Most Popular
1. It’s a New Macro, the Gold Market Knows It, But Dead Men Walking Do Not (yet)- Gary_Tanashian
2.Stock Market Presidential Election Cycle Seasonal Trend Analysis - Nadeem_Walayat
3. Bitcoin S&P Pattern - Nadeem_Walayat
4.Nvidia Blow Off Top - Flying High like the Phoenix too Close to the Sun - Nadeem_Walayat
4.U.S. financial market’s “Weimar phase” impact to your fiat and digital assets - Raymond_Matison
5. How to Profit from the Global Warming ClImate Change Mega Death Trend - Part1 - Nadeem_Walayat
7.Bitcoin Gravy Train Trend Forecast 2024 - - Nadeem_Walayat
8.The Bond Trade and Interest Rates - Nadeem_Walayat
9.It’s Easy to Scream Stocks Bubble! - Stephen_McBride
10.Fed’s Next Intertest Rate Move might not align with popular consensus - Richard_Mills
Last 7 days
THEY DON'T RING THE BELL AT THE CRPTO MARKET TOP! - 20th Dec 24
CEREBUS IPO NVIDIA KILLER? - 18th Dec 24
Nvidia Stock 5X to 30X - 18th Dec 24
LRCX Stock Split - 18th Dec 24
Stock Market Expected Trend Forecast - 18th Dec 24
Silver’s Evolving Market: Bright Prospects and Lingering Challenges - 18th Dec 24
Extreme Levels of Work-for-Gold Ratio - 18th Dec 24
Tesla $460, Bitcoin $107k, S&P 6080 - The Pump Continues! - 16th Dec 24
Stock Market Risk to the Upside! S&P 7000 Forecast 2025 - 15th Dec 24
Stock Market 2025 Mid Decade Year - 15th Dec 24
Sheffield Christmas Market 2024 Is a Building Site - 15th Dec 24
Got Copper or Gold Miners? Watch Out - 15th Dec 24
Republican vs Democrat Presidents and the Stock Market - 13th Dec 24
Stock Market Up 8 Out of First 9 months - 13th Dec 24
What Does a Strong Sept Mean for the Stock Market? - 13th Dec 24
Is Trump the Most Pro-Stock Market President Ever? - 13th Dec 24
Interest Rates, Unemployment and the SPX - 13th Dec 24
Fed Balance Sheet Continues To Decline - 13th Dec 24
Trump Stocks and Crypto Mania 2025 Incoming as Bitcoin Breaks Above $100k - 8th Dec 24
Gold Price Multiple Confirmations - Are You Ready? - 8th Dec 24
Gold Price Monster Upleg Lives - 8th Dec 24
Stock & Crypto Markets Going into December 2024 - 2nd Dec 24
US Presidential Election Year Stock Market Seasonal Trend - 29th Nov 24
Who controls the past controls the future: who controls the present controls the past - 29th Nov 24
Gold After Trump Wins - 29th Nov 24
The AI Stocks, Housing, Inflation and Bitcoin Crypto Mega-trends - 27th Nov 24
Gold Price Ahead of the Thanksgiving Weekend - 27th Nov 24
Bitcoin Gravy Train Trend Forecast to June 2025 - 24th Nov 24
Stocks, Bitcoin and Crypto Markets Breaking Bad on Donald Trump Pump - 21st Nov 24
Gold Price To Re-Test $2,700 - 21st Nov 24
Stock Market Sentiment Speaks: This Is My Strong Warning To You - 21st Nov 24
Financial Crisis 2025 - This is Going to Shock People! - 21st Nov 24
Dubai Deluge - AI Tech Stocks Earnings Correction Opportunities - 18th Nov 24
Why President Trump Has NO Real Power - Deep State Military Industrial Complex - 8th Nov 24
Social Grant Increases and Serge Belamant Amid South Africa's New Political Landscape - 8th Nov 24
Is Forex Worth It? - 8th Nov 24
Nvidia Numero Uno in Count Down to President Donald Pump Election Victory - 5th Nov 24
Trump or Harris - Who Wins US Presidential Election 2024 Forecast Prediction - 5th Nov 24
Stock Market Brief in Count Down to US Election Result 2024 - 3rd Nov 24
Gold Stocks’ Winter Rally 2024 - 3rd Nov 24
Why Countdown to U.S. Recession is Underway - 3rd Nov 24
Stock Market Trend Forecast to Jan 2025 - 2nd Nov 24
President Donald PUMP Forecast to Win US Presidential Election 2024 - 1st Nov 24

Market Oracle FREE Newsletter

How to Protect your Wealth by Investing in AI Tech Stocks

Narodny Rock Bank and the G7's Men of Action

Stock-Markets / Credit Crisis 2008 Feb 20, 2008 - 06:33 PM GMT

By: Adrian_Ash

Stock-Markets

Best Financial Markets Analysis Article"...Individually or together...erm...in pretty difficult and uncertain times...erm..."

