How to Weaken [Destroy] the
Economic Instrument
of National Power
Friday, January 20, 2006
On the super-criticality of Financial WMDs
[Weapon of Mass Destruction]
Derivatives are financial [ECONOMIC]
Weapons of Mass Destruction, carrying dangers that, while now
latent, are potentially lethal. Warren Buffett
The War with Iran has begun in earnest, with Iran firing a precise
strike into the heart of the West, the financial system. The
headline announcing this radical change simply read, Iran said
moving assets. The article explained
that Iran was moving assets out of European Banks to shield them
from possible UN sanctions but that is not the only effect which
flows from this action.
One of the stated aims of Central Banking in particular and the
Federal Reserves specifically is to fend off the spread of any
panic induced bank runs. This is necessary, assuming, of course,
you opt for a system of fractional reserves, because the inherent
leverage of said system leaves it vulnerable to collapse in the
event of withdrawals which exceed its reserves.
This vulnerability rises if the liquidation prices of the assets
on the bank's balance sheets are less than their "marked
to market" value. That is, the effects of leverage, which
has two faces, the inherent leverage of the fractional reserve
system AND the leverage of the portfolio itself which is usually
much higher, and market over-valuation are additive, hmmm, perhaps
multiplicative is a better choice.
In the event of one bank's collapse, due to some combination
of adverse market move and depositor withdrawal, depositors at
other banks can become nervous and withdraw their funds, potentially
sparking a chain reaction of financial default.
In a sense, you can think of a fractional reserve, or more generally,
leveraged, bank as an unstable atom, and a highly leveraged bank
exposed to over-valued markets as a highly unstable atom, for
instance Uranium 233.
Both the Uranium and the highly leveraged bank have the potential
to transform into a more stable state by releasing the energy
that makes it unstable. Both the Uranium and the highly leveraged
banks have the potential to ignite chain reactions, where such
energy releases in one atom or bank creates instability in the
next. In the case of Uranium, however, the medium through which
such chain reactions occur is the proximate material universe
while in the case of the financial system, the medium is the
minds of men, which is why financial managers are always tempted
to intervene in markets or otherwise obfuscate the facts.
In the patois of Nuclear Physics, criticality refers to a state
where each nucleus that fissions induces on average one additional
fission, i.e. it is self sustaining. This is the reaction used
in Nuclear Reactors. Sub-criticality refers to a state where,
while there are fissions they aren't inducing enough additional
reactions to perpetuate the self sustaining energetic release.
This somewhat complex subject can sometimes be made easier to
contemplate if instead of nuclear reactions you think of building
a camp fire. Sub-criticality then refers to the state where you
keep lighting matches and getting the kindling going but the
fire keeps going out. Criticality then would refer to a nice
camp fire that keeps you warm.
Super-criticality is the stuff of Nuclear Bombs. It refers to
a state where there are more than enough fissions to keep the
reaction going, indeed, the chain reactions grow exponentially
over time. In our camp fire metaphor, your fire is supercritical
when it ignites the tree under which you foolishly started it.
Getting back to the world of finance, it is the job of the Central
Bankers to keep the inherently unstable leveraged institutions
at sub-criticality. They perform this function by ensuring that
the banks can survive a run by pooling reserves and directing
them, at least in theory, where needed most.
To use Chairman Greenspan's favorite expression, pooled reserves
are much more productive in that a much smaller quantity, relative
to the amount that would be needed if each bank carried its own
reserves, is needed to produce the desired effect - creating
the impression of financial system solvency in the minds of depositors.
Please note that I didn't write, be solvent, the aim here is
to create the impression of, in fact, few banks could survive
total depositor withdrawal.
The greater the systemic leverage the more difficult this job,
of creating the impression of solvency, becomes as the effects
of small price changes on the financial sector's portfolios are
greatly magnified, exposing the whole industry, in the event
of a significantly adverse price change, to a loss of its entire
reserve base. Let's go over that again to be clear, Central Banks
pool reserves, making them more productive, at a cost, which
rises with systemic leverage, of the implosion of the entire
system.
Thus national asset markets under Central Banking become strategically
important. A "crash" won't just impoverish speculators,
it can cripple intermediation entirely for weeks, months or even
years.
"But," you might be thinking, "don't all the banks
mark their books to market. Surely the financial sector can liquidate
at roughly its current value."
One of the experiences which led Warren Buffett to his view on
derivatives was the unwinding of Gen. Re Securities' derivatives
book. He notes in his 2003 Letter to Shareholders:
When we began to liquidate Gen. Re Securities in early 2002,
it had 23,218 outstanding tickets with 884 counterparties (some
having names I couldn't pronounce, much less creditworthiness
I could evaluate). Since then, the unit¹s managers have
been skillful and diligent in unwinding positions. Yet, at yearend nearly
two years later we still had 7,580 tickets outstanding
with 453 counterparties. ......
The shrinking of this business has been costly. We¹ve had
pre-tax losses of $173 million in 2002 and $99 million in 2003.
These losses, it should be noted, came from a portfolio of contracts
that in full compliance with GAAP had been regularly
marked-to-market with standard allowances for future credit-loss
and administrative costs. Moreover, our liquidation has taken
place both in a benign market we¹ve had no credit
losses of significance and in an orderly manner. This is
just the opposite of what might be expected if a financial crisis
forced a number of derivatives dealers to cease operations simultaneously.
This comports with my experience managing currency option portfolios
for Chase Manhattan, unwinding derivative portfolios is an expensive
affair, at the best of times. Thus you can see the trigger mechanism
for the financial weapon of mass destruction right there, a financial
crisis which forces a number of derivative (which might be better
understood as EXTREMELY LEVERAGED) dealers to liquidate. Recalling
yesterday's whimsical digression of euphemisms, we might wonder
just what "financial crisis" means.
Well, the Asian Crisis occurred when international investors
withdrew enough capital from asian markets to create financial
super-criticality. So, to induce financial super criticality
all one needs to do is withdraw enough funds, or sell enough
Treasury Bonds or whatever, to force liquidations. The same can
happen in any leveraged financial system, even that of the US.
I'm a bit spooked to consider the coincidence of Osama bin Laden
warning of more attacks and Iran withdrawing funds. The intricate
web of financial obligations mushroomed during the 90s based
on the expectation of the whole world adopting western finance.
The "Peace Dividend" in a sense, was wagered.
Yet, If enough key countries decide not to play, and by virtue
of their oil reserves this means Iraq and Iran, the expectation
on which this vast financial web is based becomes Soros' trend
whose premise is false. It is the Achilles Heel of the west in
general and the US, by virtue of its inability to self finance,
in particular.
Hopefully this eventuality will be avoided. Although I am critical
of US economic policy with regards to financial system leverage,
specifically because it leaves the nation vulnerable to such
attacks, I have no interest in being proved right in this way
any more than one wants a friend, who happens to smoke despite
your best efforts to get him to stop, to get cancer. If I was
a politician I might argue something like, President Reagan told
Mr. Gorbachev, Tear Down This Wall, and I tell Mr. Greenspan,
Defuse the Bomb, Unwind this Portfolio. "Whew," you
might be thinking, "don't quit your day job."
One final point if I may. It seems to me as if the only way that
the US$ can continue as global reserve currency is if it brings
all nations, especially oil exporting nations within its system.
A Cold War style detante is no longer possible without significant
financial disruption by virtue of the aforenoted massive expansion
of leverage in the financial system, the bet on US$ global hegemony
has been placed. It is an all or nothing, a binary proposition,
which does not lend itself to hedging, the essence of derivatives
valuation. I think this is going to be ugly either way.
Dave Lewis
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