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Tuesday's Top 10 with NZ Mint: Westpac Viaduct's generosity; May Wang's nervous nelly auditors; Captain Bernanke's iceberg; NZ's Zombie economy; Dilbert

Tuesday's Top 10 with NZ Mint: Westpac Viaduct's generosity; May Wang's nervous nelly auditors; Captain Bernanke's iceberg; NZ's Zombie economy; Dilbert

Here are my Top 10 links from around the Internet at 10 am, brought to you in association with New Zealand Mint for your reading pleasure.

I welcome your additions and comments below, or please send suggestions for Wednesday's Top 10 at 10 via email to bernard.hickey@interest.co.nz.

I'll pop any surplus suggestions I get into the comment stream.

1. 'Sign me up for that account' - The NZHerald reports that a Westpac processing error at its Viaduct branch put about NZ$15,000 of 'free money' into an Auckland man's account, reminiscent of the Rotorua couple who received a windfall from Westpac and then did a runner to China.

Westpac got lucky this time.

The man told the bank.

Time for me to open an account at Westpac in the Viaduct...

"I was stunned, like, 'I'm sure this isn't mine'. My initial thought was to board a flight to Beijing, but better judgment prevailed and made me realise this money wouldn't last me longer than a week in a big city," he said.

He went to the Westpac branch, where the manager confirmed that the deposit had been entered twice. "He appreciated how honest we were, and thanked us for it," the man said.

2. The gathering clouds around May Wang - Now the auditors for Natural Dairy are getting nervous about the accuracy of the accounts of Natural Dairy and the affairs of May Wang and her gang of merry men, the NZHerald's Karyn Scherer reports.

Hong Kong firm Morison Heng has refused to fully sign off Natural Dairy's latest accounts, saying it is unable to give a "true and fair view" of Natural Dairy's affairs because of a lack of "reliable financial information".

The accounts have been announced a month late and reveal that the company, which is listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, made a loss of HK$203 million ($34.12 million) for the 14 months ending in May. Its auditor says it was unable to ascertain the fair value of Natural Dairy's New Zealand investments, so was unable to say if the accounts were "free from material misstatement".  

3. Zombie economy - Even the rental property investors are starting to lose faith. David Whitburn, the President of the Auckland Property Investors Federation, pointed out to Greg Ninness at the Sunday Star Times that banks are dripfeeding mortgagee properties onto the market not to cause a crash and avoid having to revalue their loan books.

This is typical 'extend and pretend' zombie banking, if true.

The size of the property overhang could be significant and means pressure on prices will remain for some time.

Here's what he says.

"There is actually a whole lot of properties where the banks are holding back on mortgagee sales, because, if they processed them all at once, it would have a downward impact on the market," Whitburn said.

While the policy may give property owners who are in arrears some extra breathing space, the banks were not holding back for altruistic reasons. A rush of mortgagee sales and a subsequent fall in prices would affect the security value of other mortgages the banks would be holding, he said.

That would shrink the amount of equity owners have in their properties and increase the risk that the banks will not be able to recover all of the money they are owed when more loans fall into arrears.

There are also serious implications for banks' balance sheets.  

4. Tax break for finance company investors? - Our Deep Freeze list shows that finance company investors are sitting on losses of upwards of NZ$3.5 billion. What if they could be offset against income to reduce tax bills?

Deloitte is wondering if they can start claiming these losses back via the IRD, the ODT reports. Your view?

Deloitte Dunedin tax partner Peter Truman has been working on ways for his clients to recoup some of the losses suffered when finance companies collapsed.

"The failure of finance companies over the last couple of years has resulted in thousands of investors suffering investment losses or finding themselves in a position where it is unlikely they will recover their investment in these companies. "This raises the issue of whether the investor is entitled to claim a deduction for their loss."  

5. 'Flogging a dead horse' - Bloomberg's Mark Gilbert makes the point that central banks are essentially flogging a big dead horse by printing more money. He's right.

