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William K. Black

William K. Black

Posted: November 17, 2010 10:28 AM

The Celtic Chimera

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I'm writing from the scene of the first Kilkenomics Festival, which brings together finance experts and professional comics to try to answer the public's questions about why the world is suffering recurrent, intensifying financial crises, why Ireland has gone to the heights and crashed spectacularly, and what options does it have that other nations in crisis have used successfully.

David McWilliams, an Irish economist, and Richard Cook the man that started the Kilkenny comedy festival (Cat Laughs) decided to create an economics festival with sessions run by professional comedians questioning the economists. This is an utterly bizarre idea, so I accepted immediately. It turns out that professional Irish comics are every bit as quick and well read as you would have guessed by extrapolating from what you see on Jon Stewart's Daily Show. (Irish angst and Jewish angst bear a strong resemblance.) There's a long European tradition of the "fool" being able to mock the pretentious and powerful and bring out the truth. Talking to the comics and answering their questions forces us to speak clearly and bluntly - or be skewered. The public love it (both parts - getting clear answers to their questions or watching the comics skewer us) and the roughly 20 events have been sold out.

Ireland was known as the "Celtic Tiger." It shot to economic fame. From the poor man of Northern Europe, it was transformed into a nation with a reported per capita GDP equivalent to that of the United States. The old, true, and painful joke: "What's Ireland leading export? (Answer: "the Irish") was reversed as people began to move to Ireland.

Unfortunately, the Celtic Tiger was ultimately revealed to be a Celtic Chimera. Irish bank supervision was so weak and Ireland's banks so wild and crazy that the New York Times called Ireland the new "Wild West." Ireland's largest banks hyper-inflated twin bubbles in commercial and residential real estate. They grew massively. Fortunately, Lehman failed and the Irish banks' ability to grow collapsed - which meant that the bubbles imploded in late 2008. Had it not done so, the Irish banks would have continued their staggering growth and caused almost incomprehensible losses (relative to the size of the Irish economy) when the (vastly larger) bubbles finally collapsed.

Anglo Irish Bank was merely the worst an awful collection of large Irish bank. The Irish entity disposing of the Irish banks' bad assets is now estimating 70% losses on Anglo's (copious) bad assets. That percentage loss estimate is, bizarrely, mandated to be as of a year ago even though property values have fallen significantly since that date and are expected to continue to decline next year. Non-linear increases in losses are common when a bubble hyper-inflates. Therefore, any estimate of the increased losses that would have resulted had the collapse of the Irish bubbles come two years later should assume percentage losses on the new assets of well above 75%. The size of Irish bank losses that the Irish government claims its taxpayers should bear is contested, but has a lower bound of roughly 60 billion Euros. Had Dick Fuld's avaricious heart not led to Lehman's collapse, or had Treasury bailed out Lehman and prevented (delayed) its failure, Ireland (and Iceland) would have collapsed as nations. If their banks had continued their growth for even two more years, Ireland and Iceland's per capita debts would have been so staggering (in the range of $50,000) that they would have sparked massive emigration, which would have pushed the per capita debt even higher. Both nations would now be occupied almost entirely by pensioners and non-nationals.

The economists and finance practitioners that presented at the Kilkenomics Festival came from diverse streams of economic and political views. They, nevertheless, agreed on three points about the Irish crisis: (1) it was insane for the Irish government to provide and extend unlimited financial guarantees of virtually all debts of the failed Irish banks, (2) the Irish government had transformed a private banking crisis into a sovereign debt and budgetary crisis that imperiled Ireland's recovery from the economic crisis and gravely stressed the EU and the Euro, and (3) that either the EU or IMF would bail out Ireland or Ireland would default.

I'm going to write a series of columns about what I've learned by examining the Irish and Icelandic crises. I urge readers to take these two small islands' experience seriously for at least five reasons. First, one of the key analytical issues has long been which flashpoint would spark the next stage in the ongoing, global financial crises. The leading candidates have been the EU periphery and the collapse of the still-growing Chinese bubbles. (Of course, they may occur simultaneously or the first crisis may quickly trigger the second.) Europe now looks like it will win the "next crisis" race. (I believe that the European Union (EU) is rich enough to paper over the crisis for several years, but European politics could scuttle that effort.

