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This
week we continue to look at what powers the forces of deflation. As I continue
to stress, getting the fundamental question answered correctly is the most
important issue we face going forward. And the problem is that we cannot use
the usual historical comparisons. This week we look at one more factor: bank
lending. I give you a sneak preview of what will be an explosive report from
Institutional Risk Analytics about the problems in the banking sector. Are you
ready for the FDIC to be down as much as $400 billion? This should be an
interesting, if sobering, letter. But
first, Dennis Gartman and Greg Weldon will be joining me next week for another
Conversation with John Mauldin. This is my subscription service where I sit
down with my friends and let you eavesdrop on our conversations (we also
transcribe them). Dennis and Greg are two of the premier traders and data
mavens in the world, and we will be all over the world of commodities,
currencies, and the markets. I can tell you, it will be one exciting conversation
for me. It
won't be too long before it will be time to do another Geopolitical
Conversation with George Friedman. George and I are doing a conversation
quarterly, and right now it is a bonus if you subscribe to Conversations with
John Mauldin, but the plan is to offer it separately for $59. Now, here is the
important part:
all current subscribers and anyone who subscribes now
will receive these Geopolitical Conversations free, as a thank
you. If you have not yet subscribed, you can do so and receive a discount by
clicking the link and typing in the code JM49
to subscribe for $149. This is a large discount from our regular price of $199;
plus, we are including the bonus Geopolitical Conversations that are worth $59.
And now, to the regular letter. Outrageous! - Artificial Deflation! Speaking of deflation, let me
mention something I find totally outrageous. Normally, I actually take up for
the bureaucrats who are stuck with the task of trying to monitor inflation. It
is a tough job, and like Monday-morning quarterbacks, everybody thinks you
should have done it differently. I can understand the rationale for hedonic
measurements, housing rent equivalents, etc., even if I don't agree with them.
You have to set some rules and live with them. But the latest imbroglio is
disgraceful. It seems the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, in the CPI next week, will
treat the subsidy received by those 800,000 car buyers who bought a car in the
"Cash for Clunkers" program as if the price of a car fell by $4,500.
Really? My tax dollars account for nothing? This does several things. It will
decrease the inflation used to adjust the GDP for this quarter. Not the end of
the world, but annoying But what really matters is that the CPI is used to
calculate Social Security increases and interest paid on TIPS. If I tried to defraud one of my
clients using such accounting legerdemain, I would be shut down, sued, and
taken to court (at the minimum) by the host of regulators who look over my
shoulder. And I should be! You don't make such changes in the rules to your own
benefit. But that is what the BLS did. This policy should be overruled
immediately. There are enough deflationary forces in the world without having
to artificially create some more. OK, off the soapbox and onto the banking
system. If You Are in a Hole, Stop Digging! Right
outside my office window I am watching what is to me a visual parable for the
banking crisis that has beset the world. I lease a rather large home in a nice,
quiet neighborhood in Dallas, and moved my office here last year, as we can use
the extra bedrooms and sitting areas. Besides saving a lot (!) of money (always
a good thing), it gives me a ten-second commute as I walk down the hall to the
back of the house. Tiffani and I each save over a month in driving time a year.
That is huge. My
quiet neighborhood changed a few weeks ago. Trying to sleep in the morning
after the Paul McCartney concert, I awoke to find with my bed literally
vibrating. Earthquakes in Texas? No, it seems my neighbor decided he needed a
bigger home, and the first thing to be done was to tear down the old one, which
they did rather efficiently, if not quietly, over the next few days. We
literally had glasses and other items vibrating in the house. Then, after removing a large pecan
tree, they proceeded to dig 25-foot-deep holes (26 of them!) and fill them with
iron and concrete piers on my side of the lot. The plans called for a rather
large basement, and the very experienced builders (exceptionally nice guys)
wanted to make sure the earth did not move, causing my home to have problems.
So for three days I had a very noisy drill literally ten feet away from my
window (I wrote an e-letter during one of those days). Now,
since the other sides of the lot were on a street or backed up to an alley,
they did not put in piers there. No homes to worry about. I did not think much
of it, as these guys had built some of the biggest and nicest homes in the
area. They then proceeded to dig a very large hole, as the basement was
going to be quite expansive. It turns out you have to dig the hole bigger than
the actual size of the basement, since you have to have room to put up forms to
pour concrete, etc. And you have to excavate on an angle. At the end of the
process, most of the lot was slanting downward toward the end of the hole near
the alley. Then
the clouds darkened, and the builders realized we were in for a little rain.
(You can start to guess!) They took precautions and put heavy plastic over the
sides of the hole to keep the sides dry. And then the rains came. Texas rains.
