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Panic ButtonThe Great Recession wasn't the result of subprime mortgage madness, according to a new report from the National Bureau of Economic Research. It was just a plain old bank panic. Yeah, but weren't bank panics supposed to be a thing of the past, thanks to the creation of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation in 1934?

That's the problem.

The report, by Yale economics professor Gary Gorton, says subprime mortgage securitization was a mess -- a house of cards probably doomed to fall -- but subprime by itself simply wasn't big enough to put the entire financial system at risk. That required a failure of the Renew Sale and Repurchase (REPO) market for collateralized securities that over the last 30 years had come to backstop global finance.

The problem here, of course is that hardly anyone has even heard of REPO, which manages to be an unregulated, uninsured $20 trillion business that is absolutely essential to keeping money flowing in the world. Subprime is only $1.2 trillion -- not big enough by itself to wag this dog.

According to Gorton, the entire basis of global banking changed in the 1980s, thanks to money market funds and junk bonds, which took all the profit out of being a traditional bank. So banks began securitizing loans to regain those lost profits.

The REPO market of interbank loans had always existed but it grew dramatically in the 1990s to support securitization. But since there was no deposit insurance for institutional loans measured in hundreds of millions of dollars, counterparties demanded collateral to back these overnight REPO loans that generally replaced demand deposits in the banking system.

While the subprime mortgage crisis began in January, 2007, the ensuing bank panic didn't happen until August of that year when lenders began making collateral calls and demanding haircuts (collateral fire sales at discounted prices) from borrowers that led to all the big banks being seriously under-capitalized.

The government, while well prepared to respond to a demand deposit bank panic like those of 1907 and 1933, was not only unprepared for the 2007 panic, they didn't even know there was a panic until it was well underway.

The panic meant that the value of all types of bonds declined, trillions of bank capital evaporated and the REPO market, itself, collapsed as all counter-parties lost faith in each other and the basis of the entire banking system literally disappeared.

So what does this mean? Well it explains why the banks still aren't lending money, because they don't have the means to back the loans they'd like to make, absent government intervention. It means that until the REPO market regains some steam there isn't going to be much natural progress in getting the economy to start growing again (take out the government stimulus and we're screwed). And it shows that the Fed and Treasury in the United States were no better able to protect us than you could keep your dog from running into the road and being hit by a car.

But it wasn't strictly a subprime mortgage crisis.

Why is it I don't feel better?
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Tags: bank panic, financial crisis, National Bureau of Economic Research, securitization, subprime lending

Reader Comments (Page 2 of 37)

21. Shirley on Tuesday, Mar 2nd at 02:58:PM said...

No, the exhorbanant prices are not the basic cause of our delema, but is a part of it. It goes back to greed, corruption and patting on the back of our government. It is our government taking care of themselves and to ***** with the people of our country. Look at the profits from the oil companies. They have been instrumental in holding back any kind of alternative fuel that has been proven to work. For example, manure which is very plentiful all over the world, has been proven to work, but has been stopped by he fuel companies, they are just too big and powerful.

22. Joe on Tuesday, Mar 2nd at 02:53:PM said...

Gas price? It's that simple? In the article, it didn't say why the counterparties (investors) were panic and asking for collateral all of a sudden. The bad story started when the war was lack of funding and we were asking loans from other countries that made our money shrinked in a flash. Investors started to question the profitability of their mortgage back securities...then found out the jumbo and subprime loans that they were buying had no insurance from Fed. Then, they stopped buying MBS, asked for collateral. REPO couldn't turn over loans, banks cut lending programs, tightened guidelines...That's the start of the crumble of the American's last defense - homes.

23. kw on Tuesday, Mar 2nd at 04:33:PM said...

With the gas prices having been raised so fast it took many who were living from paycheck to paycheck by such a surprise. And later when the layoffs began because of tighter budgets in the workplace things took a down spiral that even shocked those that were in charge of keeping or economy afloat.Thus the kaos that threw everything into what we are seeing now. Things will cycle out. Many will not recover.I only hope that We as a Nation and Us as Individuals can learn from it and dig our way out.

24. paul on Tuesday, Mar 2nd at 06:11:PM said...

I agree, it was a three letter word : G A S!

25. Russ on Wednesday, Mar 3rd at 12:13:AM said...

John, The FEDERAL RESERVE brought everything down. Gas wasn't a help, but the Mortgage bubble, recession etc was all a product of the FEDERAL RESERVE policies. The Fed created the bubble, and when it pooped EVERYTHING went to hell, and Bubbles can only be created by the Fed Reserve.