Central banks are now one-trick ponies, stuck in a financial groundhog day with no fresh ideas. Their willingness to sacrifice their principles not only undermines their hard-won independence, it also allows their political masters to avoid the hard work of structural reform that might generate a genuine recovery. Instead, we are relying on transfusions of artificial central-bank liquidity.

The guardians of the world economy still seem to think the answer to too much debt is yet more debt. Imagine the response, though, if you had asked any of the current crop of central bankers five years ago about the inflationary consequences of pumping trillions of dollars into the financial system. Nomura’s Goodwin says there is no reason why the U.S. inflation rate couldn’t surge to 6 percent by 2015 from its current 1.1 percent pace.

Lending to the U.S. government by buying its 1.25 percent note repayable in September 2015 at its current yield of about 1.3 percent might not be the smartest trade a bond manager could make. When the law of unintended consequences kicks in, the nasty surprise is, almost by definition, unforeseen and unpredictable. I struggle to see how this movie won’t end badly.

6. 'Naked greed and fraud' - Yves Smith writes at the New York Times about the seriousness of the fraudclosure crisis in the United States and the lax and fraudulent practices now being exposed as the housing market tide goes out in America.

Well worth a read to get a sense of the scale of the crisis there.

Consider a company called Lender Processing Services, which acts as a middleman for mortgage servicers and says it oversees more than half the foreclosures in the United States. To assist foreclosure law firms in its network, a subsidiary of the company offered a menu of services it provided for a fee.

The list showed prices for “creating” — that is, conjuring from thin air — various documents that the trust owning the loan should already have on hand. The firm even offered to create a “collateral file,” which contained all the documents needed to establish ownership of a particular real estate loan. Equipped with a collateral file, you could likely persuade a court that you were entitled to foreclose on a house even if you had never owned the loan.

That there was even a market for such fabricated documents among the law firms involved in foreclosures shows just how hard it is going to be to fix the problems caused by the lapses of the mortgage boom.  

7. End fractional reserve banking? - The Bank of England's Governor Mervyn King is on the warpath against the Too Big To Fail international banks, now that he is about to take over the regulatory duties from the discredited Financial Services Authority in the UK. He is talking heresy. Some of the banks don't like it.

Good on him. Here's the Economist's take on it.

“Of all the many ways of organising banking, the worst is the one we have today.”

Possible remedies included not just breaking up banks, but also “eliminating fractional reserve banking”—the centuries-old practice of banks taking in deposits and lending most of them out in riskier and longer-term loans.

Having ignored finance for a decade the Bank of England now seems to want to reinvent it.

8. Why China matters - The Economist has created a great chart showing the importance of China to many economies. We don't figure, but Australia certainly does.

CHINA is now the biggest export market for countries as far afield as Brazil (accounting for 12.5% of Brazilian exports in 2009), South Africa (10.3%), Japan (18.9%) and Australia (21.8%). Each surge or wobble in China's economy has a material impact in these places.

9. Captain Bernanke on course for icebergs - Edward Chancellor from GMO writes at the FT that the financial gains from quantitative easing are fool's gold.

It is generally agreed that a bout of quantitative easing in 2008 succeeded in calming the markets. But conditions are different today. The credit system is not dislocated and banks are willing to lend, according to the Fed’s survey of senior loan officers. The problem is not with the supply of credit but with lacklustre demand from the private sector. Any new money created by the central bank expanding its balance sheet may well end up adding to the existing pile of more than $1,000bn of excess reserves in the banking system. Quantitative easing is also intended to reduce unemployment, which remains at very elevated levels.

But much of the current unemployment may be structural in nature. People who can’t find a job because they are in the wrong place with the wrong skills won’t find their prospects improved by the central bank acquiring Treasury bonds. Nor will lower rates help many consumers. After the recent decline in house prices, about half of US homeowners find themselves owing more than their homes are worth and are thus unable to refinance. And since long-term rates in the US are already so low, quantitative easing is unlikely to promote much new business investment. Mr Bernanke is tilting at windmills. Not only is deflation absent in the US, it is arguable whether mild deflation is economically damaging.

