils seront moins long à la détente lorsque ce problème se posera à nouveau.

 Par Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.

Written by eldib

February 2, 2008 at 2:04 am

Posted in USA

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Can’t Pay Your Mortgage? Trash Your House and Leave

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Can’t Pay Your Mortgage? Trash Your House and Leave

By: Scott Thill, AlterNet.

on: 01.02.2008 
 7978.jpg

On the lookout for disturbing trends? Here’s one for your pile: According to a recent article in Fortune, there has been a noticeable increase in not just fraud but arson that has kept pace with the housing depression. Professionals in the insurance and lending industry are bracing themselves for all manner of similar situations, as homeowners either trash, or simply leave their trash lying around their houses, often taking off without even claiming their furniture. This is already a dirty problem in the housing business, with owners, lenders and banks having to figure out a way to stick each other with the check when tenants destroy their property on their way out the door. Woe is the person left behind to clean up the chaos.

“We just estimated a trashout yesterday where we’re going to have to drain the pool,” one Fontana, CA resident posted on AgentsOnline.Net, a resource and idea site for realtors, “and the stench from it when you enter the backyard is overwhelming. Then, of course there are mosquitoes all over the top and it’s been sitting so long without chemicals that it’s green on top and murky black on the bottom. We’ve already had to refuse one pool because of its really creepy condition and I’m not so sure about this one either. I just hope we don’t find the previous homeowner at the bottom when we drain it.”

“Vacant homes attract vandals and depress property values,” explained Douglas Robinson, spokesman for NeighborWorks America, a nonprofit created by Congress to offer financial and technical support and training for community-based revitalization. “This negatively affects existing owners and reduces local property tax revenues. But very few homeowners walk away, although those who do believe that is their best option. Of course, trying to get a loan modification so that the payments are affordable is their best option.”

As if it were that easy. Especially for those homeowners, including those with good and bad credit, who have seen the light at the end of our current economic crisis only to decide there isn’t a house in it. In fact, one could almost see the Wall Street Journal frown with disapproval upon reading the title of their December 2007 piece, “Now Even Borrowers With Good Credit Pose Risks.” But the title no doubt was influenced by the comments of Bank of America CEO Kenneth Lewis in the piece itself. It seems that Lewis, whose company recently bought the housing meltdown’s poster boy for bad lending, Countrywide, for $4 billion in stock, nevertheless feels confounded that customers of questionable loans would simply choose to abandon ship, er, house. “There’s been a change in social attitudes toward default,” Mr. Lewis told the Journal. “We’re seeing people who are current on their credit cards but are defaulting on their mortgages. I’m astonished that people would walk away from their homes.” While Lewis may scratch his head in disbelief, employees of the bank Wachovia have an explanation that might work for him: Homeowners have crunched the numbers and decided their houses are worth less than their mortgages. According to a recent conference call, many of Wachovia’s current losses in California are originating not from subprime buyers fallen on financial hardship, but from homeowners who can pay their cleverly structured loans but are just choosing a different fate. “They’ve been from people that have otherwise had the capacity to pay,” a Wachovia spokesperson said on the call, “but have basically just decided not to because they feel like they’ve lost equity, value in their properties. It’s hard to know right now, but we may have seen somewhat of an acceleration problem…as people have reached that conclusion.”

But that is what things usually do when you drive them off a cliff: Accelerate, ever faster. The open secret about the current housing crisis is that it is almost wholly built upon debt, which is to say the opposite of money. Everyone owes everyone: American banks borrow money from overseas, structure bizarre loans at home for Americans, which are then sliced and diced into securities and sold back to the international debt markets. The whole thing is a feedback loop made of bills needing to be paid. The best-kept secret of the crisis, however, is that homeowners at the mercy of those greedy banks and lenders — including Countrywide CEO Angelo Mozilo, who sold off his stock before the crisis to net a cool $290 million while the company’s value shrank to practically nothing — are bailing out and leaving the banks and lenders to sort out the mess of past-due notices themselves.

And that’s a problem the banks or lenders can’t handle, according to Tricia Canites, managing attorney for Human Rights/Fair Housing Commission in Sacramento, one of the housing meltdown’s most impacted cities. “The banks are not in the business of renting or selling properties,” she explained by phone. “If the homeowners are willing to work with them, banks will work to get something rather than nothing. But it’s a lose-lose situation, because you have homeowners who are willing to leave.”

Not that they should, if you ask the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Many of those fed-up homeowners, according to HUD, might not understand the intricacies of their financial agreements and relationships with their lenders, and may miss an opportunity for renegotiation if they decide to simply mail in their keys and never look back.