IN TIMES OF CRISIS , it's always good to know there are bright, committed people working non-stop to sort things out. Or so everyone seems to believe.


Stormy weather needs strong, decisive characters manning the tiller. Clever people, men of action – men like Alistair Darling, for instance, now Chancellor of the Exchequer here in the United Kingdom .

Darling took charge last June when the previous finance minister, Gordon " Gold Sales" Brown, promoted himself to Prime Minister of the world's fourth largest economy.

It was right around the time Bear Stearns was closing two heavily-leveraged subprime mortgage hedge funds. The Bank of England's policy committee – appointed but not directed by the chancellor since Darling's party, New Labor, first came to power 10 years earlier – was just about to raise UK interest rates to 5.75%, a six-year high.

And UK house prices – offering less than one-third the square footage of the average US home, and with the smallest room sizes in Europe – were fast-approaching an all-time peak price of £184,191, some $350,000.

Barely three months later in Sept. 2007, however, the global banking crisis had spread onto Britain 's high streets, creating the first open "banking run" in more than 130 years at Northern Rock – one of the nation's top five mortgage lenders.

Darling has clearly been hard at work ever since...fixing everything that let Northern Rock go from £12.29 per share to £0.52 on the stock market – a full 95% slump – as it soaked up £26 billion ($50.4bn) in emergency loans from the Bank of England.

The G7's Men of Action

"What you can do at an international level, I believe, is make sure we have better early warning systems," he told CNBC in a relaxed chat last week after the G-7 summit in Tokyo .

"[We can] make sure that, er, when it comes to, er, off-balance sheet arrangements, or when it comes to the way that credit reference...er, credit rating agencies behave, then there does need to be international co-operation.

A nice slip of the tongue! Credit reference agencies are now busier than ever in the UK , if not internationally, advising the banks on who does – and who doesn't – represent a "prime only" risk.

"But of course," the chancellor went on, "most banking supervision is a matter for the individual countries concerned. The lesson that I think we need to draw, though, is you need to get the right regulatory systems, supervisory systems, and you've also got to make sure it works.

"Er, and, you know, the system is only as good as the people who are in it, and the key thing is, the prime responsibility for getting these things right lies with the company. It's for a bank to make sure that it knows what its employees are up to, it's for a bank to ensure it's got a business plan that works."

With it so far? The woman from CNBC sure wasn't. So she asked again – without bothering to jab a finger into his chest in the way that a BBC radio or television anchor would at home – quite what the British chancellor meant by international action.

"Individually – or together," he replied, "we need to do everything we can, right across the world, to get ourselves through what is a pretty difficult and uncertain time."

And with Alistair Darling running the UK finance ministry, the times ahead are only certain to become less pretty and more difficult.

So just what might "everything" mean for policy going forward?

"Going forward, we will continue to watch developments closely and take appropriate actions, individually and collectively, in order to secure stability and growth in our economies," the G-7 statement announced.

Which sounds round about as clear and purposeful as Darling's ramblings to CNBC. Which in turn would suit us just fine here at BullionVault...if only the world's chief policy wonks would stick to talking gibberish, rather than actually trying to put it into practice.

Those sterling men Ben Bernanke and Hank Paulson of the United States are now committed – along with Japanese finance minister Fukushiro Nukaga, the two Jean-Claudes of the Eurozone (Juncker and Trichet), and assorted policy wonks from Canada, France, Germany and Italy, as well as Darling's own central banker, Mervyn King of the Bank of England – to the following course of action:

#1. Sell Gold

The G-7 thinks now would be a good time for the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to swap Gold Bullion for "income bearing assets" such as US Treasury bonds.

Or more immediately, in fact, the IMF – founded at the end of the Second World War – should now be bailed out so it can continue advising poor nations on how to run their budgets.

