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Christopher Carolan on Financial Markets & Lunar Cycles

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Hussman Commentary

March 9th, 2009 at 1:44pm · 1 Comment


…Make no mistake. Buying up “troubled assets” will not materially ease this crisis, nor will it even improve the capital position of financial institutions (see You Can’t Rescue the Financial System if You Can’t Read a Balance Sheet). Homeowners will continue to default because their payment obligations have not been restructured to any meaningful extent. We are simply protecting the bondholders of mismanaged financial institutions, even though that bondholder capital is more than sufficient to cover the losses without harm to customers. Institutions that cannot survive without continual provision of public funds should be taken into receivership, their assets should be restructured to better ensure repayment, their stockholders should be wiped out, bondholders should take a major haircut, customer assets should (and will) be fully protected, and these institutions should be re-issued to the markets when the economy stabilizes.

The course of defending the bondholders of insolvent institutions is not sustainable. Do the math. The collateral behind private market debt is being marked down by easily 20-30%. That debt represents about 3.5 times GDP. That implies collateral losses on the order of 70-100% of GDP, which itself is $14 trillion. Unless Congress is actually willing to commit that amount of public funds to defend the bondholders of mismanaged financials so they can avoid any loss, this crisis simply cannot be addressed through bailouts. Bondholders have to take losses. Debt has to be restructured. There is no other option – but the markets are going to suffer interminably until our leaders figure that out…

John Hussman – read the whole thing.

Tags: Editorial · General Market Commentary

1 response so far ↓

  • 1 pablo_36 // Mar 10, 2009 at 3:02 am

    Cris can you comment on JP Morgan Chase having 87.7T $ in OTC contracts left dated on September. On short side I assume.
    Since GDP of US is about 15T it’s scary and obvious who gets all the profits. It’s double than City and Bank of America combined.
    I don’t put any links but it was release by Reuters and it’s very easy to google it.
    What is amazing that it’s so quiet about that and that JPMC passed all stress tests, simply impossible…
    Do we have dejavu from 1907 and great depression and Morgan behind it again.
    Seems all those bailouts are going directly to JP Morgan

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