This
is the first in a series of short articles we plan to write on the
current crisis. Our aim in this series is threefold: to outline some of
the important contours of the crisis; to situate these patterns in
historical context; and to reflect on their possible causes and
implications.
Since the crisis is still ongoing, such analysis
can only be cursory and suggestive. But it is nonetheless useful to put
our preliminary research and thoughts in writing. By spelling out what
we do know (or think we know) about the crisis, we can better identify
what we don’t know and need to ask.
This paper sets the stage for the series. It
outlines the conventional wisdom about the cause of crisis; it
describes the chronology of events; and it contrasts the pattern and
magnitude of the current downturn with those of earlier episodes. The
overall picture painted by this analysis is highly stylized: crises
appear to come and go with remarkable regularity, their oscillations
are fairly similar and they share the same order of magnitude. The
whole process seems almost “automatic,” and automaticity is reassuring:
it suggests that the current crisis has run much of its course and that
doom and gloom will soon give way to a new upswing.
But what if this automaticity is a mirage?
The Mismatch
Most observers like to blame the ongoing turbulence
in the global political economy on finance—or more precisely, on a
mismatch between finance and reality.
The mismatch begins with the assumption that there
are two types of capital: “real” and “financial.” Real capital is a
productive entity, made of machines, structures, work in progress and
(some say) knowledge. Financial capital is a symbolic entity,
consisting of equity and debt claims on real capital. In a perfect
world, the two types of capital are exactly equal: the dollar value of
GE’s stocks, bonds and other outstanding obligations represents the
productive value of the company’s capital stock, so the two magnitudes
must be the same. The assets and the entitlements to the assets have to
match, by definition.
But the world isn’t perfect. Greed and fear,
irrationality and fraud, corruption and manipulation, insufficient
competition and too much government, overregulation and excessive
deregulation, imperfect information and short-term memory, all conspire
to distort the picture. These distortions cause finance to deviate from
its “fair value,” either up or down. And as the deviation grows larger,
finance ceases to mirror reality. It becomes a “fiction.”
The current crisis, goes the argument, is the
unavoidable consequence of such deviation. Since the 1980s, we are
told, finance has inflated into a huge bubble, having risen far above
the underlying stocks of real assets. But then, whatever goes up must
come down. Since finance, in the final analysis, is merely the image of
the real thing, at some point it has to shrink back to its “true” size.
And that is exactly what we are now witnessing: a violent financial
crisis that dispels the fiction and brings finance down to its “par
value.”
The Excess Unwound
According to the mismatch thesis, the current
turmoil started in the U.S. housing market. This was the epicenter.
From here the tremor spread like a tidal wave: first to the entire U.S.
FIRE sector (an acronym for “finance, insurance and real estate”), then
to every financial market around the world, and finally to the
so-called “real economy.” This domino sequence is listed in Table
1 and illustrated in Figures 1, 2 and 3.
Figure 1 shows the rise and fall of U.S. house
prices, along with the expansion and contraction of the FIRE sector.
Prices of homes started to soar in 1997/8. According to the pundits,
the blaze was fuelled by three key actors. The first was Fed Chairman
and Ayn Rand acolyte Alan Greenspan, who lowered interest rates in the
belief that “human nature” would limit risk taking. The second were the
financial institutions that gladly ignored the risks and went on to
offer mortgages to anyone willing to borrow. And the third were the
eyes-wide-shut regulators, who seemed unable to see what was going on
even if they cared. House prices had nowhere to go but up, and within a
decade they tripled.
Everyone was bullish. Home buyers were eager to
borrow, convinced that prices would go on rising and that their houses
could always be resold at a profit. The bankers bent over backwards to
lend them the money—and then melted the individual mortgages into large
pools of asset-backed securities. And the so-called investment
community—including “high net-worth individuals,” large corporations,
money managers and the banks themselves—lined up to buy tranches of the
new “structured investment vehicles,” usually without asking too many
questions.
