|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Near-panic atmosphere as US Federal Reserve chairman testifies
before Congress
By Barry Grey
9 November 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
On Thursday, one day after American stock markets plummeted
in the face of mounting bank losses, soaring oil prices and record
lows for the US dollar, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke
gave a gloomy economic forecast in testimony before Congress
Joint Economic Committee.
Bernanke admitted that the US housing slump and the credit
crisis resulting from soaring defaults of subprime mortages had
worsened since credit markets froze last August, and predicted
that US economic growth would fall sharply in the fourth quarter
of 2007 and the beginning of 2008.
He said the housing crisis would worsen in the coming months,
as millions of homeowners with adjustable rate mortgages faced
sharply higher interest payments when new rates kicked in, and
hinted that the crisis on Wall Street could spiral into a full-blown
recession.
On Wednesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Index fell 360.92 points,
wiping out all the gains since the Feds half-point interest
rate cut on September 18. The Standard & Poors 500 index
dropped by 44.65, while the Nasdaq Composite Index shed 76.42
points. The rout on Wall Street was precipitated by a series of
developments underscoring the depths of the financial crisis.
As the dollar hit record lows against the euro and other currencies,
Chinese officials said the weakness of the US dollar could lead
them to diversify their $1.43 trillion in foreign exchange reserves
into stronger currencies, such as the euro. A Chinese central
bank vice director told a conference that the dollar was losing
its status as the world currency.
The US economy, saddled with massive trade and current account
deficits, depends on daily inflows of billions of dollars in capital
from China, Japan and other countries for the functioning of its
financial system. Any significant contraction of these capital
flows would lead to a collapse in the dollar, massive interest
rate increases, deep recession and the possibility of a US and
global depression.
Also on Wednesday, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, in an
address to the US Congress, criticized Wall Street excesses
and the weak dollar and warned that monetary disorder risked
turning into economic war. Sarkozy was speaking for a European
bourgeoisie that is increasingly angered by a US monetary policy
that has cheapened the price of US exports, made European imports
more expensive, and begun to seriously impact European business.
The same day, oil futures, up more than 65 percent in the past
year, topped $98 a barrel for the first time. Gasoline prices
in the USalready significantly higher than last monthare
now expected to follow the surge in oil, and Americans winter
heating bills are expected to rise even more sharply than initially
feared.
The meltdown of so-called collateralized debt obligations (CDOs)
and other subprime-linked securities continued with the announcement
by Wall Street investment bank Morgan Stanley that it was writing
off $3.7 billion for the fourth quarter, and that its losses could
rise to $6 billion. It joined such other giants as Citigroup,
Merrill Lynch and Goldman Sachs which have announced multi-billion-dollar
write-downs in high-risk, high-yield investments in the housing
market and other forms of financial speculation.
So far this year there have been an estimated $55 billion in
losses suffered by financial institutions, but this is just the
tip of the iceberg. The chief credit strategist at the Royal Bank
of Scotland Group issued a report Wednesday estimating that the
credit crunch will cause $250 billion to $500 billion in losses
at banks and brokerage houses around the world. The upper range
of his estimate is equal to the combined stock market value of
the three largest US banks, Citigroup, JP Morgan Chase and Bank
of America.
Adding to the mood of fear and crisis on Wall Street was the
announcement by the American International Group, the worlds
largest insurance company, that it had written down nearly $2
billion in investments related to mortgages in the third quarter
and expected to write down an additional $550 million in the next
quarter, and a warning from the savings and loan firm Washington
Mutual that it faced massive credit losses. Washington Mutual
stock fell more than 17 percent for the day.
Finally, General Motors took a $39 billion charge to its third-quarter
results to offset the value of deferred tax assets.
The crisis atmosphere surrounding Bernankes appearance
before Congress was further stoked by weaker-than-expected data
on US retail sales released Thursday morning. The data, showing
sluggish sales by such retail giants as Wal-Mart, Macys
and Kohls, suggested that US consumer spending, which accounts
for 70 percent of the economy, was falling off as a result of
declining home values, rising foreclosures, soaring gasoline and
heating costs, and pervasive economic insecurity. The reports
made for a bleak prognosis for the holiday season, upon which
retailers and the US economy as whole are hugely dependent.
The mood for Bernankes appearance before Congress was
set by the opening statement from New York Senator Charles Schumer,
the chairman of the Joint Economic Committee. The Democratic senator,
known as a reliable mouthpiece for Wall Street interests, began
by noting that since Bernankes previous appearance before
the committee in March, contrary to what you said at the
time, the subprime mess has not been contained, but
instead has proved to be a contagion that has spread in dangerous
ways throughout not just the housing market, but our economy and
the global financial system.
Schumer said that in the aftermath of the seizing up
of the credit markets in the summer, there is now
a lack of confidence in credit-worthiness throughout the market.
He continued: However, while we did weather that summer
storm, Im very concerned that there may be a bigger storm
on the horizon. Quite frankly, I think we are at a moment of economic
crisis stemming from four key areas: falling housing prices, lack
of confidence in credit-worthiness, the weak dollar and high oil
prices. Each of these problems alone would be enough of a threat
to our economic well-being. But taken together, they are essentially
the four horsemen of economic crisis...
Even our bedrock assumptions are being put into doubt.
