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Business/Finance See other Business/Finance Articles Title: Bubbleberg News LP: Why We Are Plagued With Drivel Masquerading As Financial Reporting One of the evils of massive over-financialization is that it enables Wall Street to scalp vast rents from the Main Street economy. These zero sum extractions not only bloat the paper wealth of the 1% but also fund a parasitic bubble finance infrastructure that would largely not exist in a world of free market finance and honest money. The infrastructure of bubble finance can be likened to the illegal drug cartels. In that dystopic world, the immense revenue surplus from the 1000-fold elevation of drug prices owing to government enforced scarcity finances a giant but uneconomic apparatus of sourcing, transportation, wholesaling, distribution, corruption, coercion, murder and mayhem that would not even exist in a free market. The latter would only need LTL trucking lines and $900 vending machines. In this context, the sprawling empire known as Bloomberg LP is the Juarez Cartel of bubble finance. Its lucrative 320,000 terminals and profit-rich $10 billion in revenue are not purely a testament to the extraordinary inventive genius of Michael Bloomberg The Younger. In fact, Bloombergs 1981 invention owed a huge debt of gratitude to Richard Nixon and Milton Friedman. It was they who destroyed the Bretton Woods regime of anchored money and global financial discipline that made Bloombergs necessary. Let me explain. Under the fixed exchange rate regime of Bretton Woods ironically, designed mostly by J.M. Keynes himself with help from Comrade Harry Dexter Whitethere was no $4 trillion daily currency futures and options market; no interest rate swap monster with $500 trillion outstanding and counting; no gamblers den called the SPX futures pit and all its variants, imitators, derivatives and mutations; no ETF casino for the plodders or multi-trillion market in bespoke (OTC) derivatives for the fast money insiders. Indeed, prior to Friedmans victory for floating central bank money at Camp David in August 1971 there were not even any cash settled equity options at all. The world of fixed exchange rates between national monies ultimately anchored by the solemn obligation of the US government to redeem dollars for gold at $35 per ounce was happily Bloomberg-free for reasons that are obviousalbeit long forgotten. Importers and exporters did not need currency hedges because the exchange rates never changed. Interest rate swaps did not exist because the Fed did not micro-manage the yield curve. Consequently, there were no central bank generated inefficiencies and anomalies for dealers to arbitrage. Stated differently, interest rate swaps are sold not bought, and no dealers were selling. There were also natural two-way markets in equities and bonds because the (peacetime) Fed did not peg money market rates or interpose puts, props and bailouts under the price of capital securities. This means that returns to carry trades and high-churn speculation were vastly lower than under the current regime of monetary central planning. Financial gamblers could not buy cheap S&P puts to hedge long positions in mo-mo trades, for example, meaning that free market profits from speculative trading (i.e. hedge funds) would have been meager. Indeed, the profit from trading the dips is a gift of the Fed because the underlying chart patternmild periodic undulations rising from the lower left to the upper rightis an artifice of central bank bubble finance. And, in fact, so are all the other distincitive features of the modern equity gambling hallsindex baskets, cash-settled options, ETFs, OTCs, HFTs. None of these arose from the free market; they were enabled by central bank promotion of one-way marketsthat is, the Greenspan/Bernanke/Yellen put. The latter, in turn, is a product of the hoary doctrine called wealth effects which would have been laughed out of court by officials like William McChesney Martin who operated in the old world of sound money. In short, Wall Streets triumphalist doctrineclaiming that massive financialization of the economy is a product of market innovation and technological advanceis dead wrong. We need bloombergs not owing to the good fortune of high speed computers and Blythe Masters knack for financial engineering; we are stuck with them owing to the bad fortune that Nixon and then the rest of the world adopted Milton Friedmans flawed recipe for monetary central planning. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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