Its not just in Britain that
the government, the banks, estate agents, the media, and the central
bank are involved in a huge attempt to keep property prices high, to
deny that selling prices are falling sharply and so on. Why is that
happening? The answer is that it has nothing to do with protecting
home owners, still less potential home buyers, both of whom lose out
as house prices are artificially propped up. It has everything to do
with trying to save the banks. Those banks are still massively in
debt, and are once again trying to hide those debts using complex
derivatives. One German Bank alone, as set out below, has exposure
to global derivatives of €55 Trillion. That is almost 20 times the
GDP of Germany, or more starkly, its more than the entire global GDP!
These derivatives are being used to hide the extent of exposure to
property debt; property debt that sits on banks balance sheets on the
basis of hugely inflated property prices. If property prices fell to
rational levels, the banks would be exposed as bankrupt, much as
happened in the US, Ireland, Greece and Cyprus.
One of the latest economies
that looks likely to suffer such a property bubble bust is Canada,
whose central bank chief, Mark Carney, is about to take over as
Governor of the Bank of England. Throughout, the financial meltdown
of 2008, where property markets and other asset prices, in most other
countries, at least halted their lemming like stampede, property
prices in Canada continued to bubble up, driven on by the money
printing pursued by Carney. Despite, being one of the most sparsely
populated economies on the planet, Canada now has some of the most
overpriced property on the planet. So much, for the argument that
high house prices are caused by housing need, and overcrowding!
Providing a glimpse in to the UK's future, one reason Canada's house
prices were able to bubble up in this way, was the role of the state
backed mortgage provider, CMHC, which performs the same function that
Fannie May and Freddie Mac, do in the US. They perform the same
function that Osborne's proposals for state backed mortgages are
intended to perform here. These state backed organisations, did what
Osborne hopes will happen here, they gave the support to ensure that
Canada's banks would lend the money that was being printed by the
central bank, out to all those people who otherwise no
self-respecting bank would lend to.
On that basis just as
happened with Northern Rock, and as happened with the US sub-prime
crisis, which was then seen to have happened across every economy
with a large non-rental sector, tens of thousands of people were lent
money, who had no prospect of ever paying it back. The consequence
for these latter we all know. It was two-fold. Firstly, it blew up
a huge property bubble, and secondly, it ensured that thousands of
ordinary people then could not afford to buy their first home, or to
move up to a more expensive one. The end result necessarily
followed. As soon as no more “bigger fools” could be
found to buy the over priced houses, because, however, little they
had to put down as deposit, however low the interest rates offered,
they could not afford, the bubble burst. In a number of places,
like Canada, the UK, and to an extent Spain, that has not yet
happened. On the one hand, new buyers have more or less dried up,
but huge intervention by the state, to prop up the banks, and enable
them to avoid foreclosing on bad mortgages has delayed the inevitable
consequences.
In Canada, over half of
mortgages are now thought to be backed by CMHC. But, in addition,
two other organisations, AIG, and Glenworth Financial, receive 90%
backing from the state. In other words, nearly all of the C$1.1
trillion Canadian market, is backed by the state! Canadian house
prices have risen by 123% since January 2000, and the average house
price there is now 6 times earnings, whereas the historical average
is around three. For two storey homes the Canadian average rises to
seven.
The same trend applies to
rental prices. According to The Economist, the
ratio of rent to price is currently 78% higher than the long-term
average. That compares with just 68% in Hong Kong, which is one of
the world's most expensive places.
But,
the inevitable cracks are beginning to show through. In Toronto,
sales are already down 40% compared with a year ago. The government
has attempted to engineer a soft landing. It has introduced various
measures, such as requiring a 20% deposit. But, that has just led to
people finding ways around the restrictions, such as splitting up
their loans. According to one brokerage, half of all outstanding
mortgages are “high risk.” This
is the solution that Osbourne wants to bring to Britain. But,
past experience suggests that this conspiracy will only delay the
inevitable.
Between 1999 and 2002,
Gordon Brown, as Chancellor of the Exchequer, sold nearly 400 tonnes
of Britain's gold reserves. At the time, it was obvious that the
price of gold had hit rock bottom, and was starting to rise. Brown
sold the gold at prices between, $256 and $296 an ounce. The low
price for gold came in 1999, at $250 an ounce, and from 1999, gold,
like other metals and raw materials, saw its price rise relentlessly,
as the new global, long wave boom got under way. By September 2011,
gold had hit its peak of $1943 an ounce, or almost 7 times the
average price Brown had sold it for. The Liberal-Tories have liked
to portray this as just an example of Brown's economic incompetence.
It was far from that. In fact, Thomas Pascoe
argued, in this Daily Telegraph article last year, that it was part
of a necessary conspiracy to protect the banks, whose speculative
activities were already threatening to throw the world financial
system into chaos, at that time, a chaos that erupted anyway, in
2008, and from which we are still suffering today.
