Sunlight is the Best of Disinfectants
by Sinclair Noe
DOW + 59 = 16979
SPX + 4 = 1986
NAS – 1 = 4526
10 YR YLD + .02 = 2.42%
OIL + .63 = 93.49
GOLD – 3.80 = 1292.40
SILV + .04 = 19.55
SPX + 4 = 1986
NAS – 1 = 4526
10 YR YLD + .02 = 2.42%
OIL + .63 = 93.49
GOLD – 3.80 = 1292.40
SILV + .04 = 19.55
No economic reports today, but the Federal Reserve released
the minutes of the July 29-30 FOMC meeting. You will recall that the Fed
left interest rates unchanged and continued the taper by reducing large scale
asset purchases by $10 billion a month, with the plan to end purchases by
October. The Fed had said in its policy statement following the July meeting
that there was "significant" labor market slack, but the minutes
showed many members of its policy-setting panel thought this characterization
"might have to change before long."
Most Fed officials wanted further evidence the labor
market and the economy were showing significant improvement before changing
their view on raising rates, but they said, "Labor market conditions had
moved noticeably closer to those viewed as normal in the longer run," and
policymakers "generally agreed" the job market was healing faster
than they had expected.
Most Fed policymakers felt any change in their view on
when to start raising rates "would depend on further information on the
trajectories of economic activity, the labor market and inflation." Well,
we got more data yesterday showing that inflation is not a problem yet; so that
leaves economic activity and the labor market. The economic trajectory has
remained sluggish since the beginning of the recovery; GDP turned negative in
the first quarter of this year and then showed a very strong bounce in the
second quarter. Is the second quarter bounce sustainable? It seems most Fed
officials think it could be. And the Fed minutes almost seem to gloss over this
long-term sluggishness, or what the Center for Economic Policy Research callssecular stagnation. What is secular stagnation?
A persistent gap between actual and potential output.
Because of an imbalance between saving and investment, the nominal interest
rate required to maintain full employment falls to less than zero -- not just
briefly, but persistently. Since the rate can't be cut to less than zero,
monetary policy (as currently conceived) can't keep the economy running at full
potential.
A slowdown in growth of potential output. This may happen
because of demographic changes, or because innovation isn't what it used to be,
or for other reasons.
An irreversible drop in the level of potential output.
Even if the full-employment rate of interest is still positive and the growth
in potential output hasn't slowed, the recession may have permanently cut its
level -- for instance, by causing workers to leave the labor force and not come
back. Even if the economy now grows as fast as it did before, it's on a lower
track and won't ever converge with the path it was on pre-crash.
This all means that the Fed’s long awaited economic
liftoff might not happen, at least for another 20 years or so. But the Fed
doesn’t seem to be concerned with this problem, which means that if the US
economy experiences secular stagnation, the condition will be self-inflicted.
That leaves the Fed with the question of the recovery in
the labor market. So, it really boils down to jobs. More jobs, and
specifically, the quality of the jobs. So far, the average wage is stuck at
$24.25 an hour; too many jobs are part-time or temporary. If we start to see
some movement on wages, and more full-time positions, that might be a sign for
rate increases. One area of remaining slack is the low participation rate, the
percentage of working age population that is still in the labor pool; many people
got out of the pool. Last month the economy added 209,000 net new jobs. The
unemployment rate moved up to 6.2% from 6.1%. The jobless rate can rise for
both good reasons (more people looking for work) and bad reasons (fewer people
having a job). Even though the economy
added jobs, more people joined the labor force, and that is why the
unemployment rate moved higher.
There are many things that could derail the recovery in
the labor market, but for now the Fed thinks things are on track, and that
means a probable rate increase in the first half of 2015. Any rate increase is
likely to be incremental. Right now the fed funds target rate is between zero
and 0.25%. It would likely be increased by 25 basis points, with the lower
range representing the rate on overnight reverse repurchase operations. In
reverse repos, the Fed borrows funds overnight from banks to mop up excess cash
in the financial system.
Market reaction to a slightly more hawkish Fed stance:
well, the dollar index continued higher, Treasuries dropped but then settled
down, precious metals were a little lower, oil was higher, stocks initially
threw a little tantrum and then recovered. After all, there were no real
surprises.
