by Paul Craig Roberts
The article about the Libor scandal, coauthored with Nomi Prins, received much attention, with Internet repostings, foreign translation, and video interviews.
To further clarify the situation, this article brings to the forefront
implications that might not be obvious to those without insider
experience and knowledge.
The price of Treasury bonds is supported
by the Federal Reserve’s large purchases. The Federal Reserve’s
purchases are often misread as demand arising from a “flight to quality”
due to concern about the EU sovereign debt problem and possible failure
of the euro.
Another rationale used to explain the
demand for Treasuries despite their negative yield is the “flight to
safety.” A 2% yield on a Treasury bond is less of a negative interest
rate than the yield of a few basis points on a bank CD, and the US
government, unlike banks, can use its central bank to print the money to
pay off its debts.
It is possible that some investors
purchase Treasuries for these reasons. However, the “safety” and “flight
to quality” explanations could not exist if interest rates were rising
or were expected to rise. The Federal Reserve prevents the rise in
interest rates and decline in bond prices, which normally result from
continually issuing new debt in enormous quantities at negative interest
rates, by announcing that it has a low interest rate policy and will
purchase bonds to keep bond prices high. Without this Fed policy, there
could be no flight to safety or quality.
It is the prospect of ever lower
interest rates that causes investors to purchase bonds that do not pay a
real rate of interest. Bond purchasers make up for the negative
interest rate by the rise in price in the bonds caused by the next round
of low interest rates. As the Federal Reserve and the banks drive down
the interest rate, the issued bonds rise in value, and their purchasers
enjoy capital gains.
As the Federal Reserve and the Bank of
England are themselves fixing interest rates at historic lows in order
to mask the insolvency of their respective banking systems, they
naturally do not object that the banks themselves contribute to the
success of this policy by fixing the Libor rate and by selling massive
amounts of interest rate swaps, a way of shorting interest rates and
driving them down or preventing them from rising.
The lower is Libor, the higher is the
price or evaluations of floating-rate debt instruments, such as CDOs,
and thus the stronger the banks’ balance sheets appear.
Does this mean that the US and UK
financial systems can only be kept afloat by fraud that harms purchasers
of interest rate swaps, which include municipalities advised by sellers
of interest rate swaps, and those with saving accounts?
The answer is yes, but the Libor scandal
is only a small part of the interest rate rigging scandal. The Federal
Reserve itself has been rigging interest rates. How else could debt
issued in profusion be bearing negative interest rates?
As villainous as they might be, Barclays
bank chief executive Bob Diamond, Jamie Dimon of JP Morgan, and Lloyd
Blankfein of Goldman Sachs are not the main villains. The main villains
are former Treasury Secretary and Goldman Sachs chairman Robert Rubin,
who pushed Congress for the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act, and the
sponsors of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley bill, which repealed the
Glass-Steagall Act. Glass-Steagall was put in place in 1933 in order to
prevent the kind of financial excesses that produced the current ongoing
financial crisis.
President Clinton’s Treasury Secretary,
Robert Rubin, presented the removal of all constraints on financial
chicanery as “financial modernization.” Taking restraints off of banks
was part of the hubristic response to “the end of history.” Capitalism
had won the struggle with socialism and communism. Vindicated capitalism
no longer needed its concessions to social welfare and regulation that
capitalism used in order to compete with socialism.
The constraints on capitalism could now
be thrown off, because markets were self-regulating as Federal Reserve
chairman Alan Greenspan, among many, declared. It was financial
deregulation–the repeal of Glass-Steagall, the removal of limits on debt
leverage, the absence of regulation of OTC derivatives, the removal of
limits on speculative positions in future markets–that caused the
ongoing financial crisis [Editor’s note: Many economists agree that
the Federal Reserve’s artificially low interest rate policy was the
primary cause of the housing bubble, the bursting of which precipitated
the financial crisis]. No doubt but that JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs
and others were after maximum profits by hook or crook, but their
opportunity came from the neoconservative triumphalism of “democratic
capitalism’s” historical victory over alternative
socio-politico-economic systems.
The ongoing crisis cannot be addressed
without restoring the laws and regulations that were repealed and
discarded. But putting Humpty-Dumpty back together again is an enormous
task full of its own perils.
The financial concentration that
deregulation fostered has left us with broken financial institutions
that are too big to fail. To understand the fullness of the problem,
consider the law suits that are expected to be filed against the banks
that fixed the Libor rate by those who were harmed by the fraud. Some
are saying that as the fraud was known by the central banks and not
reported, that the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England should be
indicted for their participation in the fraud.
What follows is not an apology for fraud. It merely describes consequences of holding those responsible accountable.
Imagine the Federal Reserve called
before Congress or the Department of Justice to answer why it did not
report on the fraud perpetrated by private banks, fraud that was
supporting the Federal Reserve’s own rigging of interest rates (and the
same in the UK).