The plastic was pulled from its wall and the street side of the hole began to
literally wash back into the hole as we watched, going all the way back to and
under the sidewalk. The poor builders showed up and began the process of trying
to mitigate the damage, but it had been done and only got worse as it continued
to rain for three days. The next morning I was the temporary owner of lake-front
property. Those piers on my side were starting to be exposed. They
brought in crews for emergency repairs to the sides of the hole, and they really
went after it. What to do then? It seems that the only thing to do was to fill
the hole back up and start all over, only this time putting piers around the
whole property. Which is what they are doing now. But since they had taken all
the original dirt away, they are now having to take dirt from the rest of the
property to fill the hole they will redig later. It
seems to me the banking crisis was somewhat like that. We allowed our banks to
dig a hole, but we only had regulations on one side of the hole, and a
patchwork of systems to shore up the securitizations, credit default swaps, and
the entire shadow banking system. Then
the rains came and the whole thing fell apart. What we are now engaged in is the
process of filling in the hole and putting rules in place to keep the system
intact when we start the next building project. And since we hauled off all the
old dirt or, in the case of the banks, had to write off hundreds of billions of
dollars, we now have to find new dirt to fill in the hole. A very expensive
operation, to say the least. Remind me never to build a house. The Hole in the FDIC And
speaking of holes, let's look at a huge one that is looming at the FDIC.
Institutional Risk Analytics (IRA) is maybe the premier bank-analyst service in
the country. They charge over six figures for their flagship service. Good
friend and Maine fishing buddy Chris Whalen runs the show and was kind enough
to send me some of his new data, which they have not yet released to the
public. You get it here first. (www.institutionalriskanalytics.com)
IRA
takes the data from the FDIC and crunches it with their own set of risk
parameters. While the FDIC has a little over 400 banks on its current "watch"
list, IRA gives 2,256 banks an "F." They project that over 1,000 banks will either
fold or be taken over during the current cycle.
To date in 2009, a total of 92 banks have failed across the country,
compared with 25 for all of 2008, according to the FDIC. 900 more to go. Ouch. 
How
much money are we talking about? The banks rated F have total insured assets of
$4.46 trillion. So far in this cycle banks that have been taken over by the
FDIC are showing losses of 25%! 
Turning to a note from IRA: "An
important point in the analysis is that estimated losses for failed bank
resolutions by the FDIC are running around a quarter of failed bank assets, a
level much higher than between 1980 and 1995, when failures cost an average 11
percent. Our firm's long-held view of the likely loss rate peak for the US
banks in this credit cycle is 2x 1990 loss rates or, as noted by the IMF,
around 4 percent of total loans. Since total loans and leases held by all FDIC-insured
banks was some $7.7 trillion as of Q2 2009, the IMF estimate implies a cumulative
loss of over $300 billion. "If you
start with the internal assumptions used by our firm that roughly half of the
banks currently rated "F" or some 1,000 banks will fail and/or be merged with
another institution and that the loss to the FDIC bank insurance fund will be
approximately 20-25% of total assets, then the cost of these resolutions to the
FDIC through the full credit downturn could be in excess of $400-500 billion.
Keep in mind that in making this alarming estimate we ignore other banks currently
in ratings strata above "F" and that some of these institutions may indeed fail
as well. Also, our overall "worst case" or maximum probable loss ("MPL") for
large US banks above $10 billion in assets is $800 billion through the current
credit cycle." From almost $60 billion last fall,
the FDIC's reserves have been drawn down to only about $10 billion today (after
set-asides), a 16-year low. A quick look at the FDIC's own data shows us how
inadequate those reserves are compared to the deposits they are now insuring.
The FDIC only has about two-tenths of one cent for every dollar of assets it
covers. Look at this chart from my friends at Casey Research. 
The
FDIC can borrow $100 billion in an emergency line of credit, and through 2010 it
can get another $500 billion. But if and when that money is borrowed, it will
have to be paid back. Remember the money that was lost in the savings and loan
crisis 20 years ago? The FDIC had to borrow a mere $15 billion. We are still
paying that 30-year loan back. The FDIC has two options to
replenish its insurance fund in the short run: it can charge banks higher fees
or it can take the more radical step of borrowing from the US Treasury. It has
already levied a "special fee" that garnered over $5 billion. Now, let's hold that thought, as we
will come back to it in a minute. A growing economy requires a
growing credit market. If credit is shrinking it signals a receding economy.
But banks are having to raise capital, and that means many banks are having to
curtail lending. First, let's look at a chart of total bank loans for the last
five years. Notice that there was a big jump in late 2008 as commercial paper
became hard to obtain and businesses hit their credit lines. Since then banks
have been cutting back. 
This
next chart is again total bank loans but goes back to 1947. Notice that loan
growth was relatively smooth with only a few sideways drifts during recessions and
never dropping significantly, as it has in the last year. And the data suggests
that banks intend to keep reducing their loan exposure as they try to increase
their capital (at least the large number of banks that have problems). 
Consumer
credit-card lending is down. Banks have cut their outstanding and unused bank
lines to corporations. I can go on and on, but you get the picture. Remember
the money that the Fed used to purchase toxic assets so that banks could lend?