Second, the EU is set up in a fashion that creates strong, perverse incentives for future financial crises. Third, the EU is set up in a fashion that is periodically strongly criminogenic in particular nations. These criminogenic environments will feed future epidemics of "accounting control fraud" -- the leading cause of severe financial crises. Massive amounts of European money will move to fund these frauds, which will cause financial bubbles to hyper-inflate and produce catastrophic banking losses and severe recessions.

Fourth, the EU is set up in a manner that makes it extremely difficult (and expensive) to attempt to respond to the severe recessions and debt crises that these perverse incentives generate. The EU "channels" IMF's "let's turn a financial crisis into a crisis of the real economy" strategy.

Fifth, the Irish government's response to their epidemic of fraudulent lending has been so exquisitely awful that it (A) demonstrates the catastrophic costs of deregulation, desupervision, and deifying finance, and (B) allows one to illustrate why it is essential to combine good analytics, skepticism, courage, and integrity in responding to such epidemics.

One of the independent reports that the Irish government commissioned about the banking crisis was co-authored by Professor Karl Whelan of University College Dublin. That report has received moderate attention and I will discuss it in more detail in future posts. Professor Whelan, however, has provided a far more candid briefing paper for the European Parliament: "The Future for Eurozone Financial Stability Policy" (September 2010). His briefing paper makes clear why there will be an EU bailout of the Irish banks. One of his key conclusions is that sovereign defaults by EU nations are likely and that the EU must prepare now to deal with them. That fundamental candor is matched by his explanation for why the EU created a bailout fund earlier in 2010.

"While the public discussion of this decision has largely focused on the idea that the agreement was aimed at preserving the Euro as the common currency, the truth was more prosaic: The European banking system was already in a fragile state and would not have coped with a series of sovereign defaults. The need to maintain financial stability, specifically banking sector stability, was what prompted the unprecedented announcement of the bailout funds."

"The health of the European banking system remains in question. The most likely trigger for sovereign defaults in the next few years is a prolonged period of slow growth or perhaps a double-dip recession."

Whelan is trying to make clear the great underreported fact of the Irish banking crisis -- the broader EU banking crisis. (And, while Whelan does not emphasize this point, his discussion inherently means that there was a horrific failure of EU banking regulation.) He explains that the European "stress tests" were farcical because they assumed no sovereign defaults could occur and ignored all market value losses on the banks' "held for investment" exposures to sovereign risk. He cites the OECD study that discussed these massive loss exposures. The OECD emphasized that the losses were lumpy.

"Large cross-border exposures (defined as an exposure above 5% of Tier 1 capital) to Greece are present for Germany, France, Belgium (all with systemically important banks), Cyprus and Portugal. Large exposures to Portugal are present in Germany and Belgium; to Spain in Germany and Belgium; to Italy in Germany, France, Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Austria and Portugal; and to Ireland in Germany and Cyprus."

The alert reader will have noted the nation whose banks have large, unrecognized losses on debt among each of the PIIGS -- Germany. German banks acted like drunken "Girls Gone Wild" as soon as they were approached by a foreign borrower. Germany's Bank Gone Wild were hooked on yield -- for a trivial increase in yield, without any meaningful due diligence, they made massive unsecured loans to many of the most fraudulent borrowers throughout Europe. Borrowers engaged in control fraud have two great attractions for bankers gone wild -- they typically report extreme profitability (which makes them appear to be creditworthy to the credulous) and they are willing to promise to pay higher interest rates). Their promises, of course, have all the reliability of the producers' of "Girls Gone Wild" promises that the girls will be able to launch a film career if they shed their clothes.

Where were the German banking regulators? They seem to have believed that "What happens in Vegas (Dublin) stays in Vegas (Dublin)." Instead, their German banks came back from their riotous holidays in the PIIGS with BTDs (bank transmitted diseases). The German banks' regulators continue to let them hide the embarrassing losses they picked up on holiday, but that cover up will collapse if any of the PIIGS default. The PIIGS will default if the EU does not bail them out, so there will be a bail out even though the German taxpayers hate to fund bailouts.

All of this should put a very different interpretation on Chancellor Merkel's insistence on unsecured creditors suffering losses when they lend to banks that fail. She has argued that it is essential that they suffer losses so that they will have the proper incentives to provide effective "private market discipline" and that it is fair that they suffer losses given the premium yields they received and their lack of due diligence. German banks would be the primary losers under her proposal, so her position is remarkable. She is apparently disgusted with the German "banks gone wild" that were the largest funders of the accounting control frauds that drove several of the epicenters of the European financial crises and helped push Europe into the Great Recession.

