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Those Who Toil in Finance are Unhappy


By Bill Bonner • February 18th, 2008 • Related Articles • Filed Under

About the Author

Bill BonnerBest-selling investment author Bill Bonner is the founder and president of Agora Publishing, one of the world's most successful consumer newsletter companies. Owner of both Fleet Street Publications and MoneyWeek magazine in the UK, he is also author of the free daily e-mail The Daily Reckoning.

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Filed Under: Currencies
Tags: finance • subprime • The Americas

"Discontent as bank bonuses shrink..." began a story in Wednesday's International Herald Tribune . The story referred to 'the City' in London, the U.K.'s equivalent of Wall Street. Bonuses - usually ranging from 100,000 to many millions of pounds - are said to be down 16% this year. Those who toil in finance are unhappy.

But the trouble with recent news financial news is that the press doesn't know what to do with it. Just today, former crime buster and now New York governor Eliot Spitzer charged the feds with being "partners in crime" with predatory lenders. What do you do with an article like that? Should it go with the crime stories? Or in the Health section? Is it a matter for the police to deal with, in other words... or psychiatrists?

England was made bully prosperous by its dark, satanic mills. But now, spiders build their webs in front of the mill doors, confident of being unmolested. In the City, meanwhile, people come and go in such fury of busyness that the whole world stands back in admiration or disgust.

The City's new Jerusalem makes up one third of Britain's entire economic output... and last year accounted for nearly half of U.K. GDP growth. It pays one third of all corporation tax... contributes a surplus of nearly £20 billion to the trade balance... and there are now more finance sector workers in Britain than there are construction workers, farmers and factory workers COMBINED. So rich and important has the City become that you cannot drive through drunk without running over a millionaire. Every day, it turns over a third of the entire world's foreign exchange - more than $1 trillion.

"London has 40% of the global foreign equity market... trades 70% of all Eurobonds... and is the world's leading market for international insurance," reports the Fleet Street Letter. "Currently the business and finance sector accounts for 28% of Britain's GDP... some £306 billion per year. "That's 21 times more money contributed to the economy than the construction industry... 35 times more money than the automotive sector... 47 times more money than the pharmaceuticals industry..."

But what kind of City on a hill has the City built?

One of the great conceits of the credit expansion was that "finance" was, if not a noble trade, at least it was an honest one. Mothers wanted their babies to grow up to work for Goldman Sachs. Why not? Nothing paid better... and there was no heavy lifting. But what do they actually do 'in finance' and how come they get paid so much for it?

They 'add value' by 'allocating capital efficiently,' comes the answer. But what kind of value has actually been added to Britain's economy... or America's?

In these Daily Reckoning columns, we have made the point that the financial boom was a fraud. It was based on phony money... and produced phony growth. At the end of it, the average American is worse off than when it began. He has more debt... and a lower, real hourly wage.

In Britain, the story is very similar.

Personal debt in Britain has reached £1.3 trillion... (about $2.5 trillion) up 137% since 1993 and greater than the U.K.'s GDP for the very first time. Much of that debt is the notorious 'subprime' mortgage debt. Nearly 20% of all new U.K. mortgages written last year were either "subprime" or were "made to a homebuyer who offered no proof of income", reports the FT . Consequently, 21% more people were forcibly evicted from their homes in 2007 than 2006. The Council or Mortgage Lenders expects repossessions to jump another 50% in 2008! More than 500,000 Britons have missed a mortgage payment in the last 6 months."

On the institutional side, an estimate coming out of the G7 meeting put losses from sub-prime lending alone at $400 billion. So far, only $120 million has been revealed. If the estimate is correct, there is surely more subprime debt hiding in a Wall Street and City basements.

Colleague John Stepek, in the London office, puts it this way: "Our consumers are in more debt than their American counterparts. Our houses are more overvalued. We are even more dependent on a small niche area of the economy -- the City of London -- than Americans are. So we have even further to fall."

He might have added that the FTSE is already down 13% this year, while the Dow is down only 8%. And while the dollar has rallied, the pound has fallen.

Blame the City? Call in the cops to investigate?

It's true, practically all the deals made by Wall Street and the City over the last few years have a bit of Ponzi in them. As long as the volume of credit kept expanding, an investor could hope that a greater fool would buy out his positions at a higher price. Subprime mortgages, liar's loans, private equity finance, Chinese stocks, residential housing, SIVs, CDOs - they all needed more and more leverage, more and more finance, just to stay even.

Many of the new financial products, too, were based on false pretenses. Mathematicians crossed their fingers, calculated the odds based on historical prices, and then passed off the results as though they were as reliable as the periodic tables. If wheat had never traded at $10 a bushel, the $10 figure was an "outlier," not worth worrying about. What they didn't realize, or didn't admit, was that prices are neither fixed nor random - but subject to influence. By speculating on "normal" patterns, they were leaning against the very price curves they said were eternal. And when enough speculators crowded on... the price curve bent, and then collapsed under their weight. "Stability creates instability," as Hyman Minsky used to say.

But prosecutors would have a hard case. No one held a gun to investors' heads. Instead, they asked for it. he whole show was more a slapstick farce than a police thriller.

Bill Bonner
The Daily Reckoning Australia

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About the Author

Bill BonnerBest-selling investment author Bill Bonner is the founder and president of Agora Publishing, one of the world's most successful consumer newsletter companies. Owner of both Fleet Street Publications and MoneyWeek magazine in the UK, he is also author of the free daily e-mail The Daily Reckoning.

See All Posts by This Author

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