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View Full Version : FT: Why Obama’s new Tarp will fail to rescue the banks


trickblue
02-10-2009, 10:41 PM
Link (http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/9ebea1b8-f794-11dd-81f7-000077b07658.html?nclick_check=1)

Why Obama’s new Tarp will fail to rescue the banks
By Martin Wolf

Has Barack Obama’s presidency already failed? In normal times, this would be a ludicrous question. But these are not normal times. They are times of great danger. Today, the new US administration can disown responsibility for its inheritance; tomorrow, it will own it. Today, it can offer solutions; tomorrow it will have become the problem. Today, it is in control of events; tomorrow, events will take control of it. Doing too little is now far riskier than doing too much. If he fails to act decisively, the president risks being overwhelmed, like his predecessor. The costs to the US and the world of another failed presidency do not bear contemplating.

What is needed? The answer is: focus and ferocity. If Mr Obama does not fix this crisis, all he hopes from his presidency will be lost. If he does, he can reshape the agenda. Hoping for the best is foolish. He should expect the worst and act accordingly.

Yet hoping for the best is what one sees in the stimulus programme and – so far as I can judge from Tuesday’s sketchy announcement by Tim Geithner, Treasury secretary – also in the new plans for fixing the banking system. I commented (http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/4a44f222-f221-11dd-9678-0000779fd2ac.html) on the former last week. I would merely add that it is extraordinary that a popular new president, confronting a once-in-80-years’ economic crisis, has let Congress shape the outcome.

The banking programme seems to be yet another child of the failed interventions of the past one and a half years: optimistic and indecisive. If this “progeny of the troubled asset relief programme” fails, Mr Obama’s credibility will be ruined. Now is the time for action that seems close to certain to resolve the problem; this, however, does not seem to be it.

All along two contrasting views have been held on what ails the financial system. The first is that this is essentially a panic. The second is that this is a problem of insolvency.

Under the first view, the prices of a defined set of “toxic assets” have been driven below their long-run value and in some cases have become impossible to sell. The solution, many suggest, is for governments to make a market, buy assets or insure banks against losses. This was the rationale for the original Tarp and the “super-SIV (special investment vehicle)” proposed by Henry (Hank) Paulson, the previous Treasury secretary, in 2007.

Under the second view, a sizeable proportion of financial institutions are insolvent: their assets are, under plausible assumptions, worth less than their liabilities. The International Monetary Fund argues that potential losses on US-originated credit assets alone are now $2,200bn (€1,700bn, £1,500bn), up from $1,400bn just last October. (http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/gfsr/2008/02/index.htm) This is almost identical to the latest estimates from Goldman Sachs. In recent comments to the Financial Times, Nouriel Roubini of RGE Monitor and the Stern School of New York University estimates peak losses on US-generated assets at $3,600bn (http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/7dce3c14-f6ba-11dd-8a1f-0000779fd2ac.html). Fortunately for the US, half of these losses will fall abroad. But, the rest of the world will strike back: as the world economy implodes, huge losses abroad – on sovereign, housing and corporate debt – will surely fall on US institutions, with dire effects.

Personally, I have little doubt that the second view is correct and, as the world economy deteriorates, will become ever more so. But this is not the heart of the matter. That is whether, in the presence of such uncertainty, it can be right to base policy on hoping for the best. The answer is clear: rational policymakers must assume the worst. If this proved pessimistic, they would end up with an over-capitalised financial system. If the optimistic choice turned out to be wrong, they would have zombie banks and a discredited government. This choice is surely a “no brainer”.

The new plan seems to make sense if and only if the principal problem is illiquidity. Offering guarantees and buying some portion of the toxic assets, while limiting new capital injections to less than the $350bn left in the Tarp, cannot deal with the insolvency problem identified by informed observers. Indeed, any toxic asset purchase or guarantee programme must be an ineffective, inefficient and inequitable way to rescue inadequately capitalised financial institutions: ineffective, because the government must buy vast amounts of doubtful assets at excessive prices or provide over-generous guarantees, to render insolvent banks solvent; inefficient, because big capital injections or conversion of debt into equity are better ways to recapitalise banks; and inequitable, because big subsidies would go to failed institutions and private buyers of bad assets.

Why then is the administration making what appears to be a blunder? It may be that it is hoping for the best. But it also seems it has set itself the wrong question. It has not asked what needs to be done to be sure of a solution. It has asked itself, instead, what is the best it can do given three arbitrary, self-imposed constraints: no nationalisation; no losses for bondholders; and no more money from Congress. Yet why does a new administration, confronting a huge crisis, not try to change the terms of debate? This timidity is depressing. Trying to make up for this mistake by imposing pettifogging conditions on assisted institutions is more likely to compound the error than to reduce it.

