How AIG’s Collapse Began a Global Run on the Banks
One of the better summary of the Sub Prime Crisis and its impact on the economics of today has been presented by Porter Stansberry
His Essay is reproduced below in full, with no modification or splicing.
Something very strange is happening in the financial markets. And I can show you what it is and what it means…
If September didn’t give you enough to worry about, consider what will happen to real estate prices as unemployment grows steadily over the next several months. As bad as things are now, they’ll get much worse.
They’ll get worse for the obvious reason: because more people will default on their mortgages. But they’ll also remain depressed for far longer than anyone expects, for a reason most people will never understand.
What follows is one of the real secrets to September’s stock market collapse. Once you understand what really happened last month, the events to come will be much clearer to you…
Every great bull market has similar characteristics. The speculation must ' at the beginning ' start with a reasonably good idea. Using long-term mortgages to pay for homes is a good idea, with a few important caveats.
Some of these limitations are obvious to any intelligent observer… like the need for a substantial down payment, the verification of income, an independent appraisal, etc. But human nature dictates that, given enough time and the right incentives, any endeavor will be corrupted. This is one of the two critical elements of a bubble. What was once a good idea becomes a farce. You already know all the stories of how this happened in the housing market, where loans were eventually given without fixed rates, without income verification, without down payments, and without legitimate appraisals.
As bad as these practices were, they would not have created a global financial panic without the second, more critical element. For things to get really out of control, the farce must evolve further… into fraud.
And this is where AIG comes into the story.
Around the world, banks must comply with what are known as Basel II regulations. These regulations determine how much capital a bank must maintain in reserve. The rules are based on the quality of the bank’s loan book. The riskier the loans a bank owns, the more capital it must keep in reserve. Bank managers naturally seek to employ as much leverage as they can, especially when interest rates are low, to maximize profits. AIG appeared to offer banks a way to get around the Basel rules, via unregulated insurance contracts, known as credit default swaps.
Here’s how it worked: Say you’re a major European bank… You have a surplus of deposits, because in Europe people actually still bother to save money. You’re looking for something to maximize the spread between what you must pay for deposits and what you’re able to earn lending. You want it to be safe and reliable, but also pay the highest possible annual interest. You know you could buy a portfolio of high-yielding subprime mortgages. But doing so will limit the amount of leverage you can employ, which will limit returns.
So rather than rule out having any high-yielding securities in your portfolio, you simply call up the friendly AIG broker you met at a conference in London last year.
“What would it cost me to insure this subprime security?” you inquire. The broker, who is selling a five-year policy (but who will be paid a bonus annually), says, “Not too much.” After all, the historical loss rates on American mortgages is close to zilch.
Using incredibly sophisticated computer models, he agrees to guarantee the subprime security you’re buying against default for five years for say, 2% of face value.
Although AIG’s credit default swaps were really insurance contracts, they weren’t regulated. That meant AIG didn’t have to put up any capital as collateral on its swaps, as long as it maintained a triple-A credit rating. There was no real capital cost to selling these swaps; there was no limit. And thanks to what’s called “mark-to-market” accounting, AIG could book the profit from a five-year credit default swap as soon as the contract was sold, based on the expected default rate.
Whatever the computer said AIG was likely to make on the deal, the accountants would write down as actual profit. The broker who sold the swap would be paid a bonus at the end of the first year ' long before the actual profit on the contract was made.
With this structure in place, the European bank was able to assure its regulators it was holding only triple-A credits, instead of a bunch of subprime “toxic waste.” The bank could leverage itself to the full extent allowable under Basel II. AIG could book hundreds of millions in “profit” each year, without having to pony up billions in collateral.
It was a fraud. AIG never any capital to back up the insurance it sold. And the profits it booked never materialized. The default rate on mortgage securities underwritten in 2005, 2006, and 2007 turned out to be multiples higher than expected. And they continue to increase. In some cases, the securities the banks claimed were triple A have ended up being worth less than $0.15 on the dollar.
Even so, it all worked for years. Banks leveraged deposits to the hilt. Wall Street packaged and sold dumb mortgages as securities. And AIG sold credit default swaps without bothering to collateralize the risk. An enormous amount of capital was created out of thin air and tossed into global real estate markets.
