Monday, January 16, 2012

Future Financial Mayhem

You may not recognize it, but you are being lied to.

For an example, which is a full assault on your wallet, look no further than the monetization of the debt, which Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said would not happen. Well, Investors Business Daily reports that the FED is readying for more stimulus. Perplexing for sure, given the failed results of previous quantitative easing, QE1 and QE2. Printing money decreases asset value, which surely will not be of assistance the millions of homeowners underwater.

Media outlets report that the economy is growing and jobs are being created, as evidenced by the unemployment number presented by the federal government. If that is true, it would not be necessary for the FED to engage in QE3.

Speaking of the FED, something has gone terribly wrong over the last few years. The FED is the lender of last resort and is charged with conducting monetary policy. Historically, Presidents have had little power over the FED, with the FED operating outside of executive branch influence, the exception being appointments to the boards and appointing the Charmian, if necessary.

Although the FED is by far the most powerful governmental agency, there is little regulatory oversight over its activities. Somewhere recently, particularly under President Obama, The FED seems to be carrying water for the administration and assisting in the implementation of policy. This is very troubling, particularly when the leader of the executive branch is not a free market capitalist.

Recent actions by the FED, seeming to begin with TARP, have broken tendencies and are raising concerns on both sides of the aisle. The creation of the conditions that allowed MF Global to take place is a recent example of the now problematic status of the FED, and how you are being lied to.

For a brilliant explanation, please see First Principles Capital Management CEO Doug Dachille at the Yale School of Management last December:



The government, using the FED through regulatory influence and intervention, is now choosing winners and losers. Although Fannie and Freddie are still in operation, it is the FED behind the curtain who is crowding banks out of the mortgage origination market and setting unreasonable credit requirements. As Dachille points, out, life insurance companies are being squeezed, and Sallie Mae has been taken over and private lending has been crowded out.

With MF Global, customer accounts were not protected. They were stolen to pay major players. Again, as Dachille discusses, with the suffocating Dodd-Frank bill, you might think customer accounts might be protected. If the regulators are charged with one thing, it would be to protect the integrity of the system, the trust that customer accounts not participating in risk taking activity are not hypothecated and can be made whole in a timely fashion.

This did not happen at MF Global, and due to the lack of trust in the markets sure to emerge because of this, bad things are on the horizon. If this can happen at MF Global, it can happen at any firm housing investments. A customer obviously has no control over hypothecation by these firms and therefore cannot be guaranteed a return of the investment should the firm be severely compromised or fail.

Beginning with the shafting of the bondholders of the automakers, the rule of law and trust of the marketplace, integral for the survival of a free market capitalist system, has been violated. You are being lied when government officials and the media inform you that everything is fine.

Until the rule of law is reestablished, the government becomes a bystander and the FED resumes normal open market operations, the market place is compromised and for you to be participatory in it, Caveat Emptor.

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