Originally Posted to FTW Subscribers
Sept. 09, 2001
Global Economic Collapse
Likely
Derivatives Bubble About
to Burst -- Manipulated Gold Prices About to Explode
Can Wall Street Survive?
by
Michael C. Ruppert
FTW
- A hearing to dismiss a suit by the Gold Ant-Trust Action
Committee (GATA) is scheduled to begin in U.S. District
Court on October 9th, 2001. That suit, based
upon detailed research, alleges that a conspiracy has existed
between the U.S. Treasury, The Federal Reserve, former Treasury
Secretaries Robert Rubin and Lawrence Summers and major
U.S. investment banks to illegally and covertly flood the
world with literally twice the amount of gold permitted
by a 1999 international treaty. The suit also threatens
to publicly expose the artificial manipulation of gold prices
going much further back.
In 1998 the collapse
of Long Term Capital Management (LTCM), a New York based
gold derivatives/futures trading operation, nearly brought
about the implosion of the world economy. In order to save
LTCM from an insolvency that would have exposed the secret
manipulations of gold, the Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin,
the Fed Chairman, Alan Greenspan and the Bank of International
Settlements allegedly intervened to hide the crimes. They
became known as "The Plunge Protection Team."
One of the prime
reasons for artificially suppressing gold prices was to
preserve investor confidence in U.S. markets. Gold prices
have traditionally been used as a gauge for investor confidence.
Low gold prices traditionally mean that stock markets are
healthy, good investments; that inflation is low; and that
credit may be expanded. Throughout the late 90s as badly
needed corrections in the markets failed to happen a monstrous
bubble grew on Wall Street. That stock bubble has been threatening
the imminent implosion of U.S. markets
Now another, even
more terrifying, monster rears its ugly head. This "derivatives
bubble" was widely known and discussed when I attend the
global crisis economic conference in Moscow, Russia this
March. Following is a bulletin I sent to subscribers just
two days before the attacks on the World Trade Center and
the Pentagon.
FTW,
Sept. 9, 2001 - I cannot overstate the importance of this
post in helping to understand the economic precipice on
which we are all perched. More importantly, there is also
a huge socio-political precipice that is just as dangerous
because of the fact that trust in government institutions
is at an all time low. Every time there is a police shooting
these days, whether as corrupt as those revealed in Miami
recently; as indicative of bad judgement and poor training
as the one in Santa Clarita; or as justified as those in
Indiana; the "automatic" reaction of many now is that the
cops are always wrong. This "barometer" of public trust
indicates that average people are beginning to have a first
reaction that government and major institutions are "the
enemy" rather than that they should be trusted. Right or
wrong, the implications for society as a whole are ominous
when emotion overrides reason.
"Let them eat cake."
It is this mix of economic
and socio/political nitroglycerin that scares me. I am joined
by many "thinkers" now in sensing the possibility of a "Reign
of Terror," or mindless bloodletting. It would have nothing
to do with justice, good and evil, right or wrong and it
would not subside until the fear and revenge quotients just
below the surface of the collective consciousness have spent
themselves. This is especially true for the nations of the
world whose populations have suffered under US economic
bullying and globalization for many decades.
The sooner corrective action
is taken the better. The more it is postponed, the more
certain is the bloody abyss, as emotional and rational "account
balancings" occur at the same time as the economic ones.
Read this posting carefully
and then consider two points:
- Since the 1998 Russian economic collapse
was triggered by the "looting" by Harvard and Goldman
Sachs and THAT in turn triggered the collapse of LTCM,
have we been looking at a system of greed out of control
where competing pyramids fight each other for diminishing
capital streams? Would Goldman and Harvard wage war against
LTCM or JPMorganChase knowing that it could destroy the
world economy and create a global depression? If true,
that implies a pending financial and economic donnybrook,
that could "Hiroshima" the economy of the entire planet.
The lunatics are officially running the asylum now.
- As the DOW plummets - and I expect that
it may be in the 8,000s or below by the end of October
- I have now come to the conclusion that it is POSSIBLE,
IF NOT LIKELY - that the Bowers shootdown in Peru this
Spring was an intentional move. Reason: the immediate
and total suspension of drug interdiction flights -- an
apparent easy capitulation by the CIA -- that has since
allowed drug smuggling to multiply in the intervening
months. I have read some estimates indicating that cocaine
smuggling to the U.S. is up 30% this year as a result.
Add to that the fact that the eradication efforts in Colombia
have not reduced coca production but have instead, increased
it by 15-20% or more.
What better way to pour
additional billions in drug money into markets on the brink
of collapse while trying to maintain a public image that
fewer and fewer people are buying anyway?
There's a reason why people
in this country no longer get motivated by individual cries
for justice or any single human interest story, whether
the victim lost a house or $250 million. In the panic of
a fire in a crowded movie theater, no one gives a shit.
We're all going to burn.
Mike Ruppert
"From The Wilderness"
www.copvcia.com
On September 8, I received
the following from my friend David Guyatt in London.
I have lifted the following
from www.lemetropolecafe.com
and hope they donÕt mind me posting it here in its entirety.
David
*****
9/7 Adam Hamilton -
The JPM Derivatives Monster
The JPM Derivatives
Monster
Out of all the incredible
financial developments of the 1990s, one of the most important
fundamental structural changes in the nature of the operation
and interaction of the global financial system was the literal
explosion of the use of derivatives.
Derivatives are often highly
complex financial instruments that "derive" their value
from some other underlying asset. As the use of these instruments
evolved and advanced to a stunning degree in the 1990s,
an intriguing bifurcation of opinion on the merits of the
hybrid instruments developed. Among the Wall Street power
players and aggressive private speculators, derivatives
were seen as a wonderful financial innovation that would
lead to highly customizable risk management and a huge new
profit stream for Wall Street.