On September 15, all of the major credit-rating agencies downgraded AIG ' the world’s largest insurance company. At issue were the soaring losses in its credit default swaps. The first big writeoff came in the fourth quarter of 2007, when AIG reported an $11 billion charge. It was able to raise capital once, to repair the damage. But the losses kept growing. The moment the downgrade came, AIG was forced to come up with tens of billions of additional collateral, immediately. This was on top of the billions it owed to its trading partners. It didn’t have the money. The world’s largest insurance company was bankrupt.
The dominoes fell over immediately. Lehman Brothers failed on the same day. Merrill was sold to Bank of America. The Fed stepped in and agreed to lend AIG $85 billion to facilitate an orderly sell off of its assets in exchange for essentially all the company’s equity.
Most people never understood how AIG was the linchpin to the entire system. And there’s one more secret yet to come out…
AIG’s largest trading partner wasn’t a nameless European bank. It was Goldman Sachs.
I’d wondered for years how Goldman avoided the kind of huge mortgage-related writedowns that plagued all the other investment banks. And now we know: Goldman hedged its exposure via credit default swaps with AIG. Sources inside Goldman say the company’s exposure to AIG exceeded $20 billion, meaning the moment AIG was downgraded, Goldman had to begin marking down the value of its assets. And the moment AIG went bankrupt, Goldman lost $20 billion. Goldman immediately sought out Warren Buffett to raise $5 billion of additional capital, which also helped it raise another $5 billion via a public offering.
The collapse of the credit default swap market also meant the investment banks ' all of them ' had no way to borrow money, because no one would insure their obligations.
To fund their daily operations, they’ve become totally reliant on the Federal Reserve, which has allowed them to formally become commercial banks. To date, banks, insurance firms, and investment banks have borrowed $348 billion from the Federal Reserve ' nearly all of this lending took place following AIG’s failure. Things are so bad at the investment banks, the Fed had to change the rules to allow Merrill, Morgan Stanley, and Goldman the ability to use equities as collateral for these loans, an unprecedented step.
The mainstream press hasn’t reported this either: A provision in the $700 billion bailout bill permits the Fed to pay interest on the collateral it’s holding, which is simply a way to funnel taxpayer dollars directly into the investment banks.
Why do you need to know all of these details? First, you must understand that without the government’s actions, the collapse of AIG could have caused every major bank in the world to fail.
Second, without the credit default swap market, there’s no way banks can report the true state of their assets ' they’d all be in default of Basel II. That’s why the government will push through a measure that requires the suspension of mark-to-market accounting. Essentially, banks will be allowed to pretend they have far higher-quality loans than they actually do. AIG can’t cover for them anymore.
And third, and most importantly, without the huge fraud perpetrated by AIG, the mortgage bubble could have never grown as large as it did. Yes, other factors contributed, like the role of Fannie and Freddie in particular. But the key to enabling the huge global growth in credit during the last decade can be tied directly to AIG’s sale of credit default swaps without collateral. That was the barn door. And it was left open for nearly a decade.
There’s no way to replace this massive credit-building machine, which makes me very skeptical of the government’s bailout plan. Quite simply, we can’t replace the credit that existed in the world before September 15 because it didn’t deserve to be there in the first place. While the government can, and certainly will, paper over the gaping holes left by this enormous credit collapse, it can’t actually replace the trust and credit that existed… because it was a fraud.
And that leads me to believe the coming economic contraction will be longer and deeper than most people understand.
Amit…Being an illiterate in stock trading and real estate(the onluy one own is my home in cochin), this piece was indeed illuminating. I don”t profess I understood it all well. But, it certainly helped me to figure out the source and the shocks. Borrowing the words of Russell itself “The borrowing made it appear as if the future was nourishing the present. A man cannot eat a loaf of bread that does not exist”. We seldom realize that eating that future loaf now has frightful consequences….Thank you….PGR
Amit, I don’t think the resulted situation of this crisis will cause large scale human misery to the root-cause first world (FW) countries . 1. FW still have the edge on technology. 2. They have material resources except for Iceland. 3. FW have organized system in place to switch the country to “Blue collar” way of living. 4. History has shown, they can mend themselves to new situation. 5. They are grown up without expecting major clutch type support to survive. I don’t think they are panic to the extent we are made to think. Yes, the “other” countries (Service Providing countries) will suffer. 1. Others were building on the FW temporary vacuum. 2. Others did not utilize the time to build on their muscles of strength. 3. Others have lesser system in place to direct the situation to new productive environment. 4. Others will need to work hard and spend more to find share in international market.
