Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

This week's Kazoo (vs. the Wikileaks Bullhorn): Fed finally reveals details of its lending in past 3 years

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • This week's Kazoo (vs. the Wikileaks Bullhorn): Fed finally reveals details of its lending in past 3 years

    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/6ea84d76-f...#axzz17AjU2K3Z

    It took two years, a hard-fought lawsuit, and an act of Congress, but finally on Wednesday, the Federal Reserve disclosed the details of its financial crisis lending programmes. The initial reactions were shock at the breadth of lending, particularly to foreign firms. But the details paint a bleaker, earlier, and even more disturbing picture. They also highlight new tensions over high-tech transparency, echoing the controversy of the WikiLeaks cables, unveiled just days earlier.

    The Fed uploaded to its website several giant spreadsheets giving details on about 21,000 of its recent transactions. This data dump wasn’t willing: it was a response to litigation by Bloomberg, and a provision in the Dodd-Frank financial reform law requiring disclosure.

    Almost immediately analysts and bloggers sifting through the data honed in on Fed lending to non-US banks, particularly multibillion-dollar loans in October 2008 to
    Barclays of the UK, UBS of Switzerland, Dexia of Belgium, and several German banks. It didn’t take long to spot the $11.5bn loan to Royal Bank of Scotland, on October 9, 2008. It was the largest to date. Then the loans got even bigger.

    However, a close examination of the data shows that foreign lending actually began well before the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers
    triggered the 2008 crisis. Indeed, as some have argued – and these data confirm – the crisis began a year earlier, when supposedly safe structured investment vehicles began to collapse during 2007.
    The Fed, apparently worried about global ripples, reacted by supporting non-US borrowers with new loans. Its first central bank liquidity swap – effectively a $10bn 13-month loan to the European Central Bank – was in December 2007. At the same time, the Fed began lending through its Term Auction Facility, with nearly all of the first $20bn going to several non-US banks.

    Fed officials have claimed they did not know of the need for large-scale intervention in the financial markets until autumn 2008. Ben Bernanke, Fed chair, also testified that “The only way we could have saved Lehman would have been by breaking the law.” Yet the Fed’s new spreadsheets belie these claims. The data show the Fed was lending prolifically abroad in 2007, and then domestically, to investment banks – including Lehman – in early 2008.

    Bear Stearns was the biggest, with a $28bn loan in March. But Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley were borrowing, too, as were many foreign banks. The data show Lehman borrowed in March 2008 as well, but just $1.6bn, or less than six per cent of the Bear Stearns loan. In other words, the Fed’s new data show it was well aware of the crisis, and had the ability to lend tens of billions of dollars, but it opted to lend primarily to non-US banks. It lent a lot to Bear Stearns, and not as much to Lehman. This is not to say the Fed should have rescued Lehman, too, but rather that the data do not support claims about its own timing and impotence.

    An even more troubling conclusion from the data is that – given who the borrowers were, what collateral they posted, and what interest rates they paid – it is now apparent that the Fed took on far more risk, on less favourable terms, than most people have realised. The Fed defends its loans, saying they were repaid with interest. But any banker understands that lending should be assessed when the loan is made, not after the fact. The question is not whether the Fed was repaid, but whether the rate it charged adequately compensated for the risk.

    The Fed charged low rates, often almost zero per cent. It says these rates were justified because loans were “fully secured”. However, unlike some Fed disclosures, the data include only the face amount of the collateral, and vague categorical labels. The Fed admits some collateral was inadequate. But without more details we can’t know whether the loans were fully secured, or whether the Fed, by lending at low rates without adequate collateral, was effectively gifting money to borrowers around the world.

    This has been a big week for transparency. But whereas the WikiLeaks cables may have revealed too much, the Fed’s new data have revealed too little. We know now the Fed acted earlier, and with wider scope, than was previously understood. But without more detail about collateral, the case for its actions can still not be properly judged. Nevertheless, even these incomplete disclosures suggest that perhaps, during the next crisis, Fed officials will think more carefully about making loans they know will see the light of day. As US supreme court justice Louis Brandeis noted, sunlight is the best of disinfectants.