Outside of the financial
halls of power, however, derivatives began to acquire a
reputation of being staggeringly risky financial instruments
that could turn sour in a heartbeat and devour the financial
wizards who created them like hungry sharks. Like the young
sorcererÕs apprentice in Walt DisneyÕs classic 1940 masterpiece
"Fantasia", a general public perception of derivatives gradually
evolved that perceived the growth of derivatives as a dangerous
experiment being recklessly played out in the financial
world. Like the sorcererÕs apprentice dabbling in powerful
magic when the master was not around to manage the unleashed
forces, derivatives creation was increasingly seen by the
average investor as being hazardous attempts to harness
enormous financial tides and forces that were simply too
big and too complex to be decisively tamed.
A string of massive derivatives
debacles in the 1990s helped buttress this negative popular
perception of derivatives and provided strong support for
the "derivatives are very dangerous" side of the great derivatives
debate.
In December 1993 the large
German industrial conglomerate Metallgesellschaft AG reported
huge derivates related losses racked up by its US subsidiary.
Through an intricate hedging strategy involving heavy energy
derivatives use that spun out of control, the US subsidiary
of the German giant watched in horror as its complex custom-tailored
financial instruments exploded in unforeseen market conditions.
Total losses were originally estimated at $1b, enough to
push Metallgesellschaft, GermanyÕs fourteenth largest industrial
corporation, to the brink of bankruptcy. Metallgesellschaft
eventually had to cough up $1.9b as a last-ditch rescue
package to stave off bankruptcy. What was perhaps the first
well-known large derivatives debacle in the 1990s was only
a grim taste of things to come.
Unfortunately, the misfortune
of Metallgesellschaft in attempting to conquer the brave
new derivatives world proved to be only the tip of the iceberg
in derivatives disasters of the 1990s. Cargill lost $100m
playing with mortgage derivatives, Askin Securities lost
$600m dabbling in mortgage-backed securities, US blue-chip
Dow 30 company Procter & Gamble lost $157m hedging with
currency derivatives, and Codelco Chile obliterated $200m
on copper and precious metals futures. We could add Daiwa
Bank of Japan, Sumitomo Corporation, Ashanti Goldfields,
and the list goes on and on. And these are just a few of
the less well-known derivatives debacles!
In 1994 the County Treasurer
of one of the wealthiest counties in the United States,
Orange County, California, brought the mighty county to
its knees in bankruptcy. Robert Citron deployed risky exotic
derivatives including reverse repurchase agreements to produce
very high returns for the County Investment Pool he managed.
Unfortunately, when the markets moved against his huge leveraged
positions, the retirement funds under his custodianship
quickly hemorrhaged $1.5b. In a hearing before the California
State Senate in 1995, Citron said, "I must humbly state
I certainly was not as sophisticated a treasurer as I thought
I was."
In February 1995 the proud
and strong 223 year-old Barings Investment Bank of England,
which even counted Queen Elizabeth as a client, was annihilated
by unauthorized derivatives trading activity that imploded
as the markets did not move as planned. Nicholas William
Leeson, a 27-year old hotshot derivatives trader based in
Singapore, managed to quickly lose $1.3b in the highly leveraged
derivatives market before BaringsÕ management in London
realized what was happening.
Rogue trader Nick Leeson
was betting heavily on the future direction of the Japanese
blue-chip Nikkei stock index using common options. He placed
hundreds of millions of dollars at risk on the premise that
the Nikkei was due for a major recovery in 1995. As we all
know today as we watch the embattled Nikkei index rip through
17 year lows like a meteorite through a circus tent, Nick
Leeson made the wrong bet. His personal derivatives debacle
was so extreme that it killed the proud Barings Bank. Barings
had been around for centuries and had even helped finance
the rise of the great British Empire in the 19th
century. A respected, conservative monolith of a British
institution died at the hands of powerful and inherently
uncontrollable forces unleashed by a young sorcererÕs apprentice
halfway around the world in Singapore.
Derivatives disasters continued
to blossom around the world like isolated mushroom clouds
in the late 1990s, with the most memorable and dangerous
being the catastrophic Long Term Capital Management debacle
in 1998 on the heels of the Russian Debt Crisis, which we
discuss further later in this essay. In light of the frightening
record of the enormous risks and leverage of derivatives
humbling the mighty in the 1990s, it is no surprise that
most people today rightfully believe that derivatives are
a highly risky and unforgiving high-stakes game.
As derivatives use continues
to explode around the globe, it is prudent for investors
to closely monitor derivatives and the companies dealing
in them. The markets, if they have taught us anything in
this chaotic past year, have certainly reinforced the historical
truism that they are as unpredictable as ever over the short-term.
Major discontinuities in price and unforeseen volatility
events can erupt at any moment, potentially putting unfathomable
structural stress on highly-leveraged derivatives portfolios.
As we plunge through the
early years of our new millennium, any study of derivates
in the United States among leading blue-chip financial institutions
inevitably leads to one conclusion. Virtually all paths
of derivatives inquiry lead to the same destination. Today,
more than ever before in the short history of derivatives,
one leading United States institution effectively IS the
derivatives market. This company, as we will explore in
this essay, is the American giant superbank JPMorganChase
(www.JPMorganChase.com).
Before we begin our exploration
of JPMorganChaseÕs (JPM-NYSE) mind-boggling exposure to
the high-leverage high-risk global derivatives market, a
quick and dirty explanation of derivatives is in order.
As we mentioned above,
derivatives are simply financial instruments that derive
their value from some other underlying asset. The term "asset"
is employed rather loosely here, as in the derivatives world
it can also include interest rates, currency exchange rates,
stock indices, and other market indices. Common examples
of derivatives include options, futures, forwards, swaps,
and various combinations of these instruments.