The Federal Reserve will reply: “So, you
want us to let interest rates go up? Are you prepared to come up with
the money to bail out the FDIC-insured depositors of JPMorganChase, Bank
of America, Citibank, Wells Fargo, etc.? Are you prepared for US
Treasury prices to collapse, wiping out bond funds and the remaining
wealth in the US and driving up interest rates, making the interest rate
on new federal debt necessary to finance the huge budget deficits
impossible to pay, and finishing off what is left of the real estate
market? Are you prepared to take responsibility, you who deregulated the
financial system, for this economic armageddon?
Obviously, the politicians will say NO,
continue with the fraud. The harm to people from collapse far exceeds
the harm in lost interest from fixing the low interest rates in order to
forestall collapse. The Federal Reserve will say that we are doing our
best to create profits for the banks that will permit us eventually to
unwind the fraud and return to normal. Congress will see no better
alternative to this.
But the question remains: How long can
the regime of negative interest rates continue while debt explodes
upward? Currently, everyone in the US who counts and most who don’t have
an interest in holding off armageddon. No one wants to tip over the
boat. If the banks are sued for damages and lack the money to pay, the
Federal Reserve can create the money for the banks to pay.
If the collapse of the system does not
result from scandals, it will come from outside. The dollar is the world
reserve currency. This means that the dollar’s exchange value is
boosted, despite the dismal economic outlook in the US, by the fact
that, as the currency for settling international accounts, there is
international demand for the dollar. Country A settles its trade deficit
with country B in dollars; country B settles its account with country C
in dollars; and so on throughout the countries of the world.
For whatever the reason–perhaps to
curtail their accumulation of suspect dollars or to bring Washington’s
power to an end–the BRICS countries, Brazil, Russia, India, China, and
South Africa, are agreeing to settle their trade between themselves in
their own currencies, thus abandoning the use of the dollar.
According to reports, China and Japan have reached agreement to settle their trade between themselves in their own currencies.
The moves away from the dollar as the
currency of international transactions means that the dollar’s exchange
value will fall as the demand for dollars falls. Whereas the Federal
Reserve can create dollars with which to purchase the Treasury’s debt,
thus preventing a fall in bond prices, the Federal Reserve cannot prop
up the dollar’s exchange value by creating more dollars with which to
purchase dollars. Dollars would have to be taken off the foreign
exchange market by purchasing them with other currencies, but in order
to have these currencies the US would have to be running a trade
surplus, not a long-term trade deficit.
In the short-run, the Federal Reserve
could arrange currency swap agreements in which foreign central banks
swap their currencies for dollars in order to supply the Federal Reserve
with currencies with which to soak up dollars. However, only a limited
number of swaps could be negotiated before foreign central banks
understood that the dollar’s fall in value was not a temporary event
that could be propped up with currency swaps.
As the value of the dollar will fall as
countries move away from its use as reserve currency, the values of
dollar-denominated assets also will fall. The Federal Reserve, even with
full cooperation from the banking system employing every fraud
technique known, cannot prevent interest rates from rising on debt
instruments denominated in a currency whose value is falling.
Think about it this way. A person, fund,
or institution owns bonds or any debt instruments carrying a negative
rate of interest, but continues to hold the instruments because interest
rates, despite the increase in debt, are creeping down, raising bond
prices and producing capital gains in the bonds. What happens when the
exchange value of the currency in which the debt instruments are
denominated falls? Can the price of the bond stay high even though the
value of the currency in which the bond is denominated falls?
The drop in the exchange value of the
currency hits the bond price in a second way. The price of imports rise,
and this pushes up prices. The inflation measures will show higher
inflation. How long will people hold debt instruments paying negative
interest rates as inflation rises? Perhaps there are historical cases in
which bond prices continue to rise indefinitely (or even hold firm) as
inflation rises, but I have never heard of them.
As the Federal Reserve can create money,
theoretically the Federal Reserve’s prop-up schemes could continue
until the Federal Reserve owns all dollar-denominated financial assets.
To cover the holes in its own balance sheet, the Federal Reserve could
just print more money.
Some suspect that the Federal Reserve,
in order to forestall a declining dollar and thus declining prices of
dollar-denominated financial instruments, is behind the sales of naked
shorts every time demand for physical bullion drives up the price of
gold and silver. The short sales–paper sales–cancel the impact on price
of the increased demand for bullion.
Some also believe that they see the
Federal Reserve’s hand in the stock market. One day stocks fall 200
points. The next day stocks rise 200 points. This up and down pattern
has been ongoing for a long time. One possible explanation is that as
wary investors sell their equity holdings, the Federal Reserve, or the
“plunge protection team,” steps in and buys.
Just as the “terrorist threat” was used
to destroy the laws that protect US civil liberty, the financial crisis
has resulted in the Federal Reserve moving far outside its charter and
normal operating behavior.
To sum up, what has happened is that
irresponsible and thoughtless–in fact, ideological–deregulation of the
financial sector has caused a financial crisis that can only be managed
by fraud. Civil damages might be paid, but to halt the fraud itself
would mean the collapse of the financial system. Those in charge of the
system would prefer the collapse to come from outside, such as from a
collapse in the value of the dollar that could be blamed on foreigners,
because an outside cause gives them something to blame other than
themselves.
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