They are increasingly using that money to buy Fannie and Freddie loans and
banking the interest in an effort to improve their profitability. Why
are they raising capital? Because their loan losses are high and rising. Look
at this chart from Northern Trust. What it shows is consumer loan losses rising,
and so far there is no sign of those losses topping out. The lines are still
going up. The same can be said for real estate loans at commercial banks, which
are now running over 9% delinquent. These are loans the banks kept on their
books. 
Everyone
knows that commercial real estate loans are the next shoe to drop, and
write-offs may be as large as $400 billion. This will force some banks to go
under, but other banks will simply have to absorb the losses. Now,
let's come back to the FDIC. Sheila Bair, who heads the agency, has
emphatically said that the FDIC will not ask Congress for a capital infusion.
That means, as noted above, that the FDIC will have to either use their credit
lines or ask for more "one-time" special-fee contributions. If
the FDIC borrows the money, and it is highly likely they will, they are going
to have to raise the rates they charge member banks for the government backing.
And to pay back $3-400 billion? Rates will have to be raised quite high, on the
very banks struggling to raise capital and make a profit. This
is going to be a huge drain on future profits of US banks for a very long time.
It is going to make it even harder for them to increase their capital – and
they need to. But it has to happen. Zombie banks, those that are bound to fail,
need to be taken out and put into stronger hands so that credit growth can once
again start to rise. But this will not happen overnight. It is going to take
time. While
I am writing about US banks, this is a problem all over the developed world.
Banks that have to raise capital and reduce loans are not growing credit and
are a drag on growth. As credit shrinks it is a large deflationary force. And
that is not even taking into account the implosion of the shadow banking
system. Yes,
we are seeing statistical growth in the economy this quarter and probably the
next. But unemployment is rising and wages and incomes are falling. We will go
into that next week. We
are in for a very poor, jobless recovery, and the risk of falling into a double-dip
recession is quite high. The stock market is pricing in a steep V-shaped recovery
in both GDP and corporate profits. I am not convinced. How Can Just Four Stocks Be 40% of the NYSE Volume? Before
I hit the send button, a brief comment on a very odd market happening. It
appears that recently up to 40% of the volume in the NYSE is in just four low-priced
financial stocks. "According to Reuters, four beaten-up financial companies -
Bank of America (BAC),
Citigroup (C),
Fannie Mae (FNM),
and Freddie Mac (FRE)
- have accounted for upwards of 40 percent of the trading volume on the
New York Stock Exchange to begin this week." The
stocks are basically churning in price. Why is this? There are a lot of
theories, so let me offer one of my own. I think it has a lot to do with flash
trading. As I wrote in a previous letter,
with high-frequency program trading hedge funds and sophisticated brokers can
make as much as 0.5 cents buying and selling a share of stock at breakeven.
Supposedly, the exchanges pay these premiums for adding liquidity. But we are
seeing liquidity in stocks where none is needed. The
SEC announced this week that they are going to look into halting these
programs. Good. It can't come too soon. Allowing certain funds and brokers to
basically front-run the average fund or individual because they have their
servers on the actual trading floor is just wrong. This must stop. And if
program trading is actually driving the volume in these four names, it needs to
be stopped as soon as possible. Candidly, I have no way of knowing
what the true reason for the volume is. Maybe it is something simple and
innocent. But I am deeply suspicious. I doubt it's people buying Bank of
America, which has seen its volume as high as 238 million shares, or Citi at
973 million shares, in ONE day! This for stocks that are severely financially
impaired? Someone needs to be on top of this. As in Monday. New Orleans and a Mauldin Migration to Europe Today Tiffani finished using
960,000 of my American Airline miles to buy tickets for my seven kids, three of
their spouses, one toddler, and three babies (two of whom are not yet here) to
Paris, where the entire clan will wander down through France to northern Italy
and end up in Rome next June. I am giving those in the area fair warning.
Actually, it sounds like a very fun adventure. I have been to part of that
area, and I am really looking forward to showing the kids castles, beaches, and
art. And pizza in Rome! I celebrate my 60th birthday the
first weekend of October, then fly to New Orleans to be at the annual New
Orleans Conference, October 8-11. The speaker line-up is better than ever. I
find this to be one of the best conferences I go to very year. I have been
attending on and off for over 25 years. You should think about this one.
http://www.neworleansconference.com/speaker-eblast-JohnMauldin/ Then I will spend the next weekend
in Detroit, then probably go to New York, then Philadelphia for a CMG
conference October 20, then down to Houston, over to Orlando, stop to change
clothes and pack at home, and then fly off on a whirlwind trip to Argentina,
Brazil, and Uruguay, speaking at a series of CFA conferences. Denver and
Orlando in mid-November, and nothing else so far. Switzerland and London in
January. It's
time to hit the send button. Have a great week, and take your banker to lunch –
he needs a friend (and let him have the bill!). Your never wanting to build a home analyst,
 John Mauldin
John@FrontlineThoughts.com
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