Rigging the
Market; the secret maneuverings of the Plunge Protection Team
By Mike Whitney
09/14/06 "Information Clearing House"
-- -- “Every individual…generally, indeed, neither intends to
promote the public interest, nor knows how much he is promoting it. By
preferring the support of domestic to that of foreign industry he
intends only his own security; and by directing that industry in such a
manner as its produce may be of the greatest value, he intends only his
own gain, and he is in this, as in many other cases, led by an
invisible hand to promote an end which was no part of his intention.”
Adam Smith, “The Wealth of Nations”
The Plunge
Protection Team is a working group of high-ranking officials
from the Dept. of the Treasury, Wall Street, and the Federal Reserve.
Its purpose is to establish the protocols for preventing another
incident similar to the stock market crash of 1987. In the event of a
steep decline, the team is prepared to buy large amounts of equities in
an effort to stabilize the market.
Some people believe that the government has no right to interfere in
the activities of “free markets”. Others think it is a prudent way of
staving off economic collapse. Still others believe that the intrusion
of government, aided by the privately-owned Federal Reserve and the
NYSE, naturally favors the larger institutional investors and creates
an uneven playing field for small investors.
Whatever side one is on, it is proof-positive that “free markets” are
merely a public relations myth with no basis in reality. The
preservation of the system takes precedent over the lip-service to
ideology; the “invisible hand” will always be overpowered by the
manicured and mettlesome fingers of banking elites and Wall Street big
wigs. This is their system and they’re not going to let it be
obliterated by some foolish commitment to principle.
The Plunge Protection Team was first uncovered in comments by Clinton
advisor, George Stephanopoulos on Good Morning America on Sept 17,
2001. Here’s what Stephanopoulos said:
“Well, what I wanted to talk about for a few minutes is the various
efforts that are going on in public and behind the scenes by the Fed
and other government officials to guard against a free-fall in the
markets….perhaps the most important the Fed in 1989 created what is
called the Plunge Protection
Team, which is the Federal Reserve, big major banks,
representatives of the New York Stock Exchange and the other exchanges
and they have been meeting informally so far, and they have a kind of
an informal agreement among major banks to come in and start to buy
stock if there appears to be a problem. They have in the past acted
more formally… I don’t know if you remember but in 1998, there was a
crisis called the Long term Capital Crisis. It was a major currency
trader and there was a global currency crisis. And they, with the guidance of the Fed,
all of the banks got together when it started to collapse and propped up
the currency markets. And, they have plans in place to consider that if
the markets start to fall.”
Stephanopoulos comments are hardly shocking. They simply underscore the
fact that “deregulation” has created an economic monster which requires
more and more tinkering from the stewards of the system. Without the
stopgaps provided by the Plunge Protection Team and the actions of
similar organizations which forestall business bankruptcies, (bailouts) the whole
over-leveraged system would quickly crash and burn. The irony is that
the same corporate kingpins and banking moguls who’ve benefited the
most from removing the rules for prudent investment are now trying to
create a safety net for when it inevitably begins to unravel.
It won’t work. The numbers are too large. Trillions of dollars are
presently held in shaky hedge funds and derivatives markets. If the
market takes a steep and sudden downturn, there’s nothing anyone will
be able to do.
John Crudele of the New York Post has done extensive research on the Plunge Protection Team (aka;
the Working Group on Financial
Markets) and provides the blueprint for “rigging” the markets
when catastrophe hits. The idea came from an a former member of the
Federal Reserve Board named Robert Heller who suggested that “instead
of flooding the entire economy with liquidity, and thereby increasing
the risk of inflation, the Fed could support the stock market directly
by buying
market averages in the futures market, thus stabilizing the
market as a whole.”
Whatever happened to the idea of completing the “market cycle” and
allowing markets to self-correct? What about the ethical question of
whether government manipulation should be permitted in a “free market”?
And, who gives the government and the privately-owned banks the right
to interfere in the equities markets and snatch up zillions of futures
in order to prop up the unstable and debt-ridden system.
No doubt, the supporters of these drastic measures are the same “market
purists” who appear frequently on the business channel extolling the
virtues of the “free market” in the most lyrical language as though
they were gazing at the subtle and wondrous workings of the universe.
Once the pretense is stripped away, they're exposed as unprincipled
phonies trying to stitch together a faltering system on its last legs.
Crudele added that, “Over the next few years, people like me
(meaning those who watch the financial world with a critical eye rather
than a blind one) suspected that
Heller’s plan was indeed in effect. Whenever the stock market was in
trouble someone seemed to ride to the rescue.”
Crudele is probably right; there are back-channel ways to move the
markets. Fed-master Bernanke even confirmed the role of the Plunge
Protection Team in recent testimony to Rep Ron Paul (R-Texas). The
larger question is whether the group operates in the public interest or
merely tends to the needs of establishment elites who hold all the
levers of power. Certainly, no one would object if the main goal was
simply to remove some of the disruptive bumps in market activity.
What’s worrisome is the conjugal relationship between the state and the
privately-owned banking establishment which is designed to operate
exclusively in the interests of its shareholders. This is a basic
conflict of interest and puts the small investor at a real
disadvantage. He has no way to lobby government to mettle in the
markets. He must make his investment decisions on reasonable
evaluations from publicly available information.
The same rule applies to bailouts as does to interfering with the
equities markets. Bailouts only serve the interests of the ruling elite
and undermine the credibility of the system. Whenever a major
corporation or a hedge fund finds itself slipping into fiscal
quicksand, the Counterparty
Risk Management Policy Group (CRMPG) leans on the federal
government to throw them a lifeline. The CRMPG is a mix of hedge
funds
and mega-banks who are the “self appointed” caretakers of the system.
Here’s their statement:
“Since we know that financial shocks will occur in the future, and we
no that no approaches to risk management or official supervision are
fail-safe, we also know that we must preserve and strengthen the
institutional arrangements whereby, at the point of crisis, industry
groups and industry leaders, as well as supervisors, are prepared to
work together in order to serve the larger and shared goal of financial
stability.”
All very noble, but the bottom line is they serve the limited interests
of corporate plutocrats who need taxpayer money to paper-over their
business failures. The CRMPG is just a fancy-sounding lobby designed to
prevent their colleagues from slipping into bankruptcy. Bailouts are a
fundamental contradiction to free markets. If privately-owned
corporations cannot succeed on their own merits they should be allowed
to fail.
The Plunge Protection Team and the CRMPG illustrate the collusive
relationship between the banking establishment, the uber-corporations
and the state. They’ve worked assiduously to remove the safeguards
which have traditionally protected the average investor from hucksters
and scam-artists, and paved the way for a full-system breakdown. The
market is more vulnerable now than anytime since the late 1920s, a fact
that was emphasized in a statement from the IMF just days ago:
“Financial markets have failed to price in the risk that any one of a
host of threats to economic security could materialize and deliver a
massive shock to the world economy. It is clear that risks are on the
downside of a sharper than expected slowdown in house prices that would
produce weaker-than-expected growth that would have implications for
global growth and financial markets.” (“IMF: Risk of global crash is
increasing” UK Independent)
The country now faces the growing probability of an economic tsunami
triggered by the rickety hedge funds, the falling dollar, and the
rapidly deflating real estate bubble. The solid foundation of
government oversight and regulation has been eroded by the persistent
attacks of the corporatists and banking giants. The entire system is
now on shaky ground. When the scaffolding starts to fall, the futile
maneuverings of the Plunge Protection Team won’t make a bit of
difference.