26. Steven on Tuesday, Mar 2nd at 08:51:PM said...

In a global economy, anything effects everything. The price of oil does effect the banking markets, however the banks added to this declining economy with bad banking procedures such as giving loans to people who had to count every penny every month to pay their loans. Then gas goes up from $1.89 to $2.89 per gallon. If you use a 120 gallons every month (like I do, in one vechile) thats $120 more a month. Store products also go up because of shipping costs. So your grocery bill goes up $50 a month, then the electric company charges you a $25 a month fuel charge to deliver your electricity. That alone is $195 more a month for someone whose already counting pennies, the consumer has to decide do I pay to feed my family and gas to get to work or do I pay my bank and credit card payments. Trueth is we are all to blame, Oil companies for these outrages pump prices which made them more in the last 4 years than the past 15 years combined, banks for loaning money to people trying to keep up with the "JONE'S", and people who try to be the "JONE'S". The government should consider giving a stimlas check to the people, if your going to bailout wall street you shouldn't forget about the people main street because they are the one's who will either make or break the economy in the futre. The Federal Government needs a over-sight commity to watch their spending also, why does the Democratic GOP need a new jet that costs tax payers over $60,000 a month to operate when other senators and congressmen fly on commericial airlines?

27. Bob on Tuesday, Mar 2nd at 06:23:AM said...

Once again, those who should know what really took place simply have no clue. The bottom line is jobs. Banks didn't cause a loss of jobs. Banks got in trouble due to the downsizing of companies, unions accepting lower wages in order to preserve jobs, and many others who lost their job and were forced to accept low wage jobs. All of this caused people to default on their loans. This caused the collapse in the Real Estate market.

It began with the automakers. They renegotiated contracts, laid off white collar and blue collar workers. That negatively affected businesses surrounding the plants. When these small businesses closed up, more were out of work. The lack of spending spred out from there and in one year we were in a recession.

Now, banks that have the capital to lend, are finding it hard to find borrowers with good credit and who want loans. Thus, now there is a lack of lending going on. We are in a new economy and people just don't understand that. There will be negative inflation before long. After that happens, the markets will correct and we can begin the recovery.

28. renee on Tuesday, Mar 2nd at 07:18:AM said...

thats exactly what happened to my husband and i
we were going along great till the co he worked for closed the plant he was working at out of the blue... and as a result we lost our home.. not because if a bad mortgage.. but because he couldnt find a job.. and a decent payin one at that.... we had to leave the state we were in to find a job and at 36,000 a year when we was making 100,000.... people dont seem to get it... loss of job is why its going on.... for a lot of us

29. nilosam on Tuesday, Mar 2nd at 07:34:AM said...

The main cause: Unions forcing companies to go elsewhere to find labor that would show up on the job everyday. GM =UAW = U Ain't Workin' = 28% absenteeism everyday. PERIOD

30. Al on Tuesday, Mar 2nd at 08:43:AM said...

Then why is Ford, who negotiated early on to cut labor costs, the only one to survive?

31. Alicia on Tuesday, Mar 2nd at 08:21:AM said...

Renee ask yourself why did that company you work for closed?
More than likely they borrowed money via the unsecured junk bonds way - the way many companies come up with the cash up front to start and maintain thier business.
When the panic started at the end of 2006 yeah folks 2006 and didn't get going till 2007. The company was asked by the bank to make a deposit against thier loan on top of the payment to the bank.
Most business do not have that kind of capital to gather up in a short period of time.
The bank comes in and says no more - we want our money NOW...sadly business had to fold because they had no choice = they could not make payroll and pay back the money they borrowed against.
Resulting in what you and your husband experinced.
This was the ripple affect.

Sadly it has touched everyone - The company my husband work for is up for union contract in less than 6 months.
If they strike; we will lose everything.
so the ripple effect is still out there and there is not much anyone can do. You can thank every incumbent politician in office for that!
I wish you well.

Chin up America "We the People" need to help each other and stop counting on the Feds!

32. Kdub on Tuesday, Mar 2nd at 09:05:AM said...

"we the people" how can we have jobs when the banks that control the money aren't lending, our own "people" aren't helping by giving jobs away to other countries, I had to negotiate my CC with Amex who used people from pakistan/India to negotiate with me, jobs that could just as easily been here in the US... Bascially by 2006 big wigs were as greedy as they were in the late 80's and american workers were as lazy as they were in the late 80's... Try being an architect in this economy, all the banks freezed all the capital to build, developers have been feeling this crunch since mid 2006 (when devlopers stop building there is no work for a lot of architects). BANKS ARE THE MOST EVIL BUSINESS IN THE US... Profit is god to them at all cost, I don't know one person in banking that has hurt as much as the blue collar and white collar workers that rely on lending... I'd like to start an alternative to banks, give them a bit of competition, but the money machine is so deep in the pockets of our politicians (both sides)and our politicians are to busy enjoying the high life to feel the real effects this is having on the people that voted them into office. The gods of money control this country and don't give a damn how poor all the hard working people become, why is it that every business in the US is requiring their workers to take a pay cut YET THE BANKS AND THE POLITICIANS AREN"T TAKING PAY CUTS...Wake up "we the people" are our politicians working for the people or THE BANKS???

