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BEST OF DOUG NOLAND
November 20, 2008
The Only Cure for a Bubble...:
I commend Judy Shelton for her insightful op-ed piece, "Stable Money
is Key - How the G-20 can rebuild the ‘capitalism of the future.’" It
was published in this morning’s Wall Street Journal, a day ahead of "The
G20 Summit on Financial Markets and the World Economy." As Ms. Shelton
noted: "One thing is guaranteed: Most attendees will take the view that
Wall Street greed and inadequate regulatory oversight by U.S.
authorities caused the global financial crisis -- never mind that their
own regulatory agencies missed the boat and that their own governments
eagerly bought up Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac securities for the higher
yield over Treasurys."
She continues: "At the bottom of the world financial crisis is
international monetary disorder. Ever since the post-World War II
Bretton Woods system -- anchored by a gold-convertible dollar -- ended
in August 1971, the cause of free trade has been compromised by
sovereign monetary-policy indulgence. Today, a soupy mix of currencies
sloshes investment capital around the world, channeling it into stagnant
pools while productive endeavor is left high and dry… If we are to
‘build together the capitalism of the future,’ as Mr. Sarkozy puts it,
the world needs sound money. Does that mean going back to a gold
standard, or gold-based international monetary system? Perhaps so; it’s
hard to imagine a more universally accepted standard of value."
As much as I find the notion of sound money and a new gold standard
international monetary regime appealing, neither will be part of any
solution coming out of Washington or the G20 this weekend or anytime
soon. Fundamentally, our nation has only a sliver of bullion available
to back tens of trillions in financial claims that are the crumbly
bedrock for the entire global financial system. But this is a moot
point. The world may today disagree somewhat on how to parcel out blame
for international monetary disorder, resulting in the worst financial
crisis since the Great Depression, but there exists a consensus that
concerted reflationary measures are the only possible solution.
There is little prospect that the direction of global policymaking will
engender the return of stability anytime soon. As Ms. Shelton adeptly
notes, "In the absence of a rational monetary system, investment
responds to the perverse incentives of paper profits. Meanwhile, price
signals in the global marketplace are hopelessly distorted." To be sure,
the market pricing distortions that for years empowered Wall Street
finance and the GSEs these days ensure that the U.S. Treasury borrows
and spends in egregious excess.
I think often of the great economist Dr. Kurt Richebacher. My analytical
framework was over the years heavily influenced by his writings and
mentoring. He would always say, "The only cure for a Bubble is to
prevent it from developing." Today’s crisis confirms the brilliance of
Dr. Richebacher’s work. At the other end of the spectrum, conventional
economic doctrine is revealed as shallow and fatefully flawed.
I have repeatedly pointed to Milton Friedman’s analyses of the causes
behind the Great Depression as the keystone for our nation’s deeply
flawed economic perspective. By the 1960s’, there was an eagerness to
cast blame for the Depression on policy mistakes made in 1929 and
subsequent to the crash. The depression, it was determined, was not due
to any weaknesses or vulnerabilities associated with the Credit system
or market pricing mechanisms. Instead, the 1920s were conveniently
recast as the "golden age of Capitalism." Over the years, Dr. Bernanke
has repeatedly excoriated the "Bubble poppers" for their principal role
in instigating the thirties downturn.
Those of us who have studied the nature of the financial and economic
maladjustments engendered during the rampant Credit excesses leading up
to the ’29 crash take serious exception. Indeed, the Friedman/Bernanke/conventional
view of that historical Bubble and bust has been a most dangerous case
of historical revisionism and flawed analysis. I am more interested
today in working to change failed economics than fingering blame for the
crisis on our public servants working desperately to avert collapse.
It is in this spirit that I am compelled to defend Hank Paulson and
his team at Treasury. The severity of today’s crisis is not the result
of policies – good, bad or otherwise – implemented over the past few
months. The greatest Bubble in the history of mankind – nurtured by
decades of flawed economics, flawed finance, flawed policymaking and
irresponsible behavior throughout – is bursting, and there is little our
authorities can do about it. Everyone was content during the boom to buy
into the notion of all-powerful Fed reflation and Washington stimulus.
We must now come to grips with the reality that the entire framework
advocating post-Bubble "mopping up" strategies was specious.
Secretary Paulson has been criticized for "making up the rules as he
goes along." Well, there is no rulebook for resolving this crisis. His
policymaking has been faulted – perhaps not undeservingly – for lacking
transparency. Yet a more substantive policy issue goes back 15 years:
regulators looked the other way and didn’t demand any transparency as
the leveraged speculating community borrowed trillions and accumulated
massive holdings. Paulsen and Bernanke likely believed that an
unprecedented $700 billion government program to acquire securities
would provide the backstop bid to help restore market confidence,
securities prices, and lending throughout the economy. It simply didn’t
work. Yet the system was headed toward collapsed had they not moved
aggressively.
The Treasury, Fed, and the marketplace now appreciate that the system
faces a multi-Trillion dollar de-leveraging problem - not to mention the
issue of new Credit creation necessary to avert economic collapse. The
focus has, rightly, turned away from the issue of impaired securities
markets to a primary focus on stimulating lending. The hope now is that
the economy will receive a much bigger bang for $700 billion bucks if it
is used to recapitalize the financial system rather than to acquire
securities from distressed sellers. With the securitization markets now
essentially lost causes, the last hope rests with a recapitalized and,
supposedly, resurgent banking system. The expectation is that $700
billion of additional capital can be multiplied into the Trillions of
new loans vital to bolstering the economy going forward. It’s not
Paulson’s fault if it doesn’t work.
We are witnessing policymaking out of desperation. Treasury has very
limited time and few alternatives, while it confronts dire problems. It
has become popular to point out that the marketplace has lost confidence
in Mr. Paulson and his team. I believe, however, that it is more aptly
stated that the market has lost faith in the prospect of policymaking
generally having much influence on developments. This is a consequence,
as Ms. Shelton reminds us, of upwards of forty years of "monetary policy
indulgence." Regrettably, G20 policymakers will this weekend focus
efforts on global stimulus and pay only lip service to monetary system
reform.
Fundamentally, individual participant discipline is the nucleus of any
stable international monetary regime, whether it is the classic gold
standard approach or a Bretton Woods system type of arrangement. The
global abandonment of any semblance of monetary or fiscal discipline is
a hallmark of this extraordinary period of bursting Bubbles. Stable
"money" may be the key – but it’s also nowhere to be seen.
Doug Noland is a market strategist at Prudent Bear Funds. Their
website is www.prudentbear.com. |