And even if it were, no one knows whether asset purchases by the central bank could succeed in reversing a deflationary tide. After the great credit binge, deflation reflects the desire of households and companies to pay down their excessive debts. It is a symptom, not a cause, of a problem. The experience of Japan over recent decades shows that deleveraging does not end because long-term rates decline. This explains why the Bank of Japan believes quantitative easing is futile.

10. Totally relevant video - Jon Stewart previews the mid-term elections tonight.

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon - Thurs 11p / 10c
Indecision 2010 - Republicans Prepare to Take Back Power
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show Full Episodes Political Humor Rally to Restore Sanity

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33 Comments

Love it...a Teanami washing away the filth, corruption and outright scumbag political system.

Yeah sure it will... 

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Bernard , Deloitte are barking up the wrong tree . If NZ had Capital gains tax one could write off capital losses as a quid pro quo . 

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You will have to put away the booze to get through this one....a clear account of why Bolly is lost up a blind alley... http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article23944.html......good luck!

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Wolly,

I see that people have been grappling with the issue for a while - 300 years before Peel.

"However Peel's bank act, notwithstanding the good intentions behind it and its sound theoretical foundations, was a huge failure. Why? Because it stopped short of extending the 100 percent reserve requirement to demand deposits also (Mises 1980, pp. 446–448). Unfortunately, by Peel's day, some ideas originally hit upon by the Scholastics of the Spanish Golden Century had been entirely forgotten. The Scholastics had discovered at least 300 years earlier that demand deposits (which they called in Latin chirographis pecuniarium, or money created only by the entries in banks' accounting books) were part of the money supply (Huerta de Soto 2009, p. 606). They had also realized that, from a legal standpoint, neglecting to maintain a 100 percent reserve on demand deposits is a mortal sin and a crime — not of forgery, as is the case with the overissue of banknotes, but of misappropriation."

I think though it's not the fractional reserve thing as much as the "skin in the game" when the loan is extended.  The assumption with 100% reserves is that the creditors have greater visibility and exposure to the investment and if that particular loan goes bad the creditors take a hit.  But if the bank can then flip the loan off the books via securitisation you would still end up with the same situation as we have today.

The money supply still expands by the value of the loan when the loan is extended.

I'm convinced that the gradual unwinding of the controls put in place over the years by the money behind the scenes is in fact deliberate.

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"deliberate"....surely not Fred...why that would suggest bankers have been acting in their own interests all those years....they wouldn't would they?....aren't they all in the stone masons or something and sworn to do public good....?

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Stonemasons?  surely not.  Have a read of the stuff by Webster Tarpley, the establishment of the BIS and the linking of German and American interests, the Bush family, the Kennedy's.  It doesn't even have to be a conspirancy, it's just a matter of "oh that's how it works" and storing that information away for use later.

I remember being told "you know banks print money out of thin air", one of those pub conversations.  Nothing to do with social credit but it was just explained how it worked.  At the time you wouldn't have found it written down anywhere.  It's now written down in Reserve Bank papers and in that Federal reserve booklet, the veil is being lifted.  It's still counterintuitive.  It's counterintuitive because we have been conditioned to believe that money at the bank is like "solid" it's "real" it's like a coin, it's saved FFS.  The banks start on you young, the little POSB savings bank thingies.  It's touted as the "prudent" thing to do, but it's all part of the scheme.

I'm not saying that it's not prudent to save.  It's just that a negative ledger entry at the bank is not it.

So there's the sharemarkets, equity in a company.  But the banks have that covered as well.  No company can survive without debt, it's forced to have debt simply to avoid being taken over some M&A capital market merchant bank raider, loaded with debt, hard cash extracted, and the money behind the scene retires to some place like Switzerland.