Elsewhere, we’ve been waiting for the Department of
Justice announcement on a settlement with Bank of America. Bank of America has reportedly
reached a record $17 billion settlement to resolve an investigation into its
role in the sale of mortgage-backed securities before the 2008 financial crisis.
The official announcement will come tomorrow. The deal works out to $10 billion
in cash, and $7 billion in soft dollar consumer relief - which is really a gift
to the bank involving credits for various forms of consumer aid that the bank
would or should be doing anyway. So, if you have a BofA mortgage and you’ve
been having trouble with a loan mod or a refinance – try again. And by the way,
the bank will make money on consumer aid.
The deal requires Bank of America to acknowledge making
serious misrepresentations about the quality of its residential mortgage-backed
securities issued by itself and by Countrywide Financial and Merrill Lynch. In exchange,
BofA will probably not have to actually admit wrongdoing, and they get a free “get
out of jail” card.
Usually these settlements include a statement of facts
which is most notable for its absence of facts and details. That silence means
the Department of Justice is essentially protecting the banks from private
lawsuits by deliberately withholding evidence which could result in even further
disclosure of really bad behavior and even bigger damages and other unexpected
outcomes. The biggest unexpected outcome would be that the public finally says
to hell with the bankster criminals and we all see through the flimsy
apologists in the media and the cronies in politics.
Most people know the banksters got away with murder; and I
use the word literally, not figuratively. Most people want to see bankster
executives prosecuted. Most people understand that the fines in these
settlements are just a slap on the wrist, cost of business paid by
shareholders, and taxpayers. Yep, the fines are typically considered tax
deductible.
Tomorrow, the DOJ will announce the biggest settlement
ever against a bank: $17 billion. But we know, it’s really a little under $10 billion
in cash, with all kinds of little gifts to the banksters to soften the blow.
And we know this will do nothing to deter future wrongdoing. You can place a
huge derivative bet that they’re still committing those same crimes and new
ones (such as subprime auto), so the prosecution clock resets daily.
And the crazy part is that the Department of Justice and
BofA think we’re all too stupid to understand the cronyism. They will portray
the settlement as a get tough stance on the bankers. Hogwash, I know it, you
know it.
About 100 years ago, Supreme Court Justice
Louis Brandeis wrote his famous statement that "sunlight is said to be
the best of disinfectants" in a 1913 Harper's Weekly article. He went on
to say that transparency is “justly commended as a remedy for social and
industrial diseases.” Brandeis actually wrote privately about the idea of
transparency 20 years earlier, writing, “about the wickedness of people
shielding wrongdoers and passing them off (or at least allowing them to pass
themselves off) as honest men."
About 100 years ago, the country was struggling with what
was known as the Money Trust, the rough equivalent of today’s systemically
important financial institutions, or too big to fail banks. Brandeis asked how
the great wealth of his day had been accumulated, and he concluded: “power
breeds wealth as wealth breeds power. But a main cause of these large fortunes
is the huge tolls taken by those who control the avenues to capital and to
investors. There has been exacted as toll literally ‘all that the traffic will
bear.’”
Just a reminder, some of the mortgage problems of Bank of
America date back to their acquisition of Countrywide; BofA had their own
illegal mortgage problems. The guy who started Countrywide and nearly ran it
into the ground is Angelo Mozillo. Until now, the harshest penalty imposed on
Mozilo has been a $67 million settlement with the SEC from 2010 to resolve
allegations that he misled Countrywide investors. Actually, Mozilo was forced
to disgorge about $45 million from the sale of stocks, some of which may have
been based on insider information; and then Bank of America paid for most of
the other penalties; which is to say shareholders and consumers paid for Mozilo’s
penalties.
The US attorney’s office in Los Angeles is now preparing
a civil lawsuit against Mozilo and as many as 10 other former Countrywide
employees. Government attorneys plan to sue Mozilo, Countrywide’s former
chairman and chief executive officer, and other individuals using the Financial
Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act. The law, approved by
Congress in 1989 in response to savings-and-loan scandals, gives prosecutors 10
years to bring cases and has less stringent liability requirements than
criminal charges.
Prosecutors dropped a criminal probe of Mozilo in early
2011. The Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a watchdog
group, sued the Justice Department in June to try to obtain its records
detailing investigations of Mozilo and Countrywide. The group faulted the
government for failing to prosecute either Mozilo or the company “despite
substantial evidence of wrongdoing.”
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