Or it has to be hidden?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
From Bill Gross:
Duringtimes of market turmoil it helps to simplify and get basic – explainthings to a public and even yourself in terms of what can be easilyunderstood. Goodness knows it’s not a piece of cake for anyone over 40these days to understand the maze of financial structures that nowappear to be unwinding. They were created by youthful financialengineers trained to exploit cheap money and leverage who showed nofear and who have, until the last few weeks, never known the sting ofthe market’s lash. They are wizards of complexity. I, however, havingjust turned 63, am a professor of simplicity.
Soforgive my perhaps unsophisticated explanation to follow of how thesubprime crisis crossed the borders of mortgage finance to swiftlyinfect global capital markets. What Citigroup’s Chuck Prince, the Fed’sBen Bernanke, Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, and a host of othersophisticates should have known is that the bond and stock marketproblem is the same one puzzle players confront during a game of“Where’s Waldo?” – Waldo in this case being the bad loans anddefaulting subprime paper of the
Thoselooking for clues to the extent of the spreading fungus shouldunderstand that there really is no comprehensive data to allow anyoneto know how many subprimes actually rest in individual institutionalportfolios. Regulators have been absent from the game, and informationrelease has been left in the hands of individual institutions, some ofwhom have compounded the uncertainty with comments about volatilemarket conditions unequaled during the lifetime of their careers. Andtoo, many institutions including pension funds and insurance companies,argue that accounting rules allow them to mark subprime derivatives atcost. Defaulting exposure therefore, can hibernate for many monthsbefore its true value is revealed to investors and importantly, toother lenders.
Thesignificance of proper disclosure is, in effect, the key to the currentcrisis. Financial institutions lend trillions of dollars, euros,pounds, and yen to and amongst each other. In the
Thepast few weeks have exposed a giant crack in modern financialarchitecture, created by youthful wizards and endorsed as adiversifying positive by central bankers present and past. While thenewborn derivatives may hedge individual institutional and sector risk,they cannot eliminate the Waldos. In fact, the inherent leverage thataccompanies derivative creation may foster systemic risk wheninformation is unavailable or delayed in its release. Nothing withinthe current marketplace allows for the hedging of liquidityrisk and that is the problem at the moment. Only the central banks cansolve this puzzle with their own liquidity infusions and perhaps aseries of rate cuts. The markets stand by with apprehension.
Butshould markets be stabilized, the fundamental question facing policymakers becomes, “what to do about the housing market?” Granted acertain dose of market discipline in the form of lower prices might behealthy, but market forecasters currently project over two milliondefaults before this current cycle is complete. The resultant impact onhousing prices is likely to be close to -10%, an asset deflation in the
Housingprices could probably be supported by substantial cuts in short-terminterest rates, but even cuts of 200-300 basis points by the Fed wouldnot avert a built-in upward adjustment of ARM interest rates, nor wouldit guarantee that the private mortgage market – flush with fears ofdepreciating collateral – would follow the Fed down in terms of 15-30year mortgage yields and relaxed lending standards.Additionally, cuts of such magnitude would almost guarantee aresurgence of speculative investment via hedge funds and leveredconduits which have proved to be the Achilles heel of the currentcrisis. Secretary Paulson might also have a bone to pick with this“Bernanke housing put” since it more than likely would weaken thedollar – even produce a run – which would threaten the long-termreserve status of greenbacks and the ongoing prosperity of the
The ultimate solution, it seems to me, must not emanate from the bowels of Fed headquarters on