By Mike "Mish" Shedlock | 31 January 2008
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Bank Reserves Go Negative
I have been watching a chart of Borrowed Bank Reserves for several weeks. The action is unprecedented.
Borrowed Reserves of Depository Institutions
Click Here, or on the image, to see a larger, undistorted image.
The NFORBES Chart above is courtesy of St. Louis Fed.
Here's an interesting excerpt from the book Investing Public Funds by Girard Miller about borrowed reserves.
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Given that the Fed is certainly not in a credit tightening mode, we must look for another explanation. Here it is: Banks in aggregate have now burnt through all of their capital and are forced to borrow reserves from the Fed in order to keep lending.
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Detail comes from the Federal Reserve H3 Release.
Table 2 Not Seasonally Adjusted Reserves in Millions of Dollars
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Total Reserves for two weeks ending January 16th are $39.988 billion. Inquiring minds are no doubt wondering where that $40 Billion came from. It's a good question. The answer is the Term Auction Facility. You can see that figure in Table 1 of the H3 release (not shown).
Were it not for the Term Auction Facility, banks would have had to raise another $40 billion in capital by selling assets or some other means. We will look at "other means" in just a moment.
For now, the Fed is not disclosing who is borrowing under the Term Auction Facility, probably out of fear that people just might find out what banks are capital impaired and by how much.
January 29 TAF Auction
Forbes is reporting Fed's TAF auctions $30 bln 28-day loans at 3.123 pct.
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The Role Of The Monolines
What Happens if Ambac (ABK) and MBIA (MBI) are downgraded? That too is a good question. Let's take a look.
MarketWatch is reporting Banks may need $143 billion in fresh capital.
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The Telegraph is reporting Banks 'face a further $300bn sub-prime hit'.
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As noted in Banks Attempt To Freeze Balance Sheets “Large money center banks have virtually frozen their balance sheets, reluctant to lend even to good credit,” according to Scott Anderson, a senior economist at Wells Fargo.
However, rising numbers of foreclosures are forcing assets back on to bank balance sheets in spite of that desire to freeze. It's no wonder banks are spooked by those walking away from debt. See 60 Minutes Legitimizes Walking Away for details.
Banks Raise ATM Fees To $3.00
One method of raising capital is to increase fees. $3 ATM Fees are one such method.
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Another way to raise cash (and a very expensive one at that) is to offer way above market rates on savings deposits and CDs. Let's take a look at some current offers on savings accounts.
Savings Deposit Rates
Click Here, or on the image, to see a larger, undistorted image.
Chart courtesy of Bankrate.Com.
Any bank paying those rates on savings accounts is desperate for cash. Those looking for candidate banks liable to go under need only look at the price banks are willing to pay for capital.
I cannot stress this enough: If you accept these offers, please make sure you never go above the FDIC limit.
$3.00 ATM Fees Will Backfire
As for banks charging $3.00 ATM fees, I think the strategy will backfire in several ways. Some customers will stop using anything but their own bank's ATMs. Instead of getting $1.50 banks will get nothing. Other customers will opt to max out the cash they take on each transaction to minimize the number of transaction fees.
Banks charging their own customers will find many switching banks out of resentment. In the grand scheme of things, $30 Billion or $40 billion is not a lot of money. However, when lack of reserves would otherwise prevent lending, it certainly is a lot of money. Imagine a major bank telling customers: "We have no cash reserves so we can't renew your loan." With that in mind, banks are scrambling to raise cash .
Borrowing reserves is expensive, paying 5% on CDs and Savings Deposits is expensive, and in the end, attempting to extract more blood out of consumers by raising ATM fees to $3.00 is going to prove expensive. There are simply no good ways to raise capital [[but it's why the Fed is desperately trying to steepen the interest rate curve (banks make money on the difference between short and long term rates): normxxx]]. And the problem is going to get far worse before it gets better.
A deepening recession, a falling stock market, plunging commercial real estate, and social acceptance of 'walking away' are all going to exacerbate the problems Bernanke and lending institutions face. A Crash Course For Bernanke on academic theory is coming. It will be interesting to watch how he reacts to it.
M O R E. . .
Normxxx
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