The humble option is one
of the simplest forms of derivatives. An option is simply
the right to buy (call) or sell (put) a certain investment
at a contractually set price for a limited time in the future.
Options are also used as building blocks to assemble much
more complex highly exotic derivatives instruments, kind
of like the financial equivalent of the toy Lego blocks
perpetually popular with children. Options are a fantastic
tool to help comprehend and understand the enormous leverage
inherent in derivatives and the huge risks that are shouldered
when trading them. In order to wrap our minds around options,
it is best to start our illustration with normal equity
investing and then move to simple lone options.
Imagine you have saved
up $5,000 of risk capital you want to sow into the markets
in the hopes of reaping some profits. The conventional stock
investing strategy is simply to find some undervalued stock
and buy it. You do your due diligence, find an undervalued
stock trading at a fair multiple with good future prospects,
and you buy your shares of the company. For this exampleÕs
sake, letÕs assume that your investment in "XYZ Company"
was made at a share price of $50. Your $5,000 bought you
100 shares of XYZ Company.
Now that your capital has
been successfully deployed, letÕs fast-forward six months
into the future and examine two scenarios. In the "Win Scenario",
XYZ rallies 50% and you win some healthy capital gains on
your investment. In the "Loss Scenario", XYZ plunges 50%
and you begin to feel like a typical NASDAQ investor today.
In the Win Scenario when
you are simply buying stock outright, your gains are easy
to calculate. Your 100 shares of XYZ that you purchased
at $50 ran up 50% to $75, leaving you with an equity position
worth $7,500, a straightforward $2,500 profit. In the Loss
Scenario, XYZ plunged to $25, vaporizing one half of your
original capital deployed. Your shares are still worth $2,500,
however, even after the share price implosion of XYZ. This
clear-cut equity example which we all intuitively understand
is a pure unleveraged position that is most useful to contrast
with the extraordinary risks and potential rewards/losses
inherent in derivatives trading.
Next, letÕs warp back in
time to your original decision to deploy your $5,000 of
risk capital. LetÕs assume that the money is not super-important
to you and that you have a very-high risk tolerance, so
you decide to place the money in options instead of stock.
You still like XYZ Company and its prospects but you crave
higher leverage and you are willing to accept higher risks
of loss to attain that leverage. You fully realize the risks
in playing options are very high, but you will not shed
any tears if your $5,000 speculation does not pay off. You
do some research and find that you can buy a standard call
option, the right to purchase, XYZ stock at a strike price
of $55 for seven months into the future for $1 per option.
Each option contract on
XYZ represents options on 100 shares, so at $1 per share
a contract runs $100. With your $5,000 of risk capital you
can buy 50 option contracts, yielding a total span of control
of 5,000 shares. The enormous leverage inherent in derivatives
such as options is immediately apparent. If you buy XYZ
outright, you only can afford 100 shares with your $5,000.
On the other hand, if you play the risky derivatives market
through call options on XYZ, you can control the gains and
losses on 5,000 shares, a staggering 50 times increase in
absolute leverage. With leverage through derivatives comes
the potential for far greater returns, but also far greater
losses. Leverage is ALWAYS a sharp double-edged sword.
In the Win Scenario, XYZ
rockets to $75 in six months. Your 50 contracts of XYZ call
options at a $55 strike price are still one month from expiration
and have grown very valuable. As each option grants you
the contractual right to purchase a share of XYZ at $55
even though it is now trading at $75, the option on every
individual share is now worth $20. The option, a derivative,
derives its value from the movements in its underlying asset,
the actual shares of XYZ. Since you bought 50 contracts
each representing 100 shares worth of XYZ call options,
your $5,000 speculation has grown into $100,000 in six months!
Through the use of derivatives, your dramatic increase in
leverage yielded an awesome $95,000 profit instead of the
$2,500 you would have made through outright XYZ stock ownership.
When the markets move your way, leverage attained through
derivatives can be utterly exhilarating.
In the Loss Scenario, XYZ
plummeted to $25 in six months, mimicking the 2001 action
of the crippled NASDAQ. Because your options are now so
far "out of the money", they are nearly worthless. Even
though there is one month left until they officially expire,
no one in the market wants to buy your right to purchase
XYZ at $55 when they can just go buy the actual stock at
$25 in the open markets. In this scenario, your $5,000 of
risk capital has been ground down into oblivion, a catastrophic
100% loss. If you had just bought the stock outright instead,
at least you would still have $2,500 dollars left, but through
deploying options you basically made an all-or-nothing bet
that the XYZ stock price would rise over the limited time
horizon of the options. When the markets move against your
derivatives, your hard-earned capital can be literally obliterated
in mere hours or days, a very difficult and excruciating
experience.
Options, the simplest of
derivatives, help illustrate the extraordinary leverage
and the mega-risk that derivatives exposure entails. Amazingly,
long options are one of the lowest risk forms of derivatives
because one can never lose more capital than what they paid
to purchase the options. Many other more exotic derivatives
have dangerous unlimited loss potential and can ultimately
destroy far, far more capital than what was actually paid
for the financial instruments.
Another critical concept
for understanding the strange world of derivatives is "notional
value" or "notional amount". This is a quasi-fictional number
that illustrates how much capital a given derivative effectively
controls. Although the notional amount does not change hands
in a derivatives transaction, it is used to calculate the
actual payments that must be made to one counterparty or
the other in a derivatives transaction. Furthering our options
example above, we can also gain a glimpse into the world
of notionality in derivatives.