“We strongly encourage homeowners facing a financial crisis to stay in close touch with the lender holding the mortgage on their home,” advised Larry Bush, Public Affairs Officer for HUD’s California network. “Because of the number of foreclosures, many lenders would prefer not to add to the inventory of foreclosed homes but instead work out an agreement with the homeowner. Lenders likely have higher costs for a vacant home than a homeowner has for living in the home. They have to make certain the property is kept in good condition, in most jurisdictions this means keeping the electricity and water hookups active, security monitoring to ensure there are no squatters or break-ins, and new appraisal and inspection. Homeowners absorb many of those costs.”

Of course it’s expensive, one might say, but it’s arguably more expensive for a homeowner to hang onto a money pit. Billions of equity lost, companies teetering on the brink of bankruptcy, the dollar sinking like a stone, the recession at the door: Some homeowners read those tea leaves and decide to leave well enough alone.

While that kind of payback might not sit well with banks and lenders who kick-started the so-called subprime crisis by taking advantage of ridiculously low lending rates, courtesy of free-marketeer and now-disgraced Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, they cannot argue with its purely financial logic. These are people who refer to the market as a living thing, and place their bets across its expansive craps table in hopes of hitting the mad jackpot. And for the years following Greenspan’s loony monetary policy, that jackpot was in housing.

“Most of the homeowners now facing problems bought their homes when the market was at its recent height in 2005-2006, and paid prices that have not held up in the current market,” added Bush. “That leaves the homeowner owing more than the current value of the home.”

That, at least for conventional gamblers, is usually a sign to walk away from the table, which is what compromised homeowners are doing in greater numbers than before. But it has yet to reach the stage where it is has become an epidemic concern, according to Bush.

“There isn’t a one-size rule for all communities,” he explained. “We see some homeowners losing their homes, but HUD certainly does not see an exodus underway. In many cases, the trend is now toward resolving the financial challenges.”

Perhaps for now, in an economic crisis that looks like it might have a bottom, or could be solved by the recent bipartisan band-aid designed to give taxpayers rebate checks ranging from $600 to $1200. But that’s not the kind of money that is going to save a homeowner from default or bankruptcy; it’s merely spending money the government hopes will be liquidated at the mall, so that its resultant consumption can jump-start our debt-based economy back to life again. And, for many homeowners, even ones with good credit, loan modifications are just different arrangements of the same basic pain, one with root in the American Dream of housing for sure, but also one with root in dense financial contracts no one has time to read because they’re too busy working to pay them off. As an alternative, rentals offer less migraines and less responsibility, because responsibility at the bottom and accountability at the top are rare things these days.

Too bad one is frowned upon by the powers-that-be, while the other is ignored outright.


http://www.alternet.org/workplace/75228/?page=entire

Written by eldib

February 2, 2008 at 1:18 am

Posted in USA

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Fed Lowers Rate to 3% as U.S. Expansion Falters

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Fed Lowers Rate to 3% as U.S. Expansion Falters

By Craig Torres

Jan. 30 (Bloomberg) — The Federal Reserve lowered its benchmark interest rate by half a percentage point to 3 percent, the second cut in nine days, to prevent the U.S. economy from sinking into a recession.

“Today’s policy action, combined with those taken earlier, should help to promote moderate growth over time and to mitigate the risks to economic activity, the Federal Open Market Committee said in a statement after meeting today in Washington. “However, downside risks to growth remain.

The language signals the central bank is prepared to make additional reductions to prevent a credit squeeze from further weakening the economy. Hours before the decision was announced, the Commerce Department reported that gross domestic product grew at an annual pace of 0.6 percent in the fourth quarter.

“They’re going full-bore trying to keep the economy from recession, said David Resler, chief economist at Nomura Securities International Inc. in New York. “There’s nothing in reserve here.

Stocks rallied, while the dollar fell and Treasury notes weakened. The cumulative reduction in rates since Jan. 22 is the fastest easing of monetary policy since 1990.

“The Fed has gotten religion and is going do what they need to do,” said Mark Vitner, senior economist at Wachovia Corp. in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Readiness to Respond

Fed officials said they will continue to assess financial markets and the economy “and will act in a timely manner as needed.”

“Financial markets remain under considerable stress, and credit has tightened further for some businesses and households, the Fed said. “Recent information indicates a deepening of the housing contraction as well as some softening in labor markets.

Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and the Fed’s Board of Governors also voted to cut the discount rate, the cost of direct loans from the central bank, to 3.5 percent from 4 percent.

Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher dissented from today’s decision, preferring no change.

Policy makers presented revised three-year economic forecasts at this week’s gathering. The Fed will release the projections along with minutes of the meeting on Feb. 20.

