The media has done a poor job of explaining what's really at stake. While, it's true that higher interest rates would make consumer loans more expensive and put the kibosh on the housing recovery, that's not what the media cares about. Not really. What they care about is the looming massacre in shadow banking where USTs are used as collateral to secure short-term loans by the banks so they can increase their leverage by many orders of magnitude. In other words, the banks are using USTs to borrow gobs of money from money markets and financial institutions so they can finance their other dodgy investments, derivatives contracts and ancillary casino-type operations. If there's a default, the banks will have to come up with more capital for their scams that are leveraged at 40 or 50 to 1. This system-wide margin call would trigger a deflationary spiral that would domino through the entire system unless the Fed stepped in and, once again, provided a giant backstop in the form of blank check support. Here's how Tim Fernholz sums it up over at Daily Finance:
"Many informed people are worried" (about) "A freeze in the tri-party repo market, akin to the cascade of troubles that followed the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy in 2008.'
"In 2008, more than a third of that collateral was mortgage-backed securities. When Lehman went bankrupt, its lenders began a "fire sale" of the securities it used as collateral, which drove down the value of other mortgage-backed securities, which led to more fire sales. This dynamic would eventually lead to a freeze in the repo markets, which, at the time, provided $2.6 trillion in funding to the banks each day...
"Today, most of the collateral in use is U.S. Treasuries and 'agency securities' -- mortgage-backed securities guaranteed by the U.S. government:
"... if the ugly day of a default comes, lenders may simply stop accepting U.S. debt as collateral. That will have the effect of sucking some $600 billion in liquidity out of the banking system. Unable to get funding for Treasurys, securities dealers would be pressured to sell them-or other assets-to find new funding, creating a fire sale dynamic...
"And, of course, this scenario is only about how the Treasurys work in the repo markets. U.S. debt is used as collateral for derivatives swaps and numerous other transactions; if they are suddenly worth less than expected, lenders can be expected to demand more collateral up front, putting even more pressure on the financial system. That's why pressure is building to raise the ceiling before the world's largest economy enters a scenario with so much uncertainty."
Repeat: "That's why pressure is building to raise the ceiling before the world's largest economy enters a scenario with so much uncertainty."
So the Obama team isn't worried that Joe Homeowner won't be able to refi his mortgage or that the economy might slip back into recession. They just don't want to see Wall Street take it in the shorts again. That's what this is all about, the banks. Because the banks are still up-to-their-eyeballs in red ink. Because they still don't have enough capital to stay solvent if the wind shifts. Because all the Dodd Frank reforms are pure, unalloyed bullsh** that haven't fixed a bloody thing. Because the risks of another panic are as great as ever because the system is the same teetering, unregulated cesspit it was before. Because the banks are still financing their sketchy Ponzi operations with OPM (other people's money), only now, the Fed's over-bloated balance sheet is being used to prop up this broken, crooked system instead of the trillions of dollars that was extracted from credulous investors on subprime mortgages, liars loans and other, equally-fraudulent debt instruments.
Can you see that?
This is why the media is pushing so hard to end the debt ceiling standoff; to preserve this mountainous stinkpile of larceny, greed and corruption run by a criminal bank Mafia and their political lackeys on Capital Hill. That's what this is all about.
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