This post originally appeared at Benzinga.

 
 
 
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Linda from Deerfield
Paying attention
08:53 PM on 11/25/2010
Thank you. I'm really late reading this, but I'm grateful because it does more than anything else I've read to clarify why contagion is a European concern. Others mention nothing about the "wild" intertwined bank investments, but just tend to suggest contagion as though it is something that stems from fright at the sight of others' troubles.
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WorldisMorphing
Jaded Iconoclast ...
11:19 AM on 11/20/2010
Good Morning to all.
Here's a little gem of an interview that addresses the underlying issue with the right perspective I think...enjoy:

http://www­.youtube.c­om/watch?v­=8JCncJhU7­eQ
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12:59 PM on 11/19/2010
Let he banks fail, residents of Ireland should look at the lack of success from the U.S. plan to bailout banks. The banks will pay own debt with little or no support to the citizens that are stuck with the bill through taxes. If the economy is inevitable and dollars to rescue corporate will only be returned back to the top executives don’t do it. They will sit on the money, just look at the reinvestment or lack of the U.S. companies have withheld.
For a change stand up to bad leadership on top, if the conditions are the same in the end for struggling taxpayers, no jobs, austerity tax measures that further decline in personal income, let them fail. Banks in the U.S. will suffer as well and pass it along to the consumer but that should be an obvious wake-up call.

Basically we are told if you do not support a bailout we will turn on you and conditions will get worse, really?
How could they? If I only have little today bailing out the banks will only provide even less at a later date while of course top banking executives feel no pain. How does that prevent an attitude shift for nefarious actions in the future?
01:37 AM on 11/19/2010
It's too bad that auditors and the auditing profession get so little coverage in the media
and in public education. Here in Canada Auditor General Sheila Fraser is probably
one of the most respected Federal officials. Are there ways to minimize the temptation
of an audit firm to turn a blind eye on the companies it audits?

Structural changes, tough sanctions for crooked auditors, Sarbanes-Oxley and more,
public education?
11:59 AM on 11/18/2010
Just a little other aspect: the ex boss of Anglo Irish Bank, the biggest problem, went to the
US after his dismissal in Ireland, from the bank.
There he declared bankruptcy not so long ago:
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/breaking/2010/1014/breaking54.html

He might face extradition form the USA in case he is going to be prosecuted.
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/breaking/2010/1014/breaking54.html
So far not ONE of the bankers involved were prosecuted, not one of them was yet
charged with fraud, etc.. That's one thing driving people mad and is indeed a scandal
of its own.
11:31 AM on 11/18/2010
I think the scariest message that this article is trying to send is that German taxpayers will be getting stuck bailing out the rest of Europe.  I wonder what the German "tea party" will think about this.  I hope it doesn't give the German "tea party" an opportunity to resurrect itself through the anger of German taxpayers.
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Indigo1941
Time Traveler
11:13 AM on 11/18/2010
All that and prices don't come down. A touristic week in Dublin costs more than two weeks in Cairo with the Valley of the Kings thrown in for good measure. I'd enjoy a visit to the ancestral homeland but not when it costs more than an on-site tour of Egytian antiquities.
Celtic Tiger? Celtic Chimera? I calls it a Celtic (k)Not.
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Lorianne
ama vitam
12:33 AM on 11/18/2010
Euro crisis: Britain needs to prepare for an economic dark age next door
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/columnists/simonheffer/8138669/Euro-crisis-Britain-needs-to-prepare-for-an-economic-dark-age-next-door.html
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themodernleader
10:23 PM on 11/17/2010
    Professor William K. Black is one of the few authorities who understands the enormity of the woes and suffering let loose by unregulated banking and their corrupt bankers.  Americans are damned fools for ignoring his entreaties and remedies.
05:02 PM on 11/17/2010
Another great article from Bill Black. And this issue can be applied in the U.S.. The bottom line is that all these countries have monetary systems based on fractional reserve lending. The banks used way too much leverage to give out way too much unsecured loans to drive profitability and pay bigger bonuses. And when, inevitably, the bubble bursts, all the losses go back tot the taxpayers of the respective countries because, to do otherwise, risks a failure of the banking system. But the banking systems will inevitably fail under the weight of too much debt relative to GDP. Better to deal with it now by re-structuring the debt and putting the failing banks through a government resolution process. Wipe out their equity, re-structure their debt and sell off the pieces. And then, going forward, require banks keep 100% reserves against all unsecured lending so they can't go crazy again.

