Log in

View Full Version : (the drying up of capitalism's fictitious capital)The Derivatives Market is Unwinding



ckaihatsu
5th June 2008, 04:11
http://georgewashington2.blogspot.com/2008/06/derivatives-market-is-unwinding.html
http://whatreallyhappened.com/

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

The Derivatives Market is Unwinding!

A couple of months ago, a financial analyst who sells derivatives told me that fears about a meltdown in the derivatives market were unfounded.

Yesterday, he told me - with a very worried look - "THE DERIVATIVES MARKET IS UNWINDING!"

What does this mean? What are derivatives and why should you care if the market is unwinding?

Well, it turns out that the reason that Bear Stearns was about to go belly-up before JP Morgan bought it is that it had held trillions of dollars in derivatives, which were about to go south. (The reason that JP Morgan was so eager to buy Bear Stearns is that it was on the other side of these derivative contracts -- if Bear Stearns had gone under, JP Morgan would have taken a huge hit. But the way the derivative agreements were drafted, a purchase by JP Morgan canceled the derivative contracts, so that JP Morgan didn't experience huge losses. That is probably why the Fed was so eager to broker - and fund - the shotgun marriage. JP Morgan is a much larger player, and if Bear's failure had caused the derivatives hit to JP Morgan, it probably would have rippled out to the whole financial system and potentially caused an instant depression).

In addition, the subprime prime loan crisis is intimately connected to the unwinding of the derivatives market. Specifically, loans were repackaged into derivatives called collateralized debt obligations (or "CDO's") and sold to both big and regional banks and investment companies worldwide. The CDO's were highly-leveraged -- many times the amount of the actual loans. When the subprime loan crisis hit, the high leverage magnified the fallout, and huge sums of CDO derivatives became essentially worthless.

Do you remember when wealthy Orange County, California, went bankrupt in 1994? Yup, that was because it had invested in bad derivatives.

And, according to a recent article by one of the world's top derivative insiders, the market for credit default swap ("CDS") derivatives is also unraveling.

And reported just today, Lehman Brothers is now on the edge, due to exposure to derivatives.

Derivatives are the Elephant in the Living Room

The subprime mortgage crisis is bad, and is hurting many people, and slowing the economy. High oil and food prices are bad, and are hurting many people, and bringing down the economy. But -- according to top insiders -- derivatives are the elephant in the room . . . the single largest threat to the U.S. and world economy.

One reason is that, according to Paul Volcker, the former chairman of the Federal Reserve, the entire modern financial system is based upon derivatives, and the financial system today is entirely different from the traditional American or global financial system because derivatives - a relatively new concept - now underly the entire fabric of the financial system. In short, many of the people who know the most about derivatives say that the current system is a house of cards built upon derivatives.

And yet banks and financial houses have hidden their derivatives exposure off the balance sheets. No wonder almost no one understands derivatives:

"Not only [world's richest man] Warren Buffett, but Bond King Bill Gross, our Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, the Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and the rest of America's leaders can't 'figure out'" the derivatives market.

Indeed, the government may have actively helped to hide the the derivatives mess since at least 2006. For example, according to Business Week:

"President George W. Bush has bestowed on his intelligence czar, John Negroponte, broad authority, in the name of national security, to excuse publicly traded companies from their usual accounting and securities-disclosure obligations."

Former fed chairman Alan Greenspan has been a huge booster for and defender of derivatives for many years. Did you know that the same guy that pushed subprime loans has also aggressively pushed derivatives since at least 2001?

And the other regulatory agencies and Congress have taken a totally hands-off approach towards derivatives.

How Big a Problem?

How big is the derivatives market? Worldwide, it is $516 trillion dollar. The derivatives market dwarfs the real market for goods and services, and acts likes an unregulated black market.

As one writer put it:

"It’s all smoke and mirrors. The financial system has decoupled from the productive elements of the economy and is now beginning to show disturbing signs of instability."

And its not just the U.S. Derivatives salesmen have sold these babies all over the world. Because banks, financial institutions and governments world-wide have bought significant derivatives, the fall out will not be limited solely to the U.S. See this and this.

If the derivatives market is truly unwinding, as my investment advisor friend and some of the top industry insiders say, we could be in for a very bumpy ride.

For further information on derivatives, see these articles:

http://www.prudentbear.com/index.php/BearsLairHome
http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article4419.html
http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article1038.html
http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article4378.html
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8634
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2008/03/23/ccfed123.xml
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/23/business/23how.html?_r=1&oref=slogin&ref=business&pagewanted=print
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/23/business/23gret.html?ref=business
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/23/business/23regulate.html?pagewanted=2&th&emc=th
http://money.cnn.com/2008/03/21/markets/dollar/
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/803541a6-f78c-11dc-a40-000077b07658.html
http://www.occ.treas.gov/ftp/release/2008-36a.pdf
http://news.moneycentral.msn.com/provider/providerarticle.aspx?feed=OBR&date=20080519&id=8667647
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2008/04/17/cnlibor117.xml

Posted by George Washington at 12:01 PM

sonicbluetm
5th June 2008, 04:39
oh shi-

Plagueround
5th June 2008, 04:49
Hoarding capital will cause problems, but I've always thought all these people hoarding money that they've twisted so much that it essentially doesn't exist would cause even bigger ones. All the little legal loopholes and tricks they use to entangle people are coming back at them with a vengeance.
I'd love to see Warren Buffet, Carl Icahn and friends jumping out of windows depression style. Hell, maybe they could sell tickets to recoup some of the money they'll lose.

Oh and sonicblue...what's with you? Did you say Candlejack's name or som-

ckaihatsu
5th June 2008, 04:57
The capitalists are always trying to mitigate risk through these financial instruments, but in the end they can't -- the endemic declining rate of profit wreaks havoc through their financial contortions....


Chris




--


--
___

RevLeft.com -- Home of the Revolutionary Left
www.revleft.com/vb/member.php?u=16162

Photoillustrations, Political Diagrams by Chris Kaihatsu
community.webshots.com/user/ckaihatsu/

3D Design Communications - Let Your Design Do Your Footwork
ckaihatsu.elance.com

MySpace:
myspace.com/ckaihatsu

CouchSurfing:
tinyurl.com/yoh74u

cyu
6th June 2008, 18:56
Hoarding capital will cause problems
Even if you are rich, hoarding money is still stupid from the rich man's point of view. If everyone else just agrees to one day no longer accept your money as legal tender, and switch to some other medium of exchange, then the rich man is f**ked.

The same is true of a nation. If the nation is wealthy only because it holds a lot of money, all the other nations have to do is stop accepting the money as legal tender, and the rich nation is f**ked.

Real wealth comes from an economy's ability to produce things: it's technology, it's labor force, it's raw materials. Obviously improving all this is difficult on an individual level, which is why rich individuals are more focused on gathering money. Improvements in real wealth have to be done on a collective level, because it has to involve many people - which is why capitalism's focus on individual grab-all-I-can strategies often leads to economic meltdowns.