  • #2
    Re: This week's Kazoo (vs. the Wikileaks Bullhorn): Fed finally reveals details of its lending in past 3 years

    Interesting.
    Here is Assange's take on disclosure
    The west has fiscalised its basic power relationships through a web of contracts, loans, shareholdings, bank holdings and so on. In such an environment it is easy for speech to be "free" because a change in political will rarely leads to any change in these basic instruments. Western speech, as something that rarely has any effect on power, is, like badgers and birds, free. In states like China, there is pervasive censorship, because speech still has power and power is scared of it. We should always look at censorship as an economic signal that reveals the potential power of speech in that jurisdiction. The attacks against us by the US point to a great hope, speech powerful enough to break the fiscal blockade.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: This week's Kazoo (vs. the Wikileaks Bullhorn): Fed finally reveals details of its lending in past 3 years

      My impression of Assange grows daily.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: This week's Kazoo (vs. the Wikileaks Bullhorn): Fed finally reveals details of its lending in past 3 years

        Originally posted by don View Post
        My impression of Assange grows daily.
        I suspect he and his wikileaks are a well developed limited hangout. He will happily expose some ugly truths. Just don't expect much truth about Israel, Mossad, Zionism, Neocons or some notorious false flag operations of the past in which those parties were heavily involved.
        Most folks are good; a few aren't.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: This week's Kazoo (vs. the Wikileaks Bullhorn): Fed finally reveals details of its lending in past 3 years

          Fed shows how hedge funds and baseball players got their cut of its cash

          US Federal Reserve details credit crunch loans to super-rich investors as well as pension funds and charities


          ..


          Beneficiaries of Fed funds included computer billionaire Michael Dell; John Paulson, the hedge fund king who made a fortune betting on the credit crunch; an art charity run by philanthropist Eli Broad; a movie producer; a horse breeder; and a second world war flying ace.
          ..


          http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2...seball-players
          I bet the Fed made money on it ... lol

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: This week's Kazoo (vs. the Wikileaks Bullhorn): Fed finally reveals details of its lending in past 3 years

            Originally posted by ThePythonicCow View Post
            I suspect he and his wikileaks are a well developed limited hangout. He will happily expose some ugly truths. Just don't expect much truth about Israel, Mossad, Zionism, Neocons or some notorious false flag operations of the past in which those parties were heavily involved.
            http://sabbah.biz/mt/archives/2010/1...ing-influence/

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: This week's Kazoo (vs. the Wikileaks Bullhorn): Fed finally reveals details of its lending in past 3 years

              Hmm... interesting. Well, there's a little (possible) truth regarding Israel. Fortunately for my forecasting record (gotta keep its success ratio above zero!), I used a weasel word above and said "don't expect much truth".

              Thanks for the link.
              Most folks are good; a few aren't.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: This week's Kazoo (vs. the Wikileaks Bullhorn): Fed finally reveals details of its lending in past 3 years

                Originally posted by ThePythonicCow View Post
                I suspect he and his wikileaks are a well developed limited hangout. He will happily expose some ugly truths. Just don't expect much truth about Israel, Mossad, Zionism, Neocons or some notorious false flag operations of the past in which those parties were heavily involved.

                do u mean jewish ppl or groups are funding him?

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: This week's Kazoo (vs. the Wikileaks Bullhorn): Fed finally reveals details of its lending in past 3 years

                  Originally posted by touchring View Post
                  do u mean jewish ppl or groups are funding him?
                  Israel != Jewish. The relationship between these two entities is complex and sometimes deeply oppositional. For that matter, neither of these two entities is monolithic, to put it mildly.

                  Limited Hangout != Funding. Even if my suspicion is accurate, there are a variety of ways in which it could be so.
                  Most folks are good; a few aren't.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: This week's Kazoo (vs. the Wikileaks Bullhorn): Fed finally reveals details of its lending in past 3 years

                    how has Ben not been arrested by the FBI and tried in a court of law?

                    Oh that's right, we live in the USA, Bananna Repubic.

                    1/10/08
                    - Q&A after speech
                    “The Federal Reserve is not currently forecasting a recession.”
                    2/27/08 - Q&A after testimony to Senate Banking Committee
                    “I expect there will be some failures [referring to smaller regional banks]. Among the largest banks, the capital ratios remain good and I don’t anticipate any serious problems of that sort among the large, internationally active banks that make up a very substantial part of our banking system.”
                    6/10/08 - Boston Federal Reserve’s 52nd annual economic conference
                    “The risk that the economy has entered a substantial downturn appears to have diminished over the past month or so.”