Today’s Commerce Department figures showed the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge rose at a 2.7 percent annualized rate last quarter. Fed officials in October forecast the personal consumption expenditures price index minus food and energy would rise 1.6 percent to 1.9 percent in 2010, offering a measure of their longer-term inflation objective.

Inflation

“The Committee expects inflation to moderate in coming quarters, but it will be necessary to continue to monitor inflation developments carefully,” the Fed said in today’s statement.

Wall Street firms including Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch & Co., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Citigroup Inc. are forecasting the first recession since 2001 this year. Still, executives at firms such as Dow Chemical Co. said they don’t detect a downturn yet, while risks remain.

This year “will be slower than 2007, Andrew Liveris, the chairman and chief executive officer of Dow Chemical, said yesterday. “It is an inconvenience, not a catastrophe.

United Parcel Service Inc., Caterpillar Inc. and General Electric Co. are relying on gains overseas to counter slower growth at home.

Fed policy makers have struggled since August to contain the economic damage sparked by the worst housing recession in a quarter-century. The world’s largest banks and securities firms have recorded more than $133 billion in asset writedowns and credit losses since the beginning of 2007, which analysts blamed on weak and fragmented supervision and poor credit analysis.

Housing Downturn

Foreclosure rates rose 75 percent in 2007 as a record amount of adjustable-rate loans to borrowers with weak or limited credit histories reset to higher rates, RealtyTrac Inc. data show. Home prices in 20 U.S. metropolitan areas fell 7.7 percent in November from a year earlier, the 11th consecutive decline, the S&P/Case-Shiller home-price index showed yesterday.

“We are in a historic housing bust right now, comparable to that of the Great Depression, said Robert Shiller, chief economist of MacroMarkets LLC in Madison, New Jersey, who co- founded the house-price index. “The unraveling of that has unpredictable consequences.

Delay in 2007

Fed officials waited until September to cut the benchmark lending rate, even though premiums on corporate bonds and lower- rated securities began to climb in late June.

By December, Fed policy makers had cut the benchmark lending rate 1 percentage point, yet still described the policy rate as “somewhat restrictive” as they deliberated whether to cut again that month, minutes show.

The government’s December payroll report, which showed a loss of 13,000 private sector jobs, the first decline since July 2003, began to reshape Fed officials’ views about risks.

Bernanke used a Jan. 10 speech to update the public. “The baseline outlook for real activity in 2008 has worsened and the downside risks to growth have become more pronounced, he said, breaking with the Fed’s statement a month earlier which only expressed “uncertainty about the outlook. He pledged “substantive additional action as needed.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Craig Torres in Washington at

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=assdItLMl7.0&refer=home

Written by eldib

February 1, 2008 at 10:05 am

Posted in USA

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Système financier : le prochain domino est encore plus gros

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Système financier : le prochain domino est encore plus gros

29 janvier 2008

Par Paul Gallagher, EIR

Une bulle de quelque 50 000 milliards de dollars de contrats financiers dérivés [cf. note 1] menace d’éclater incessamment, provoquant un déferlement de faillites et d’insolvabilités bancaires. Raison de plus pour passer de toute urgence à une réorganisation du système.

Les produits dérivés en cause sont des contrats assurant le risque de crédit (credit default swaps – CDS). Pratiquement inexistants il y a cinq ans encore, leur « valeur » nominale a triplé en trois ans, selon des sources new-yorkaises bien informées qui parlent du « prochain domino à tomber », estimant que le choc sera « beaucoup plus sévère » que l’éclatement de la « bulle hypothécaire américaine », qui ne représentait « que » 20 000 milliards.

Les CDS s’échangent uniquement de gré à gré, c’est-à-dire qu’il n’existe aucun marché organisé qui puisse assumer une quelconque responsabilité pour cette énorme masse de contrats financiers, contrairement aux actions et obligations. Comme les fameux SIV (véhicules d’investissement structurés), les contrats bilatéraux assurant le risque sont des opérations spéculatives hautement rentables qui n’apparaissent jamais dans les bilans des banques et hedge funds qui en tirent profit – jusqu’au moment où ils s’évaporent, provoquant des centaines de milliards de dollars de pertes.

Dans le cas des CDS, il faudrait plutôt parler de dizaines de milliers de milliards, selon ces sources. Le but officiel de ces contrats est d’assurer les acheteurs d’obligations d’entreprise contre la défaillance de ces obligations. Or le montant des dettes d’entreprise effectivement « assurées » par ces 50 000 milliards de dollars de CDS ne s’élève qu’à… 5000 milliards. C’est incontestablement la plus haute montagne de dette par effet de levier !

