The fundamental problem is simply
concentration of risk. It is easily ended by breaking up TBTF and separation of function as was done for exactly the same reasons under Glass Steagel. When
that was repealed in 1999 under Clinton ,
I was stunned. I said then it would take
about eight years to blow up the system.
That is exactly what happened. We
are now getting ready for another round in the next four to six years unless
serious sense is brought to bear.
I would start today by charging every
signatory to a failed AAA bond with treason, preferably in the State of Texas . That would at least put the lobby out of
business for a while.
Treason is been willfully practiced against
the United States
by its own blindingly greedy Investment Banking Community. It must end before it simply ends badly for
everyone.
After all that let us get back to distributing
credit downstream to the States in particular were it is certain to do a lot of
good.
Winner Takes All: The
Super-priority Status of Derivatives
By Ellen Brown
Cyprus-style confiscation of depositor funds has been called the "new normal." Bail-in policies are appearing in multiple countries directing failing TBTF banks to convert the funds of "unsecured creditors" into capital; and those creditors, it turns out, include ordinary depositors. Even "secured" creditors, including state and local governments, may be at risk.
Derivatives have "super-priority"
status in bankruptcy, and Dodd Frank precludes further taxpayer bailouts. In a
big derivatives bust, there may be no collateral left for the creditors who are
next in line.
Shock waves went around the world when the IMF, the EU, and the ECB not only approved but mandated the confiscation of depositor funds to "bail in" two bankrupt banks in Cyprus. A "bail in" is a quantum leap beyond a "bail out." When governments are no longer willing to use taxpayer money to bail out banks that have gambled away their capital, the banks are now being instructed to "recapitalize" themselves by confiscating the funds of their creditors, turning debt into equity, or stock; and the "creditors" include the depositors who put their money in the bank thinking it was a secure place to store their savings.
The Cyprus bail-in was not a
one-off emergency measure but was consistent with similar policies already in
the works for the US, UK, EU, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia, as detailed
in my earlier articles here and here. "Too big to
fail" now trumps all. Rather than banks being put into bankruptcy to
salvage the deposits of their customers, the customers will now be put into
bankruptcy to save the banks.
Why Derivatives Threaten Your
Bank Account
The big risk behind all this is the massive $230 trillion derivatives boondoggle managed by US banks. Derivatives are sold as a kind of insurance for managing profits and risk; but as Satyajit Das points out in Extreme Money, they actually increase risk to the system as a whole.
In the US after the Glass-Steagall Act was implemented in 1933, a bank could not gamble with depositor funds for its own account; but in 1999, that barrier was removed. Recent congressional investigations have revealed that in the biggest derivative banks, JPMorgan andBank of America , massive commingling has
occurred between their depository arms and their unregulated and highly
vulnerable derivatives arms. Under both the Dodd Frank Act and the 2005
Bankruptcy Act, derivative claims have super-priority over all other
claims, secured and unsecured, insured and uninsured. In a major
derivatives fiasco, derivative claimants could well grab all the collateral,
leaving other claimants, public and private, holding the bag.
The tab for the 2008 bailout
was $700 billion in taxpayer funds, and that was just to start. Another $700
billion disaster could easily wipe out all the money in the FDIC insurance
fund, which has only about $25 billion in it. Both JPMorgan and Bank
of America
have over $1 trillion in deposits, and total deposits covered by FDIC
insurance are about $9 trillion. According to an article on
Bloomberg in November 2011, Bank of America 's holding company then had
almost $75 trillion in derivatives, and 71% were held in its depository arm;
while J.P. Morgan had $79 trillion in derivatives, and 99% were in its
depository arm. Those whole mega-sums are not actually at risk, but
the cash calculated to be at risk from derivatives from all sources is at
least $12 trillion; and JPM is the biggest player, with 30% of the market.
It used to be that the
government would backstop the FDIC if it ran out of money. But section 716 of
the Dodd Frank Act now precludes the payment of further taxpayer funds to bail
out a bank from a bad derivatives gamble. As summarized in a letter from
Americans for Financial Reform quoted by Yves Smith:
Section 716 bans taxpayer
bailouts of a broad range of derivatives dealing and speculative derivatives
activities. Section 716 does not in any way limit the swaps activities which
banks or other financial institutions may engage in. It simply prohibits public
support for such activities.
There will be no more $700
billion taxpayer bailouts. So where will the banks get the money in the next
crisis? It seems the plan has just been revealed in the new bail-in policies.
All Depositors, Secured and
Unsecured, May Be at Risk
The bail-in policy for the US
and UK is set forth in a document put out jointly by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and the Bank of England (BOE) in December 2012,
titled Resolving Globally Active, Systemically Important, Financial
Institutions.
In an April 4th article
in Financial Sense, John Butler points out that the directive does not
explicitly refer to "depositors." It refers only to
"unsecured creditors." But the effective meaning of the term,
says Butler , is
belied by the fact that the FDIC has been put on the job. The FDIC has direct
responsibility only for depositors, not for the bondholders who are wholesale
non-depositor sources of bank credit. Butler
comments:
Do you see the sleight-of-hand
at work here? Under the guise of protecting taxpayers, depositors of failing
institutions are to be arbitrarily, de-facto subordinated to interbank claims,
when in fact they are legally senior to those claims!
. . . [C]onsider the brutal, unjust irony of the entire proposal. Remember, its stated purpose is to solve the problem revealed in 2008, namely the existence of insolvent TBTF institutions that were "highly leveraged and complex, with numerous and dispersed financial operations, extensive off-balance-sheet activities, and opaque financial statements." Yet what is being proposed is a framework sacrificing depositors in order to maintain precisely this complex, opaque, leverage-laden financial edifice!
