BREAKING: Between Hurricane Harvey and now, Larger Irma, Loan Defaults enough to crash US Banking System
Bulletin:
With Hurricane Irma bearing down on Florida likely to destroy
literally HALF that state, and the devastation around Houston from
Hurricane Harvey, we
are heading into a situation where enough loans will not be serviced
so as to COLLAPSE THE U.S. BANKING SYSTEM.
Further
proof, as if more were needed, that God
is rather cross with the world’s number one exceptional nation:
Hurricane Irma is tracking for a direct hit on Disney World. In the
immortal words of the Talking Heads: This
ain’t no party, this ain’t no disco, this ain’t no fooling
around.
Houston
is still soggy and punch-drunk, with a fantastic explosion of
breeding mosquitoes, and otherwise it’s not even in the news
anymore. This
week, the cable networks had their scant crews of reporters scuttling
around Florida, asking the people here and there about their
feelings. “What’s
gonna happen is gonna happen….”
I think I heard that one about sixty times, and there’s actually no
disputing the truth of it.
For
the moment, though (Friday morning), it’s a little hard to
calculate the effect of a complete scrape-off, wash, and rinse of the
state of Florida vis-à-vis the ongoing viability of the US
economy. There’s
going to be a big hole with dollars rushing into it and that will
likely prompt the combined powers of the US Treasury, congress, and
the Federal Reserve to materialize tens of billions of new dollars.
Overnight the DXY plunged to a new low for the year.
Am
I the only observer wondering if Irma may be a fatal blow to the
banking system? The
mind reels at the insurance implications of what’s about to
happen. Urgent
obligations triggered by an event of this scale can’t possibly be
serviced. Look for it to snap the chain of counterparty leverage that
has been propping up the banks, insurers, and pension funds on mere
promises for years on
end. Finance, both private and public, has been feeding off unreality
since well before the tremor of 2008. The destruction of Florida (and
whatever else stands in the way up the line) will be as real as it
gets.
You’ve
heard the old argument, I’m sure, that a natural disaster turns out
to be a boon for the economy because so many people are employed
fixing the damage. It’s not true, of course. Replacing
things of value that have been destroyed with new things is just
another version of the old Polish Blanket Gag: guy wants to make his
blanket longer, so he cuts a foot off the top and sews it onto the
bottom. The capital expended has to come from something and
somewhere, and in this case it probably represents the much
talked-about necessary infrastructure spending that is badly needed
for bridges, roads, water and sewer systems, et cetera, in all the
other parts of the USA that haven’t been hit by storms. Instead,
these places and the things in them will quietly inch closer to
criticality without drawing much notice.
The
second major weather disaster this year may not be enough to induce
holdouts to reconsider the issue of climate change, but it ought to
provoke some questioning about the development pattern known as
suburban sprawl, which
even in its pristine form can be described as the
greatest misallocation of resources in the history of the
world. Surely
there will be some debate as to whether Florida, or at least parts of
it, gets rebuilt at all. The wilderness of strip malls, housing
subdivisions, and condo clusters deployed along the seemingly endless
six-lane highways that accumulated in the post-war orgy of
development was an affront to human nature, if not to a deity, if one
exists. There are much better ways to build towns and we know how to
do it. Ask the shnooks who paid a hundred bucks to walk down Disney’s
Main Street the week before last.
Apart
from all that remains the personal tragedy that awaits, the losses of
many lifetimes of work invested in things of value, of homes, of
meaning, and of life itself. Many
people who evacuated will return to… nothing, and perhaps many of
them will not want to stay in such a fragile place.
But
the America they roam into in search of a place to re-settle is going
to be a more fragile place, too. A
week or so after Irma has gone away, the ill-feeling that heaps this
country like a swamp fever will still be there, driving the new
American madness into precincts yet unknown.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.