World Economy: Monoline – the latest domino to go down Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Wednesday, 26 March 2008

The Chinese have a saying and curse – may you live in interesting times. The financial crisis and credit crunch are certainly interesting times. But how do these complex shenanigans impact on the real economy? Here’s an example.

We are experiencing a crisis in what is called the monoline business in the USA. You’ve probably never heard of monoline, but if these financial players go down, which may well happen, then US banks are set to write down more than $200 billion of their assets. Kissing goodbye to all that money brings a banking collapse so much closer. $2.4 trillion in loan guarantees have been called into question.

Monoline is part of the insurance business specialising in insuring bonds issued for local infrastructure projects. That’s all they do. They’re only in one line of business. That’s why it’s called monoline.

recessionmed.jpgEven the most financially unsophisticated reader will work out that this is a very boring bit of high finance where it’s very hard to lose money, even if you’re not raking in pots. Local infrastructure projects are safe. Nothing much can go wrong. So the monoline or bond insurers in the States have a top AAA rating. Obviously the insurers have been frustrated by seeing their buccaneering fellows in more ritzy lines of high finance trousering shedloads of cash. So they’ve decided to diversify. In other words they’ve gone out betting other people’s money on stuff they know nothing about. And they’ve lost.

This matters because they’re big. A ‘minor’ player ACA has lost $1 billion and gone bust. Giant insuring firms Ambac and MBIA are tottering on the brink of bankruptcy. Their credit ratings agencies have blown the whistle. Ambac has lost $500 billion for more than 100,000 state and local projects.

Here’s how this is giving a helping hand to the looming world recession. There’s a Private Finance Initiative to build a hospital for the Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells area in Kent. PFI is a scam where a capitalist consortium puts money up-front to build a hospital, school or other public asset. They then own the hospital and charge the public sector for the use of ‘their’ hospital. As Socialist Appeal has pointed out, if the government borrowed the money to build the hospital, it would be cheaper. When did you last hear of a government going broke? Since the risk of lending is non-existent, interest rates are much lower than for a capitalist firm.  New Labour argues that it’s worth paying more since risk is transferred to the private sector. Actually, as we know from the Metronet fiasco on the London underground, if the PFI firm goes belly-up the government picks up the bill. No risk is transferred. Instead the PFI privateers just get to pocket our money.

The consortium building the Tunbridge Wells hospital was going to borrow the money (£225 million) guaranteed (‘wrapped,’ as it is called) from the monoline bond insurers in the USA. That makes it the cheapest source of private finance. Now they can’t. They’re going to have to go cap in hand to the banks. That will cost more. The PFI people don’t care. They will just present us with a bigger bill. A PFI project to provide the RAF with a fleet of refuelling tankers for £1 billion has been called into question because the PFI consortium can’t go to the cheap monoline insurers for their money. They’ll have to pay more, which means we’ll have to pay more. Interest rates are going up all over the place anyway. We’ve seen the end of the era of cheap money

Real projects employing real building workers and providing work for real nurses are getting the chop because of the crisis in high finance. And this is just the start.