The Big Picture |
- The South Sea Bubble of 1720—Repackaging Debt and the Current Reach for Yield
- 10 Tuesday PM Reads
- The Bifurcated Recovery in Jobs
- 10 Tuesday AM Reads
- Is State and Local Austerity Ending?
| The South Sea Bubble of 1720—Repackaging Debt and the Current Reach for Yield Posted: 13 Nov 2013 02:00 AM PST Crisis Chronicles: The South Sea Bubble of 1720—Repackaging Debt and the Current Reach for YieldJames Narron and David Skeie http://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed.org/2013/11/crisis-chronicles-the-south-sea-bubble-of-1720repackaging-debt-and-the-current-reach-for-yield.html In 1720, the South Sea Company offered to pay the British government for the right to buy the national debt from debtholders in exchange for shares backed by dividends to be paid from the company's debt holdings and South Sea trade profits. The Bank of England countered the proposal and the two then competed for the right to buy the debt, with South Sea ultimately winning through bribes to the government. Later that year, the government moved to divert more capital to South Sea shares by hampering investment opportunities for rival companies in what became known as the Bubble Act, and public confidence was shaken. In this edition of the Crisis Chronicles, we explore the rise and fall of the South Sea Company and offer a cautionary look at the current reach for yield. A Rogue's Guide to Repackaging Debt: Start with Insider Trading . . . Two key events predate the South Sea Bubble. First, around 1710, the Sword Blade Bank offered to exchange unsecured government debt issued by army paymasters for Sword Blade shares. But it did so only after having secretly amassed large holdings of the debt, which traded at a deep discount given investor uncertainty that Britain could pay its debts. Knowing the price of the debt would rise with the announcement of the debt-to-shares exchange, the Sword Blade Bank made a significant profit on its debt holdings in what would today be called insider trading.The second key event was the formation of the South Sea Company in 1711, for the purpose of rivaling the East India Company in trade. But a unique feature included in the formation of the company was the exchange of shares for government debt, no doubt influenced by the prior Sword Blade Bank deal; five of the directors of the South Sea Company were from the Sword Blade Bank. By 1713, the peace treaty at Utrecht brought an end to war with Spain, but the British gained only limited access to trading stations in the Americas. Consequently, the trading operations never proved profitable and the South Sea Company became a financial enterprise by default. In 1715, and then again in 1719, the South Sea Company was allowed to convert additional government debt into shares. In April 1720, South Sea won approval to buy the remaining government debt and to issue stock in exchange. The once-burdensome debt had been cleverly repackaged into a valuable commodity.Then Pay Bribes . . . Investors in South Sea shares now anticipated both a 5 percent annual dividend payment in addition to the hope of lucrative profits from trade with the Americas. But on the announcement of approval to buy the remaining government debt on April 7, 1720, the South Sea share price fell from £310 to £290 overnight. South Sea directors were eager to pump up the stock price and spread rumors of even greater riches to be earned from South Sea trade. Later that month, South Sea offered to new investors its First Money Subscription of £2 million in stock at £300 a share with 20 percent down and the remaining payments to be made every two months. So successful was the first offer that a Second Money Subscription followed later that same April with equally generous terms that allowed participants to borrow up to £3,000 each. Nearly 200 new ventures were launched that year under similar schemes, increasing the competition for investor capital. In the short term, shares soared across most companies. But South Sea stock sale proceeds were needed to pay dividends and bribes to the government for favorable treatment, as well as to buy its own shares to support its stock price. Consequently, a Third Money Subscription was launched later that year with even more generous terms at just 10 percent down with installment payments over four years and the second payment not due for a year. . . . And Ban Rivals Recall from our last post on the "not so great" re-coinage of 1696 that after the re-coinage, silver continued to flow out of Britain to Amsterdam, where bankers and merchants exchanged the silver coin in the commodity markets, issuing promissory notes in return. The promissory notes in effect served as a form of paper currency and paved the way for banknotes to circulate widely in Britain. So when panicked depositors flocked to exchange banknotes for gold coin from the Sword Blade Bank (the South Sea Company's bank), the bank was unable to meet demand and closed its doors on September 24. The panic turned to contagion and spread to other banks, many of which also failed. The Return of Repackaged Debt Disclaimer
Posted by Blog Author at 07:00:00 AM in Crisis Chronicles |
| Posted: 12 Nov 2013 01:30 PM PST My afternoon train reading:
What are you reading?
Percentage of Stocks Above 50-Day Per Sector |
| The Bifurcated Recovery in Jobs Posted: 12 Nov 2013 10:00 AM PST
The Labor market continues to improve. Last week Bureau of Labor Statistics reported 204,000 new positions created, and adjustments to prior months data were upward. But the gains are not all they are cracked up to be. The jobs recovery has not been evenly distributed. The beneficiaries of the economic recovery have been a somewhat narrow group: Those who are highly educated and already are high earners are feeling the positive effects in both employment and wage gains. For the rest of the labor pool, it is not nearly so rosy a story. Consider the difference in joblessness . . .
Continued here |
| Posted: 12 Nov 2013 06:30 AM PST Some interesting reads to start off your day:
Continued here |
| Is State and Local Austerity Ending? Posted: 12 Nov 2013 05:00 AM PST After four years of contracting state and local governments, has the drag on local economic activity finally ended? That appears to be the case, based on recent hiring and spending trends for many state and local areas.
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