En réalité, les swaps sur défaillance sont des moyens de spéculer massivement sur la capacité d’une société à rembourser ses dettes et obligations et sur lesquels des dizaines de banques, fonds spéculatifs et autres sociétés financières parient des sommes considérables. En outre, d’autres hedge funds achètent des swaps sur défaillance pour parier si, en cas de défaillance, les sociétés qui assurent les obligations ne feront pas défaut elles-mêmes !

Les hedge funds et les banques ayant vendu une « assurance » aux sociétés détentrices d’obligations d’entreprise encaissent des primes de la part de ces sociétés. Ensuite, ces primes sont titrisées – c’est-à-dire vendues comme titres financiers à d’autres banques et hedge funds, de la même manière que les crédits hypothécaires subprime avaient été regroupés dans toutes sortes de titres qui ont récemment perdu toute valeur.

Il existe peu d’instruments financiers qui aient permis, autant que les CDS, aux fonds spéculatifs de faire plus de profits en si peu de temps, avec un tel effet de levier et si peu de capital réel. Tant que sir Alan Greenspan (directeur de la Réserve fédérale jusqu’en 2006) faisait en sorte que les taux d’intérêt à court terme restent très faibles sur le plan international, et que le « yen carry trade » [cf. note 2] fournissaient aux spéculateurs des centaines de milliards de dollars d’« argent gratuit », il n’y avait quasiment pas de défaillances sur les obligations d’entreprise, même sur les obligations poubelles.

La vente d’une assurance contre défaillance, à l’aide de swaps, est alors devenue un jeu extrêmement rentable, presque entièrement financé par de l’argent emprunté avec un fort effet de levier. On comptait dix vendeurs d’assurance d’obligations pour chaque détenteur d’obligations susceptible de l’acheter. Par conséquent, les vendeurs se sont vendus les swaps entre eux, ajoutant de nouveaux paris de produits dérivés à la même obligation de référence sous-jacente. Et ils ont vendu les primes d’assurance sous forme de titres financiers, accumulant encore des dettes sur ces produits.

Sur les marchés et dans la presse financière, une peur bleue se répand face à la perspective d’une faillite imminente des grandes sociétés d’assurance d’obligations, comme Ambac Financial Corporation et MBIA, qui assurent plus de 2000 milliards de dollars de bons du Trésor et vendent des CDS. Merrill Lynch vient d’essuyer une perte de 3,1 milliards de dollars sur les CDS avec l’une d’entre elles. Mais selon nos sources, 50 % de ces 4500 à 5000 milliards de dollars représentent des obligations potentielles de banques et 24 % de fonds spéculatifs. Dans la première vague de défaillances, lorsqu’elles se volatilisent, ces obligations vont se retrouver chez les mêmes banques qui ont prêté aux fonds l’argent pour jouer le jeu des CDS.

L’effondrement financier en cours depuis juillet-août 2007 frappe désormais l’« économie réelle », avec des effets notables sur l’emploi, l’industrie, la consommation et, bien sûr, le bâtiment et l’ensemble du secteur immobilier. Pour les premiers mois de 2008, selon les estimations toujours optimistes des agences de notation Fitch et Moody’s, le pourcentage de défaillance sur les dettes d’entreprise devrait atteindre 4 à 5 % (10 % pour les obligations poubelles).

Mais les vendeurs de CDS, qui devraient normalement payer, n’ont rien provisionné pour cela. Ils comptent sur le jeu des contre-paris et contreparties pour s’en tirer indemnes, laissant les pertes échoir aux détenteurs originaux des obligations.

Ted Seides, directeur financier de Protégé Partners, a comparé la bulle des CDS à une « énorme industrie de l’assurance, dont les fournisseurs n’ont rien mis de côté pour couvrir les futures pertes. Imaginez ce qui se passera s’il y a des pertes de 5 % sur 45 000 milliards de dollars, et personne [dans les banques] n’a de quoi payer les pots cassés. »

Quelqu’un a-t-il espère t-il encore sauver le système ou alors en change t-on ?


Notes :

1- Le « contrat financier dérivé » est un pari hautement spéculatif puisqu’il porte sur la valeur future d’un objet tiers (matières premières, taux de change, indice boursier, etc.), dont le montant ne fait pas l’objet d’un paiement immédiat, mais seulement d’une « option » valant par exemple 1 % des sommes en jeu, d’où les « effets de levier » permettant de jouer gros avec presque rien.

2- Le « Yen carry trade » consistait à emprunter une somme en Yen lorsque celui-ci était à un taux anormalement bas (moins de 1 %) et permettait d’aller jouer ailleurs avec un bénéfice quasi-assuré à la clé, puisque le coût de ce crédit en Yen équivalait à 0.

solidarite et progres

Written by eldib

January 29, 2008 at 11:54 pm

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