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Ellen Brown Advocaat
Ellen Hodgson Brown (geboren 15 september 1945) is een Amerikaanse auteur, politieke kandidaat, advocaat, spreker in het openbaar en pleitbezorger van alternatieve geneeswijzen en financiële hervormingen, met name openbaar bankieren.
Brown is de oprichter en voorzitter van het Public Banking Institute, een onpartijdige denktank die zich inzet voor de oprichting van door de overheid gerunde banken. Ze is ook de president van Third Millennium Press en auteur van twaalf boeken, waaronder Web of Debt en The Public Bank Solution, evenals meer dan 200 gepubliceerde artikelen, die verschijnen in de New York Times, Huffington Post, Common Dreams, Truthout , Asia Times, Global Research, OpEdNews, Alternet, Truthdig, Counterpunch en elders.
Brown publiceerde The Public Bank Solution, waarbij ze haar argumenten in Web of Debt opnieuw bekeek, de geschiedenis van het publieke bankieren in kaart bracht en verschillende opties besprak om dit in de hedendaagse economie te implementeren. In 2013 kondigde ze ook haar kandidatuur aan voor de California State Treasurer op het Green Party-ticket bij de verkiezingen van 2014. Op 27 december 2013 keurde de Groene Partij van Californië de kandidatuur van Brown goed.

Amerikaanse economie en financiën
" Casinokapitalisme en de derivatenmarkt: tijd voor een nieuw 'Lehman-moment'? "
Door Dr. Ellen Brown Advocaat
Reading the tea leaves for the 2024 economy is challenging. On January 5th, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said we have achieved a “soft landing,” with wages rising faster than prices in 2023. But critics are questioning the official figures, and prices are still high. Surveys show that consumers remain apprehensive.
There are other concerns. On Dec. 24, 2023, Catherine Herridge, a senior investigative correspondent for CBS News covering national security and intelligence, said on “Face the Nation,” “I just feel a lot of concern that 2024 may be the year of a black swan event. This is a national security event with high impact that’s very hard to predict.”
What sort of event she didn’t say, but speculations have included a major cyberattack; a banking crisis due to a wave of defaults from high interest rates, particularly in commercial real estate; an oil embargo due to war; or a civil war. Any major black swan could prick the massive derivatives bubble, which the Bank for International Settlements put at over one quadrillion (1,000 trillion) dollars as far back as 2008. With global GDP at only $100 trillion, there is not enough money in the world to satisfy all these derivative claims. A derivative crisis helped trigger the 2008 banking collapse, and that could happen again.
The dangers of derivatives have been known for decades. Warren Buffett wrote in 2002 that they were “financial weapons of mass destruction.” James Rickards wrote in U.S. News & World Report in 2012 that they should be banned. Yet Congress has not acted. This article looks at the current derivative threat, and at what might motivate our politicians to defuse it.
What Regulation Hath Wrought
Derivatives are basically just bets, which are sold as “insurance” — protection against changes in interest rates or exchange rates, defaults on loans and the like. When one of the parties to the wager has a real economic interest to be protected – e.g. a farmer ensuring the value of his autumn crops against loss — the wager is considered socially valuable “hedging.” But most derivative bets today are designed simply to make money from other traders, degenerating into what has been called “casino capitalism.”
In 2008, derivative trading brought down investment bank Bear Stearns and international insurer A.I.G. These institutions could not be allowed to fail because the trillions of dollars in credit default swaps on their books would have been wiped out, forcing the counterparty banks and financial institutions to write down the value of their own risky and now “unhedged” loans. Bear and A.I.G. were bailed out by the taxpayers; but the Treasury drew the line at Lehman Brothers, and the market crashed.
Under the rubric of “no more bailouts,” the Dodd Frank Act of 2010 purported to fix the problem by giving derivatives special privileges. Most creditors are “stayed” from enforcing their rights while a firm is in bankruptcy, but many derivative contracts are exempt from these stays. Counterparties owed collateral can grab it immediately without judicial review, before bankruptcy proceedings even begin. Depositors become “unsecured creditors” who can recover their funds only after derivative, repo and other secured claims, assuming there is anything left to recover, which in the event of a major derivative crisis would be unlikely. We saw this “bail-in” policy play out in Cyprus in 2013.
That’s true for deposits, but what of stocks, bonds and money market funds? Under the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) and the Bankruptcy Act of 2005, derivative securities also enjoy special protections. “Safe harbor” is provided to privileged entities described in court documents as “the protected class.” Derivatives enjoy “netting” and “close-out” privileges on the theory that they are a major source of systemic risk, and that allowing claimants to jump ahead of other investors in order to net and close out their bets reduces that risk. However, critical analysis has shown that derivative “super-priority” in bankruptcy can actually increase risk and propel otherwise viable financial entities into insolvency.