Although you only deployed
$5,000 worth of risk capital in your XYZ call option purchase,
you controlled the equivalent of 5,000 shares of stock since
each option only cost $1. As the stock was trading at $50
when you originally purchased your options, you controlled
a notional amount of XYZ stock worth $50 per share times
5000 shares, or $250,000. In the Win Scenario when XYZ rose
50%, the notional value of your options rose to $75 per
share times 5000 shares, $375,000. By purchasing call options
you harnessed the extreme leverage of derivatives to enable
yourself to originally control the notional equivalent of
$250,000 worth of XYZ stock while only risking $5,000 of
your own capital.
Realize that the notional
amount is not a real number but simply a descriptive fiction
detailing how much of the equivalent underlying asset your
derivatives position effectively "controls". Notional amounts
are used in the derivatives world to show the effective
span of control that derivatives grant market participants
over underlying assets at any given point in time. By comparing
changing notional values over time, they can be used to
measure and analyze positional changes in derivatives exposure
over a given time horizon.
Also critical, realize
that notional amounts are NOT volume or turnover data, but
positional data points. A notional derivatives amount for
the end of a given quarter is like a balance sheet presentation
of potential exposure at that moment in time, NOT an income-statement
like account of activity or turnover in a given quarter.
Some prominent analysts have crossed this line out of reality
and made the embarrassing public mistake of publishing research
where they articulated the twisted fantasy that notional
amounts are transactional and not positional. Notional derivatives
amounts ARE positional, a snapshot of exposure at a single
moment in time.
Although it has lately
become somewhat popular on Wall Street and financial circles
to claim that notional amounts of derivatives bear no relation
to the risk of derivatives positions, we strongly disagree.
The higher the notional amounts of an entityÕs total derivatives
exposure, generally the higher the leverage it has used
to pyramid its derivatives positions. The greater the leverage
employed, the higher the aggregate risk of a derivatives
portfolio. We will discuss this important concept in more
detail further below.
In the United States, commercial
banks and trusts are required to report their derivatives
exposure once every quarter to the United States Comptroller
of the Currency. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
was founded in 1863 as a bureau of the US Treasury and has
been responsible for ensuring a "stable and competitive
national banking system". Per the OCCÕs website at www.occ.treas.gov
, the OCC claims it has four objectives:
"To ensure the safety and
soundness of the national banking system, to foster competition
by allowing banks to offer new products and services, to
improve the efficiency and effectiveness of OCC supervision,
including reducing regulatory burden, and to ensure fair
and equal access to financial services for all Americans."
The OCC prepares a quarterly
report called the "Bank Derivatives Report" which details
general derivatives positions for all US commercial banks
and trusts that operate in the derivatives market. US commercial
banks and trusts are required by law to report their general
derivatives positions to the OCC each quarter. Although
the OCC Bank Derivatives Report does not include the derivatives
positions of non-commercial bank entities like Goldman Sachs,
which is an investment bank, the OCC report is still extremely
useful in providing a sample or cross section of derivatives
market activity and positions in general. We are not sure
what percent of the total derivatives market that commercial
banks and trusts represent, but we suspect it approaches
a majority.
In this essay, all the
derivatives data cited is directly from the latest available
OCC Bank Derivatives Report, for the first quarter of 2001,
available at http://www.occ.treas.gov/ftp/deriv/dq101.pdf
. All of our graphs and derivatives numbers are either lifted
directly from or calculated directly from this important
US government report. As the data we are reporting is so
mind-blowing as to appear unbelievable, we strongly encourage
you to check out this original OCC document with your own
eyes. An analysis of this official report makes it quite
evident that the enormous derivatives market is dominated
by one US holding company, the elite blue-chip Dow 30 superbank
JPMorganChase.
Our first graph was constructed
using data from "Table 1" of the OCC Q1 2001 Bank Derivatives
Report. It clearly shows who the largest derivatives players
are out of all the 395 US commercial banks and trusts that
dabble in the derivatives market. The first point that leaps
out of this pie graph like a central banker sitting on a
thumbtack shows the overwhelming iron-fisted dominance that
JPMorganChase (Chase Manhattan Bank and Morgan Guaranty
together) exercises over the US derivatives market.
As we delve into the often
cryptic world of derivatives, it rapidly becomes apparent
that the amounts of dollars of capital effectively controlled
through derivatives is absolutely staggering. The notional
amount pie in our first graph above is a monstrous $43,922
billion, or almost $44 TRILLION dollars. Rarely at a loss
for superlatives, we cannot even think of enough to describe
how large these numbers truly are! It is virtually impossible
for humans to grasp how big even one trillion is, so we
are enlisting the help of the fascinating "MegaPenny Project"
website which was created to illustrate enormous numbers.
The MegaPenny Project is
located at http://www.kokogiak.com/megapenny/
and is designed to illustrate large numbers by stacking
given numbers of common US one-cent pennies and showing
the relative size of the stacks. We encourage you to take
in the whole fascinating MegaPenny tour, but for this essay
we are particularly interested in its two pages describing
one trillion pennies, beginning at http://www.kokogiak.com/megapenny/thirteen.asp
. The MegaPenny Project does a wonderful job graphically
illustrating just how much space one trillion pennies would
take up.
According to the fine folks
at MegaPenny, a solid block of one trillion pennies tightly
stacked on top of each other would create a cube 273 feet
on each side, each axis of the cube almost as long as an
American football field. For comparison purposes, remember
that all the gold mined in the last six millennia would
fit in a much, much smaller cube only 62 feet on each side!
The cube of one trillion pennies would weigh an amazing
3,125,000 tons, almost half as much as the estimated entire
weight of all the huge stones comprising the Great Pyramid
on the Giza plateau in Egypt! If the trillion pennies were
laid flat side-by-side instead of stacked, they would cover
89,675 acres, or over 140 square miles. Stacked on top of
each other in a single mega-column, one trillion pennies
would create a stack of pennies 986,426 miles high. The
average distance from the Earth to the Moon is only around
238,866 miles, so one trillion pennies stacked could travel
between the Earth and Moon over four times!
