Financial collapse danger
DECEMBER 18, 2014
Financial Market
Manipulation Is the New Trend: Can It Continue
Rigging the Market
by PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS
A dangerous new trend is the successful
manipulation of the financial markets by the Federal Reserve, other central
banks, private banks, and the US Treasury. The Federal Reserve reduced real
interest rates on US government debt obligations first to zero and then pushed
real interest rates into negative territory. Today the government charges
you for the privilege of purchasing its bonds.
People pay to park their money in the
Treasury debt obligations, because they do not trust the banks and they know
that the government can print the money to pay off the bonds. Today
Treasury bond investors pay a fee in order to guarantee that they will receive
the nominal face value of their investment in government bonds.
Think about this for a minute.
Allegedly the US is experiencing economic recovery. Normally with rising
economic activity interest rates rise as consumers and investors bid for
credit. But not in this “recovery.”
Normally an economic recovery produces
rising consumer spending, rising profits, and more investment. But what we
experience is flat and declining consumer spending as jobs are offshored and
retail stores close. Profits result from labor cost savings from employee
layoffs.
The stock market is high because
corporations are the biggest purchases of stock. Buying back their own stock
supports or raises the share price, enabling executives and boards to sell
their shares or cash in their options at a profitable price. The cash
that Quantitative Easing has given to the mega-banks leaves ample room for
speculating in stocks, thus pushing up the price despite the absence of
fundamentals that would support a rising stock market.
In other words, in America today there are
no free financial markets. The markets are rigged by the Federal Reserve’s
Quantitative Easing, by gold price manipulation, by the Treasury’s Plunge
Protection Team and Exchange Stabilization Fund, and by the big private banks.
Allegedly, QE is over, but it is not. The
Fed intends to roll over the interest and principle from its bloated $4.5
trillion bond portfolio into purchases of more bonds, and the banks intend to
fill in the gaps by using the $2.6 trillion in their cash on deposit with the
Fed to purchase bonds. QE has morphed, not ended. The money the Fed paid the
banks for bonds will now be used by the banks to support the bond price by
purchasing bonds.
Normally when massive amounts of debt and
money are created the currency collapses, but the dollar has been
strengthening. The dollar gains strength from the rigging of the gold price in the futures
market. The Federal Reserve’s agents, the bullion banks, print paper futures
contracts representing many tonnes of gold and dump them them into the market
during periods of light or nonexistent trading. This drives down the gold price
despite rising demand for the physical metal. This manipulation is done
in order to counteract the effect of the expansion of money and debt on the
dollar’s exchange value. A declining dollar price of gold makes the dollar look
strong.
The dollar also gains the appearance of
strength from debt monetization by the Bank of Japan and the European Central
Bank. The Bank of Japan’s Quantitative Easing program is even larger than the
Fed’s. Even Switzerland is rigging the price of the Swiss franc. Since all currencies
are inflating, the dollar does not decline in exchange value.
As Japan is Washington’s vassal, it is
conceivable that some of the money being printed by the Bank of Japan will be
used to purchase US Treasuries, thus taking the place along with purchases by
the large US banks of the Fed’s QE.
The large private US and UK banks are also
manipulating markets hand over fist. Remember the scandal over the banks fixing
the LIBOR rate (the London Interbank Borrowing Rate) and the opening gold price
on the London exchange. Now the banks have been caught rigging currency
markets with algorithms developed to manipulate foreign exchange markets.
When the banks get caught in felonies,
they avoid prosecution by paying a fine. You try doing that.
The government even manipulates economic
statistics in order to paint a rosy economic picture that sustains economic confidence. GDP growth is exaggerated by
understating inflation. High unemployment is swept under the table by not
counting discouraged workers as unemployed. We are told we are enjoying
economic recovery and have an improving housing market. Yet the facts are
that almost half of 25 year old Americans have been forced to return to live
with their parents, and 30% of 30 year olds are back with their parents.
Since 2006 the home ownership rate of 30 year old Americans has collapsed.
The repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act
during the Clinton regime allowed the big banks to gamble with their
depositors’ money. The Dodd-Frank Act tried to stop some of this by requiring
the banks-turned-gambling-casinos to carry on their gambling in subsidiaries
with no access to deposits in the depository institution. If the banks gamble
with depositors money, the banks’ losses are covered by FDIC, and in the case
of bank failure, bail-in provisions could give the banks access to depositors’
funds. With the banks still protected by being “too big to fail,” whether
Dodd-Frank would succeed in protecting depositors when a subsidiary’s failure
pulls down the entire bank is unclear.
The sharp practices in which banks engage
today are risky. Why gamble with their own money if they can gamble with
depositors’ money. The banks led by Citigroup have lobbied hard to overturn the
provision in Dodd-Frank that puts depositors’ money out of their reach as
backup for certain types of troubled financial instruments, with apparently
only Senator Elizabeth Warren and a few others opposing them. Senator Warren is
outgunned as Citigroup controls the US Treasury and the Federal Reserve.
The falling oil price has brought concern
that oil derivatives are in jeopardy. Citigroup has a provision in the omnibus
appropriations bill that shifts the liability for Citigroup’s credit default
swaps to depositors and taxpayers. It was only six years ago that Citigroup was
bailed out to the tune of a half trillion dollars. Already Citigroup is
back for more while nothing whatsoever is done to bail the American people out
of their hardships caused by Citigroup and the other financial gangsters.
