
Fractional Reserve Banking: The Source of All Evil? - 12 January 2013
I'm getting very suspicious of anything which
regulators think is "safe" collateral...
FRACTIONAL Reserve Banking is not
responsible for the bad practice of 'creating money', writes Paul
Tustain, founder and CEO of Bullionvault.
It is a speed limit on money creation, put in place by a Central Bank to stop banks doing too much of what comes naturally to them.
This excerpt is taken from Paul Tustain's new report, Money Printing for Beginners (and Experts). To read the full PDF for free today, simply register your email address at Bullionvault now...
The Central Bank used to leave lending decisions to
bankers, and step in to liquidate them when they screwed up.
But in a world of Deposit Protection Insurance and bank bailouts, the
Central Bank picks up the tab for excessive money creation. To limit
the risk, they impose the 'Fractional Reserve' to try to calm the
commercial banks down. But it is only necessary because we have a timid
central bank which lacks the gumption to swing its axe in the direction
of bad banks.
Indeed the current set up – where banks are not allowed to fail – turns
out to be even worse than I previously thought. It does much more than
offer succour to the odd unfortunate bank which steps over the limit of
safety. It actually forces banks to be dumb. They have no choice but to
approach the safety limit until they are bound to step over it.
Any bank which does not step up to the plate will underperform all the
others, and be subsumed by a more aggressive competitor. It's how
evolution works; the survival of the fittest, where fitness means
adapted to the prevailing environment. If you do not compete in the
skewed environment where the central bank is a wimp you will expire
because of it.
That's why banks are forced to make rosy judgments on the value of
collateral.
I think I can see how the Central Bank's turning a blind eye to bad
banks' unwise money creation is going to lead to monetary catastrophe,
and how it's all going to blow up and leave us in a really, really big
hole. But we need to understand a bit more about the way money climbs a
pyramid of clearers to see what is happening.
Imagine there is a fellow called Godfrey who earns his living building
sheds. Let's see what happens when banks start accepting sheds as
collateral for new bank loans.
People can now get two uses out of a shed. Sheds are materially more
valuable to people who like to use both debt and sheds. Even people who
have no garden tools, but who like debt, can suddenly see how useful a
shed really is, even an empty one.
So Godfrey is busy building sheds, and he's building lots of them for
people like Brad, who owes his bank a fortune with little prospect of
it being repaid any time soon. Yet the bank believes it is making good
profits, because it does not regard the loans collateralised by sheds
as being doubtful or impaired. For the moment they are considered
excellent collateral to 99% of their market value, and no bank in
Brad's city will do any business whatsoever if it refuses to recognise
the rock-solid resale value of collateralised sheds.
Godfrey takes on some more employees, and the customers' cheques don't
bounce. There's soon going to be a heck of a lot more sheds, and Brad's
bank will get a very big negative balance with Central.
Eventually, even with a wimp at the Central Bank, a memo from the
Governor to the exuberant bosses of Brad's bank will question the
collateralising of yet more sheds. Soon after that the shed which used
to have two uses is once again useful only as a store-room for garden
tools – which makes it intrinsically less valuable. The abundant supply
of sheds extends the problem. It will be a very bad time to own sheds.
That's more-or-less how we got a sub-prime crisis, and all the problems
which flowed from it.
You know, I'm starting to get very suspicious of stuff which achieves
the bank regulator's seal of approval as tip-top collateral. I mean
it's so blinking obvious that as soon as they say "this stuff is rock
solid" that banks are going to go out and finance purchases which force
its value to a ridiculous level, from which it will eventually fall, to
generate huge and unsupported balances at Central.
But there's now a rock-solid approved form of collateral out there.
It's already grossly overvalued, infesting the entire global financial
system, and preparing to deliver us a real financial knock-out punch –
not the sort of warm-up act we've just enjoyed with a few sub-prime
houses.
I'm talking, of course, about sovereign debt.
This excerpt is taken from Paul Tustain's new report, Money Printing for Beginners (and Experts). To read the full PDF for free today, simply register your email address at Bullionvault now.







