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WSWS : News
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America
US bank losses intensify recession fears
By Patrick Martin
15 January 2008
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Two more major banks reported heavy mortgage and consumer-loan
losses Monday for the fourth quarter of 2007, reinforcing fears
that that US financial crisis will likely trigger a recession,
not only in America, but worldwide.
M&T Bank, based in Buffalo, New York, reported a 70 percent
decline in earnings for the fourth quarter, largely due to losses
on Collateralized Debt Obligations, the financial instrument widely
used to transform home mortgages into tradeable securities.
Sovereign Bancorp of Philadelphia said it would take a $1.6
billion write-off for the fourth quarter, much of it related to
mortgage lending. However, $600 million of the loss was due to
defaults on consumer loans, an indication that the financial crisis
is spreading. Sovereign said it had stopped issuing auto loans
in seven of the 15 states in which it does businessNevada,
Utah, Arizona, Florida, Georgia and North and South Carolina.
Also on Monday, CNBC reported that the biggest US bank, Citigroup,
will announce a colossal write-off of as much as $24 billion and
the elimination of as many as 24,000 jobs. The bank is to report
its fourth-quarter earnings Tuesday, and is also expected to announce
a cut in its dividend.
Citigroup has been scouring the Middle East and Asia for investors
in a position to take multi-billion-dollar stakes. Among those
said to be involved is Prince Alwaleed bin Talal of Saudi Arabia.
The bank is seeking to raise as much as $15 billion in new capital.
On Monday, the state-owned China Development bank decided not
to go ahead with a proposed investment of $2 billion in the company,
forcing Citigroup to seek other benefactors.
The Financial Times reported Monday that Merrill Lynch,
the largest US stockbroker, is seeking to raise an additional
$4 billion in new capital, with the Kuwait Investment Authority
as the leading candidate. Merrill Lynch is expected to write off
as much as $14 billion in losses and lay off up to 1,000 workers.
The spectacle of giant US financial institutions going hat
in hand to the oil sheiks and the government investment agencies
of China, Taiwan and Singapore is one indicator of the deteriorating
world position of American capitalism.
Another is the continued fall in the dollar, both against the
currencies of rival capitalist powers, and against gold and other
precious metals. Gold topped the $900 an ounce mark Monday in
London trading, at one point hitting $914, an all time record.
Platinum set a new record of $1,587 an ounce, while silver hit
$16.58 an ounce, the highest figure in 27 years.
The dollar dropped to a record low of 1.0912 Swiss francs,
while also hitting seven-week lows against the euro and the yen.
At $1.4890 to the euro, the dollar is near to breaking the 1.50
barrier. That is widely regarded as a psychological milestone
which could produce a much wider sell-off of dollars as countries
currently accumulating dollarsespecially the oil states
and Asian exportersseek to shift their surpluses to euros,
yen or a basket of currencies more likely to retain their value.
The latest dollar plunge was said to be in response to comments
last week by Federal Reserve Board chairman Ben Bernanke, in which
he pledged substantive additional action to prop up
the US economy, a statement widely viewed as a pledge to continue
cutting US interest rates by at least a half percentage point
this month.
Further cuts in US interest rates, carried out at the behest
of Wall Street to stave off a collapse of confidence in the financial
system, ultimately make the crisis even worse, since reducing
the rate of return impels foreign investors to dump their dollar-denominated
assets and shift their holdings into other, more lucrative, investments.
Exerting continuous pressure on the value of the dollar is
the gargantuan US trade deficit, which hit its highest monthly
total in 14 months last November, according to figures released
by the US Commerce Department January 11. The trade deficit shot
up 9.3 percent to $63.1 billion, much more than expected, driven
by a 16.3 percent rise in the cost of imported oil. Oil imports
hit $34.4 billion, accounting for more than half the net deficit.
Retail sales figures from December, to be announced publicly
on Tuesday, are expected to show the combined impact on consumer
spending of higher gasoline and home heating costs and plunging
home values. An actual decline in retail sales in December, compared
to the same month the year before, would be the first such negative
reading since June.