It is also highly inequitable. The collateral grabbed to close out derivative claims may be your stocks and bonds. In a 2016 American Banker article called “You Don’t Really Own Your Securities; Can Blockchains Fix That?”, journalist Brian Eha explained:
In the United States, publicly traded stock does not exist in private hands. It is not owned by the ostensible owners, who, by virtue of having purchased shares in this or that company, are led to believe they actually own the shares. Technically, all they own are IOUs. The true ownership lies elsewhere. While private-company stock is still directly owned by shareholders, nearly all publicly traded equities and a majority of bonds are owned by a little-known partnership, Cede & Co., which is the nominee of the Depository Trust Co., a depository that holds securities for some 600 broker-dealers and banks. For each security, Cede & Co. owns a master certificate known as the “global security,” which never leaves its vault. Transactions are recorded as debits and credits to DTC members’ securities accounts, but the registered owner of the securities — Cede & Co. — remains the same. What shareholders have rather than direct ownership, then, “is a [contractual] right against their broker…. The broker then has a right against the depository institution where they have membership. Then the depository institution is beholden to the issuer. It’s [at least] a three-step process before you get any rights to your stock.” This attenuation of property rights has made it impossible to keep perfect track of who owns what.
In a 2023 book called The Great Taking (available for free online), Wall Street veteran David Rogers Webb traces the legislative history of these developments. The rules go back 50 years, to when trading stocks and bonds was done by physical delivery – shuffling paper certificates bearing titles in the names of the purchasers from office to office. In the 1970s, this trading became so popular that the exchanges could not keep up, prompting them to turn to “dematerialization” or digitalization of the assets.
The Depository Trust Company (DTC) was formed in 1973 to alleviate the rising volumes of paperwork. The DTCC was established in 1999 as a holding company to combine the DTC and the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC).
The DTCC is a central clearing counterparty (CCP) sitting at the top of a pyramid of banks, brokers and exchanges. All have agreed to hold their customers’ assets in “street name,” collect those assets in a fungible pool, and forward that pool to the DTCC, which then trades pooled blocks of stock and bonds between brokers and banks in the name of its nominee Cede & Co. The DTCC, a private corporation, owns them all. This is not a mere technicality. Courts have upheld its legal ownership, even in a dispute with client purchasers. According to the DTCC website, it provides settlement services for virtually all equity, corporate and municipal debt trades and money market instruments in the U.S., and central safekeeping and asset servicing for securities issues from 131 countries and territories, valued at $37.2 trillion. In 2022 alone, the DTCC processed 2.5 quadrillion dollars in securities.
The governing regulations are set out in Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) sections 8 and 9, covering investment securities and secured transactions. The UCC is a set of rules produced by private organizations without an act of Congress. It is not itself the law but is only a recommendation of the laws that states should adopt; but the UCC has now been adopted by all 50 U.S. states and has been “harmonized” with the rules for trading securities in Europe and most other countries.
The Wikipedia summary of the relevant UCC provisions concludes:
This re-characterization of the proprietary right into a simple contractual right may enable the account provider [the “intermediary” broker or bank] to “re-use” the security without having to ask for the authorization of the investor. This is especially possible within the framework of temporary operations such as security lending, option to repurchase, buy to sell back or repurchase agreement.
“Security lending” by your broker or other intermediary may include lending your stock to short sellers bent on bringing down the value of the stock against your own financial interests. Illegal naked short selling is also facilitated by the impenetrable shield of the DTCC, and so is lending to “shadow banks” for the re-use of collateral. As Caitlin Long, another Wall Street veteran, explains:
[T]he shadow banking system’s lifeblood is collateral, and the issue is that market players re-use that same collateral over, and over, and over again, multiple times a day, to create credit. The process is called “rehypothecation.” Multiple parties’ financial statements therefore report that they own the very same asset at the same time. They have IOUs from each other to pay back that asset—hence, a chain of counterparty exposure that’s hard to track. Although improving, there’s still little visibility into how long these “collateral chains” are.
It is this reuse of the collateral to back multiple speculative bets that has facilitated the explosion of the derivatives bubble to ten times the GDP of the world. It should be the collateral of the actual purchaser, but you, the purchaser, are at the bottom of the collateral chain. Derivative claims have super priority in bankruptcy, ostensibly because the derivative edifice is so risky that their bets need to be cleared.
Hoe zit het met de “Klantbeschermingsregel”?
