... mania ran wild this week as saga continues for the greatest bubble ...
The Hemingway Table Discussion du Jour: US Financial Markets
David Tice The Prudent Bear Fund ticed@prodigy.net October 23, 1999 The Federal Home Loan Bank System
What can we say; it was one tough week for us bears... ... This is a market that continues to be characterized by dislocated and unhealthy trading action. As such, the bottom line is that the mania ran wild this week as the saga continues for the greatest bubble of all time.
On November 13, 1931, in the midst of a crumbling financial system and an economy having lurched into the Great Depression, President Herbert Hoover proposed the establishment of a Federal Home Loan Bank System,...
In his memoirs, Hoover wrote, "All depressions unduly lower equity values and thus jeopardize honest holdings of property that may be under mortgages. Also, bankruptcy can end the life of an important productive agency. Beyond this, mortgage foreclosure can bring the greatest of tragedies to home life."
"These (Federal Home Loan) banks were for the purpose, with the temporary assistance of the Government, of mobilizing the resources of building loan, savings banks, and other institutions devoted to home ownership to enable them to borrow collectively on more favorable terms from the investor, and to assure to the borrower long-term payments at more reasonable rates...
... But typical of well-intentioned government initiatives and programs, they instinctively take on a life of their own, and as the original charter is outlived, a new one is created. Today, "the mission of the Federal Home Loan Bank System is to provide access to housing for all Americans and to improve the quality of their communities by extending credit through its more than 7,100 member financial institutions." They do this by borrowing in the capital markets and using these borrowed funds to make low interest rate loans to member financial institutions, that then use these funds to make home loans or purchase mortgage securities. More than half our country's commercial banks are members of the FHLB.
Today, with the economy booming and an overabundance of inexpensive and easily obtained mortgage finance available to virtually anyone, it would appear reasonable to expect that the Federal Home Loan Bank System would have little role to play. Well, as is all too commonplace throughout our financial system, the concept of what is "reasonable" is rather irrelevant. Indeed, for the past year the FHLB has extended credit more aggressively than ever before... ...Amazingly, the FHLB ended June with $486 billion of total assets, having tripled in less than 7 years... Clearly, the FHLB system has been a key player fueling the American credit bubble...
An article in the American Banker stated, "Amid concern that bank deposits are not growing enough to cover loan demand, bankers are urging their peers to back legislation that would expand the Federal Home Loan Bank System." This is outrageous, although it does illustrate how out of control this all has become. Unbelievably, in the midst of an historic financial and economic bubble there is a push to make it easier for banks to access funds from the FHLB; with less stringent collateral requirements and the ability to fund agricultural, small-business and community development loans. Interestingly, stagnant bank deposit... ... Well, nothing like a stock market bubble becoming justification for increasing the role of a government-sponsored lending institution. ... this institution, created after the bursting of the 1920's bubble, is now a major force fueling the 1990's bubble.
Today, it is most critical to recognize the powerful role now played by the "Government-Sponsored Enterprises," largely the Federal Home Loan Bank System, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. While their original mandate was to provide lending to homeowners during a deep credit contraction, they have evolved to become the dominant institutions providing an ongoing flow of financial market liquidity, ensuring sufficient fuel is purveyed to perpetuate a dangerous financial and economic bubble...
And now this year these institutions proceed completely unrestrained in perpetrating the greatest credit creation fiasco in history. And, amazingly, no one, including the Federal Reserve, raises an eyebrow. Sure, credit bubbles provide one wild party as they fuel a stock market mania and economic boom. Unfortunately, they also work insidiously to destroy the foundation of financial systems and economies. Moreover, the greatest damage is rendered at the end of the credit cycle, during what we refer to as the "terminal" phase of credit excess. It is at that time that endemic speculation and dangerous economic distortions grow exponentially along with credit. This "terminal" phase began last year and continues to this day with the strong support of Government-Sponsored Enterprises.
If President Hoover were alive today, he would certainly be mortified... ... role now played by the Federal Home Loan Bank System that he himself created... Hoover stated that he understood clearly that the Federal Reserve had "deliberately created credit inflation" during the 1920's.
Well, today we replay this momentous policy blunder as Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Bank System assist the mighty Federal Reserve with history's greatest credit inflation... ... this extraordinary period of bullish propaganda and misinformation. The Hemingway Table Discussion du Jour: US Financial Markets The Federal Home Loan Bank System David Tice, The Prudent Bear Fund, ticed@prodigy.net, October 23, 1999
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