With the stock markets increasingly jittery, and just in time for Thanksgiving, I can't resist leaving a little ray of sunshine BAG OF GLOOM at your doorstep: via FT Alphaville, Stand by for "generalized systemic financial meltdown", Helen Thomas, Nov 21 or straight to the source, HERE'S ROUBINI …
Nouriel Roubini, Nov 16: … I now see the risk of a severe and worsening liquidity and credit crunch leading to a generalized meltdown of the financial system of a severity and magnitude like we have never observed before. In this extreme scenario whose likelihood is increasing we could see a generalized run on some banks; and runs on a couple of weaker (non-bank) broker dealers that may go bankrupt with severe and systemic ripple effects on a mass of highly leveraged derivative instruments that will lead to a seizure of the derivatives markets (think of LTCM to the power of three); a collapse of the ABCP market and a disorderly collapse of the SIVs and conduits; massive losses on money market funds with a run on both those sponsored by banks and those not sponsored by banks (with the latter at even more severe risk as the recent effective bailout of the formers’ losses by theirs sponsoring banks is not available to those not being backed by banks); ever growing defaults and losses ($500 billion plus) in subprime, near prime and prime mortgages with severe known-on effect on the RMBS and CDOs market; massive losses in consumer credit (auto loans, credit cards); severe problems and losses in commercial real estate and related CMBS; the drying up of liquidity and credit in a variety of asset backed securities putting the entire model of securitization at risk; runs on hedge funds and other financial institutions that do not have access to the Fed's lender of last resort support; a sharp increase in corporate defaults and credit spreads; and a massive process of re-intermediation into the banking system of activities that were until now altogether securitized. …As differentiated a wee bit by Yves Smith:
Naked Capitalism, Nov 17: … I agree with Roubini that there is the very real possibility of a financial horrorshow, However, I differ with him on some of the particulars. We are not going to see bank runs. We didn't have them in the late 1980s where S&Ls were actually failing and Citi nearly went under. However, we are already seeing institutional money getting very costly for Citi, and their tsuris have only begun. And we are seeing more examples of Citi-type behavior, where banks have what effectively were contingent liabilities (think, for example, of the guarantees and/or cash injections to keep affiliated money market funds from breaking the buck). These funding or liability demands are coming at precisely the time when bank equity is under strain, due to the need to increase loss reserves and writedowns. Look, for example, at asset backed commercial paper. The Financial Times reported today that banks have shown substantial balance sheet growth of late. But it isn't net new lending; it's credit commitments or actual drawdown related to ABCP.I expect Citi to be in serious trouble in 6 to 12 months, and that specter will increase risk premia for many banks, and could push others towards the edge. So I anticipate a lot of near-failures, some gunshot marriages, and possibly even real bank collapses, but the mechanism will not be a run by retail depositors.
But I expect to see more serious damage among the "large complex financial institutions" of which Citi is one. There are 16 behemoths that have been deemed by the Bank of England as especially important to global credit intermediation. One is already in the process of taking a body blow. If we see damage to any others, it will lead to a contraction in the credit markets, both directly (shrinkage of their balance sheets) and indirectly (shrinkage of everyone else's balance sheets due to new found conservatism and sharply higher borrowing costs). The securitization market, absent government agency paper, is not functioning very well right now. It will really start laboring if conditions on Wall Street continue to deteriorate.
And if securitization looks less attractive because investors are far more stringent (and maybe no longer believe ratings) and Wall Street looks to have lost a couple of cylinders, then the banks need to step into the breech. Ah, but will they? Banks for the most part are no longer in the habit of keeping a lot of their own loans on their balance sheet. …
Sir
With US Dollar at the bottom and oil at 100usdpb, I think this ia nighmare sir,
I thank you
Firoali A Mulla MBA PhD
P.O.Box 6044
Dar-Es-Salaam
Tanzaia
East Africa
Posted by: famulla | November 23, 2007 at 07:27 AM