If you believe that what has
happened recently in Cyprus
is unlikely to happen elsewhere, think again. Economic policy officials in the US , UK and other countries are
preparing for it. Remember, someone has to pay. Will it be you? If you are a
depositor, the answer is yes
The FDIC was set up to ensure
the safety of deposits. Now it, it seems, its function will be the confiscation
of deposits to save Wall Street. In the only mention of "depositors"
in the FDIC-BOE directive as it pertains to US policy, paragraph 47 says that
" the authorities recognize the need for effective communication to depositors,
making it clear that their deposits will be protected. " But protected
with what? As with MF Global, the pot will already have been gambled away. From
whom will the bank get it back? Not the derivatives claimants, who are first in
line to be paid; not the taxpayers, since Congress has sealed the vault; not
the FDIC insurance fund, which has a paltry $25 billion in it. As long as the
derivatives counterparties have super-priority status, the claims of all other
parties are in jeopardy.
That could mean not just the
"unsecured creditors" but the "secured creditors,"
including state and local governments . Local governments keep a
significant portion of their revenues in Wall Street banks because smaller
local banks lack the capacity to handle their complex business. In the US , banks
taking deposits of public funds are required to pledge collateral against any
funds exceeding the deposit insurance limit of $250,000. But derivative claims
are also secured with collateral, and they have super-priority over all other
claimants, including other secured creditors. The vault may be empty by the
time local government officials get to the teller's window. Main Street will again have been
plundered by Wall Street.
Super-priority Status for
Derivatives Increases Rather than Decreases Risk
Harvard Law
Professor Mark Row maintains that the super-priority status of
derivatives needs to be repealed. He writes:
. . . [D]erivatives counterparties, . . . unlike most other secured creditors, can seize and immediately liquidate collateral, readily net out gains and losses in their dealings with the bankrupt, terminate their contracts with the bankrupt, and keep both preferential eve-of-bankruptcy payments and fraudulent conveyances they obtained from the debtor, all in ways that favor them over the bankrupt's other creditors.
. . . [W]hen we subsidize derivatives and similar financial activity via bankruptcy benefits unavailable to other creditors, we get more of the activity than we otherwise would. Repeal would induce these burgeoning financial markets to better recognize the risks of counterparty financial failure, which in turn should dampen the possibility of another AIG-, Bear Stearns-, or Lehman Brothers-style financial meltdown, thereby helping to maintain systemic financial stability.
In The New Financial
Deal: Understanding the Dodd-Frank Act and Its (Unintended)
Consequences, David Skeel agrees. He calls the Dodd-Frank policy approach
"corporatism" -- a partnership between government and corporations.
Congress has made no attempt in the legislation to reduce the size of the big
banks or to undermine the implicit subsidy provided by the knowledge that they
will be bailed out in the event of trouble.
Undergirding this approach is
what Skeel calls "the Lehman myth," which blames the 2008 banking
collapse on the decision to allow Lehman Brothers to fail. Skeel counters that
the Lehman bankruptcy was actually orderly, and the derivatives were unwound
relatively quickly. Rather than preventing the Lehman collapse, the bankruptcy
exemption for derivatives may have helped precipitate it. When the bank
appeared to be on shaky ground, the derivatives players all rushed to put in
their claims, in a run on the collateral before it ran out. Skeel says the
problem could be resolved by eliminating the derivatives exemption from the
stay of proceedings that a bankruptcy court applies to other contracts to
prevent this sort of run.
Putting the Brakes on the Wall
Street End Game
Besides eliminating the
super-priority of derivatives, here are some other ways to block the Wall
Street asset grab:
(1) Restore the
Glass-Steagall Act separating depository banking from investment banking.
Support Marcy Kaptur's H.R. 129.
(2) Break up the giant
derivatives banks. Support Bernie Sanders' "too big to
jail" legislation.
(3) Alternatively, nationalize
the TBTFs, as advised in the New York Times by Gar Alperovitz. If
taxpayer bailouts to save the TBTFs are unacceptable, depositor bailouts are
even more unacceptable.
(4) Make derivatives illegal, as
they were between 1936 and 1982 under the Commodities Exchange Act. They
can be unwound by simply netting them out, declaring them null and
void. As noted by Paul Craig Roberts, "the only major effect of
closing out or netting all the swaps (mostly over-the-counter contracts between
counter-parties) would be to take $230 trillion of leveraged risk out of
the financial system."
(5) Support the
Harkin-Whitehouse bill to impose a financial transactions tax on Wall Street
trading. Among other uses, a tax on all trades might supplement the FDIC
insurance fund to cover another derivatives disaster.
(6) Establish postal
savings banks as government-guaranteed depositories for individual
savings. Many countries have public savings banks, which became particularly
popular after savings in private banks were wiped out in the banking crisis
of the late 1990s.
(7) Establish
publicly-owned banks to be depositories of public monies, following the
lead of North Dakota ,
the only state to completely escape the 2008 banking crisis. North Dakota does not keep its revenues in
Wall Street banks but deposits them in the state-owned Bank of North Dakota by
law. The bank has a mandate to serve the public, and it does not gamble
in derivatives.
A motivated state legislature
could set up a publicly-owned bank very quickly. Having its own bank would
allow the state to protect both its own revenues and those of its citizens
while generating the credit needed to support local business and restore
prosperity to Main Street .
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