And for a while there was little to ask
about. Since house prices were rising, default wasn’t an issue. A home
owner who couldn’t service his mortgage would have his house
repossessed and quickly resold to the next sucker in line, often at a
higher price. And if the parties still felt that there was some
residual risk left, they could always offset the hazard with higher
interest rates, mortgage insurance and a whole slew of derivatives. The
process seemed so robust that even “sub-prime” mortgages, lent to
borrowers with little or no income, received a triple-A grading from
honest-to-god analysts and fail-proof rating agencies.[1]
By the early 2000s, the real-estate boom
went global. Worldwide, the annual issuance of asset-back securities
rose nearly five-fold—from $532 billion in 2000 to $2.5 trillion in
2006—with much of the expansion accounted for by mortgage-backed
instruments, whose new issues rose from $275 billion in 2000 to over $2
trillion in 2006. In the United States, repackaging reached record
levels. By the early 2000s, over half of all single home mortgages and
roughly one third of multifamily home mortgages were melted and resold
as securities—up from 10 and 5%, respectively, in 1980.[2]
There was simply no way to lose money in this
business, and the stock market certainly reflected that belief. The
real-estate boom encouraged many other forms of debt financing, ranging
from plain vanilla, to the exotic, to the kinky. And with U.S. FIRE
companies cutting a profit on every deal, the total equity
capitalization of their sector nearly quadrupled—from $1 trillion in
1997 to $3.7 trillion in 2007.
And then the music stopped.
As Figure1 shows, in July 2006, U.S. house
prices started to drop. Initially, investors hung in suspension.
Pretending as if nothing had happened, they continued to buy FIRE
stocks, pushing the market even higher. But the downward spiral in
house prices persisted—and then, suddenly, in May 2007, everyone
started rushing for the door. By September 2008, house prices were down
nearly 25% relative to their 2006 peak, while U.S. FIRE stocks went
into free fall. In October 2008, the total market capitalization of the
sector was more than 50% below its May 2007 peak.
The gathering storm didn’t register
immediately on the broader stock market. Figure 2 shows the market
capitalization of three broad aggregates—U.S. FIRE equities, all U.S.
equities, and all world equities. The three series are denominated in
current $U.S. and plotted on a logarithmic scale to facilitate
comparison.[3]
The data show that, while the U.S. FIRE sector
started to drop in May 2007 (marked by the vertical line in the chart),
the overall U.S. and global stock markets took another five months
before tanking. However, once the broad reversal started, the downward
convergence was swift. From October 2007 to October 2008, U.S. listed
corporations lost 38 per cent of their market capitalization, while the
global market lost 46 percent.
The last to join the downward spiral was
the so-called “real economy.” Figure 3 shows the U.S. Composite
Index of Coincident Indicators, a weighted average of four indicators
that move more or less together with the business cycle.[4] Although
this Composite Index pertains only to the United States, in the current
environment of global integration it provides a good proxy for world
trends.
The figure presents two manifestations of the index:
one is the actual level; the other is the annual rate of change,
calculated by comparing the same month in successive years (so that the
reading for October 2008 denotes the rate of change from October 2007,
etc.). The growth series, plotted at the bottom of the chart, shows
that the “real economy” started to decelerate at the end of 2006. But
the actual level of the index, depicted by the top series, peaked at
the end of 2007 (marked by the vertical line in the figure) and started
its month-to-month declines only in early 2008.
So on the face of it, the world appears to be in the midst of a finance-led
crisis, a decline triggered and significantly amplified by the collapse
of fictitious capital. “The salient feature of the current financial
crisis,” explains George Soros, “is that it was not caused by some
external shock. ... The crisis was generated by the financial system
itself.”[5] According to this view, the biggest distortion was in the
U.S. housing sector, whose bubble was the largest and first to deflate.
The next victim was the broader financial market, which was also
grossly inflated and therefore justly punctured. And the last to
capitulate was the “real economy,” whose excesses obviously were more
limited yet certainly worthy of a periodic cleanup.
But that is only half the story.
Toward a New Upswing?
The mismatch thesis tells us that fictitious
capital, by its very nature, tends to distort the picture in both
directions: it grows by too much in the upswing, only to shrink by too
much in the downswing. And indeed, many experts are already wondering
if finance hasn’t been overly deflated.
Measured against the historical record,
the current market collapse certainly is extremely large. The magnitude
of this collapse is contextualized in Figure 4 and Figure 5, where
we show the history of U.S. stock prices since 1820. Before examining
these charts, though, note that they express stock prices not in actual
dollars, but in constant dollars. The latter measure is computed by
dividing actual stock prices (expressed as an index) by consumer prices
(also expressed as an index). This computation serves to “purge” from
the stock market index the effect of inflation (and occasionally
deflation). And once inflation has been expunged, the result represents
stock prices denominated in constant dollars—i.e., in dollars with a
“constant purchasing power.”[6]
Why is it so important to distinguish between the
two measures? To answer this question, note that stock prices in actual
dollars can always be expressed as the product of two separate
magnitudes: (1) the average price level of all commodities (in actual
dollars), and (2) the ratio between stock prices and the average price
level (which yields a pure number). This decomposition is true by
definition:
Now, during periods of inflation or
deflation, changes in the average price level (the first component on
the right-hand side of the equation), can easily overwhelm changes that
are unique to the stock market (the second component on the right). To
illustrate, between 1900 and 2008, actual stock prices rose 133-fold.