What we are experiencing is not a repeat
of the past. The ability or, rather, the audacity of the US government itself
to manipulate the major financial markets is new. Can this new trend
continue? The government is supposed to be the enforcer of laws against
market manipulation but is itself manipulating the markets.
Governments and economists take their hats
off to free markets. Yet, the markets are rigged, not free. How
long can stocks stay up in a lackluster or declining economy? How long can
bonds pay negative real interest rates when debt and money are rising. How long
can bullion prices be manipulated down when the world’s demand for gold exceeds
the annual production?
For as long as governments and banks can
rig the markets.
The manipulations are dangerous.
Manipulations blow a bigger bubble economy, and manipulations are now being
used by Washington as an act of war by driving down the exchange value of the
Russian ruble.
If every time the stock market tries to
correct and adjust to the real economic situation, the plunge protection team
or some government “stabilization” entity stops the correction by purchasing
S&P futures, unrealistic values are perpetuated.
The price of gold is not determined in the
physical market but in the futures market where contracts are settled in
cash. If every time the demand for gold pushes up the price, the Federal
Reserve or its bullion bank agents dump massive amounts of uncovered futures
contracts in the futures market and drive down the price of gold,
the result is to subsidize the gold
purchases of Russia, China, and India. The artificially low gold price
also artificially inflates the value of the US dollar.
The Federal Reserve’s manipulation of the
bond market has driven bond prices so high that purchasers receive a zero or
negative return on their investment. At the present time fear of the safety of
bank deposits makes people willing to pay a fee in order to have the protection
of the government’s ability to print money in order to redeem its bonds.
A number of events could end the tolerance of zero or negative real interest
rates. The Federal Reserve’s policy has the bond market positioned for
collapse.
The US government, perhaps surprised at
the ease at which all financial markets can be rigged, is now rigging, or
permitting large hedge funds and perhaps George Soros, to drive down the
exchange value of the Russian ruble by massive short-selling in the currency
market. On December 15 the ruble was driven down 19%.
Just as there is no economic reason for
the price of gold to decline in the futures market when the demand for physical
gold is rising, there is no economic reason for the ruble to suddenly loose
much of its exchange value. Unlike the US, which has a massive trade
deficit, Russia has a trade surplus. Unlike the US economy, the Russian
economy has not been offshored. Russia has just completed large energy
and trade deals with China, Turkey, and India.
If economic forces were determining
outcomes, it would be the dollar that is losing exchange value, not the ruble.
The illegal economic sanctions that
Washington has decreed on Russia appear to be doing more harm to Europe and US
energy companies than to Russia. The impact on Russia of the American attack on
the ruble is unclear, as the suppression of the ruble’s value is artificial.
There is a difference between economic
factors causing foreign investors to withdraw their capital from a country,
thereby causing the currency to lose value, and manipulation of a currency’s
value by heavy short-selling in the currency market. The latter can cause
the former also to occur. But the outcome for Russia can be positive.
No country dependent on foreign capital is
sovereign. A country dependent on foreign capital, especially from
enemies seeking to subvert the economy, is subject to destabilizing currency
and economic swings. Russia should self-finance. If Russia needs
foreign capital, Russia should turn to its ally China. China has a stake
in Russia’s strength as part of China’s protection from US aggression, whether
economic or military.
The American attack on the ruble is also
teaching sovereign governments that are not US vassals the extreme cost of
allowing their currencies to trade in currency markets dominated by the
US. China should think twice before it allows full convertibility of its
currency. Of course, the Chinese have a lot of dollar assets with which to
defend their currency from attack, and the sale of the assets and use of the
dollar proceeds to support the yuan could knock down the dollar’s exchange
value and US bond prices and cause US interest rates and inflation to
rise. Still, considering the gangster nature of financial markets in
which the US is the heavy player, a country that permits free trading of its
currency sets itself up for trouble.
The greatest harm that is being done to
the Russian economy is not due to sanctions and the US attack on the ruble.
The greatest harm is being done by Russia’s neoliberal economists.
Neoliberal economics is not merely
incorrect. It is an ideology that fosters US economic imperialism.
By following neoliberal prescriptions, Russian economists are helping
Washington’s attack on the Russian economy.
Apparently, Putin has been sold, along
with his internal enemies the Atlanticist integrationists, on “free trade
globalism.” Globalism destroys the sovereignty of every country except
the world reserve currency country that controls the system.
As Michael Hudson has shown, neoliberal
economics is “junk economics.” But it is also a tool of American
financial imperialism, and this makes neoliberal Russian economists tools of
American imperialism.
The remaining sovereign countries are
slowly learning that Western economic institutions are deceptive and that
placing trust in them is a threat to national sovereignty.
Washington intends to subvert Russia and
to turn Russia into a vassal state like Germany, France, Japan, Canada, Australia,
the UK and Ukraine. If Russia is to survive, Putin must protect Russia
from Western economic institutions and Western trained economists.
It is too risky for the US to take on
Russia militarily. Instead, Washington is using its unique symbiotic
relationship with Western financial institutions to attack an incautious Russia
that foolishly opened itself to Western financial predation.
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