Assume that the problem is insolvency and the modest market value of US commercial banks (about $400bn) derives from government support (see charts). Assume, too, that it is impossible to raise large amounts of private capital today. Then there has to be recapitalisation in one of the two ways indicated above. Both have disadvantages: government recapitalisation is a bail-out of creditors and involves temporary state administration; debt-for-equity swaps would damage bond markets, insurance companies and pension funds. But the choice is inescapable.

If Mr Geithner or Lawrence Summers, head of the national economic council, were advising the US as a foreign country, they would point this out, brutally. Dominique Strauss-Kahn, IMF managing director, said the same thing, very gently, in Malaysia (http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/survey/so/2009/NEW020709A.htm) last Saturday.

The correct advice remains the one the US gave the Japanese and others during the 1990s: admit reality, restructure banks and, above all, slay zombie institutions at once. It is an important, but secondary, question whether the right answer is to create new “good banks”, leaving old bad banks to perish, as my colleague, Willem Buiter, recommends (http://blogs.ft.com/maverecon/2009/02/good-banknew-bank-vs-bad-bank-a-rare-example-of-a-no-brainer/), or new “bad banks”, leaving cleansed old banks to survive. I also am inclined to the former, because the culture of the old banks seems so toxic.

By asking the wrong question, Mr Obama is taking a huge gamble. He should have resolved to cleanse these Augean banking stables. He needs to rethink, if it is not already too late.

http://media.ft.com/cms/9a3c921a-f7a0-11dd-a284-000077b07658.gif

martin.wolf@ft.com

theogt
02-10-2009, 10:55 PM
The correct advice remains the one the US gave the Japanese and others during the 1990s: admit reality, restructure banks and, above all, slay zombie institutions at once. It is an important, but secondary, question whether the right answer is to create new “good banks”, leaving old bad banks to perish, as my colleague, Willem Buiter, recommends (http://blogs.ft.com/maverecon/2009/02/good-banknew-bank-vs-bad-bank-a-rare-example-of-a-no-brainer/), or new “bad banks”, leaving cleansed old banks to survive. I also am inclined to the former, because the culture of the old banks seems so toxic.In others words, a complete nationalization of the US banking system.

sbark
02-10-2009, 11:52 PM
........Japan pioneered the concept of massive Pork spending.....10 yrs ago.....and still is falling off economically

Japan faces ‘unimaginable’ contraction(annualized GDP fall: -10%) (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2182948/posts)
FT ^ (http://www.freerepublic.com/%5Ehttp://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/97ad993c-f6b9-11dd-8a1f-0000779fd2ac.html?nclick_check=1)| 02/09/09 | Mure Dickie

Posted on Tuesday, February 10, 2009 10:35:02 PM by TigerLikesRooster (http://www.freerepublic.com/~tigerlikesrooster/)

Japan faces ‘unimaginable’ contraction
By Mure Dickie in Tokyo
Published: February 9 2009 15:04 | Last updated: February 9 2009 18:46
Japan’s economy faces an “unimaginable” contraction, the chief economist of its central bank warned on Monday, as figures revealed surging bankruptcies and a big fall in machinery orders.
The warning from Kazuo Momma, head of the Bank of Japan’s research and statistics department, underscored the gloom surrounding the world’s second-largest economy as export orders dry up, companies shut down production lines and consumers stop spending. Japan, where industrial output plunged a record 9.6 per cent month on month in December, is due to announce fourth-quarter gross domestic product data next week. Polls of economists suggest GDP will have fallen more than 3 per cent compared with the previous quarter – an annualised decline of more than 10 per cent.

(Excerpt) Read more at ft.com (http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/97ad993c-f6b9-11dd-8a1f-0000779fd2ac.html?nclick_check=1) ...

ScipioCowboy
02-11-2009, 12:00 AM
In others words, a complete nationalization of the US banking system.

You interpreted the article in precisely the same way I did. That's a relief. I was about to make a similar comment, but I was worried that I had missed some crucial point.

theogt
02-11-2009, 12:23 AM
You interpreted the article in precisely the same way I did. That's a relief. I was about to make a similar comment, but I was worried that I had missed some crucial point.I kept waiting for the author to say it, but he just wouldn't.

SuspectCorner
02-11-2009, 06:57 AM
The Audacity of Dopes

by William K. Black

The Huffington Post ~ Posted February 10, 2009 | 12:30 PM (EST)

We are being played for chumps. The Bush and Obama plans could only have been designed by failed bankers -- for their principal beneficiaries are failed bankers. We already know enough to confirm that the Bush administration made us the "fool" in the market by massively overpaying for assets. The Obama administration is about to compound that scandal with a "guarantee" program. The bankers that caused the crisis designed both programs. The senior officers at big bank aren't very good lenders, but they are expert in maximizing their compensation.