I was aware of the rumours
of such a conspiracy, back in 2000, and decided to make it a part of
the novel, that I was writing at the time - See Chapter 1 Here - about the manipulation of
markets for revolutionary purposes. But, the rumour, at the time,
was not just that this was Gordon Brown that was involved in such a
conspiracy, rather that it was central banks and governments in a
number of major economies, including the US. The basis of the
rumours was, as Pascoe sets out, that a number of very large banks
had made big, short bets against gold, bets that were going bad, as
the price of gold began to soar. Because many of these short bets
are undertaken using leverage, i.e. the bank or other speculator
borrows huge amounts of money to finance the trade, in the
expectation that they can close out their position at a profit,
before they need to make good on their margin call, a number of these
banks were threatened with bankruptcy.
Two things were at play
here. Firstly, there is the effect of leverage. Suppose I come to
buy $1 billion of shares in Apple. In fact, I can buy these shares
for just $100 million on margin. I basically put down 10% of the
cost to buy the shares, borrowing the other 90%, which I only have to
make up when I get the margin call some time later. If Apple shares
rise by 1%, I sell my now $1.01 billion worth, pocket the $10 million
gain, and have the rest to pay off the margin call. Great if the
shares go up, not so great if they fall. But, secondly, there is the
problem of shorting. Suppose, I buy that $1 billion of Apple shares,
and they go bust. Nasty, I've lost my $1 billion, but if you are a
bank or multi-billionaire you can survive. However, suppose I short
Apple stock. That means I think their share price will fall. So, I
sell Apple shares, I do not actually own, in the expectation that, at
some point in the future, before I actually have to transfer
ownership of those shares, I can buy the shares needed, at a lower
price than I've sold them for. The problem here is its the same as
spread betting. There is no limit to how much I can lose. If the
value of Apple shares, rather than falling, goes up, I make a loss,
and although a share price can only fall to zero, there is no limit
to how high it can go.
This was the problem these
banks faced with gold. For years, after 1980, the price of gold had
gone in only one direction – down. The general view of financial
analysts was that gold was an historical relic. Unlike even silver,
it had few industrial uses. It was used for jewellery, and not much
else. Global trade was financed now by dollars not gold. Unlike
shares, or bonds, or even a cash deposit, gold paid no dividend or
interest. Therefore, if you were going to hold it, it could only be
if its value was going to rise to give you capital gain, but given
the aforesaid, why would it. No wonder its price had kept falling
for 20 years. It was a one way bet, and speculators love one way
bets. It is what provides the basis of the kind of carry trade that
Pascoe describes.
So, it is not surprising
that these banks had exposed themselves, to such a massive degree, in
short gold positions. Remember that this is not long after Long Term
Capital Management, in the United States, had gone bust, and had to
be bailed out, by other banks, to the tune of $3.6 billion. It too
was supposed to have developed an infallible algorithm for making
money. It was also not long after the Asian Currency Crisis, and the
Rouble Crisis, and slap bang in the middle of this process came the
Stock Market crash of 2000, that wiped 75% off the value of the
NASDAQ index. Just before that crash, as happens now with property,
there were no end of analysts, newspaper column writers and others,
who claimed that the market could only ever go up, because this time
it was different from every other bubble!
No wonder governments and
central banks were worried. No wonder they decided to engage in some
market manipulation, to ensure the banks did not go down. In fact,
such manipulation and intervention is nothing new. In Hong Kong, the
state has for many years directly intervened in both the stock and
bond markets, buying shares when the stock market looked like it was
going to fall sharply. The US Federal Reserve and Treasury deny that
they do the same, and its probably illegal for them to do so, but
many rumours abound that they do on a regular basis, coming in at the
end of the trading day, when they can have most effect, for example.
And, in the last few years, there has been no doubt that the US
Federal Reserve and Bank of England, as well as other Central Banks
have directly intervened in the market. That is what Quantitative
Easing is. In fact, the Bank of England, and Federal Reserve, have
intervened so much, that both own around 30% of the total debt,
issued by their respective governments, and buy up around half of the
newly issued debt.
What does this have to do
with the conspiracy in the property market? Only that it sets out
that such conspiracies are, in fact, quite common, and sometimes
undertaken in plain sight. The common theme is protection of the
banks themselves, almost at whatever cost to the rest of society, who
always end up picking up the tab for the bail-out. Witness, Greece,
Ireland, Portugal, Cyprus and coming soon Malta, Slovenia,
Luxembourg, Spain, Italy, the UK and possibly France and Germany too.
The experience of Cyprus was
perhaps most illuminating. It is literally only months ago that
Europe's banks were “stress tested” to see if they could
withstand some unforeseen shock. The first of those stress tests,
three years ago, were widely seen as a sham. The last stress tests
were, we were told, more rigorous. Yet, that didn't stop some of
those banks, across Europe, failing. And the banks in Cyprus were
given a clean bill of health. In fact, a couple of years ago, the
IMF was commending Cyprus for its economic model! Yet, the Cypriot
banks went bust, and not only Cypriot taxpayers, but also the
depositors, in those banks, are the people who have been handed the
bill. Looking at the situation of banks in those other economies
listed above, including Germany, the situation does not look any
better.
Forward To Part 2
Forward To Part 2
Canada does in fact has a housing bubble. Proly even bigger then the one at the US by looking at some graphs
ReplyDeletehttp://www.torontocondobubble.com/2013/05/canadian-housing-bubble-exceeds-us.html