33. Gorgeous on Tuesday, Mar 2nd at 09:22:AM said...

Now this I can believe ... it just makes more sense that the priority should be JOBS. Outsourcing and allowing other countries to take away our manufacturing capacity had a hand in our downfall. The priorities in the WH are all screwed up. Bring back the jobs - lower taxes and make it more lucrative to do business in the US. More important get your priorities straight.

34. Robert on Tuesday, Mar 2nd at 10:07:AM said...

I agree, the job loss is the main cause. We lost millions of jobs when they started closing factories and making everything overseas. They started making a few parts overseas and got so greedy that the entire factory was outsourced. The goverment should have put duties on these imports 30 years ago when this outsourcing started. Now we have little choice, many products are now made only offshore now, we can not buy made un US.

35. phil on Tuesday, Mar 2nd at 11:06:AM said...

Bob, there's more. From the article:
..."The problem here, of course is that hardly anyone has even heard of REPO, which manages to be an unregulated, uninsured $20 trillion business that is absolutely essential to keeping money flowing in the world."
Guess what folks? It's your Federal Reserve (bankers) at work. Accountable to no one, except the major banks! Why do you think so many Congressmen were really (making a show )questioning Fed Director Ben Bernankes' renomination? Do you really think REPO will now, magically, become regulated?
In addition, where do we get our government regulators? Answer: AIG, Leman Brothers, Goldman Sacs! This is an unbelievable incestuous conflict of interest that would not be tolerated in any other industry. Don't count on your Congressman to stop it. They have long since, been bought and paid for by these same bankers. (Did you ever wonder why someone would spend millions on a job that paid $150,000 a year?)
The answer is not to trade parties. All are complicit in the deceit and robbery of our nation. The answer is change. Real Change. Demand more of your representatives. Demand term limits, line item veto (to be forced upon someone.) Demand government transparency, identify all earmark sponsors by name, open the books on budget appropriations and itemize every dollar spent. Demand an honest currency and cease private business bailouts. The list goes on.
It's still your country. It's up to us.

36. Dianne DB on Tuesday, Mar 2nd at 12:41:PM said...

So true. SIMPLE. you have 12 cnstrctnWrkrs @ $20.+. Have 12 illegal aliens come replace those 12AMERICAN wrkrs@ $9. The AMERICAN wrkrs can no longer support their mortgage as they are either unemployed or Accept The Slave Wages(which wont pay the mortgage either). WhiteCollar outsourced to India - again, unemployed, cant support mortgage/buy. Then Productn/manufactur to China, again unemployed,cant support mortgage/buy. NOTHING is made in the USA - which is DIFFER than the Depression (america was still the major manufac/producer). Now it is HomesMade in Mexico, ProductsMade in China/Mexico. Only the Greedy Corporate "boys" are making money - they arent affected.

37. cY on Wednesday, Mar 3rd at 01:09:PM said...

How did and article on REPO and causes of the Great Recession end up on gas prices?? Did anyone read the previous article--we can't follow a train of thought or is it that we ourselves do not understand the banking system of this country.


Do not get me started on the labor unions!! Can't get rid of the drones and can"t keep the performers. Look at the steel mills in NW Indiana and look at the car industry in Detroit--too much money for nothing. Once labor unions may have been needed but now they prevent progress.

38. peter on Tuesday, Mar 2nd at 06:36:AM said...

Yale or not they do not have a clue. They are educated well beyond their intelligence. This is caused by the trade imbalance and federal spending, coupled with fractional reserve. You can't pay money back with interest when it is your own money in the first place.

39. phil on Thursday, Mar 4th at 12:46:AM said...

..."The problem here, of course is that hardly anyone has even heard of REPO, which manages to be an unregulated, uninsured $20 trillion business that is absolutely essential to keeping money flowing in the world." Guess what folks? It's your Federal Reserve (bank) at work. Accountable to no one, except the major banks!

40. kenshinfreak3500 on Tuesday, Mar 2nd at 10:24:AM said...

Technically the Government can do just that because of the Fractional Reserve-based system and the Money Multiplier (Inflation). The Federal Reserve can just print the money cause inflation and hope that the fiat currency holds up (the people keep accepting it even though the real purchasing power of the currency goes down, sometimes significantly). Also this inflation helps the Government pay off it's debt without explicitly raising taxes instead it implicitly raises them, through the reduction in purchasing power. This is why some people call inflation the hidden tax.

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