I
receive a lot of hate mail from loyal Barrick shareholders
accusing me of “plunging my little dagger into Barrick’s
back out of spite”. I can assure readers that my time is more
precious than wasting it on petty revenge or indulging in Schadenfreude**.
I am not trying to make Barrick appear smaller than it is. In
fact, I am suggesting that Barrick is the modern Atlas carrying
the entire derivatives market, currently estimated at $300
trillion, on its shoulders. The global derivatives market and
Barrick’s ‘hedging’ program stand or fall together. In
particular when Altas shrugged, there would be an earthquake
measuring ten on the Richter-scale, and the derivatives market
would go down the drain causing unprecedented economic pain in
the world through the destruction of bond, stock, and real
estate values.
Speculation
versus
gambling
It
is amazing that the exploding derivatives monster finds
apologists in the “free market” camp. This monster has been
called “the most toxic element of the financial markets
today” (Howard Davies, Chairman, U.K. Financial Services
Authority), “a financial weapon of mass destruction carrying
dangers that, while now latent, are potentially lethal”
(Warren Buffett). Yet if you read the opinion of some people
associated with the the Ludwig von Mises Institute and the Lew
Rockwell website, then you get the impression that the $300
trillion derivatives monster is benign, even ingenuous, if
misunderstood and unfairly maligned. Derivatives are good
because they allow banks, industrial companies, and private
individuals to shift risk to speculators who are happy to
shoulder it. Risk people are ill-equipped to deal with is
“traded away” so that they “can focus on tackling tasks in
areas in which they specialize”. A typical example is an
import/export company using foreign exchange derivatives to
neutralize risks inherent in buying and selling abroad due to
the fluctuation of the exchange rate. Another example is
provided by people carrying a variable-rate mortgage, who are
allowed to switch to a fixed-rate mortgage when they expect a
rise in interest rates. The free market helps those who help
themselves. This is what ‘division of labor’ is all about,
the source of economic efficiency of which Adam Smith spoke.
This apology is rather grotesque. It ignores the fact
that gyrating foreign exchange and interest rates are far from
being free market institutions. They were created by the
government in order to strangle the free market. These rates
were stable under the gold standard. It is one thing to shift
risks created
by nature
to the shoulders of speculators who are better able to deal with
them, for example, in the case of the futures markets for
agricultures products. It is another thing if the risks have
been created
by men
(read: the government). In the former case speculation has a
legitimate role; in the latter, the word ‘speculation’ is a
misnomer. Dealing with risks created by man is not speculation.
It is gambling.
Failure to make this distinction is to play into the hands of
the enemies of the free market. They suggest that speculation in
foreign exchange and interest rate futures has a
‘stabilizing’ effect on these rates, no less than
speculation in grain futures has on grain prices. The message is
that there is nothing to worry about. The regime of irredeemable
currency is here to stay and it will create its own institutions
to confront economic problems as they come along.
The
carry trade
This
message is false. Speculation in foreign exchange and interest
rates does
not
have a stabilizing effect. As in the casino, more bets do not
subdue the gambling spirit; rather, it will heighten it.
Moreover, not all derivatives have arisen out of ‘risk
management’. An unknown but apparently very large part takes
its origin in the ‘carry trade’, the practice of creating
something out of nothing (more accurately described,
clandestinely siphoning off value from the balance sheet of the
producing sector and transfer it to that of the financial
sector). It consists of borrowing at a low and investing the
proceeds at a high rate of interest. For example, consider the
yen carry-trade involving the sale of high-priced Japanese bonds
and the purchase of cheap U.S. bonds with the proceeds, thus
swapping a 2 percent per annum outlay for a 5 percent per annum
income. Since it takes a long time for the interest rate spread
between the U.S. and Japan to close, pyramiding can be continued
indefinitely. It cannot be denied that the carry trade adds
materially to the $215 trillion ‘notional’ value of the Bond
Derivatives Tower of Babel.