One trillion is a ridiculously
large number and almost impossible to visualize in the abstract.
Trillions of dollars of derivatives exposure blow the mind!
According to MegaPenny, it would take 1.8t pennies to create
an exact full-scale replica of the Empire State Building
out of pennies. It would take 2.6t tightly stacked pennies
to create a life-sized perfect replica of ChicagoÕs mighty
SearÕs Tower.
It is very hard to believe
that the total US notional derivatives positions of US commercial
banks and trusts is $43.9 TRILLION dollars. By comparison,
the US GDP, all the goods and services produced and consumed
in our entire great nation by every single American each
year, was only running $10.1t in the first quarter. The
US M3 money supply, the broadest measure of money, was only
$7.4t at the time. The 500 best and biggest companies in
the United States, the S&P 500, were only worth $10.4t
at the end of the first quarter. Clearly, the $43.9t dollars
of the notional value of derivatives that a mere 395 commercial
banks and trusts control is simply staggering as it far
exceeds the entire US GDP, the entire broad US money supply,
and the entire value of all the stocks traded in the United
States! BIG, BIG, BIG numbers!
Of that huge $43.9t, JPMorganChase,
a single holding company, controls a breathtaking $26.3t
worth of derivatives in notional terms! JPM represents 59.8%
of the total derivatives market controlled by US commercial
banks and trusts per the OCC. Why on earth would one entity
run up such gargantuan exposure to derivatives? Perhaps
JPM controls nearly 60% of the commercial bank segment of
the derivatives market because maybe it holds 60% of the
commercial bank assets in the United States of America.
We constructed the next graph from "Table 1" of the Q1 2001
OCC Bank Derivatives Report as well to investigate this
very question.
Although JPM is a very
large commercial bank, it only represents around 12.6% of
the total commercial bank assets in the United States per
the Q1 OCC report. The pie size in this second graph is
$4.9t. This number implies that, in general, the US commercial
banking system has a derivatives notional value to assets
ratio of 9 to 1, pretty extraordinary leverage when one
realizes that a large portion of a given bankÕs assets are
not usually the shareholdersÕ but represent funds entrusted
to the bank by depositors in various forms. It is also pretty
extraordinary gross leverage for an industry that prides
itself in being "conservative". A 9 to 1 implied leverage
to assets achieved through derivatives sounds more like
hedge fund territory than banking!
JPMorganChase controls
12.6% of the total commercial bank and trust assets in the
United States, but a whopping 59.8% of the total commercial
bank and trust derivatives market. JPMÕs implied derivatives
leverage on assets ratio is a colossal 43 to 1. Why would
one superbank risk such extreme derivatives exposure relative
to its asset base?
Even more provocative and
outright frightening is the ratio of the notional value
of JPMÕs derivatives positions to its shareholder capital.
Per JPMÕs latest 10-Q quarterly financial report filed with
the US Securities and Exchange Commission available at www.jpmorganchase.com/pdfdoc/jpmchase/10Q2Q01.pdf
, JPM reported a stockholdersÕ equity balance of $42b. $42b
is a lot of capital and is nothing to scoff at, but when
compared to an outstanding aggregate derivatives position
with a notional value of $26,276b, JPMÕs implied leverage
on stockholder equity is utterly mind-blowing. For every
dollar that JPMÕs shareholders own free and clear, JPM management
has pyramided on almost $626 worth of derivatives exposure
in notional terms to the highly risky and highly volatile
derivatives market! 626 to 1 implied leverage?!? Why, why,
why?
While the latest JPM 10-Q
was released in mid-August and pertains to Q2 while the
latest OCC derivatives report is from Q1, this cross quarter
comparison still accurately shows the hyper-extreme leverage
inherent in JPMÕs aggregate derivatives exposure. If we
instead use JPMÕs Q1 10-Q to ensure we are comparing apples
to apples, the implied leverage on stockholdersÕ equity
changes little to 611 to 1 on $43b of stockholdersÕ equity.
In financial circles 10
to 1 leverage is considered very aggressive, 100 to 1 is
considered to be in the kamikaze realm, but we donÕt ever
recall hearing about large-scale leveraged operations exceeding
100 to 1 outside of the horrible example of the doomed super
hedge fund Long Term Capital Management. JPMÕs management
may have effectively created the most leveraged large hedge
fund in the history of the world by using $42b worth of
shareholdersÕ equity to control derivatives representing
a notional value of a staggering $26,276b. After we shook
off the blunt shock of learning of an implied leverage of
626 to 1 by the United StatesÕ premier Wall Street bank
and elite Dow 30 blue-chip company, we continued to dig
deeper into the revealing OCC Bank Derivatives Report.
The next pie graph was
constructed from "Table 8", "Table 9", and "Table 10" of
the OCC report. It shows a breakdown of how JPMÕs derivatives
portfolio is comprised, of what classes of derivatives constitute
the JPM Derivatives Monster. The total pie size in this
graph is nine-tenths of one percent smaller than the earlier
totals in the OCC report. The OCC explained this small delta
in a footnote claiming it was caused by the exclusion of
some credit derivatives as well as rounding differences.
The large green slice of this pie is comprised of a small
amount of credit derivatives and other derivatives of which
the OCC does not require specific disclosure including "foreign
exchange contracts with an original maturity of 14 days
or less, futures contracts, written options, basis swaps,
and any contracts not subject to risk-based capital requirements."
