“Last night,
Mr Brown made it clear he was ready to increase the level at which savers’
deposits were guaranteed from £35,000 to £50,000 but indicated he did not want
to act until the markets had calmed.” – From The Financial Times, 1st
October 2008.
As part of my O-level history course back in the mid-1980s, I wrote an
extended essay on the topic of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima in 1945. My
teacher made the useful suggestion of comparing the Hiroshima experience and
related issues with those of the Dresden fire bombings earlier that fateful
year. Even now I’m not sure whether either action could be easily or wholeheartedly
justified and as a non-combatant (and non-civilian, for that matter) of the
time in question, it still seems somewhat presumptuous even to try. What I do
recall is that I concluded my study with the words of historian A.J.P. Taylor:
“War suspends morality.”
I recall these words because I am
now reminded of advice given me a year ago when the crumbling of the credit
markets first became manifest to a financially less literate world. While I was
personally wrestling mentally with the moral hazard issues surrounding banking
bailouts and the like, a South African fund manager friend made the following pertinent
observation: in a shooting war, don’t waste time scrupling over moral hazard –
the objective is survival. Politicians across the board and across the world
seem dangerously unaware of the severity of this crisis, and of the risks they
pose by indulging in partisan bickering when political leadership (sic) is so desperately needed and simultaneously
so horribly deficient.
A year ago I was watching the run
on Northern Rock from a hotel room in Rome. This time round – a full year into
this crisis – I was watching certain members of the US Congress effectively voting
for some sort of suicide pact from a hotel room in Sicily. Perhaps I should be
forbidden from going on holiday. But watching the venal self-interest of
Republicans (and some Democrats) blooming with some disbelief, it was almost
easy to paraphrase the words of Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis, in that I’ve had
all the fun I can stand in investment management.
But one of the many benefits of a
short break was the opportunity to read, and re-read, Robert Shiller’s timely
analysis of how we got here, ‘The Subprime Solution: How today’s global
financial crisis happened, and what to do about it’ (Princeton University
Press, 2008). Professor Shiller begins his measured and constructive study of
the current financial debacle with an apposite quote from the master himself,
John Maynard Keynes:
“A general bonfire is so great a
necessity that unless we can make of it an orderly and good-tempered affair in
which no serious injustice is done to anyone, it will, when it comes at last,
grow into a conflagration that may destroy much else as well.”
Keynes was writing about the
economic consequences of the overly punitive Treaty of Versailles imposed upon
a defeated Germany in 1919. The analogy of an all-consuming fire is just as
appropriate now. And I for one am getting increasingly disgusted at the sight
of politicians fiddling while our entire financial infrastructure burns. The
fire metaphor was also used by Henry Steagall, chairman of the House Banking
and Currency Committee, in 1932:
“Of course, it involves a
departure from established policies and ideals, but we cannot stand by when a
house is on fire to engage in lengthy debates over the methods to be employed
in extinguishing the fire. In such a situation we instinctively seize upon and
utilize whatever method is most available and offers assurance of speediest success.”
Something tells me we may hear
more of the name of Steagall, for it was Henry Steagall who helped establish
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and it was Henry Steagall who, by
means of the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933, helped prohibit bank holding companies
from owning other financial companies including the sort of broker-dealers who
have helped ignite the current bonfire. Those provisions were repealed in
November 1999. They should never have been allowed to. Perhaps Goldman Sachs
and Morgan Stanley will survive as newly converted bank holding companies.
Whether they do or not, their future earnings prospects look frankly, for want
of a better phrase, subprime.
Professor Shiller cites Benjamin
Friedman and his 2005 book ‘The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth’ which
suggests that “when people see encouraging prospects for the future, they are
better able to work together constructively, supporting democratic principles
and political and social liberalization. When perceived prospects for growth
falter, there are major setbacks..” In much of the world and particularly in
Europe, the Great Depression of the 1930s led in turn to squalid outcomes like
fascism, anti-Semitism, racism, nationalism – and ultimately a world war. But
the US, by contrast, “stands out as an exception – in many respects the
exception” to Friedman’s theory. Now, in 2008, it would truly be a tragedy if
the US were to join the rest of the world in a retreat to profitless
fingerpointing and mudslinging before confidence in the financial
infrastructure was shored up by government action.
Comparisons with the 1930s are no
longer grotesque overreactions. Since there are no private entities with the
resources to recapitalise the banks, it will be left to governments and
taxpayers to do the job, provided politicians can abandon their differences and
finally acknowledge the threat posed by a systemic meltdown in financial
confidence. But the US bailout is not a bailout solely for Wall Street
interests. As the author behind Accrued
Interest makes clear, if bank lending disappears, so in its wake does the housing
market; secondary education; small business foundation.. Whether we like it or
not, we live in a society largely built and dependent on the free flow of
credit.
As to matters of investment, the
advice remains what it has always been. Capital preservation trumps ‘growth at
any cost’. Cash remains king. Fretting about bank stability is missing the
point: have any depositors anywhere been allowed to lose one penny of their deposits
yet ? The monetary metals still represent a superior store of value than any
form of paper. The arguments for government bonds just get louder,
notwithstanding the imminence of greater supply. And for those investors with
the psychological resources to see beyond the fog of the present, shares in well-run
businesses and well-run managed funds are starting to look (and certainly feel) compellingly attractive longer
term buys. A final note on equity market pricing. If equity prices and the
prices of other financial assets go down relative to our incomes or purchasing
power, we become wealthier rather than poorer. This is not meant to be a
sophistic argument. The danger would simply be for governments to try and shore
up (housing and equity) market values – as opposed to credit availability – at
unsustainable levels. So it may not feel like it – human beings are not
hard-wired with the contrarian instincts to be successful investors – but we
may actually be sitting on the cusp of opportunity. In the interim, nobody ever
promised us a rose garden.