Official
check-kiting
Government
bonds today are not a legitimate instrument of saving as gold
bonds of yesteryear were. They are supposed to have value
because they are payable in FR notes at maturity. But what gives
value to the FR notes? Why, it is the fact that they are
liabilities of the issuing FR bank, backed by assets such as
government bonds. Thus, then, there is an official check-kiting
between the US Treasury and the Federal Reserve. The former
issues bonds with which FR notes are backed; the latter issues
notes used to pay off the bonds at maturity. This is no free
market. It is a parody of the free market or worse. It is a
charade designed to fool and defraud people. In effect the
government bond is irredeemable, no less than the FR note.
If the bond appears to have value it is solely because
bond speculators are, for
the time being,
willing to bet that producers will continue to accept it in
exchange for real goods and services, and that there will be a
demand for the notes by taxpayers anxious to pay their taxes.
But don’t take this willingness for granted. Bond speculators
are not running a charity to bail out profligate and bankrupt
governments. If, in their judgment, too many of those bonds are
owned by foreigners who are not subject to the taxing authority
of the U.S. government, or the producers of crude oil, for
example, are increasingly reluctant to accept FR credit in
payment, then bond speculators will, without prior notice,
withdraw their bets -- with fatal consequences to the fortunes
of Treasury obligations. Note that the term “bond
speculator” covers big-league banks and hedge funds with bond
positions running into trillions.
Whitewashing illegitimate derivatives using free market
rhetoric will not legitimize them. To sing a song of praise of
‘financial innovations’ designed to justify and perpetuate
official check-kiting is not fitting for a defender of the free
market.
Big
Bang
It
was not until 1973 that the Chicago Board of Trade opened its
Options Exchange to trade options on financial futures marking
Big Bang, the beginning of the explosive growth of the
derivatives market. Notice the coincidence of Big Bang with the
U.S. government’s default on its international gold
obligations. Incidentally, the same year marked the explosion of
volatility in commodity prices as well.
The derivatives market grew from zero to $865 billion
during the 15 years from 1972 to 1987. During the next 15 years,
from 1987 to 2002, it grew to $100 trillion,
or more than 100-fold.
It trebles on average every four years. The latest report of the
Bank for International Settlements states that the gross market
value of amounts outstanding in the over-the-counter derivatives
markets at the end of December, 2005, was $285 trillion, of
which the largest component, the interest-rate derivatives
contracts was $215 trillion.
The amazing thing is that the total value of bonds
outstanding world-wide is estimated at only $45 trillion. How
can you write contracts to buy bonds, five times greater in
amount than all the bonds in existence? Does this not give the
lie to the word ‘derivatives’, meaning that these contracts
‘derive’ their value from the underlying assets? What kind
of ‘musical chairs’ game is this? When the music stops, what
will happen to those who are out of luck and hold the bag?
‘Telescope
effect’
Defenders
of the derivatives market insist that its growth is quite
benign. Malignancy is explained away by the need of banks and
other financial institutions, as well as industrial
corporations, to hedge their interest-rate risk-exposure. The
word ‘notional’ was introduced to cover up dangers involved
in constructing this unprecedented Tower of Babel. The word
means ‘fictional’, or ‘not having a real
existence’. The idea is that behind the growth of the
derivatives markets there is an increasing chain of swaps as
companies are switching their debt-servicing back-and-forth
between fixed-rate and fluctuating-rate income streams. There is
nothing to worry about that, the defenders of this Ponzi-scheme
say, because of the ‘telescope effect’ operating on
income-stream swaps. The notional value of swaps may appear very
large and seems to be growing very fast. But all this is an
optical illusion, they say, because swapped payment-streams net
out or cancel. No party to the contract demands that
non-existent bonds be delivered upon expiry.
One defender takes the example of a company wishing to
change its floating-rate loan into a fixed rate loan because it
expects that interest rates will rise. It could renegotiate the
loan with lenders, or it could retire the debt and reissue a new
fixed-rate debt. However, these are expensive maneuvers. It is
cheaper to find a counter-party who will take over the
floating-rate payments for a consideration, while the company
will make fixed-rate payments to it. The two swap. They do not
swap the actual underlying bonds. They swap income-streams
represented by the semi-annual interest-payments.