Once again, this graph
exclusively represents only JPMorganChaseÕs enormous $26t
derivatives portfolio, no other banksÕ or trustsÕ data is
included in this gargantuan pie. The sorcererÕs apprentice
is playing with powerful financial magic indeed!
As the pie illustrates,
JPMÕs largest position by far is in interest rate derivatives.
The huge red king-sized slice of the pie graph represents
interest rate derivatives with a notional amount of a staggering
$17.7t!
In interest rate derivatives,
the notional amount represents the implied principal of
a debt on which interest rate derivatives are written. For
instance, a debtor with $1m in debt and variable interest
rate payments may contract with JPM to hedge its interest
rate payments into a fixed interest rate scheme instead
of a variable one. By having a fixed interest rate payment
schedule, the debtor company will not have to worry about
market fluctuations in interest rates as their counterparty
JPMorganChase assumes that risk for a fee. Although the
interest streams in this small $1m debt example are swapped,
the actual cash changing hands may only be a few tens of
thousands of dollars. The $1m in principal, however, is
the notional amount for our interest rate derivatives example
and provides a true picture of JPM positional exposure in
the deal.
Gold investors may be surprised
to see what a trivial portion of JPMÕs total derivatives
portfolio is deployed in the gold market. Only two tenths
of one percent of JPMÕs notional derivatives exposure is
in gold. Of course, gold is an exceedingly small market
compared to the huge debt or foreign exchange markets so
JPMÕs position in gold derivatives is still quite large
relative to the gold market itself. JPM reported $56.8b
in gold derivatives in the Q1 2001 OCC report. By comparison,
with only 2,500 metric tonnes of gold mined on the entire
planet each year, the whole freshly mined annual world gold
supply is only worth $22b at $275 per ounce.
JPM is controlling a notional
amount of gold through derivatives equal to the value of
every ounce of gold that will be mined in the entire world
for the next two and a half years assuming gold production
does not continue to plummet due to dismal gold prices,
which it probably will.
Why is a sophisticated
superbank like JPM even interested in the small and devastated
gold market, let alone motivated enough to maintain derivatives
exposure equal to more than 6,400 tonnes of gold? Why does
JPM management want to maintain derivatives gold exposure
worth 1.35 times the capital owned by the shareholders of
the company? With Wall Street perpetually telling the world
that gold is a "barbaric relic", why does the premier Wall
Street bank have such large gold derivatives positions?
Ever more intriguing questions!
In the lower left corner
of the graph above note the percentage of derivatives market
shares that JPM controls out of the entire US commercial
bank and trust derivatives universe. JPM is the utterly
dominant player with 64% of the interest rate derivatives
market, 49% of the foreign exchange market, 68% of the equity
derivatives market, and 62% of the gold derivatives market
among US commercial banks and trusts. JPMÕs management,
for whatever reasons, has effectively built up a derivates
powerhouse that has almost cornered the entire US commercial
bank and trust derivatives market.
Zeroing back in on the
$17.7t in interest rate derivatives, we wonder why such
enormous exposure to interest rates has been shouldered
by JPMÕs management. In terms of interest rate derivatives
alone, JPM has an implied leverage ratio of notional interest
rate derivatives exposure to stockholdersÕ equity of 422
to 1. Are JPM shareholders aware of this? It is hard to
fathom why anyone would want to have leveraged exposure
to chaotic interest rates with 422 to 1 leverage, but an
intriguing hypothesis has recently emerged that may illuminate
the decision by JPM to dominate the enormous interest rate
derivatives market. Here is a quick outline of this provocative
theory.
As growing numbers of investors
around the world realize, American attorney Reginald Howe
filed a landmark complaint against the Swiss-based Bank
for International Settlements on December 7, 2000. In his
lawsuit, which is highly recommended reading and available
for free download in PDF format at www.zealllc.com/howepla.htm
, Mr. Howe carefully builds the case that certain large
banks that deal in gold derivatives were involved in an
effort to actively manipulate the world gold market in violation
of key United States laws. Shortly after Mr. Howe filed
his complaint in United States District Court, we wrote
a summary essay outlining his lawsuit called "Let Slip the
Dogs of War" which also has further background information
if you are interested in digging deeper.
In Howe v. BIS et al, both
the pre-merger JP Morgan and Chase Manhattan were named
as defendants with the BIS. In his complaint, Howe points
out anomalous gold derivatives activity at both banks documented
on earlier OCC bank derivatives reports that correlates
extremely well with unusual activity in the gold markets
and gold price. The evidence is highly suggestive that both
banks, now a single entity, used carefully targeted strategic
gold derivatives transactions to help rein in the out-of-control
gold rally that was sparked in late 1999 after European
central banks agreed to curtail their gold sales and leasing
with the Washington Agreement.
Mr. HoweÕs complaint filed
in the federal court elaborates on this odd activity by
the two banks that have since merged to form superbank JPMorganChase.
Interestingly, Mr. HoweÕs case will soon be heard before
a federal judge in Boston, Massachusetts on October 9, 2001,
when defendants will present their arguments in support
of their Motions to Dismiss.
With both ancestor banks
of the new JPMorganChase already documented as having well-timed
anomalous gold derivatives activity prior to their merger,
chances are the banks had some level of insider-type knowledge
of what was really transpiring in the gold market. There
is no way that JPM management would have acquired gold derivatives
with a notional value worth 1.35 times the total of their
entire shareholdersÕ equity base unless they knew and intimately
understood the gold market.
