Here Comes The GFC... Again

 | Mar 27, 2016 05:08AM ET

The origins of the GFC are more or less understood. The American consumer, tipsy at first, increasingly drunk and finally blind drunk, began throwing up. The drink: debt.

Enormous amounts of debt, secured against ever-rising home values, used to finance increased consumption (with historically-low interest rates engineered by central banks, terrified of the last boom ending) caused a painful reversion to the mean.

Financial alchemists converted the tidal wave of mortgages into exotic securities throwing off yield, and this is where the perversity of a centralized system showed it’s true colors.

Central bank overlords had (and continue to) destroyed yield and so, unsurprisingly, it is yield which every investor desperately chases. Selling yield in a yield-starved world is like selling crack to junkies. Global investors slurped back high-yield debt instruments like a 21-year-old college student at a beer pong party.

The assets allowed investment banks to finance a massive increase in short-term commercial lending. The financially illiterate, led by Greenspan at the time, applauded the sophistication of the financial system… oblivious, stupid, or simply turning a blind eye to what was shadow banking at its finest.

The Asian crisis highlighted the inter-connectivity of the global financial system, but the core of the system remained relatively unscathed - the core being the US and Europe. Lehman’s failure set off the worst global economic downturn since the great depression, and brought a new dynamic to the understanding of just how interconnected the global financial system had become.

This inter-connectivity became the very vector greasing the wheels of contagion, as losses cascaded through the tangled web of derivatives, counterparties and counterparties to counterparties. The world woke up to the fact that the underwriting of the assets underpinning the US housing market were now sitting on balance sheets halfway across the world at values unknown. Contagion no longer stopped at borders.

Governments stepped in to secure and guarantee banks, absorbing massive losses, forcing nationalization and pouring the foundations for the next crisis.

Today the implications and knock-on effects of this crisis are still being felt, and yet the lessons and the understanding of how and why this took place seem to be understood by only a few. Pareto’s law stands tall and strong.

Certainly 80% of the market participants discount the idea that a crisis is coming and coming fast. This while, just as before the GFC, the signs are there if one cares to look.

Which brings us squarely into 2016.

I shared this graph at a private Seraph Member briefing in Singapore last week. We’ll discuss this again, plus much more, at our upcoming 3-day Summit in Del Mar, California. You’ll want to book your seat now to avoid disappointment, as we strictly limit attendance to ensure higher value.

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