As housing prices decline, there are real fears that we wont
be able to depend on consumers, the engine of our economy over
the past few years, to keep spending. And now we hear that foreign
investors may no longer be confident in the dollar as the global
currency of choice. Im not surprised to hear experts, such
as your predecessor Alan Greenspan, warn about the threat of recession.
Ive begun to worry about worse.
In particular, as I watch bank after bank write down
bad investments tied to baroque financial instruments that even
sophisticated investors dont understand, I fear for the
stability of our financial system.
Bernanke provided little solace. While noting that the US gross
domestic product rose at a strong 3.9 percent rate in the third
quarter, he warned that such a rate could not be sustained because
of the ongoing correction in the housing market, and
added that inflation was bound to rise because of recent
increases in energy prices.
He admitted that financial markets remained under significant
pressure, saying the financial turmoil was triggered
by investor concerns about the credit quality of mortgages,
especially subprime mortgages with adjustable rates. He
spoke of the continuing increase in the rate of serious
delinquencies for such mortgages, and warned that they were
likely to rise further as a sizable number of recent-vintage
subprime loans experience their first interest rate resets.
He explained that on average, from now until the end of 2008,
nearly 450,000 subprime mortgages every quarter were scheduled
to undergo their first interest rate reset, and that the resulting
payment shock would be compounded by the decline in
home prices and a tightening in lending terms. A sharp increase
in foreclosed properties for sale, he said, could
also weaken the already struggling housing market and thus, potentially,
the broader economy.
Bernanke related the housing and mortgage crisis to the crisis
in credit markets by explaining that while in the past most mortgages
were held by the companies that originated them, today mortgages
are commonly bundled together into mortgage-backed securities
or structured credit products, rated by credit agencies, and then
sold to investors.
Commenting, in rather diplomatic terms, on the collapse of
the resulting edifice of financial speculation, he said, As
mortgage losses have mounted, investors have questioned the reliability
of credit ratings, especially those of structured productssuch
as CDOs.
Since no one really knows the value of these assets, the
loss of confidence in the credit ratings... led to a sharp decline
in demand for these products. In other words, banks and
other financial institutions holding these securities are unable
to unload them except at fire-sale prices, leading to potentially
catastrophic losses on their balance sheets.
Bernanke went on to say that the collapse in confidence in
subprime-backed securities had spread to virtually every sector
of the credit markets, including securities backed by jumbo mortgages
to home buyers with good credit and commercial paper traded between
corporations. The market for leveraged buyouts, which had largely
fueled the stock market boom of the last few years, had dried
up, and banks were increasingly reluctant to lend to their customers
and to each other.
These events do imply, the Fed chairman said, a
greater measure of financial restraint on economic growth as credit
becomes more expensive and difficult to obtain.
The short-term result, Bernanke said, would be a further contraction
in housing-related activity and a slower growth in
household spending. Overall, the Fed expected that
the growth of economic activity would slow noticeably in the fourth
quarter from its third quarter rate. Putting an optimistic
face on a dire situation, he said that growth, while remaining
sluggish in the first part of 2008, would strengthen
as the effects of tighter credit and the housing correction
began to wane.
However, he acknowledged the downside risks of
a worsening financial crisis causing credit conditions to
become even more restrictive than expected and a more-than-expected
weakening of housing prices, which could further reduce
consumers willingness to spend and increase investors
concerns about mortgage credit.
He also spoke of the upside risks of sharply higher
inflation from soaring oil prices and a continuing weakening of
the dollar.
He concluded with his standard statement that the Fed would
continue to carefully assess the implications for the outlook
of the incoming economic data and financial market developments
and act as needed to foster price stability and sustainable economic
growth.
The initial response on Wall Street to Bernankes testimony
was a sharp fall in stock prices, with the Dow Jones index slumping
more than 200 points. However, by the end of Thursday the Dow
had recovered most of its losses, closing down 33.7 points. However,
the technology-laden Nasdaq fell 52.76, or 1.9 percent. This was
largely due to a negative projection from the networking giant
Cisco, whose shares fell 10 percent, sparking a broader sell-off
of hi-tech stocks.
The recovery, particularly in banking and financial stocks,
may have reflected a consensus that Bernankes report was
so dismal as to suggest a third successive interest rate cut when
the central banks Federal Open Market Committee meets next
on December 11. While many on Wall Street continue to clamor for
rate cuts, in the hope that an expanded flow of cheap credit will
save them from the consequences of years of financial manipulations
and outright swindling, such an action can in no way resolve the
mounting crisis of US and global capitalism.
In the short term, it will only intensify the crisis of the
dollar and fuel the conditions for rampant inflation. More fundamentally,
such policies compound the underlying instability and insolvency
of the financial system.
Bernankes own testimony points to an inevitable reckoning,
in which the vast global economic imbalances, the inherent anarchy
of the capitalist market, and the rampant parasitism, of American
capitalism in particular, produce an economic and social disaster.
See Also:
Citigroup ousts CEO, warns of billions
more in subprime losses
[6 November 2007]
Stock market gyrations fueled by credit,
housing market crises
[3 November 2007]
US Federal Reserve accedes to Wall Street
demands with another interest rate cut
[1 November 2007]
The rise and fall of Merrill
Lynch CEO Stanley ONeal
[30 Octobr 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |