Exclusive: Derivatives for Dummies by The Other Katherine Harris

by The Other Katherine Harris
Featured Writer
Dandelion Salad
Feb. 18, 2009

Recent attempts by corporate media to explain the nature of our economic meltdown have left me ready to bite the ears off mice. They’ve been superficial, profoundly misleading and, above all, apologias for the likes of

Paulson, Bernanke and Geithner. So, having spent every spare moment over the past three years studying the debacle that many saw brewing, here’s the simplest explanation I’ve come up with:

Imagine being able to insure a car that you don’t own or use. Imagine it’s the car your neighbors will let their teenage son drive, when he gets his license in a few weeks — and you know the kid is a reckless brat.

Now imagine that, by using financial derivatives called swaps, you can purchase as many insurance policies on this car as you can afford to pay premiums on.

When that car is eventually trashed and scrapped, you — and any friends you clued in on the deal – might collect millions, even billions, of dollars. By contrast, your neighbors, who bought real insurance on a real vehicle, get only its Blue Book value (and, one hopes, a chastened child).

This explains the primary problem with swaps. Anybody can bet on anything, so the nominal value of the bets far exceeds the actual worth of any property involved.

Still worse, no tangible or financial asset has to be in the picture. Wagers of any amount can be made, based only on opinions. You can bet on next Wednesday’s weather, if a counterparty wants to take the other side.

Only a fraction of swap action stems from logical situations in which, say, Party A owns a certain debt-based bond and Party B feels good enough about its prospects to accept premiums against possible default. Those are the Credit Default Swaps we hear so much about, which are a small part of the picture.

Similarly, Collateralized Debt Obligations comprise a much larger category than merely those bonds into which home mortgages have been sliced, diced, tranched and peddled to the unwary. Every type of debt is subject to the same treatment, called securitization or financialization. Commercial mortgages, student loans, home equity loans, credit card balances and auto notes spring immediately to mind, but it doesn’t stop there by any means. Among the latest wrinkles are buying up and bundling seniors’ life insurance policies and selling solar equipment with financing and service contracts attached, so that those obligations can be packaged and resold. Carbon credits, if cap-and-trade is approved in the US, instead of a sensible carbon tax, will be another new toy for the boyz.

Beyond swaps and CDOs, there are many other types of derivatives. Some serve no purpose except adding layers of expense to the delivery of commodities. Think of the possibilities as endless and you’ll be right.

This is how speculators in derivatives have created a “shadow economy” so vast it looms over the actual economy like a death-star over a bumblebee.

Much of their vast construct is not merely shadowy but wholly obscured. Among derivative securities, relatively few are traded on any exchange. So there’s no public record of the rest, which are based on private agreements. A host of swaps have arisen from so-called “dark pools of liquidity” — in which those who play may not even clearly identify themselves to one another. Yet more of these monsters from the deep arise daily. There’s still no rule against them, nor a wisp of regulation. At times the contracts are doubly hidden, recorded off the holder’s main books in so-called Structured Investment Vehicles.

All of that makes it impossible to be certain, but the Bank for International Settlements is a pretty good guesser and they last pegged the total face value of derivatives in existence at $1.4 QUADRILLION — more money than there is in all the world (at least until Ben Bernanke turned on the printing press lately). This figure may have since declined, but I wouldn’t bank on it. A lot of derivatives are long-term deals operant for many years.

Returning to our original example,you don’t even have to await the neighbor kid’s big smashup to start making money on your swaps. Say he gets a speeding ticket or has a fender-bender. Those are documented events that raise the price of coverage — for all who want it, not just the boy’s unfortunate parents. Now you can, by presenting him as a known risk, profit by selling some of your contracts to others for much more than you paid.

In this case, you wouldn’t want to sell unless you need funds badly, but imagine that your payoff depends on the failure of a company, a currency or a country. The weaker your target is perceived to be, as reflected by the cost of default insurance on its debt, the closer you move toward your ultimate goal. So you and your friends will do all you can to drive that cost up and make the world fully aware of it, including buying and selling CDS contracts openly. This makes the rising cost apparent and you can count on the rating agencies to take notice swiftly. Their downgrade will become the death-knell.

Therein lies another great problem with Credit Default Swaps. They work exactly like short-selling and rumor-mongering (which CDS owners may well be doing, too) to create self-fulfilling prophecies.

They also create the derivative world’s equivalent of margin calls, which mean trouble for luckless parties on what increasingly seem the wrong side of particular bets. Staying in the game takes cash, more and more of it.

Such circumstances also invite side-bets — on when the shaky whatsit will fall, for instance. Thus, the money monster grows bigger and bigger. Until it finally pops.

Which brings us to the enormous problem of extracting payment from those on the losing side of each bet, who of course didn’t expect to lose. Gamblers never do, until it’s far too late.

So welcome to the Casino at the End of the World. Where you’re now backing every remaining wager and paying off the winners. In bailout bucks.

Why, instead of doling out trillions of taxpayer dollars through the Fed and Treasury Department, didn’t our government simply nullify these crazy bets that never should have been made — thereby averting the present crisis? It can’t be that contracts are really all that sacrosanct. Credit card companies change terms on us all the time.

see

On the edge with Max Keiser: Goldman Sachs Fraud with David Degraw

Exclusive: Why should I pay somebody else’s mortgage? by The Other Katherine Harris

The U.S. Economy: Designed to Fail by Richard C. Cook

How the US Economy Was Lost By Paul Craig Roberts

Trouble at Treasury – Geithner gets the keys to the henhouse By Mike Whitney

The Looming Collapse of the American Empire by Chris Hedges

Finance Capitalism Hits a Wall by Prof. Michael Hudson

It’s the Derivatives, Stupid! Why Fannie, Freddie, AIG had to be Bailed Out by Ellen Brown

82 thoughts on “Exclusive: Derivatives for Dummies by The Other Katherine Harris

  1. Hi Katherine,
    I came across your name only yesterday. It was the name that made be click through and read.

    [edited]

    I enjoyed reading the above article and the “shadow economy” so vast it looms over the actual economy like a death-star over a bumblebee, was particularly choice.”

    Strangely enough some of the most enjoyable writing around is that being written about boring old finance now its become far more exiting than it should be.
    There is of course Michael Lewis. Then even when George Sorus writes a good clear piece even though he is a money man first he becomes a fine writer by being able to explain it clearly. Morale of the story don’t invest money with anyone who can’t write.
    I’ve passed you on and hope to read more from you again in the future.
    The best writing is now on the web. I gave up print years ago.

    • Thanks for your comment, Cris. I did edit out the part that had nothing to do with this post and this particular author. You were thinking of Katherine Harris from Florida.

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  4. Hi Katherine,

    Okay –so guess the question is–WHO would bet on the neighbors kid NOT WRECKING–and why is the taxpayer liable?

    At some point the kid would become uninsurable at any price.
    at some point–“ALLSTATE” would not take the bet that he won’t wreck.

    But who is the “ALLSTATE” in this mess?
    if it’s all shadows and smoke wisp I just don’t see how the Government or anyone would say–WE ARE THE LIABLE PARTY!

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  6. Carbon credits – new fraudulent security.

    YES! I have been saying this for months to anyone who would listen. Now, I have seen it in print for the first time:

    “Carbon credits, if cap-and-trade is approved in the US, instead of a sensible carbon tax, will be another new toy for the boyz.”

    Not to mention: Fractional reserve banking (Federal Reserve System) is the ultimate fraud of immense magnitude and is the root cause of our financial problems.

  7. Ms-Harris
    Very clear thinking on this,one of the best sum ups I’ve seen.To further penatrate this-
    Doesn’t This seem to you too be the Enron/reliant/entergy california power scam writ much larger with more players?
    If so-this may be only the tip of the berg,as I think the outlines of what Obama and his merry band of neoconmen are up to on ‘greenalisous’ energy policy is-
    Piss most of the borrowed funding away first on ‘clean coal ‘and ‘clean tar sands’ delusions,when it can no longer be concealed that these strats are worse than useless-switch to the oh so green and economical nucs.
    Thus accompishing much less than anything useful and with the new bio wennie ag sec,satisfing the first 3 names on his dance card.
    And so-no funds left for the concervation /efficency strategies with wind base load and solar genetation that would actually be useful.

