The Biggest Shock of All

by Martin D. Weiss, Ph.D.
06-07-10

Video: http://www.cnbc.com/id/15840232?play=1&video=1511573004

Why did the specter of collapse in far-away Hungary help sink the Dow by 323 points on Friday?

And why did similar scenarios in Greece, Spain, and Portugal trigger the Dow’s 1,000-point Flash Crash one month earlier?

Is it because those countries are so important to the future of America’s blue-chip corporations?

Not quite!

It’s because investors around the world are finally waking up to some shocking realities:

Shock #1 is that these countries are canaries in the coal mine — the first of many that could suffer the wrath of investors fed up with runaway deficits.

Shock #2 is that, in the UK and the US, federal deficits and total debts, as a percent of GDP, are similar to — or even larger than —those of Greece, Spain, Portugal, or Hungary.

Shock #3 is the recurring revelations of official deceptions. Investors suddenly discover that unemployed were counted as employed … that government debts were disguised as capital … that far bigger federal deficits were camouflaged. And it is these revelations that trigger the biggest selling panics, that are the final nail in the coffin for companies and entire countries.

But Shock #4 is the biggest and most dangerous of all — not just random deceptions by a few companies or a few countries, but a global deception in the credit ratings that investors rely on for nearly ALL companies and countries!

With gathering momentum right now, investors are beginning to realize they can’t trust the ratings issued by established agencies like Moody’s, Standard and Poor’s, and Fitch.

But this is not merely bad news for the agencies themselves. It’s also a powerful force that can drive global stock and bond markets into a nosedive.

When companies are downgraded, their share and bond prices automatically fall.

So think about what it means when the grading system itself, encompassing thousands of ratings on trillions of dollars in securities, crumbles!

It implies, in effect, a collective downgrade of nearly ALL the securities in the world — every rated corporate bond, municipal bond, and even government bond in existence!

Needless to say, this transformation is too massive to happen overnight; it will progress in three phases.

Phase 1 Widespread Loss of Confidence in The Leading Rating Agencies

In the first phase, regulators, analysts, and investors begin to raise serious questions about the validity of ratings:

Is a bond really triple-A? Or is the rating agency just maintaining the high grade because it wants to protect a good client that’s paying fat fees for its ratings?

Beyond triple-As, what about the hundreds of thousands of corporate, municipal, and sovereign bonds that currently boast other “investment gradeâ€