So that leaves paying down debt. . . . and property,   and hard PM's.

Hey GBH you still there?

PS. I read recently about how Angus Tait set his company up.   Now he had a few clues.

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Sod it...Freemasons...I knew it was one of them mason bunches...and guess what Fred...a business can grow and prosper and be productive and profitable and last for heaps of years...with no debt at all. There are plenty of farmers farming at a profit because they never borrowed a penny.

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And good on them, ummm  . . . . .  you mean . . . . . the ones that ignored the guy that drove up and said pssssst want to buy the farm next door.

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pre-meal they say 'amason grace'.

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The comment of interest of course is if the Fed throws 2, 4 or even 8 Trillion and no one in the real economy borrows it what then?  It either sits in the vault (OK excel spreadsheet) or the cocaine brigade borrow it for more expensive hookers.....uh I mean gamble with it....uh I mean carry trade it.....uh I mean do something good with it....uh no I mean waste it....

Mean while out in the real world...."official US unemployment has gone past 10%?  10.1% I believe? and the GOP look to control Congress...oh mayhem....

regards

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And Ron Paul looks likely to be joined in there by several "Tea Party" representatives who also want to "abolish the Fed". You said it: mayhem....

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Im coming round to agreeing with Ron Paul Re: The Fed....they seem incompetent if not actually dis-honest....ie worse than no Fed.

The Tea party ppl are a joke.....

 

regards

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Re NZ's Zombie economy, and the banks.

Who else has noticed the increase in "marketable securities" on the RBNZ's balance sheet?

http://www.rbnz.govt.nz/statistics/rbnz/f2/download.html

Download that and take a look.  "Marketable Securities"? What marketable securities does the RBNZ need to be holding several times as much of now, as a few years ago? And why? What are the implications for "money supply"?

Maybe "quantitative easing" done early enough, prevents your crash from happening in the first place?

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That aspect of the stimulus in Noddy kicked off in 09 PB...Bolly swapped fresh loot for mortgage paper from the banks....now they need another snort...hence the 'covered bond' rort.

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#7 - It seems he will have some support in the UK government too:

Douglas Carswell's UK banking reform bill, first reading (2010-09-15)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HMGr-OuXihg 

 Also useful:

 'Prof. Yamaguchi's System Dynamics Analysis of The American Monetary Act'

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ikn6gSsPgW4

From AMI's recent conference:

http://www.monetary.org/

Cheers, Les.

www.mea.org.nz

 

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Suggestion. Monetary easing should occur solely via business taxes owed to the IRD. The Reserve Bank should apply the "official cash rate" to business taxation money owed to the IRD. Keep the OCR lower and more businesses "keep the money" at a low interest rate and use it usefully. Raise the OCR and some businesses will start paying it back. The temporary shortfall in revenue to the Treasury, can be made up by "printing money".

What's not to like about it? The "easing" occurs at the right place in the economy - in businesses that are making a profit - hence the taxes owing - and who will actually use the money to "produce and employ". You want finance capital at the Official Cash Rate? Make profits and declare them.  By the way, I always regarded taxes on retained profits as a tax on economic growth anyway - this remedies that situation without actually abolishing the tax.

The banking sector has forfeited its "right" to be the sole conduit into the economy for monetary easing, as far as I am concerned, after what they have done all over the first world with property markets, home ownership, and financing other speculative lunacies on the share market in the past - all with insane "leverage".

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It took wannabe's to line up at the tellers windows, too.

Greed, and lack of understanding of exponential mathematics, was what it was.

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Qe, NZ Style, our $ is in for a hiding when this news gets out.

 

http://www.omo.co.nz/

 

 

RBNZ purchases new government debt directly from the printers (NZDMO) with it's own printed ''out of thin air" money.  