It's currently running an annual budget deficit of $400 million all of its own. And as our friend Julian Phillips of the Gold Forecaster notes, the IMF's gold doesn't actually belong to the IMF yet. The gold still belongs to the original sponsors of the Bretton Woods currency agreement, an agreement which collapsed in 1971 when US president Richard Nixon cut the Dollar free from what remained of the international Gold Standard.

But why let detail get in the way of bailing out a failed institution?

#2. If at First You Completely Screw Up...

Speaking to the Nikkei news agency just before the G-7 summit, "I believe you could make a good case...particularly with the European banks [that] the way they implemented Basel [the international accounting standards agreed in 1988] may have been partially or largely responsible for the conduit and SIV issues," said Hank Paulson.

Put another way, the former head of Goldman Sachs thinks the last set of pan-national banking rules threw the door open to precisely the "off-balance sheet" tomfoolery that's led us to the current world banking crisis.

But never let hard-won experience get in the way of cocking things up afresh. Right?

"Not only has liquidity dried up since summer," as Marine Cole reports for Finance Week, "making the funding of [special investment] vehicles more expensive, but with the upcoming application of Basel II capital rules next year, banks will have to start setting aside capital for off-balance-sheet vehicles, which they haven't had to do under Basel I."

Basel II specifically demands that banks match their off-balance sheet risks with some level of funded provision. But the new rules – so complex that their implementation has been delayed by more than three years – still rely on " the same flawed approach of using internal risk models, credit rating agencies ratings and some band aid capital charges," notes Nouriel Roubini in his Global EconoMonitor blog.

So what to do? "There are a number of things that are being looked at," says Paulson, the poacher-turned-gamekeeper. "Rating agencies are one of them. We're looking at the mortgage underwriting, origination process in the US , looking at securitization, looking at evaluation and accounting issues and capital issues."

Nothing is safe, in other words, from the new slew of regulation about to hit the world's banking sector. Which will only increase fear and uncertainty on Wall Street and in the City – the perfect policy outcome now that banking confidence has shrunk to nothing.

#3. Bail Out Anything & Everything

Within days of returning from Tokyo , Alistair Darling finally took the only course of action he thought left open to him, and he nationalized the failed Northern Rock.

Shareholders are apoplectic – not least those shareholders who bought into the new People's Bank of Great Britain during its 95% plunge, hoping to turn a quick buck on the bounce.

If current investors aren't given full value when the Narodny Rock is re-privatized, "the British government's actions would amount to robbery under the law," wails Tim Congdon, an otherwise highly respected (and apparently sentient) economist. He pleads in the Financial Times that simply letting the Rock go under was never an option.

"Central banks exist for the purpose of preventing [banking] runs or, at any rate, ensuring that runs are met by lender-of-last-resort loans so the hurried liquidation of assets can be avoided."

Help me when I screw up, in short, but don't interfere when I think I've been clever. Which in the bigger scheme of things – underpinning the British public's faith in the security of its banking deposits – if just what nationalizing Narodny Rock will do.

"If US policymakers want to avoid a recession," writes David Bowers of Absolute Research Strategy – also in the Financial Times – "they need to ensure that America's $750bn annual funding requirement from overseas is assured, and at a reasonable price."

How to keep money flowing into the US financial sector so that its very real-world trade deficit doesn't implode? "We believe they should move more rapidly to restore confidence in credit ratings and, thus, in securitised paper," says Bowers. "This could be done through more regulatory oversight of the ratings agencies.

"As a last resort, the government could even 'share' its credit rating with key private sector operators such as the [ailing bond insurance] monolines" – which is precisely what nationalizing Northern Rock achieves for the failed UK mortgage lender.

Expect ever-more government meddling in short, begged for by the Western world's finance industry and willingly supplied by policy-makers desperate to appear decisive.

And for as long as this circus keeps rolling on, you might want to keep Buying Gold as defense.

The men of action, after all, are trying to sell it.

By Adrian Ash
BullionVault.com

Gold price chart, no delay | Free Report: 5 Myths of the Gold Market
City correspondent for The Daily Reckoning in London and a regular contributor to MoneyWeek magazine, Adrian Ash is the editor of Gold News and head of research at www.BullionVault.com , giving you direct access to investment gold, vaulted in Zurich , on $3 spreads and 0.8% dealing fees.

(c) BullionVault 2008

Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.

Adrian Ash Archive

© 2005-2022 http://www.MarketOracle.co.uk - The Market Oracle is a FREE Daily Financial Markets Analysis & Forecasting online publication.


Post Comment

Only logged in users are allowed to post comments. Register/ Log in