Conversely, if interest rates are expected to fall, then
the company will want to change its fixed back into a
floating-rate loan.
Dumping
non-existent bonds
This
argument ignores the problem of what happens in a panic when
interest rates take off and bond values start falling like a
rock. Then everybody wants to dump the obligation of making
floating payments, but there will be no counter-party to assume
it. An additional
criticism is that the ‘telescope effect’ operates on the
string of payment-stream swaps only if made between the same two
parties, which is hardly ever the case. In general, the market
value of the right to receive the fixed payment stream does not
‘telescope’. Every swap adds the value of the underlying
bond to the balance sheet of one party or the other, without the
benefit of the ‘telescope effect’. Yes, there is pyramiding
of derivatives. It is foolish to think that ‘derivatives’
will retain their value when the bonds from which this value is
supposed to have been ‘derived’ have lost theirs.
A third criticism concerns the fact that the bond and
gold derivatives markets are interdependent. As in the former
the long-interest and in the latter the short-interest gets
bloated, disequilibrium keeps growing. It will ultimately act as
a trigger. This will be more fully explored in Part 2.
In the absence of derivatives the panic would run its
course and bond values, having absorbed the loss, would
eventually stabilize at a lower level. In 1980 the runaway train
could still be stopped before it derailed. But with a
derivatives market of the present size such a panic would be
tantamount to a stampede to sell up to $200 trillion worth of
bonds which nobody wanted to buy. Nothing could stop this
runaway train. The credit of the U.S. government would be
ruined.
The problem is not that delivery of non-existent bonds is
expected at the maturity of contract. The
problem is that there will be an irresistible run to dump
non-existent bonds when the underlying bond starts losing value
precipitously,
that is, when interest rates repeat or surpass their 1979-80
performance of entering stratosphere. In that episode, it will
be recalled, the largest American banks became insolvent as the
value of bonds in their portfolios collapsed, making huge holes
in the balance sheet.
Fate
of Sodom and Gomorrah
What
is surprising is not that it could happen. Government bonds are
the tangible result of check-kiting pretending that ‘NSF’
checks have value. For a time people accept them as such but
sooner or later the truth will dawn on them. At that point the
value of bonds, whether fixed or floating rate, is doomed and
will be wiped out like the biblical towns of Sodom and Gomorrah
have been.
What is surprising is that economists, among them
free-market protagonists, fail to see in the derivatives market
and in its unlimited exponential and cancerous growth the very
mechanism, the fire and brimstone ordained by God that, in the
fullness of times, will annihilate Sodom and Gomorrah. Instead,
they sing a praise of “market innovation”, of “economic
efficiency”, of the “Wonderful Wizard of Risk Control”,
and of the “neutrality and usefulness of derivatives”, when
they should sound the alarm and forewarn people of the impending
catastrophe.
Gold
derivatives
The
latest report of the Bank for International Settlements on the
over-the-counter derivatives of major banks and dealers in the
G-10 countries for the period ending December 31, 2005, lists
the total notional value of all gold derivatives outstanding as
$334 billion at year-end, an increase $46 billion from $288
billion at midyear. Gold available for delivery has not
increased nearly at this rate and the total value of outstanding
gold derivatives exceeds the value of gold available for
delivery by a large and increasing factor. Clearly,
there is no ‘telescope effect’ at work here.
It is no coincidence that the amount of outstanding
contracts is so much larger than the amount of underlying
assets, both in the case of gold and bond derivatives. The
dynamics of the growth of the derivatives market is hardly
spontaneous. Here is the reason why.
The government has the following desiderata:
(1) to have a floor
below the bond price;
(2) to have a ceiling
above the gold price.
Indeed,
without such a floor and ceiling, the bluffing epitomized by
check-kiting could be called, and the international monetary
system would unravel.
The
lure of risk-free profits
To
promote these desiderata, the bond and the gold markets are
manipulated. It is true that the Treasury and the Federal
Reserve prefer not to play a direct role in it. Speculators are
induced to do it for them through
the lure of risk-free profits.