It's clear how much hold the banks have on the politicians that this hasn't happened yet. Instead, they keep throwing the taxpayers under the debt bus. It's madness.
outnow
Ban the bomb
10:09 PM on 11/17/2010
Another type of control fraud by the financial elites; throw the taxpayers and the governments under the bus to save their risky banking system once again. The bankers will then be free to bottom scavage hard assets while the middle class is absorbed by the lower class into a two class system know as fuedalism.

Instead of devine right of Kings we have the devine right of fractional reserve artists. The free market is the official state religion. This is a deleveraging crisis than cannot be papered over I'm afraid. The banks were insolvent but were deemed to big to be allowed to fail.
04:56 PM on 11/17/2010
I spent enough time there before the crash to see it was inevitable.The main political party was openly corrupt and the PM was found literally with brown bags full of money,he was semi literate and easily manipulated,but smart enough to leave before the shit hit.The main reason the IMF is not welcome is that everyone who works for the government is massively overpaid and would be too obvious a target for the knife.The EU will not bail out a nation where all the pols,civil servants ,health workers ,power workers and transportation workers earn about twice what they do in mainland Europe.
02:31 PM on 11/17/2010
WHERE THE HELL CAN I VIEW THIS !!??
I'd love to see Prof Black, Peter Schiff, and the others at this event.
This should be posted someplace soon, I hope another HuffoPo article or notice is posted when the event is viewable on youtube or similar.
When I was a kid, something like this would've been covered by PBS.
That network isn't what it used to be, nothing much is.
01:49 PM on 11/17/2010
The seemingly obvious fact that has been omitted in the rise of the radical deregulation gospel is that responsibility grows with the number of people ones decisions affect, and with the severity of impacts. You can go home and drink yourself insensible and it “aint nobody’s business” as the old song says. If you decide to drink and drive a car, or if you are drunk at the wheel of a passenger ship, responsibility, and therefore society’s right to impose behavioral boundaries, increases. Regulation has downsides of its own, so you want to be smart about it, but after all that has happened, who would deny the need to proscribe practices that risk other’s fortunes without their consent? And yet they do and continue to be taken seriously.
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Paul Houston
British and a London resident
12:35 PM on 11/17/2010
The rumours about Ireland's banks have been going on for years in the City of London and other European financial centres. They have always had lax controls in regarding their money laundering and KYC. A colleague of mine was moving back to Dublin after working in Frankfurt for a number of years and wanted to transfer her savings out of Germany, her German bank said it would be no problem, then she told them the money was to be transferred to Ireland, they immediately demanded to see all her proof of income for the time she was in Germany. Add to that tax evasion is rife in Ireland. When Ireland switched over to the Euro huge numbers of red fifty pound notes suddenly appeared for conversion, prior to that you hardly ever seen them.
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dbmetzger
12:02 PM on 11/17/2010
Ireland Insists No Bailout Needed
While the Irish government says it welcomes any efforts to shore up a troubled banking sector, it still insists it doesn't need a bailout. The discussion comes as European finance ministers are gathering in Brussels amidst talk of an EU "survival crisis. http://www.newslook.com/videos/266886-ireland-insists-no-bailout-needed?autoplay=true
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TheMediaRanger
Pull over, buddy, let's see your poetic license
01:58 PM on 11/17/2010
Ireland has based that claim on a reserve that appears solid for the next 6 months or so. The EU, apparently, doesn't want to be turn an intermediate term plan into a short term game of No Choice.
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Seaniebhoy
03:46 PM on 11/17/2010
It could also be posturing on the part of the Irish...if Dublin accepts a bailout then the EU or IMF would likely want some measure of control over finances and spending...which means a possible threat to cornerstone social programs like the health service...howver if Dublin and Leinster House threaten to let the Euro crash....a lot more than Ireland will be affected...so it could be that they are playing chicken in order to get assurances Brussles will not try to run the Finance Ministry
11:27 AM on 11/18/2010
Greece said the same thing before they were bailed out.