    • Thanks veyr much, Todd — and please do call me Katherine (or Erin, as I’m known for short). I’m definitely not the Ms. Harris type.

      Yeah, I do agree this is an Enron-ish scam, writ large — and I do think there’s a lot more to it than most venture to suggest (including, once again, killing off our best alternate energy prospects — but, far worse, also placing the lives of millions at risk with their biofuels boondoggle).

      You’ve noticed, I’m sure, that the only serious investments being made in solar and wind force the equipment to be grid-tied, whereas the original ’70s vision of green energy was for households to achieve energy self-sufficiency,, starting with passive solar construction. Lots of blood (and overlarge, inefficient McMansions) under the bridge since then.

      I fear the world will continue to be run by shameless sociopaths, until something very definitive is done to stop them.

  8. Thanks Katherine. I wish more people were aware of this issue. This is the financial problem. Not subprime mortgages (they just created more opportunities for derivatives). Not greedy homeowners. Not a credit crunch. All the problems we hear about relate back to this.

    • Hey, Joe, thanks a bunch. It;s good to know you’re also spreading the word. Gets discouraging, amid the barrage of lies and half-truths, but we’ve gotta keep trying.

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  10. I wonder if the premiums paid to the insurers were laid against current year income and removed as bonuses and dividends.
    Otherwise, at least the premiums should exist. This is what “clawback” should be used for.

    • Interesting thought, rdbcci. (How do you pronounce that?) The premiums must amount to a pretty penny, despite all the insane leverage.

      Thanks for taking time to read and comment. I appreciate it.

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  13. Katherine, you are wicked scarey.

    Write some more. Copy Al Franken, Barack Obama and John Daley. It’s your patriotic duty.

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  16. Katherine, many thanks for your clear explanation of the derivatives that are wrecking havoc on our economy. I first read about the huge “financial economy”–what you call the “death star”–back in the mid 90s and have had a devil of a time finding good explanations about how it works and how it might destroy the much smaller “bumble bee” real economy of goods and services. I would be very interested in working with you on efforts to help inform people about this issue, which is probably the single most important one that we should be addressing now.

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  23. Hello, Natureboy. Thanks for taking time to read and comment. I agree the Geithner pick is bewildering. He still loves securitization; he comes right out and says the problem is that folks stopped buying ENOUGH of this dreck to keep the bubble inflated.

    At first I hoped Obama chose him only because Geithner understands the situation (having helped create it) and knows where the bodies are buried, but there are no grounds for believing that now. He’s Wall Street’s man.

    Either Obama is being influenced by the wrong crowd — or he’s part of it. Either way, the world is screwed.

    • Perhaps time to repost ‘The Corporation’ again…

      The whole idea of issuing equities was already a recipe for corruption, greed, graft. What is an equity but a gamble on fear/greed/perceived demand. But this insane insurance scheme?

      Too much outrageous, exponential treasure to be gained to be ignored by those susceptible to gambling-addicted speculation. And they got away with… more capital than exists?

      ‘Wall Street’ proponents forgot that Gordon Gecko was indicted for insider-trading– yet the corporate-raider tax-evading 80’s player was a rookie compared to this exponential pyramid scheme. I’m glad investment banking is extinct. Shoulda gone the way of venture capital after the dot.com fiasco.

      I agree, this whole thing shoulda been nullified, but didn’t Geithner just argue successfully against legal control of this absurd interpretation of trade?

      I hate finance (and history and politics). People need to make things with their hands, barter them, trade for genuine hand-stamped coin, and abandon this industrialist, market-driven speculative greed-machine.

      I had an employee, a former celebrity personal assistant who refused to cash her check at a bank, insisted on a ‘credit union’. Now I understand.

  24. I should have stated in the blog, rather than merely implying it, that I believe Iceland’s fall was a deliberate takedown. Ireland is now under attack, as are Switzerland and the UK. What they have in common is resistance to membership in or full dominance by the European Union.

  25. Hi, Shaine. Thanks very much. Gosh, I wish that I could shout this from the rooftops, so people would understand the enormity of what we’re up against.

    There’s absolutely no way for taxpayers around the world to keep propping this lunatic system up — although the banksters are happy for us to die, trying.

  26. I thought I had a good handle on the derivatives, but this brings everything into much clearer focus.

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