So, the IMF has made a ‘bold’ move, announcing two measures
custom-tailored to shore up the insolvent Euro zone until something else,
miraculously and unexpectedly cures its deadly disease of too much debt against
too low of the quality of its growth.
Details of the latest ‘Leverage Like Lehmans’ scheme.
The Precautionary Credit Line
(PCL) “has been established to provide effective crisis prevention to members
with sound fundamentals, policies, and institutional policy frameworks that
have no actual balance of payments need at the time of approval of the PCL, but
moderate vulnerabilities that would not meet the FCL’s [The Flexible Credit Line – see below] qualification standard.”
That’s a mouthful of gibberish. According to the IMF,
totally healthy economies will be lining up to borrow from IMF even though they
can access funding in the normal markets. Otherwise, they’d be in a distress
and ‘prevention’ would really mean ‘once sh*t hits the fan’. Oh, and per IMF,
it will be countries that actually don’t really need to borrow as such at all,
as they will “have no actual balance of payments need at the time of approval
of the PCL”. In other words, PCL aims to supply emergency credit to countries
not in emergency and in no need of credit. Yes, folks, indeed they will.
“Members may request an arrangement with duration of between
one and two years. Access under an arrangement with one-year duration shall not
exceed 500 percent of quota, with the entire amount being made available upon
approval of such arrangement and remaining available throughout the arrangement
period subject to an interim six-monthly review.”
Here we have it again – if the PCL-using members sport
“sound fundamentals, policies, and institutional policy frameworks” and “have
no actual balance of payments need at the time of approval of the PCL”, why
would IMF need to perform an interim review, especially within such a short
time frame as 6 months? Normally, such reviews are carried out to ensure compliance
with lending conditions that are designed to stabilize and fiscally improve
borrowers’ performance. But, clearly, borrowers with ‘sound fundamentals’ etc
have no need to improve their fiscal and economic performance.
“Access under an arrangement with a duration of more than
one year shall not exceed 1000 percent of quota, with an initial amount not in
excess of 500 percent being made available upon approval of the arrangement and
the remaining amount being made available at the beginning of the second year
of the arrangement subject to completion of the relevant six-monthly review.
Purchases under PCL arrangements are repayable in 8 quarterly instalments 3¼ -
5 years after disbursement.”
So in effect, the IMF has created an up to 7 years lending facility
(5 years to repayment from disbursement, plus 2 years to repay) which is
roughly speaking similar to their ‘normal’ Lender of Last Resort (LOLR) loans.
And that is for members with, recall, ‘sound fundamentals’ and in no need of
borrowing. Presumably, you can see Sarko applying for one of them PCL loans to
build Disneyland Paris Deux.
And notice the number – at 1000 percent the IMF will be
leveraging member contribution some 10 times, to lend against SDRs. That’s a
hefty leverage, especially in today’s terms.
The second facility created is less bizarre, although no
less disturbing.
“Flexible Credit Line The Flexible Credit Line (FCL) has
been established to allow members with very strong track records to access IMF
resources based on pre-set qualification criteria to deal with all types of
balance of payments problems. The FCL could be used both on a precautionary
(crisis prevention) and nonprecautionary (crisis resolution) basis.”
So now, distressed sovereigns can borrow from the IMF either
on the needs-based principle (just as the current lending by the IMF goes,
except without any caps on how much they can borrow – see below) or on the
‘precautionary’ basis (presumably once you smell the rot, you can get IMF
pre-approve you for a mortgage). The former is really a blank cheque for loans
to existent and future delinquents. The latter is for those delinquents playing
chicken with the markets: who finds out who first – the markets find out the
dodgy sovereign or the dodgy sovereign finds the IMF.
“Members may request either a one-year arrangement with no
interim reviews, or a two-year arrangement with an interim review of
qualification required after twelve months.”
Now there’s something funny going on here. In PCL, a
non-distressed sovereign with ‘sound fundamentals’ and in no need of borrowing
will be lent to on the back of bi-annual reviews. In the FCL, a dodgy sovereign
with unsound fundamentals (BOP crisis) will be borrowing without a review. I
have no idea what is going on through the IMF minds, but might this be that the
Fund’s effectively abrogating from any enforcement on LOLR loans in the Euro
area?
“Upon expiration, the Fund may approve additional FCL
arrangements for the member.”
Re: there is no time limit on the loans, so in effect the
FCL can be the replacement of the existent more stringent LOLR loans
“Access is determined based on individual country financing
needs and is not subject to a pre-set cap. Purchases under FCL arrangements are
repayable in 8 quarterly instalments 3¼ - 5 years after disbursement.”
So there is unlimited leverage that is allowed under the
FCL. Not even 1,000% or 10,000%, but ‘not subject to a pre-set cap’.
Potentially, we are talking Lehman^n where n is any number between zero and…
well ‘not subject to a pre-set cap’. The reason such extreme levels of
leveraging are needed is that the European clients for whom such programmes are
designed need well in excess of their SDR-linked funds, even if these are
leveraged at 1,000%.
You see, leveraging SDRs (see allocations here)
at 1,000% would allow
- Spain
to borrow some SDR40,234mln or roughly speaking (at 1SDR=€1.355)
€54.5bn through which Spain will burn, oh, in about 3 months post
borrowing.
- Italy
to borrow some SDR78,823 or €107bn which won’t float “Fool” Monti for too
long.
- Portugal to borrow SDR10,297mln or €13.95bn which is quite below the €20-25bn that it will require in Bailout-2 (see the story here) and that assuming that we leverage it up on top of already leverage-ridden Bailout-1 SDRs.
- Ireland to borrow SDR12,576mln or €17bn – not bad, but not exactly a windfall should Irish economy take a turn for the worst. Note, this is roughly equivalent to what Blackrock estimated will be the losses on owner-occupied mortgages in IRL3 ‘big banks’. Oh, and don’t forget, like Portugal – we are already levered on our SDRs under the Bailout-1.
- Greece,
well, assuming Greece can borrow anything else from the IMF, since it
managed to double-lever its SDRs in Bailouts-1 and 2 already, to borrow
some SDR11,018mln or a miserly €14.9bn.
All of this simply means that if PCL/FCL to have any effect
on Euro area debt crisis, it will have to be used as levered borrowing well by
the likes of France and Germany to raise funds for… well, might it be EFSF? In
other words, solvent member states can claim access to PCL to ‘insure’ private
sector buy-in into EFSF. A sort of borrow to buy insurance policy stuff.
We, thus, are no longer in the world with over-leveraged
banks, but in the world with over-leveraged banks, central banks, & at last,
the over=leveraged lender of last resort. That’s what I call ‘Contagion
Complete’. Next stop on the Euro train – the mine shaft. All aboard!
1 comment:
All ponzi schemes end. And our monetary system is the greatest of all of them....
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