Simply put, the role of the derivatives market is to make
phantom bonds available to buy, and phantom gold available to
sell, for the benefit of speculators. It is no problem to make
speculators want to buy phantom bonds. They have the incentives.
They know that the Federal Reserve is going to buy, rain or shine.
This offers a risk-free opportunity for profits. All the
speculators have to do is to pre-empt Federal Reserve purchases,
that is, to
buy
beforehand.
So let them.
The tricky part is how to make speculators want to sell
phantom gold. This problem is solved by setting up a gold mine as
a front, beefing it up as the world’s largest gold-mining
concern, and letting it introduce a phony hedge plan. Let’s call
it Sarrick Gold. The hedge plan of Sarrick calls for selling but
never buying gold
forward.
The plan is then promoted as an essential ‘risk-management’
tool for the company, which is supposed to ‘stabilize
revenues’ and even enhance them. It is alleged that forward
selling also serves ‘to satisfy the banks that finance
Sarrick’s mining operations’. Other hare-brained gold mining
companies chime in: “Me too! Me too!”
But since no forward purchases complement forward sales (as
they should if it were an honest-to-goodness hedging program),
speculators abandon their traditional spot on long side of the
market, and make the short side their haunt. They now have a
risk-free opportunity for profits in short-selling gold.
Speculators know that Sarrick is going to sell whenever the gold
price is itching to rise. All they have to do is to pre-empt
Sarrick’s sales, that is,
to sell beforehand. So
let them.
The
lore
of risk-free profits
You
don’t have to go any further than that to explain the inordinate
size of the derivatives markets in bonds and gold, and their
cancerous growth. It is uninhibited pyramiding, pure and simple.
Speculators pyramid on the long side of the bond derivatives
market; and they pyramid on the short side of the gold derivatives
market. In Part 2 we shall see that, far from supporting one
another, the two activities tilt the imbalance more and more away
from equilibrium so that, eventually, the pyramids will topple.
The gold standard rules out risk-free profits and unlimited
pyramiding. That is its main excellence. The regime of
irredeemable currency makes risk-free profits and unlimited
pyramiding possible. That is the main reason that it will
self-destruct in due course through the crash of the Derivatives
Tower of Babel.***
To recapitulate, apologists suggest that the derivatives
market is largely due to prudent risk-management, in the form of
swaps between fixed and floating-rate payment-streams. Other
contributing factors can be neglected. At any rate, there is
nothing to worry about: payments streams are netted out and will
stay manageable.
I emphatically disagree. I argue that the bulk of the
derivatives market is due to positions motivated by the lure of
risk-free profits. The lure is planted by the Treasury and the
Federal Reserve. In particular, there is no limit to pyramiding
for bonds on the long and for gold on the short side of the
market, since there is no limit to human greed and thirst for
power. This is not a condemnation of the individual speculator
who, like everyone else, is trying to eke out a living. He is not
responsible for bringing about false incentives. The
responsibility for that rests squarely with the government.
In the second and concluding part I shall draw attention to
the fact that the bond and gold derivatives markets are
interdependent: the former is subordinate to the latter. Gold
plays a pivotal role in the operation of the bond market in terms
of ‘Gibson’s Paradox’. Default in gold derivatives will
bring about the collapse of bond derivatives, with incalculable
consequences to human welfare.
Endnotes
* With
apologies to Ayn Rand, author of Atlas
Shrugged.
**
Schadenfreude
is German, meaning the pleasure felt over other’s misfortunes.
*** Derivatives per
se are
not necessarily evil. Futures markets functioned quite well during
the gold standard. It is conceivable that a sophisticated
derivatives market would function optimally again in a world
with a working gold standard. Agents may partake in
derivatives for insurance against risks created by nature. Also,
speculators may use derivatives to offer liquidity services
against such natural risks.

© 2006 Antal E.
Fekete
Professor Emeritus, Memorial University of Newfoundland
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