Sales reports from individual retailers already suggest the
dimensions of the downturn in consumer spending, with Macys
reporting a 7.9 percent decline in same-store sales in December
2007, compared to December 2006. Kohls reported an 11 percent
drop and Nordstrom a 4 percent drop. The broad decline is an indication
that upscale as well as middle-income consumers are cutting back.
Other figures detailed the expanding dimensions of the home
mortgage crisis, which is becoming a more generalized crisis of
consumer credit:
* A Mortgage Bankers Association survey found that a record
18.81 percent of the nearly 3 million sub-prime adjustable-rate
loans issued by its members were already past due.
* Freddie Mac, the big mortgage finance company, found that
homeowners refinancing their mortgages were able to extract $20
billion less in the third quarter than the second. The $60 billion
in home equity extracted was the lowest since the first quarter
of 2005, and indicates that far less such cash will be available
for consumer spending.
* The American Bankers Association found that delinquency rates
for home equity lines of credit had climbed to their highest level
in 10 years at the end of September.
* The Federal Reserve Board reported last week that total outstanding
credit card debt rose at an 11.3 percent annual rate in November
2007. For the year, credit card debt is up 7.4 percent to $937.5
billion, compared to increases of from 2 to 4 percent between
2003 and 2005.
The growing indebtedness of consumers, combined with the falloff
of spending, demonstrates that millions of households, working
class and middle class, are going further into debt just to finance
their day-to-day expenses. Any new expenses can lead to major
financial difficulties.
In the face of these figures, the sudden flurry of proposals
by the political representatives of big businessthe Bush
administration, Congress, and the Democratic and Republican candidatesresemble
nothing so much as the reorganization of the deck chairs on the
Titanic.
White House officials told the press last week that Bush would
propose a stimulus package for the US economy in his State of
the Union speech scheduled for January 28, although no details
had been worked out yet. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said
January 11 that the US economy had slowed rather materially
and that time is of the essence in initiating any
stimulus package.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid, the two leading congressional Democrats, sent a joint letter
to Bush Friday saying, We want to work with you. The
letter received a favorable White House response, and Pelosi met
with Fed chief Bernanke Monday to discuss what concrete actions
could be taken.
Some combination of tax cuts for business, tax rebates for
the working poor and a limited extension of unemployment benefits
or home heating assistance is the likely outcome of such discussions,
with a total amount estimated at $50 to $100 billion. Even these
proposals are problematic, however, since congressional Republicans
could block such measures, particularly those targeted to lower-income
families.
The presidential candidates have chimed in, with the Republican
candidates proposing more tax cuts for business and the wealthywhich
would do nothing to alleviate the spreading economic distress
among working peopleand the Democrats offering stimulus
packages that would amount to little more than band-aids.
Hillary Clintons plan, released Friday, calls for $70
billion in stimulus, including relief for homeowners facing foreclosure
and an extension of unemployment benefits. Barack Obama slightly
outbid her, offering a $75 billion plan, but with more targeted
to business interests in the form of tax incentives.
None of these plans amount to more than a drop in the bucket
compared to the vast dimensions of the social and economic crisis
in the United States. By one estimate, the $30-a-barrel increase
in oil prices over the past five months has by itself cost US
consumers $150 billiondouble the amount of stimulus
proposed by the Clinton and Obama plans. It goes without saying
that no big business politician is proposing that the oil companies
disgorge any of their massive profits. On the contrary, the energy
bill adopted by the Democratic Congress last month retains $12
billion in federal subsidies to the oil giants.
More fundamentally, a minor boost to consumer spending will
do nothing to offset the spreading financial contagion or restabilize
debt markets. The bursting of the housing bubble is only the initial
stage of a financial crisis of unprecedented dimensions, one that
will call into question the viability of the capitalist system
worldwide.
See Also:
US Federal Reserve chairman warns of
recession danger, promises more rate cuts
[12 January 2008]
Sharp rise in unemployment rate
US jobs report shows slide into recession
[5 January 2008]
Record fall in US
home prices
[27 December 2007]
Inflation surge hits
consumers, compounds global banking crisis
[20 December 2007]
Central banks coordinate
actions amid fears of a global financial breakdown
[13 December 2007]
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