Market-Rigging and Price-Fixing

Market-Rigging and Price-Fixing

According to Bob Janjuah of Nomura International, the markets right now are rigged that policymakers. He continues to say that the crisis was caused by central bankers mispricing the cost of capital which eventually caused a asset bubble which eventually collapsed.

By Eric Fry
07/19/12
Daily Reckoning

“Markets are so rigged by policymakers that I have no meaningful insights to offer.”

That’s what Nomura International’s Investment Strategist, Bob Janjuah, griped five months ago. Since then, policymakers have stepped up their market-rigging, while new revelations of past market-rigging have also come to light.

It’s starting to feel like the financial markets are all rigging and no ship.

“I am simply stunned that our policymakers seem so one-dimensional, so short-termist, and so utterly bereft of courage or ideas,” Janjuah remarked last February. “It now seems obvious that in response to the financial crisis that has been with us for five years and counting, we are being told to double up on these same policy decisions [that have failed]. The crisis was caused by central bankers mispricing the cost of capital, which forced a misallocation of capital, driven by debt/leverage, which was ultimately exposed as a hideous asset bubble which then collapsed, destroying the lives and livelihoods of tens of millions of relatively innocent people.”

When Mr. Janjuah voiced these concerns a few months back, the European Central Bank (ECB) had barely started rigging the sovereign credit markets of Europe by providing hundred-billion-euro bailouts to the central banks of Spain, Italy and others.

And when Janjuah sulked that he had no meaningful insights to offer, the ECB had not yet announced that it would also rig the private eurozone credit markets by extending loans directly to European financial institutions, rather than lending money only to eurozone governments.

And, of course, when Janjuah griped that markets were “so rigged by policymakers” he had no idea that policymakers had already been rigging LIBOR rates — the very foundation of the global credit markets.

LIBOR, which stands for London Interbank Offered Rate, may seem like a meaningless financial obscurity to most folks. But this particular obscurity happens to determine the pricing of trillions of dollars’ worth of credit lines and credit derivatives.

Therefore, rigging LIBOR is a little like rigging magnetic north…or its modern-day equivalent, the Global Positioning System (GPS). Every compass in the world would point to a deception. More importantly, your Paris-bound jet might touch down in Tripoli. And even if your Paris-bound jet touched down in nearby Lyon, you’d still be a little annoyed.

The point is that you could never be certain where you would land. And if you can’t be certain where you would land, why would you ever take off in the first place? Or to rephrase the question: who would ever buy a plane ticket to “Somewhere”?

That’s right; no one. And that’s roughly the same number of folks who would willingly participate in a rigged financial market. Rigging markets is a destructive fraud. Rigging a market as influential as LIBOR is fraud on an epic scale.

According to recent press reports, only three of the 16 banks that establish the LIBOR rate have admitted — or sort of admitted — to posting fraudulent LIBOR rates between 2005 and 2008. But very few filthy kitchens contain just three cockroaches.

Chances are, as the various investigations proceed, we will discover that the number of banks that participated in the LIBOR-rigging totaled more than three, but probably not more than 16…unless we were also to include central banks like the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England.

That’s right — Are you sitting down? — some central banks may have sanctioned LIBOR-rigging.

According to recent press reports, a few of the 16 LIBOR-setting banks engaged in LIBOR-rigging from 2005 to 2008. The motive for their fraud seems to have been nothing more elaborate than pure greed. But during the 2008 crisis, government market-riggers — i.e., central banks — may have gotten in on the act.

Earlier this week, Jerry del Missier, a former executive of Barclays Bank, admitted to manipulating his firm’s LIBOR postings during the 2008 crisis. But he said he did so because “at the time it did not seem an inappropriate action, given that this [directive] was coming from the Bank of England.”

Not surprisingly, the Bank of England refutes del Missier’s assertion. Apparently, market-riggers prefer to do their rigging privately. Despite this preference for anonymity, however, the policymakers who are rigging various market riggers probably believe their treachery to be in the best interests of Queen and country…and maybe Goldman Sachs. The policymakers seem to genuinely believe that the free markets need them — that free markets would stumble around in the darkness unless policymakers switched the lights on.

But the reality, of course, is that free markets don’t stumble around unless some government agency blindfolds them with “policy measures.”

Price-fixing and market-rigging are a perversion — destructive corruptions of the market-based signals that facilitate capitalistic enterprise. The more the market-riggers and price-fixers have their way, the less the free markets can nurture entrepreneurial dynamism. And yet, tragically, the more the riggers have their way, the more they argue the need for even more pervasive and extreme market-rigging.

“Politicians hold key to recovery: IMF,” a Globe and Mail headline declared earlier this week. Yes; it’s true! The IMF asserted that the biggest threat to the financial markets is a lack of rigging. “Downside risks continue to loom large,” the meddlesome agency declared, “importantly reflecting the risks of delayed or insufficient policy action.”

“If you listen to the [policymakers in the US and Europe],” Janjuah griped in February, “it seems that the only solution they can offer up is to yet again misprice the cost of capital, in the hope that, yet again, through increased leverage/debt, we are yet again greedy enough to misallocate capital, which in turn will lead to yet another round of asset bubbles. Such asset bubbles are meant to delude us into believing that we are now ‘richer.’ When — as they do by definition — these bubbles burst, those who have been suckered in will realize that their ‘wealth’ is instead an illusion, which in turn will be replaced by default risk…”

Indeed, our illusory wealth is already vaporizing. As reported previously in this space, “The median net worth of families plunged by 39% in just three years from $126,400 in 2007 to $77,000 in 2010. According to the Fed, the financial crisis, which began in 2007, wiped out nearly two decades of wealth — with middle class families bearing the brunt of the decline. This puts Americans roughly in the financial position they were in 1992.”

In other words, the heavy hand of government meddling is a failure. It is a failure built upon the delusion that free markets require more attention and medication than a nursing home patient. It is a failure built upon the fraud that rigging markets enables them to function more efficiently. And this fraud rests upon the conceit that policymakers know which markets to rig, when to rig them and by how much.

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