This
has come my way via Max Keiser's website, and now, from Aotearoa: a
Wider Perspective.
These
could always be rumours, but could also be indication of something
very serious.
No
doubt more of this to come
Rumours
have it that JP Morgan Is On The Way Out
Over
the past couple of days rumours are circulating that a big banks is
on the verger of collapse and many of them associate that banks with
JP Morgan.
MORGAN
STANLEY IMPLOSION
The
insider conversation, often called chatter when it become deafening
in tone, is that Morgan Stanley faces imminent failure and ruin.
Almost two weeks ago, the Jackass provided a
tip to Bill Murphy of GATA to post on his popular LeMetropole Cafe
that Morgan Stanley fund managers and high ranking employees were
preparing for the firm’s implosion.
A
subscriber to the Hat Trick Letter has a good friend whose father
works as a fund manager and provided the story. It was not detailed,
and bore no follow-up after my request.
The
older employees are selling all of their stock, some legacy stock
from one or two decades ago.Many workers are making contingency plans
for their next positions in another firm.
When Lehman Brothers was killed, thousands of employees had to find
new jobs, some without success.
In the last week, the shock waves are
being heard from internal Wall Street sources in an unequivocal
manner. The implosion is in progress, like the collapse of several
platforms and structural cables.
For
full article GO HERE
Here
is a iconograph showing the exposure of the five to big too fail to
the derivatives
bubble
Following
on from that, this Zero Hedge article from last year may be of
interest
Five
Banks Account For 96% Of The $250 Trillion In Outstanding US
Derivative Exposure; Is Morgan Stanley Sitting On An FX Derivative
Time Bomb?
24
September, 2011
The
latest quarterly report from the Office
Of the Currency Comptroller is
out and as usual it presents in a crisp, clear and very much glaring
format the fact that the top 4 banks in the US now account for a
massively disproportionate amount of the derivative risk in the
financial system. Specifically, of the $250 trillion in gross
notional amount of derivative contracts outstanding (consisting of
Interest Rate, FX, Equity Contracts, Commodity and CDS) among the Top
25 commercial banks (a number that swells to $333 trillion when
looking at the Top 25 Bank Holding Companies), a mere 5 banks (and
really 4) account for 95.9% of all derivative exposure (HSBC replaced
Wells as the Top 5th bank, which at $3.9 trillion in derivative
exposure is a distant place from #4 Goldman
with $47.7 trillion). The top 4 banks: JPM with $78.1 trillion in
exposure, Citi with $56 trillion, Bank of America with $53 trillion
and Goldman with $48 trillion, account for 94.4% of total exposure.
As historically has been the case, the bulk of consolidated exposure
is in Interest Rate swaps ($204.6 trillion), followed by FX
($26.5TR), CDS ($15.2 trillion), and Equity and Commodity with $1.6
and $1.4 trillion, respectively. And
that's your definition of Too Big To Fail right there: the biggest
banks are not only getting bigger, but their risk exposure is now at
a new all time high and up $5.3 trillion from Q1 as they have to risk
ever more in the derivatives market to generate that incremental
penny of return.
At
this point the economist PhD readers will scream: "this is total
BS - after all you have bilateral netting which eliminates net bank
exposure almost entirely." True: that is precisely what the OCC
will say too. As the chart below shows, according to the chief
regulator of the derivative space in Q2 netting benefits amounted to
an almost record 90.8% of gross exposure, so while seemingly massive,
those XXX trillion numbers are really quite, quite small... Right?
...Wrong.
The problem with bilateral netting is that it is based on one
massively flawed assumption, namely that in an orderly collapse all
derivative contracts will be honored by the issuing bank (in this
case the company that has sold the protection, and which the buyer of
protection hopes will offset the protection it in turn has sold). The
best example of how the flaw behind bilateral netting almost
destroyed the system is AIG: the insurance company was hours away
from making trillions of derivative contracts worthless if it were to
implode, leaving all those who had bought protection from the
firm worthless, a contingency only Goldman hedged by buying
protection on AIG.
And while the argument can further be extended that in bankruptcy a
perfectly netted bankrupt entity would make someone else whole on
claims they have written, this is not true, as the bankrupt estate
will pursue 100 cent recovery on its claims even under Chapter 11,
while claims the estate had written end up as General Unsecured
Claims which as Lehman has demonstrated will collect 20 cents on the
dollar if they are lucky.
The
point of this detour being that if any of these four banks fails, the
repercussions would be disastrous. And no, Frank Dodd's bank
"resolution" provision would do absolutely nothing to
prevent an epic systemic collapse.
...
Lastly,
and tangentially on a topic that recently has gotten much prominent
attention in the media, we present the exposure by product for the
biggest commercial banks. Of particular note is that while virtually
every single bank has a preponderance of its derivative exposure in
the form of plain vanilla IR swaps (on average accounting for more
than 80% of total), Morgan Stanley, and specifically its Utah-based
commercial bank Morgan Stanley Bank NA, has almost exclusively all of
its exposure tied in with the far riskier FX contracts, or 98.3% of
the total $1.793 trillion. For a bank with no deposit
buffer, and which has massive exposure to European banks regardless
of how hard management and various other banks scramble to defend
Morgan Stanley, the fact that it has such an abnormal amount of
exposure (but, but, it is "bilaterally netted" we can just
hear Dick Bove screaming on Monday) to the ridiculously volatile FX
space should perhaps raise some further eyebrows...
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