All change is interrelated. Of late there are a lot of new concepts and products that have entered the scenarios- like, biofuels, carbon credits, to name just a couple. Another significant novelty was the subprime loan- all these made new demands on liquidity, and an explosion followed by an implosion was inevitable. The frequency of the price spirals remains unchanged; it’s the amplitude that has undergone large fluctuations
The malaise has to be deep rooted. It is entrenched more in the way the world measures growth and progress than the unfolding of actual events. The reaction is much more than the action, the fluctuation is much more than the reality of economic downturn. It follows the logic that a grave upward price spiral occurs when the shortage is a meager 5 %, and there is heavy erosion in price with just a 5 % excess in availability. When the fluctuation for a given shortage or excess is so dramatic, it is a sign of a grave malaise in the economy. This needs to be corrected. If one analyses the prices in the last one year- not just of share indices but the price of various internationally traded commodities- one sees the same trend of hyperbolic price fluctuation. Food grains, petroleum, fertilisers and their intermediates, everything saw this unprecedented price spiral. In the last couple of months the world saw a complete reversal with prices moving southwards with equal ferocity.
It is wonderful to have an idealistic vision and to own it as a personal philosophy. In a practical world where everyone does not or will not share that vision, there will always be the imminent and intrinsic danger of injustice brought about by these divergent values. To be able to see the larger good in the given whole of an imperfect world and to act on it to ensure that that greater good is more precious than one’’s own sense of probity and righteousness is to acknowledge a bigger social cause than one’’s moral fulfilment. Sometimes it is necessary to use a tedi ungli to get at the ghee, melting it could be an option for the ghee but if the same option were applied to people melting in this meltdown, we are going to see more mass suicides by families. Grey areas need patience in times of a crises, and a much larger vision to address the urgent issues of compassionate justice. You can be right and you can be ”dead” right. The weight of right must not be phyrric.
…These things I believe and the world , for all its horrors has left me unshaken” I kind of believe that too
Mankind is all one family and we can all be happy or we can all be miserable.The time is passed when you could have a happy minority living upon the misery of the great mass.That is passed forever. People will not acquiesce in it and you have to learn to put up with your neighbour’’s happiness.” He further says..”"I may have thought the road to a world of free and happy human beings shorter than it is proving to be, but I was not wrong in thinking that such a world is possible and that it is worth while to live with a view to bringing it nearer. I have lived in the pursuit of a vision, both personal and social. Personal:to care for what is noble, or what is beautiful, for what is gentle; to allow moments of insight to give wisdom at more mundane times. Social to see in imagination the society that is to be created, where individuals grow freely, and where hate and greed and envy die because there is nothing to nourish them…
Eka ! frankly, i am an admirer of greytones as distinct from white. Perfection in any field unnerves me. // I was stacking some books from my daughters collection, and i stumbled upon “Russell’’s best”. Allow me a longish extract from the preface, “I should not wish to be thought in earnest only when i am solemn. The longer i have lived, the more i have come to suspect solemnity and to see in it- not always, but frequently- a cloak for a humbug. What is most lacking in the modern world is genial, good natured tolerance; and what is most hostile to this is a harsh and dogmatic morality which condemns the majority of the human race as reprobates. I have tried to avoid this danger, though i must confess that i have not always been succesful in this endevour”
Amit, I am copy pasting here your observations in the comments section of your last post. “What Eka and LL are debating about is Morality in everyday Life… subject matter of an independent discussion, for, if applied to current affairs and the economy, it gives a skew which makes many lines of discussion inappropiate. We set limits to ourselves, and that is the biggest and most absurd compromise we make- but we all do it all the time. We are not what we wish to be, but what the environment has reduced and comnspired us to becom ” After reading this article, doesn”t it become all the more clear, that it is the lack of ethics in our dealings that is spiralling into this crisis?How can you say that they are separate issues.?
Amit, you scared readers. May be you should have explicitly mentioned that scenario is about US Financial system & players exposed to it! Indian banking is relatively insulated. Yes, stock market and export will be affected by weakening of cash flow. India has home-grown strong economic system. Cheer up!
Oh dear! such a lot of bad news
This is brilliant Amit. Simply brilliant. So, should we liquidate all and turn to gold? :))