After a one-day reprieve from total meltdown in the financial markets, news media cheerleaders for the most reckless gang of bankers in world history declared the crisis over on Good Friday (with the markets safely closed). Whew, that's a relief. Problem solved. And just in time for baseball season, too, so none of the Banker Boyz have to sell their sky box leases.
Commodities Drop, Rally in Dollar, Stocks Vindicate Bernanke
What
is meant by "meltdown," by the way, since the word is
used so promiscuously by myself and others. I'd define it as the
shock of recognition that many big institutions are worse than
flat broke and are therefore powerless to conduct normal
operations. By "worse than flat broke" I mean they are
so deep in hock that all the accountants who ever lived, in the
life of this universe and several others like it, using the
fastest parallel processing computers ever built, could not keep
up with their compounding accelerating losses (now approaching
the speed of light).
The current vacation from reality
on Wall Street may last a few more days, or even a couple weeks,
but it seems as though a whole flock of black swan events is
circling the sky over Financial-land and is about to blot out
the sun. By black swan, I refer to the concept popularized by Nassim
Nicholas Taleb in his recent book of that name, namely
unexpected events of great power that tend to change the
course of history.
For the moment, with the crisis
"contained," and the Boyz getting ready to air out
their Hampton villas for the coming season, we are once again
primed to be blindsided by potent random events that nobody saw
coming. The trouble is, there are enough potent potential
fiascos already visible on the horizon.
The mortgage fiasco is still just
gathering steam as it moves from the non-payment stage to the
default and repossession level on the grand scale. Even the
political wish to bail out feckless mortgage holders will
stumble on the mammoth clerical task of administrating the
process, especially since we've barely begun to sort out who
actually holds the mortgages after they've been minced into a
fine mirepoix of securities off-loaded onto countless dupe
"investors" ranging from municipal funds in obscure
corners of foreign nations to countless public employee
retirement plans.
No matter how the authorities try to
"nationalize" the sucking chest wound of bad
mortgages, the body of finance will flat-line -- and the
American public will get stuck with the bill from the intensive
care unit. Those who, for some weird reason, continue to pay
their way and meet their obligations, will be none too pleased
to pay for misdeeds of the deadbeats and their banker-lenders.
This portends a taxpayer rebellion, which may translate into a
voter rebellion.
It's too bad the current
presidential candidates have been unable to address the
unfolding economic nightmare. Their collective silence on the
matter suggests that they don't have a clue what to say about
it. As the nightmare plays out and black swans flock in to blot
out the sun, and the hedge funds come a'tumbling down, and more
big banks blunder into black holes, and businesses big and small
across the land shutter up their operations, and the
unemployment rolls swell, and families are thrown out of their
houses even when bailouts are supposed to be saving them (but
the bureaucracy can't get the paperwork done in time) -- well
now, they are going to be one pissed off bunch of people. What
will they do at the conventions? Our outside the conventions?
In the deeper background of all
this is the all-important oil story that nobody in politics or
the media wants to pay attention to. Notice that in the fervid
unloading of assets this past week, as investors dumped their
positions in the commodities markets, the price of oil remained
stubbornly above $100-a-barrel when it was all over on Thursday
afternoon. Well, maybe they'll ratchet down a little further
this week, but the trend line will prove to continue
remorselessly upward in the months ahead.
Peak oil is for real. The supply
can't keep up with global demand, even if it dips in the USA.
And more portentous sub-plots develop in the story every month.
Export rates are falling at a steeper rate than depletion rates.
The exporting nations are not only buying more cars and running
more air-conditioners, they also need to use more energy to lift
the oil they've got out of the ground.
Another sub-plot is the fact that
the equipment used world-wide to drill for oil and recover oil
and move oil around the planet -- all that equipment is now so
old and rusty that it can barely do the job, and it is going to
start failing altogether unless investments are made to replace
it, which nobody is making.
By the way, Americans blame the familiar private
oil companies for all the trouble with oil in their lives --
Exxon-Mobil, Shell, et al -- but they don't seem to know that
oil nationalism is in the driver's seat now. The old private
"majors" are only producing five percent of the
world's oil. The rest is coming from the national companies --
Aramco, Petrobras, Pemex, et blah blah -- and the very
operations of the oil markets are entering a phase of radical
instability as they move away from auctioning their stuff on the
futures markets and start making long-term favored customer
contracts instead.
The bottom line is that high
prices for oil is hardly the only thing America has to worry
about. Pretty soon the US will have to worry about getting the
oil at any price -- meaning, we're in for shortages and supply
disruptions sooner rather than later.
Also unbeknownst to most of
America, the financial markets reflect all this instability
around the basic resource of oil because industrial economies
like ours are set up in such a way that they can't run without
cheap and reliable supplies of the stuff. So the least little
twitter in the reality-based world of peak oil means that
everything to do with money and capital investment will
naturally go batshit, since our expectations for increased
wealth -- i.e. "growth" -- are predicated on the
activities driven by oil.
It will be interesting to see what new
machinations are unveiled this week. Whatever else this
catastrophe is, it's a good show from the cheap seats.

