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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Bernanke's Federal Reserve Freakout

By Nicholas von Hoffman, The Nation. Posted May 14, 2008.


Call it a subdued, bankerly freakout.
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The other day Ben Bernanke came as close as a chairman of the Federal Reserve will come to a public freakout. Call it a subdued, bankerly freakout.

In a speech at Columbia University's Business School he used the word "crisis" as in "the foreclosure crisis." Fed chairmen do not generally use words like "crisis"; they use words such as vanilla, cream sauce, custard and tapioca.

What's got Bernanke scared is that "about one quarter of subprime adjustable-rate mortgages are currently 90 days or more delinquent or in foreclosure. Delinquency rates also have increased in the prime and near-prime segments of the mortgage market.... foreclosure proceedings were initiated on some 1.5 million U.S. homes during 2007, up 53 percent from 2006, and the rate of foreclosure starts looks likely to be yet higher in 2008."

Spooking Bernanke is the Fed's discovery that many thousands of delinquencies are not caused by unemployment or even, perhaps, inability to keep up with payments but rather by the quick, steep drop in the price of real estate. "Sharp declines in house prices, and thus in homeowners' equity, reduce both the ability and incentive of homeowners, particularly those under financial stress for other reasons, to retain their homes," he said.

"Non-owner occupiers -- investors or purchasers of vacation homes," he went on to say, make up an important slice of those defaulting on their mortgages, as well as those who bought with the assistance of "junior liens (or piggyback loans), often an indicator of little borrower equity at the time of purchase." All of this is the long way around of saying that many thousands of those whose property is being foreclosed on are not tough-luck families being tossed out of their homes. They are people walking away from an investment because it now is worth less than the mortgage on it.

The denouement Bernanke and not a few others fear is that "high rates of delinquency and foreclosure can have substantial spillover effects on the housing market, the financial markets, and the broader economy. Therefore, doing what we can to avoid preventable foreclosures is not just in the interest of lenders and borrowers. It's in everybody's interest. "

The Fed's remedy is apparently, first, to stop the drop in prices, and next to push them back up to the point that real estate is at least worth the mortgage debt it carries. A bill presently in Congress aims to do that, although nobody can be certain about its succeeding, since such a thing has not been done before.

The cost would be immense in dollars and in civic morale, since any broad save-the-real-estate scheme would include saving speculators, wealthy people's vacation homes, those who lied to fraudulently obtain mortgages, and spendthrifts who put their homes under water so that they could buy large sailboats and/or Cadillac Escalades. The mere thought of such a bailout has the millions who saved for down payments, bought sensibly and have sacrificed to keep up with their mortgage installments somewhere between a slow boil and a tooth-grinding rage.

Yet the much respected Floyd Norris, a premier business writer of the New York Times, says, "The government may eventually decide that it is necessary to bail out the undeserving as well as the deserving, no matter how repugnant that seems at the moment, and no matter how bad the inflationary impact may be."

Let' s hope he is exaggerating, because runaway inflation destroys the society it eats up. We saw it pave Adolf Hitler's way to power in Weimar Germany many years ago. We see it contributing to the destabilization of Zimbabwe today, and we see what inflation at a relatively moderate level is doing to ordinary salaried people in our country now.

Though Ben Bernanke is willing to risk some inflation (as though one can finely calibrate inflation), some of his fellow Federal Reserve Board members are not. Thomas Hoenig, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, is calling for yanking up interest rates, because "there is a significant risk that higher inflation will become embedded in the economy."

Thus we have reached an extraordinary moment, with government looking to reduce some prices at the same time it would raise others. Push up the price of real estate, pull down the price of gasoline and food. Only if Dr. Seuss could be made chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers.

Such schemes are not quite the equal of the command economy that brought the Soviet Union to its sorry end, but they're moving in that direction. Will there be a free market left in the United States after these stopgap measures have been implemented?

Under pressure of impending foreclosures, bankruptcies and the threat of many thousands losing their jobs, hysteria at the Fed and in Congress is understandable. But this up, down, run-around gallimaufry of proposals is no way to run an an economy.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: fed, recession, housing crisis

Nicholas Von Hoffman is a columnist for the New York Observer and is the author, most recently, of "Hoax" (Nation Books, 2004).