Broker-dealers beweren dat de activa van hun klanten worden beschermd onder de “Customer Protection Rule” van de Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC). De SIPC biedt verzekeringen voor aandelen, vergelijkbaar met de FDIC-verzekeringen voor bankdeposito's, waarbij een pool wordt aangehouden die kan worden aangeboord in het geval van faillissement van een lid. Maar een memorandum uit 2008 over The Customer Protection Rule van advocatenkantoor Willkie Farr & Gallagher beweert:
Met betrekking tot contanten en effecten die niet op naam van de klant zijn geregistreerd, maar door de makelaar-dealer worden gehouden ten gunste van de klant, zou de klant een pro rata deel ontvangen van het totale bedrag van de contanten en effecten die daadwerkelijk door de makelaar worden aangehouden. handelaar. Als er een tekort overblijft, dekt SIPC maximaal $ 500.000, waarvan slechts $ 100.000 mag worden teruggevorderd voor contant geld dat bij de makelaar-dealer wordt aangehouden.
… [De meeste effecten worden gehouden door makelaars-dealers op straatnaam en zouden beschikbaar zijn om aan de vorderingen van andere klanten te voldoen in geval van insolventie van een makelaar-dealer.
Als het lid een grote derivatenportefeuille heeft ( JPMorgan bezit $54,4 biljoen aan derivaten en slechts $3,4 biljoen aan activa), zouden derivatenklanten met prioriteit de pool en ook het SIPC-fonds kunnen wegvagen.
Waar Webb zich echter zorgen over maakt, is het faillissement van de DTCC zelf, dat de hele onderpandketen zou kunnen wegvagen. Hij zegt dat de DTCC duidelijk ondergekapitaliseerd is en dat de start van een nieuwe Central Clearing Counterparty al gepland en vooraf gefinancierd is. Als de DTCC faalt, kunnen bepaalde beschermde schuldeisers al het onderpand in beslag nemen, waarop zij de juridische controle zullen hebben geperfectioneerd.
Defensieve maatregelen
In het geval van een cyberaanval waarbij de gegevens van banken en makelaars worden vernietigd, kunnen kopers op geen enkele manier bewijzen dat zij eigenaar zijn van hun activa; en in het geval van een tweede Grote Depressie, met een golf van bankfaillissementen in de stijl van de jaren dertig, kunnen eisers van derivaten met superprioriteit de activa van de banken in beslag nemen zonder dat ze een faillissementsprocedure hoeven te doorlopen. In de huidige fragiele economie zijn dit geen vage hypothesen, maar reële mogelijkheden, die niet alleen het spaargeld van gezinnen uit de middenklasse, maar ook het fortuin van miljardairs teniet kunnen doen.
En daar, zo betoogt Webb, liggen onze kansen. Het systeem waarmee Cede & Co. het eigendomsrecht heeft op alle ‘gedematerialiseerde’ effecten is duidelijk kwetsbaar voor uitbuiting door ‘de beschermde klasse’, en het Congres zou deze zorgen door wetgeving kunnen wegnemen. Als onze vertegenwoordigers zich zouden realiseren dat zij niet de geregistreerde eigenaren van hun bezittingen zijn, maar slechts schuldeisers van hun makelaars en banken, zouden ze geïnspireerd kunnen worden om enkele hoorzittingen te houden en actie te ondernemen.
De eerste stap is het schijnen van een licht op de obscure verborgen werkingen van het systeem en de bedreiging die deze vormen voor onze persoonlijke bezittingen. De druk van de bevolking brengt politici in beweging, en de mensen worden zich bewust van veel problemen wereldwijd, met protesten die overal toenemen – economisch, politiek en sociaal. Mogelijke actie die door het Congres zou kunnen worden ondernomen, is onder meer het ongedaan maken van de “speciale privileges” die aan het derivatencasino zijn verleend in de vorm van “superprioriteit” bij faillissement. Een Tobintaks van 0,1% of belasting op financiële transacties is een andere mogelijkheid. Voor het beschermen van eigendomsrechten op activa is blockchain een veelbelovend instrument, zoals besproken door Brian Eha in het hierboven geciteerde artikel van American Banker. Deze en andere federale mogelijkheden, samen met mogelijke oplossingen op lokaal niveau, zullen het onderwerp zijn van een vervolgartikel.
Amerikaanse economie en financiën
" Casinokapitalisme en de derivatenmarkt: tijd voor een nieuw 'Lehman-moment'? "
Door Dr. Ellen Brown Advocaat
Contact
Dit artikel werd voor het eerst geplaatst op ScheerPost . Ellen Brown is advocaat, medevoorzitter van het Public Banking Institute en auteur van dertien boeken, waaronder Web of Debt , The Public Bank Solution en Banking on the People: Democratizing Money in the Digital Age . Ze is ook mede-presentator van een radioprogramma op PRN.FM genaamd ' It's Our Money' .