On May 30, 2001, ace researcher
and analyst Michael Bolser and GATA Chairman Bill Murphy
co-published an analysis of JPMorganChaseÕs interest rate
derivatives in Mr. MurphyÕs "Midas" column at the excellent
www.LeMetropoleCafe.com
contrarian investing website. Mr. Bolser titled his research
"GoldGateÕs Real Motive?". Current subscribers to www.LeMetropoleCafe.com
can see this analysis in the archives of the "James Joyce"
table at LeMetropoleCafe. In his analysis, Mr. Bolser pointed
out that JPMorganChase had $16t worth of notional interest
rate derivatives exposure at the time and how incredible
this fact was. He noted that JPMÕs interest rate derivatives
notional amounts had doubled since the middle of 1998, an
astronomical increase given the absolute amounts of dollars
involved.
Mr. Bolser offered the
stunning tentative conclusion that perhaps a suppressed
or shackled-down gold price was a necessary prerequisite
to JPM assuming enormous amounts of interest rate derivatives,
as a managed gold price would ratchet down inflationary
expectations and make interest rate positions much less
volatile and risky than in a truly free market. Mr. Bolser
planned to continue his research and was seeking earlier
OCC reports to model JPMÕs derivatives trading activities
and exposures further back in time.
After Mr. BolserÕs interest
rate derivatives report revealing JPMÕs enormous and massively
out-of-proportion derivatives positions, there were a few
tangential comments made about this hypothesis over the
summer by various market analysts, but for the most part
it remained an obscure area of inquiry that appeared to
generate little popular interest.
Then, just a few weeks
ago on August 13, 2001, Reginald Howe published a fascinating
commentary entitled "GibsonÕs Paradox Revisited: Professor
Summers Analyzes Gold Prices" available at www.GoldenSextant.com
. In his essay Mr. Howe quotes a 1988 academic paper from
the Journal of Political Economy co-written by President
Bill ClintonÕs future third Secretary of the Treasury, Lawrence
Summers. Among other things, Mr. Howe discusses Mr. SummersÕ
interpretation of an observation by the famous economist
John Maynard Keynes on the behavior of gold prices and real
interest rates. Lord Keynes called the relationship "GibsonÕs
Paradox".
As Mr. Howe points out,
per Lord Keynes, GibsonÕs Paradox, the solid relationship
between price levels including gold and interest rates under
a gold standard regime was, "one of the most completely
established empirical facts in the whole field of quantitative
economics." Mr. Howe shows, using the writings of Professor
Lawrence Summers and legendary economist John Maynard Keynes
that there is a rock-solid inverse relationship between
gold and real interest rates in a free market. We investigated
this phenomenon as well in our essay "Real Rates and Gold".
In effect, real interest rates could be used to predict
inverse moves in the price of gold or gold could be used
to predict inverse moves in the real interest rates.
For us, HoweÕs fantastic
"GibsonÕs Paradox Revisited" essay finally lit the proverbial
lightbulbs above our heads that triggered a solid understanding
of Michael BolserÕs shrewd earlier hypothesis on JPMÕs enormous
interest rate derivatives exposure! GibsonÕs Paradox helped
to reconcile the puzzle and answer nagging questions about
JPMÕs gargantuan interest rate derivatives position and
how it could relate to the active management of the price
of gold.
If factions of the US government
in the Clinton years from 1995 to late 2000 were really
actively manipulating the gold price (as the latest amazing
research of government records by James Turk and Reginald
Howe certainly strongly suggests through ever-increasing
evidence), and if JPM really had inside knowledge of some
of these operations as its anomalous gold derivatives activity
seems to imply, then it is only a short logical step to
assume that a possible catalyst for the explosion in JPMÕs
interest rate derivatives operations was the artificially
pegged price of gold!
GibsonÕs Paradox, defined
by Lord Keynes, effectively claims that under a fixed gold
price regime real interest rates remain predictable. If
JPM top management was participating in any US efforts to
cap gold, they had full knowledge that a de facto fixed
gold price regime had been stealthily established and they
would have had a carte blanche to massively balloon potentially
highly lucrative interest rate derivatives exposure. After
all, if JPM was convinced gold was under control, and that
gold prices were a prime driver of real interest rates,
then what better time to become the king of the interest
rate derivates world than when gold was being quietly hammered
down through massive sales of official sector gold from
Western central banksÕ coffers?
Our superficial presentation
here certainly does not do this startling hypothesis justice,
but the JPMorganChase interest rate derivatives explosion
due to JPM upper management knowledge of and possible involvement
in stealthy government machinations in the gold markets
is a very intriguing hypothesis that definitely warrants
further investigation and discussion. We may write a future
essay on this topic alone after we dig deeper, and we certainly
hope other analysts and researchers follow Michael BolserÕs
original lead and do some serious investigating.
Back to the JPMorganChase
Derivatives Monster for now, we have to wonder how many
JPM shareholders realize just how incredibly leveraged their
superbank has become. Do they think they are holding a safe
conservative blue-chip elite Wall Street bank, or do the
average shareholders desire to hold a hyper-leveraged mega
hedge fund with 600+ times implied leverage on stockholdersÕ
equity? Do JPM shareholders understand how dangerous large
derivatives positions have proven historically for other
companies?
JPM currently has something
like 2,700 large institutional shareholders who hold almost
61% of its common stock. Do the managers of these mutual
funds and pension funds understand that JPM management has
built the biggest most highly-leveraged derivatives pyramid
in the history of the world per US government OCC reports?
Do fund managers understand the inherent risks in leveraging
capital hundreds of times over? These are important questions
that ALL JPM investors should carefully consider, especially
in this incredibly turbulent and volatile market environment
we are experiencing today.
One of the most dangerous
possible events for high derivatives exposure is unforeseen
market volatility, especially that caused by unusual and
unexpected major discontinuities in market pricing. The
following graph is also shamelessly taken from the OCC report,
"Graph 5C", which shows the "charge-offs" taken on derivatives
written off in each quarter since 1996 by commercial banks
and trusts alone. Note the enormous loss that occurred in
the third quarter of 1998 coincident with the Russian Debt
Crisis/LTCM debacle and the large losses in late 1999 following
the Washington Agreement gold spike.