RBNZ and NZ Treasury undertake blatant debt monetisation (printing money). The RBNZ purchased $100 million 15/03/2019, 5% notes directly from the NZ Treasury. View details. Paid for no doubt with the proceeds of selling freshly minted non- interest bearing IOU's, commonly known as circulating bank notes.    
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Good job too I reckon but barely a toe in the water compared to the amount they are borrowing elsewhere.  Still why 5%? drive it down lower, but I guess they don't want all the other bondholders to get an instant capital gain.

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December the 7th seems to be the thing in Europe.  Will it work?

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#3: LOL, if TRUE. I love it when banks begin to suffer from their OWN excesses

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The US just gets worse and worse, and even though I am in no way surprised IT WILL only lead to civil war over there which will hurt us all. BUT..........they did it to themselves so whatever!

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it is already over( the civil war). All that has to happen now is for the pre-written script to be played out.

Everything is always changing............but the reality is that, it all remains the same.

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This is now how I feel.....I think the GOP are a bunch of fruitcakes so you would have to be stupid to vote for them, however the Democrats have shown they are also so bad that neither are good enough to clear the mess up. So for me yeah, I hope the GOP gets in because that will hasten the collapse and the rebirth of American democracy.

regards

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Steven you really must stop believing in the tooth fairy....the situation over there is terminal...they won't accept it as such until they hit the deck....It does not matter which bunch of crooks controls the govt or the executive....the debt burden is up near 200 trillion!....way over 850% of GDP....check out the stuff at The Market Oracle.

Indications are that export returns from the primary sector are peaking now and may well slide down from here. There is no way the rural sector will splurge the economy back to bubble activity and make Humpty better. We are left with an economy that is still one stinking big property ponzi scheme for the benefit of the banks, protected by the RBNZ and govt, and the Debt Elephant is getting ready to sit down...on you!

Have you paid your Mortgage this month...is your job secure...when will the rate go up...are you still spending like tomorrow can never come......

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I pretty much said its "terminal" Wolly....but until the system gets fixed it wont be repaired...hence my comment until democracy is recovered it is indeed terminal...GOP getting in will hasten that fix.....or destruction....one or other....

I would assume the rural economy is going to be paying down debt as fast it can, I know I would....so splurging no.....

The answers are, yes, probably, maybe...no Im paying down debt....

regarsd

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Re: #3

The bulls may be very surprised, but I have actually attended a couple of auctions in recent times as a serious potential buyer

I figured that low interest rates + low levels of interest from investors = potential bargains

In both cases I just missed out (not too worried about that), in both cases there were few competitors and no investors to be seen (all appeared owner occupiers with one child- the properties were semi-detached and I would swear just a few years a go there would have been a mass of investors there)

I know this is only anecdotal , but I'm very convinced the investor market is pretty dead 

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this Herald article tends to back up my anecdote that investors are hiding away:

 http://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/news/article.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=10684840

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Are the OIO still actually considering May Wang or Natural Dairy's offer?

I would have thought there would have been more than enough by now to tell them to F off.

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On that subject isn't it time someone told these Australian receivers firms to stop clumping massive farms together, and refusing to sell them in anything other than as one big entity.

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"Why China matters - The Economist has created a great chart showing the importance of China to many economies. We don't figure, but Australia certainly does. "

Only because NZ isn't one of the countries that the Economist regularly reports data for.  OTOH our share would be about 2.5% of GDP, and rising faster than any of those countries mentioned as we belatedly get with the program.

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Silly me...should have known the report in the media somewhere that the UK flight departure tax was based on capital city distance...........was crap!

 "The tax - designed to offset the effects of pollution created by the aviation industry - is being imposed on passengers according to flight distance bands. The further you fly, the more you pay.

Air Passenger Duty rose by up to 55 per cent this month and is the second rise in the last year.

The new rates are applied to all flights leaving the UK".......but the wise Kiwi and tourists will hop a train to France and depart from there, saving the tax minus the traintrip cost but getting to enjoy the lovely trainride across the French countryside....and enjoying the pleasure of giving the UK tax thief a big finger.

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