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Good essay, but a couple of false assumptions
Posted by: Canute on May 14, 2008 1:10 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bernanke and Co. are freaking out because their "worldview in a Dixie cup" doesn't include the real issues.

First, it isn't a mortgage crisis or a credit crisis, but as the writer points out, it is a value crisis. If home values were still rising, there would be no default problem. People who couldn't make payments would just resell and pay out. The problem is that home values have almost doubled in the past ten years, which is twice the average since WWII and more than anybody can afford. The answer is not to bail out defaulters but increase income for lower and middle income Americans. Unfortunately, making life better for the peasantry isn't an acceptable solution for the plutocrats - cuts into profits and sets a bad example.

The other mistaken assumption is that there is anything called a "free market." A market is a set of rules for doing business, set by law, and therefore both un-free and state controlled. The real questions are how it is controlled, by whom, and who benefits. Free markets, free trade, and the tooth fairy are all myths. The dirty word "protectionism" translates secretly as "rules that don't protect my company's profits." So don't mourn the demise of something that was never there.

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More Pablum for the Hoi Polloi ...
Posted by: mmckinl on May 15, 2008 1:54 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nicholas von Hoffman doesn't even come close.

What Bernanke is looking at are $600 Trillion , with a "T" in derivatives that have no regular market, no framework for trading and no common contract for disposition. Should only a small fraction of these derivatives go bad the whole economy would crash.

Many are now looking at the Bear Stearns Deal as a bailout of JP Morgan for just this reason.

The Secret Bailout of J. P. Morgan: How Insider Trading Looted Bear Stearns and the American Taxpayer


Did Bernanke lie in Congress?

Von Hoffman needs to do a little homework... The privately owned and operated Federal Reserve is now using tax payer money to bail out the Fed's owners, the private banks. Can't the left field any decent journalism on the scandal that will bankrupt us.

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It's a Rigged Game
Posted by: JSquercia on May 15, 2008 2:15 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wall Street is a rigged game and run for the benefit of the "Insiders" . After reading the goings on I feel that everyone involved in Puts should be acussed of Insider Trading and the Board that allowed the new strike prices should be Criminally Indicted .
The crucified Martha Stewart over a whole lot less than this . Reminds me of the fact that Airline stocks were shorted the days before 911 and yet NO ONE has EVER looked into that .

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» RE: It's a Rigged Game Posted by: Von
» RE: It's a Rigged Game Posted by: Von
» RE: It's a Rigged Game Posted by: Von
Thanks for the heads up
Posted by: crazy carlos on May 15, 2008 5:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
mmckinl,jsqueecia, both of you appear to be right on target. mm for the citation. It certainly makes cents (and boocoo $$) and js you brought up something I had almost forgot about--all the stock shit on 9/11. Thanks to both. Crazy carlos

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Speculation, Gambling & pushing it forward
Posted by: Purple Girl on May 18, 2008 7:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The stock market lured in the average person who has no idea what they are doing, into the shark pool with 'E-Trade's- The 'MARKS' .So simple a baby who 'spits up on himself ' is able to do it- intersting advertising, 'like taking candy from a baby', will make you sick and there will ability clean yourself Up- helpless, that's my impression of that commercial.Is that a joke at OUR expense?
then with your cash they hit the Casino, but the House always win,so they always need more cash to keep going. Their rig the 'machine' to cost you more- but pay out only enough to keep you Trying for the'big pay off'- so you keep handing them money.If you run out they'll give you a credit line. If they can't conjole you out of more cash They'll Charge You interest- like charging a passer buy for using the sidewalk, Or outright Rob youSending 'Guido'- teh IRS- to break your legs (Bankruptcy) which only takes what little you have left (shirt off your back) and unable to Stand back Up.
should tht not the money they want - they borrow from a Loan Shark ( Foriegn countries) Put it i=on your tab, agreeing to outrages interest payment - charge you a higher interst rate for their 'finders fee' and leave your ass hanging out for Vinny to beat.Worse is that by pushing this to the future for Repayment it becomes the 'inheritance' we leave to our children, grandchildren (Bernake is just the stooge who got left holding the evidence stolen by the last 'ring leader'.sucks to be Bernake, But Greenspan should be the one feeling the real Heat- along with numerous predecessors, since the US Treasury Heist by the Organize dcrime Sydicate The Federal Reserve was formed- NOT 'Federal' Nor a 'Reserve' For US!

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