When a non-linear market
event that is inherently unpredictable like the Russian
Debt Crisis occurs, its effects on carefully crafted derivatives
portfolios can be catastrophic. Long Term Capital Management
folded during the 1998 crisis. It was an elite hedge fund
run by some of the most brilliant market geniuses of the
entire last century. The all-star brain trust at LTCM could
probably have helped put men on Mars, as the stellar IQs
and acclaim of the founders were without equal in the financial
world. The gentlemen helping to build the sophisticated
computer derivatives trading models for LTCM were Nobel-prize
winning economists who understood more about markets and
volatility than pretty much everyone else on the planet.
Here are a few paragraphs on LTCM from an earlier essay
we penned on gold derivatives volatility titled, "Gold Delta
Hedge Trap (Part 2)".
"LTCM employed ScholesÕ
and MertonÕs work to hedge and protect its bets. Through
Black and Scholes based hedging strategies, LTCM became
one of the most highly leveraged hedge funds in history.
It had a capital base of $3b, yet it controlled over $100b
in assets worldwide, and some reports claim the total notional
value of its derivatives exceeded an incredible $1.25 TRILLION.
LTCM used extraordinarily sophisticated mathematical computer
models to predict and mitigate its risks."
"In August 1998, an unexpected
non-linearity occurred that made a mockery of the models.
Russia defaulted on its sovereign debt, and liquidity around
the globe began to rapidly dry up as derivatives positions
were hastily unwound. The LTCM financial models told the
principals they should not expect to lose more than $50m
of capital in a given day, but they were soon losing $100m
every day. Four days after the Russian default, their initial
$3b capital base lost another $500m in a single trading
day alone!"
"As LTCM geared up to declare
bankruptcy, the US Federal Reserve believed LTCMÕs highly
leveraged derivatives positions were so enormous that their
default could wreak havoc throughout the entire global financial
system. The US Fed engineered a $3.6b bailout of the fund,
creating a major moral hazard for other high-flying hedge
funds. (Expecting the government or counterparties will
bail them out of bad bets once they get too large, why not
push the limits of safety and prudence as a hedge fund manager?)"
Long Term Capital Management
had $3b in capital allegedly supporting $1,250b of derivatives
notional value, an implied leverage ratio of 417 to 1. JPMorganChase,
per its own reports filed with the US government, has $42b
supporting $26,276b of derivatives notional value. Incredibly,
JPMÕs implied capital leverage on its derivatives is far,
far higher than LTCMÕs at 626 to 1. IsnÕt it disconcerting
to realize JPM management has further leveraged its shareholder
equity than even the infamous Long Term Capital Management?
LTCM had the best economic
minds in the world running the fund, unlimited brain and
computer power, but still an unpredictable volatility event
spurred by the Russian Debt Crisis caused their painstakingly
developed computer derivatives models to blow up. By many
reports, including from the Federal Reserve, the LTCM failure
was so dangerous it threatened to take the whole financial
system down if LTCMÕs obligations to its counterparties
were defaulted upon.
We are NOT suggesting that
JPM is another LTCM. We know that the men and women running
JPM are very intelligent and have a deep understanding of
the global markets in which their company operates. We know
they have cross-hedged and carefully modeled their enormous
derivatives portfolio to try and make it net market neutral
and therefore resilient to shocks. But, just as a tiny imperfection
can cause a massive hardened-steel shaft connected to a
nuclear aircraft carrierÕs propeller to vibrate uncontrollably
until it shatters, even a "balanced" net derivatives portfolio
of massive size is highly vulnerable to market shocks that
can push it out of proper equilibrium and spin the computer
hedging models out of control far faster than derivatives
can be unwound.
There comes a point when
leverage becomes so extreme that even a tiny unforeseen
event can break down the complex contractual glue that holds
the various components and players of the convoluted derivatives
world together and cause the whole structure to shake or
crumble.
We believe that JPMÕs management
is taking a mammoth gamble with the wealth of its shareholders
by supporting derivatives with a notional value of over
$26 TRILLION dollars with a relatively trifling $42 billion
of shareholder equity. Any discontinuous market volatility
event that is unforeseen and beyond JPM managementÕs control
could conceivably cause this immense pyramid to rapidly
unwind, utterly annihilating the companyÕs capital in a
matter of days or weeks.
Also, JPM, just by virtue
of having extreme leverage, is placing itself at risk for
a Barings Bank type scenario, where a rogue trader hid derivatives
trading activities from management until it was too late
and the damage was irreparable. What if some twenty- or
thirty-something derivatives trader working for JPM accidentally
makes a big mistake in his or her trading and destroys that
fragile balance supporting the whole massive JPM derivatives
pyramid and the whole structure comes crashing down?
By its own reporting to
the US government, JPMorganChase has shown itself to have
evolved into a real-life Derivatives Monster. Derivatives
offer extreme leverage and the potential for mega-profits,
but with that they carry commensurate extreme risks. Until
the JPM Derivatives Monster begins to deflate its leverage
and exposure, we believe individual and institutional investors
alike should be very careful in assessing the potential
extreme risk of holding JPM stock.
We canÕt help but feeling
that essentially unlimited leverage is the modern financial
equivalent of Walt DisneyÕs sorcererÕs apprentice in "Fantasia"
unleashing forces he couldnÕt possibly hope to control.
Adam Hamilton, CPA, MCSE
aka Zelotes
7 September 2001
Copyright 2000 - 2001 Zeal
Research
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Metropole Cafe. All rights reserved.
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