In terms of our equation, most of this increase was due to inflation:
the average price level rose nearly 30-fold, whereas the ratio of stock
prices to the average price level rose less than fivefold.[7]
Clearly, stock owners are focused
primarily on the second component. At the very minimum, their concern
is not to keep up with inflation but to outperform it, and that is why
we gauge the long-term performance of the stock market in constant
dollars rather than actual ones.[8]
With this qualification in mind, let us return now
to Figure 4. The chart shows the stock market index in constant prices,
plotted against a logarithmic scale. The vertical grey bars indicate
what we consider to be major bear markets—i.e., periods during which
the stock market suffered protracted declines.
As it turns out, there is no general definition for
a bear market—let alone a “major” one. So we’ve devised our own. In
what follows we define a major bear market as a multiyear period during
which stock prices, measured in constant dollars, move on a downtrend,
and in which each successive peak is lower than the previous one.
According to this definition, over the past two centuries, the United
States experienced six major bear markets. These periods are listed in
Table 2, along with the cumulative declines in stock prices.
A similar picture emerges from Figure 5,
which measures the annual growth rate of the stock market index (again,
in constant dollars). The thin line in the chart shows the percent
variation from year to year. The thick line smoothes these variations
as a 10-year moving average—meaning that every observation in the
series measures the average annual growth rate in the previous ten
years.[9]
The last data points in Figure 5are for 2008. The
year-to-year change shows a drop of 40%—on par with the record declines
of 1917, 1931, 1937 and 1974. Furthermore, as the moving-average series
indicates and Figure 4 confirms, this decline wasn’t a fluke
event, but rather part of a decade-long bear market. According to the
smoothed series, the market peaked in 1998, with the 10-year moving
average growth rate hovering around 13%. From then on, annual growth
rates decelerated, and by 2008 pushed the 10-year moving average down
to nearly –4%.
To the eyes of a seasoned financier, these
magnitudes mean that the crisis may be approaching a bottom. According
to Figure 5, prior crises were similarly bounded. Their highest
starting point, measured by the 10-year moving average series, was 13%
(in 1929 and in 1959), and their lowest trough, measured by the same
series, was –8% (in 1920). The extent of deceleration in growth rates,
measured by the peak-to-trough difference of the 10-year moving
average, ranged from a low of 6.5% (during in the 1834-1842 crisis), to
a high of 15.5% (in 1928-1948).
The present crisis, measured by the 10-year moving
average series, has already met or exceeded these extreme values. It
started from a record ceiling of 13.3%; its current low is –3.6%; and
the extent of its deceleration, computed as the difference between
these two values, marks a new record: 16.9%. For long-term investors,
these numbers indicate that much of the crisis is probably behind them.
And the news gets even better. According to Figure
4, historically, each major bear market was followed by a long bull
run, and each of those bull runs pushed stocks to a new record high.
These upswings occurred in 1842–1950, 1857–1905, 1920–1928, 1948–1968
and 1981–1999, and it isn’t far fetched to think that a new one may
soon be brewing.
Given that the present bear market is
approaching historical lows, and since previously such bottoms were
always followed by major upswings, many forward-looking
strategists—from permanent bull Barton Biggs, to Wizard of Omaha Warren
Buffet, to doom-and-gloom Martin Wolf—are now advising their followers
to fasten their seat belts.[10] News from the so-called “real economy”
is likely to remain very bad and may possibly get worse—but most of the
negatives are already “in the price.” And since fictitious capital is
notorious for “overreacting,” particularly during deep downturns,
current stock prices offer a once-in-a-life-time buying opportunity for
those prescient enough to see into the next takeoff.
But, then, if the market has bottomed and the upswing is so certain, why isn’t every investor buying?
Financial Cycles and the Reordering of Society
It is easy to fall for the aesthetic gyrations of
the stock market. Their stylized cycles make them look natural. They
“revert to mean,” as Francis Galton would have it. They oscillate
within fairly clear boundaries. Their ups and downs seem almost
automatic (at least in retrospect). Their regularities are so neat many
are tempted to forget David Hume and extrapolate the past into the
future.