                    7/18/08
                    - Remarks to the House Financial Services Committee
                    “The GSEs are adequately capitalized. They are in no danger of failing.”

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: This week's Kazoo (vs. the Wikileaks Bullhorn): Fed finally reveals details of its lending in past 3 years

                      Originally posted by babbittd View Post
                      how has Ben not been arrested by the FBI and tried in a court of law?

                      Oh that's right, we live in the USA, Bananna Repubic.

                      1/10/08
                      - Q&A after speech
                      “The Federal Reserve is not currently forecasting a recession.”
                      2/27/08 - Q&A after testimony to Senate Banking Committee
                      “I expect there will be some failures [referring to smaller regional banks]. Among the largest banks, the capital ratios remain good and I don’t anticipate any serious problems of that sort among the large, internationally active banks that make up a very substantial part of our banking system.”
                      6/10/08 - Boston Federal Reserve’s 52nd annual economic conference
                      “The risk that the economy has entered a substantial downturn appears to have diminished over the past month or so.”

                      7/18/08
                      - Remarks to the House Financial Services Committee
                      “The GSEs are adequately capitalized. They are in no danger of failing.”
                      Considering the revelation that they were lending before 2008, these statements, made by anyone else, would place them in the dock for certain.......

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: This week's Kazoo (vs. the Wikileaks Bullhorn): Fed finally reveals details of its lending in past 3 years

                        Originally posted by ThePythonicCow View Post
                        Just don't expect much truth about Israel, ...
                        This article says that Assange intentionally left out some damning cables regarding Israel:
                        INDYMEDIA: WikiLeaks ‘struck a deal with Israel’ over diplomatic cables leaks
                        “Assange met with Israeli officials in Geneva earlier this year and struck the secret deal. The Israel government, it seems, had somehow found out or expected that the documents to be leaked contained a large number of documents about the Israeli attacks on Lebanon and Gaza in 2006 and 2008-9 respectively. These documents, which are said to have originated mainly from the Israeli embassies in Tel Aviv and Beirut, where removed and possibly destroyed by Assange, who is the only person who knows the password that can open these documents, the sources added.”
                        Most folks are good; a few aren't.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: This week's Kazoo (vs. the Wikileaks Bullhorn): Fed finally reveals details of its lending in past 3 years

                          TPC maybe you've wondered why WikiLeaks has not leaked anything with regards to 9/11.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: This week's Kazoo (vs. the Wikileaks Bullhorn): Fed finally reveals details of its lending in past 3 years

                            My personal judgement on Assange is still in deliberation.

                            On the one hand, transparency is a good thing.

                            On the other hand, Wikileaks is anything but transparent.

                            On the gripping hand, Assange is such a self promoter that all my wary instincts are set on edge.

                            Be that as it may, the 'big' Wikileaks dump continues to be lots of storm, but little substance.

                            As it turns out these 'secret' documents were just that - 'Secret'.

                            'Secret' as in 4 million Americans have access to them - as opposed to 'Top Secret' or 'Eyes Only'.

                            http://www.manilatimes.net/index.php...ican-diplomacy

                            WikiLeaks released the much-anticipated first tranche of more than 250,000 US State Department diplomatic cables on Sunday (November ??), releasing just fewer than 300 individual documents by the time of writing on Monday (it will take some time for the full archive of diplomatic cables obtained by WikiLeaks—many lengthy—to be published). Like the previous releases of massive collections of military and security Afghan and Iraq war documents (in July and October, respectively), there has been little in the way of real surprise or revelation.

                            This set of leaks has differed from those of the past. They have included not a single Top Secret report like the Pentagon Papers of 1971 that, despite the plural, were actually a single report comprising thousands of pages of analyses and thousands more of documentation organized into nearly 50 volumes. Each of these WikiLeaks releases has instead been of vast quantities of fairly low-level reports of lower levels of classification. Many of the military documents released in July and October were initial reports or impressions of “significant activities”—SIGACTs, in the parlance—and are not even a definitive or complete account of a specific event.

