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The impending derivitives storm that threatens the world

This is the real financial tsunami that is threatening to engulf Wall St and the world. The propaganda in the controlled media continues to ignore this blaming it all on the subprime crises. But the subprime crises is really just the tip of the iceberg. This is why Freddie and Fannie and AIG had to bailed out. The recent auction of Lehmans’ credit default swaps for $370 billion has terrified the financial giants. This is why the credit industry is frozen. The banks are hoarding their cash in fear of derivitive judgement day. They cannot pay these debt obligations. Thank you J.P. Morgan.

The subprime mortgage problem is really just the detonator for the coming derivatives bomb that Warren Buffett rightly called “weapons of financial mass destruction” back in 2003.

Wall St. has literally gambled away our economic stability and future in a form of high stakes financial Russian roulette. And they sold it as insurance??? Guess who blocked the legislation to outlaw this insanity in the early ’90’s? Some of the very same people that blocked reforms of Fannie and Freddie. And Greenspan promoted it along with his lucrative hedge funds that are now going belly up all over the world. Paulson, btw, was known as a big derivative trader when he ran Goldman Sachs. Both Cinton and Phill Gramm fueled the explosion of the derivitives industry when they dismantled the Glass-Steagall Act in 1999. 98 Senators voted for it. The Wall St. lobbies pay well.

The recent bailout (sellout) to Wall St. does not or solve or prevent this very real looming financial crises. The wake alone will be enough to swamp the entire global financial system.

Tuesday, 4 March, 2003

Buffett warns on investment ‘time bomb’

Derivatives are financial weapons of mass destruction

The rapidly growing trade in derivatives poses a “mega-catastrophic risk” for the economy and most shares are still “too expensive”, legendary investor Warren Buffett has warned.

The world’s second-richest man made the comments in his famous and plain-spoken “annual letter to shareholders”, excerpts of which have been published by Fortune magazine.

The derivatives market has exploded in recent years, with investment banks selling billions of dollars worth of these investments to clients as a way to off-load or manage market risk.

But Mr Buffett argues that such highly complex financial instruments are time bombs and “financial weapons of mass destruction” that could harm not only their buyers and sellers, but the whole economic system.

Contracts devised by ‘madmen’

Derivatives are financial instruments that allow investors to speculate on the future price of, for example, commodities or shares – without buying the underlying investment.

Derivatives generate reported earnings that are often wildly overstated and based on estimates whose inaccuracy may not be exposed for many years

Derivates like futures, options and swaps were developed to allow investors hedge risks in financial markets – in effect buy insurance against market movements -, but have quickly become a means of investment in their own right.

Outstanding derivatives contracts – excluding those traded on exchanges such as the International Petroleum Exchange – are worth close to $85 trillion, according to the International Swaps and Derivatives Association.

Some derivatives contracts, Mr Buffett says, appear to have been devised by “madmen”.

He warns that derivatives can push companies onto a “spiral that can lead to a corporate meltdown”, like the demise of the notorious hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management in 1998.

Derivatives are like ‘hell’

Large amounts of risk have become concentrated in the hands of relatively few derivatives dealers … which can trigger serious systemic problems

Derivatives also pose a dangerous incentive for false accounting, Mr Buffett says.

The profits and losses from derivates deals are booked straight away, even though no actual money changes hand. In many cases the real costs hit companies only many years later.

This can result in nasty accounting errors. Some of them spring from “honest” optimism. But others are the result of “huge-scale fraud”, and Mr Buffett points to the US energy market, which relied for most of its deals on derivatives trading and resulted in the collapse of Enron.

Berkshire Hathaway, the investment group led by Mr Buffett, is pulling out of the market, closing down the derivatives trading subsidiary it bought as part of a huge reinsurance company a few years ago.

In his letter Mr Buffett compares the derivatives business to “hell… easy to enter and almost impossible to exit”, and predicts that it will take years to unwind the complex deals struck by its subsidiary General Re Securities.

Warren Buffett, dubbed “the sage of Omaha”, from where he controls Berkshire Hathaway, is well-known for both his blunt assessments of the markets and the high returns he delivers to shareholders.

This year, he remains cool towards further share investments, despite the sharp correction in stock market values. Mr Buffett says this “dismal fact is testimony to the insanity of valuations reached during The Great Bubble”.

Berkshire backyard barbecues

A good friend of Bill Gates, he famously refused to invest in technology shares during the boom years that came to a sudden end in March 2000. As a result, Berkshire was sitting pretty after the technology bubble burst.

In marked contrast to the hubris of former managers at fallen firms like Enron and WorldCom, Mr Buffett is known for his down-to-earth style, summoning shareholders not to glitzy hotels but “Berkshire backyard barbecues” and baseball games in out-of-the-way Omaha, Nebraska.

But his strategy of identifying undervalued companies with good management in unfashionable retail sectors or the insurance industry and investing in them for the long-term has produced spectacular returns.

During the past 37 years, the company has delivered an average annual return of 22.6%. Since 1965 the company’s book value has gone up by 194,936%.

However in 2001, the last year for which detailed numbers are available, heavy losses in the insurance industry worldwide resulted in a $3.77bn loss at Berkshire Hathaway – the first loss in the firm’s history under Warren Buffett.

Here are some more good articles on the issue:

IT’S THE DERIVATIVES, STUPID! WHY FANNIE, FREDDIE AND AIG ALL HAD TO BE BAILED OUT

Coming Derivatives Crisis_150

Gold Up as the $500 Trillion Derivatives Time Bomb Keeps Ticking

 A dangerous bubble of derivatives trading – indiatimes

And here is an excellent blog on the derivitives market: George Washington’s Blog

9 Responses to “The impending derivitives storm that threatens the world”

  1. captain_menace says:

    He’ll go down in history as foreclosure Phil

    And no surprise, he’s a good friend of McCain’s, and until recently was his economic advisor.

  2. Right on Emery! Thanks for bringing this up.

    AIG’s bailout is all anyone needs to investigate to figure this thing out. Read the stories on how/why it happened.

    My perception of credit derivatives…being that I deal with them through my work…it’s a zero-sum game. Either you were right about the future, or your counterparty was…either you were smarter or they were. Someone gets paid off and the other loses money.

    Swaps that originate because of a portfolio manager’s fear of not hedging against some specific negative turn in the market is what these were sold to Congress as originally. They turned into chips in a casino, and the Credit Default Swap – CDS – is an unregulated insurance policy.

    What other type of insurance product can be sold unregulated in the United States?

  3. LeftHook says:

    Great post Emery.

    Why nobody is talking about derivatives (especially credit default swaps) and why the “bailout” doesn’t address them is a complete mystery.

  4. captain_menace says:

    Because CDSs are unregulated I think it is hard for any one entity to measure the potential impact that unwinding these things will have.

    The issue that I’ve had some difficulty understanding is the notional vs. net value.

    The notional value is staggering – $50+ TRILLION.

    The net value is unknown (although less than the notional), as it will depend on how the market plays these contracts out.

    Hang tight, the roller coaster is picking up speed.

  5. captain_menace says:

    BTW, I’m curious to know if Emery supports Barack Obama, like Warren Buffett does?

  6. JohnKonop says:

    When I ran for office I made a big deal out of this issue and they called me CHICKEN LITTLE!

  7. Bill says:

    When the average Joe looses in Vegas what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. When a large bank looses on Wall Street, what happens on Wall street goes to K street which goes to Congress which then goes to the President, which then comes out of the average Joe’s wallet.

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