And here lies the problem. The long-term cycles of
the stock market, no matter how stylized and regular they seem, are not
self-generating. They don’t just happen on their own. Each cycle has a
reason, and that reason is deeply social and historically unique.
Note that, during the twentieth century, every oscillation from a bear to a bull market was accompanied by a systemic societal transformation:
The crisis of 1905–1920 marked the closing of the
American Frontier, the shift from robber-baron capitalism to
large-scale business enterprise and the beginning of synchronized
finance.
The crisis of 1928–1948 signaled the end of
“unregulated” capitalism and the emergence of large governments and the
welfare-warfare state.
The crisis of 1968–1981 marked the closing of the
Keynesian era, the resumption of worldwide capital flow and the onset
of neoliberal globalization.
Furthermore, none of these transformations were “in
the cards.” Most observers in the 1900s didn’t expect managerial
capitalism to take hold; few in the 1920s anticipated the
welfare-warfare state; and not too many in the 1960s predicted
neoliberal regulation. All three transformations involved a complex set
of conflicts, their trajectories were all fuzzy, and their outcomes
were all but impossible to anticipate.
In other words, underneath the seemingly repetitive long-term patterns of the market lies an open-ended
and inherently unpredictable reordering of the entire political
economy. Although past bear markets have always given way to long bull
runs, these transitions were never automatic. Each and every one of
them reflected a profound transformation of the underlying social
structure. And in our view, this correspondence still holds. In order
for the current crisis to end and a new upswing to begin, something
very big has to happen: the social structure must change.
The precise nature of this transformation—assuming
it occurs—is likely to remain opaque until the process is well under
way. But one thing seems clear enough. A new upswing means the
rekindling of accumulation, and if we are to understand what this
upswing might entail, we need to go back to the beginning and start
from the entity that matters most: capital.
For more on that issue, stay tuned for the next installment in our series.
Jonathan Nitzan and Shimshon Bichler are co-authors of Capital as Power: A Study of Order and Creorder,
RIPE series in Global Political Economy (London and New York:
Routledge, forthcoming 2009). All their publications are freely
available from The Bichler & Nitzan Archives.
Endnotes:
1. For a colorful description of the sub-prime lending and investment cycle, see Michael Lewis, The End, Portfolio.com, November 11, 2008. For a more detailed account, see Robin Blackburn, The Subprime Crisis, New Left Review 50, March-April, 2008, pp. 63-106.
2.See SIFMA, ASF, ESF, AusSF and McKinsey
& Company, “Restoring Confidence in the Securitisation Markets,”
October 15, 2008, pp. 3-4.
3. A logarithmic scale has two convenient
features. First, it amplifies the variations of a series when its
values are small and compresses these variations when the values are
large. This property enables us to conveniently examine exponential
growth (note that the numbers on the scale jump by multiples of 10). It
also allows us to compare series with very different orders of
magnitudes (note that world market capitalization is 15 times larger
than the market capitalization of the U.S. FIRE sector). Second, the
slope of a series is indicative of its percent rate of change—the
steeper the slope the greater the growth rate, and vice versa.
4. The four coincident indicators that
make up the composite index include: (1) the number of employees on
non-agricultural payroll (with an index weight of 52.9%), (2) personal
income less transfers expressed in constant dollars (20.8%), (3) the
level of industrial production (14.7%), and (4) manufacturing and trade
sales expressed in constant dollars (11.6%). (The meaning of “constant
dollars” is explained later in the article.)
5. George Soros, “The Crisis & What to Do About It,” The New York Review of Books, Vol. 55, No. 19, December.
6.
The notion of “constant dollars” is deeply problematic both
theoretically and philosophically. But since we are dealing here with
the conventional creed, we take this notion at face value.
7. The computations here are based on data charted in Fig 4
8.
Beating inflation is merely the beginning. For the modern investor, the
ultimate goal is to beat the performance of other investors—i.e. to
achieve differential accumulation. We hope to explore this latter emphasis in future articles in this series.
9.
To illustrate, the 10-year moving average for 2008 represents the
average growth rate of the stock market index in the period 1999-2008,
the 10-year moving average for 2007 represents the average for
1998-2007, and so on.
10 Barton Biggs, “The Mother of Bear Market Rallies is on the Horizon,” Financial Times, November 25, 2008, p. 24; Warren E. Buffett, ”Buy American. I Am,” The New York Times, October 17, 2008; Martin Wolf, “Why Fairly Valued Stock Markets are an Opportunity,” Financial Times, November 26, 2008, p. 11.
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