                            In war, secrecy is of paramount importance. But the value and sensitivity of a secret that is truly actionable is often of a very short-lived nature (as opposed to the continued classification of material that is merely embarrassing). The trick with intelligence in war is that you can never quite know what tidbit of information your adversary might make useful. But perhaps the single most important and unambiguous lesson of the WikiLeaks releases of Iraq and Afghan war documents has not so much been a security problem (though obviously there was a very important one) but of how overloaded the classification system has become with information of marginal and short-term sensitivity. So many were accessing so much mundane, day-to-day information that no one noticed when something important (in this case enormous quantities of low-level sensitivity) was being accessed and moved inappropriately: the WikiLeaks releases are a symptom of a classification system that is broken—and not just because someone managed to leak so much.

                            “Nothing that WikiLeaks has released so far—about the Iraq and Afghan wars or American diplomacy—has changed geopolitics.”

                            Interestingly, few of the more than 250,000 diplomatic cables are actually classified—though they were never intended for public consumption. But the real significant difference is the game that is being played: a diplomatic rather than military one. In the practice of diplomacy, no one should be surprised that a country behaves one way and says another. When two leaders talk, their ability to speak in confidence is essential for moving beyond the pomp, circumstance and atmospherics that diplomacy has always entailed. Indeed, the very act of two leaders talking is the product of innumerable back-channel negotiations and confidential understandings. And even in supposedly more transparent democratic societies, the exigencies of foreign affairs dictate discretion and flexibility. Diplomacy not only requires compromise, but by its nature, it violates ideals and requires multiple layers of deception and manipulation.

                            The issue that is raised in peacetime diplomacy is that the mutual understanding of confidence is publicly breached. In war, nothing important is going to change based on a SIGACT report from a squad-level patrol from two years ago. If something needed to change, the exigencies of war saw it change long ago—at the company level, things may have changed as a result of the debrief following that very patrol. Other than for the men and women who fought there that day and their families, it has become a matter for history. But what the sitting US ambassador to a country has been saying to Washington for the last two years has the potential to matter for the functional relationships he has worked to cultivate and for how that country’s people perceive their government’s relationship with America—and therefore the constraints those leaders face moving forward.

                            Everyone already knows this is how the game is played, and leaders in Washington and beyond have already demonstrated that countries with real problems to work on are not going to let a glimpse of what goes on behind closed doors interrupt important geopolitical relationships. With the release of these cables, everyone now knows what US diplomats think of Moammar Gadhafi. It may impact US-Libyan relations temporarily, but only if Libya was already in the market for an excuse to muck up the works. It would be far more problematic if the WikiLeaks revealed that the US State Department was working with an unrealistic political assessment of what a meeting with Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi was going to be like than the fact that what everyone reads in the tabloids also made it into a diplomatic cable.

                            What’s more, the idea that WikiLeaks could hurt diplomatic relationships between the United States and the rest of the world also assumes that the rest of the world conducts diplomacy in a more “honest” manner—it does not—or that it somehow does not fear that one day its own dispatches may be laid barren for all to see—it does. And given American intelligence capabilities, there’s a good chance most countries do not want to gamble on whether the United States is already reading them.

                            Nevertheless, this latest batch of WikiLeaks has been more anticipated here at STRATFOR than the first two. The matters they discuss would have eventually made their way into history books if they mattered, but they offer an unprecedented sampling of what the current administration and the current State Department have said in confidence in recent years on a wide variety of issues. Nothing that WikiLeaks has released so far—about the Iraq and Afghan wars or American diplomacy—has been so revelatory and of such great consequence to spur entire nations to make significant alterations to their foreign policies, and so far the diplomatic impact has been minimal. But it is fascinating for those who detail the blow-by-blow of history for a living, and have to make estimates about what is going on behind those closed doors based on imperfect information.

                            These cables provide a way to check not the accuracy of intelligence estimates—and not in a matter of years when they are proven right or wrong—but are based on a vast array of current data. We imagine STRATFOR is not the only one benefiting from getting a look at the answer sheet, incomplete and imperfect though it may be.
                            So far mostly titillating back biting. But at least a for once somewhat beneficial STRATFOR analysis.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: This week's Kazoo (vs. the Wikileaks Bullhorn): Fed finally reveals details of its lending in past 3 years

                              Originally posted by cjppjc View Post
                              TPC maybe you've wondered why WikiLeaks has not leaked anything with regards to 9/11.
                              Julian Assange has made his position on 9/11 clear. In an interview in the UK Independent, he is quoted as saying "I'm constantly annoyed that people are distracted by false conspiracies such as 9/11, when all around we provide evidence of real conspiracies, for war or mass financial fraud."
                              Most folks are good; a few aren't.

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X