Worse, Mr. Geithner, the senior public official who, with former Treasury Secretary Paulson, designed the failed Bush plan is the architect of the disastrous Obama plan. Indeed, as the New York Times has just revealed, it should be called the Geithner plan. He overcame intense opposition within the Obama administration and designed a plan that is even worse than the failed Bush program. Geithner's gifts to the bankers that caused the crisis include: a unnecessary taxpayer bailout of "risk capital," a massive coverup of their banks' insolvency, gutting the proposed limits on executive compensation, and devising a "guarantee" mechanism designed to hide the expenses of the unprincipled bailouts from the American public. Remember, executive compensation is not "merely" a fairness issue. Executive compensation and the compensation systems used for appraisers, accountants, and rating agencies were designed, and served, to create the perverse incentives and ethical rot that caused the ongoing financial crises by producing a "Gresham's dynamic" in which fraudulent and abusive lending and accounting practices drove good practices out of the marketplace.

Here's the amazing part -- the bankers are so arrogant that they bragged to a sympathetic CNBC commentator they are playing us:


"What a delicious irony this is--last week, just as President Obama was publicly bashing the stupidity of the banks ... his economic team [was] privately begging for input from Wall Street. The administration was conducting around-the-clock discussions and interviews with senior Wall Street executives, including many from the same firms he was theoretically appalled with, about how to fix the lingering financial crisis. "

There are proven ways to resolve the crisis that are far cheaper and more effective because they don't subsidize bankers and "risk capital." We know how to resolve failed banks. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) can place even the largest banks in "pass through" receiverships on Friday at the close of business and reopen them as "New Federal" bank Monday morning with minimal disruption to customers and creditors and retain "going concern" value. This is how the Reagan administration resolved failed S&Ls during the debacle.

The FDIC appoints a senior manager to ensure that "New Federal" is run prudently. There is plenty of unemployed banking talent available. Hundreds of good bankers lost their jobs during the financial bubble because they refused to make bad loans. Research has shown that its sister agency, FSLIC, appointed receivership managers that greatly reduced losses during the S&L debacle. Leaving the managers in charge of failed banks that they led into insolvency is suicidal. The new senior leader is picked based on expertise in prudent lending and integrity. If we want failed banks to return promptly to making prudent loans and help lead an economic recovery an S&L style "New Federal" is the best possible device. The existing managers have terrible incentives -- to cover up existing losses and to make bad or even fraudulent loans that produce the greatest (fictional) accounting income and to "live large" through bonuses and perks. (The Obama compensation limits are political cover. The bankers have designed the "guarantee" plan to ensure that the compensation limits will be illusory.)

The FDIC managers have the correct incentives to finally produce an honest evaluation of which assets are toxic and how much they are worth. This transparency is essential if we are to end this crisis. Under the Bush and Obama plans we retain the existing managers that have overwhelming incentives to cover up the losses. The bankers have designed the guarantee plan to encourage banks to continue to cover up their toxic assets and not recognize their losses. These cover-ups make a financial crisis last longer and increase the taxpayers' costs.

The FDIC managers preserve the going concern value by making prudent loans and get the "New Federal" in shape to be acquired. By providing reliable information about the toxic assets the managers reduce acquisition risks, which expands the number of bidders and reduces the financial assistance required to aid the acquisition.

"New Federal" receiverships dramatically reduce cash needs. Most costs are deferred until the New Federals are sold.

Pass through receiverships save the taxpayers money and prevent perverse managerial incentives because they do not subsidize "risk capital" when banks are insolvent. Common and preferred stock and subordinated debt in banks are "risk capital." Their holders are supposed to receive nothing if a bank becomes insolvent, but the Bush and Obama plans reward them. There is no need to do this. Subsidizing risk capital and maintaining the failed managers at insolvent banks creates the worst possible incentives. It will cause future crises. It will delay the recovery from the ongoing crises. It robs the U.S. taxpayers and primarily benefits the wealthy -- many of them non-U.S. citizens. The contract they made was that they would get nothing if the bank failed. It has failed, and they are often complicit in those failures. The bankers have convinced the Bush and Obama administrations that the taxpayers should be looted to bail out risk capital. We should stop listening to the folks that caused the crisis and have interests hostile to our interests. Let's stop them from using us as chumps.



William K. Black, Associate Professor of Economics and Law, University of Missouri - Kansas City. He held senior regulatory positions during the S&L debacle and is the author of "The Best Way to Rob a Bank is to Own One" (2005)

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/william-k-black/the-audacity-of-dopes_b_165637.html

Aikbach
02-11-2009, 07:19 AM
Andrew Jackson would be most disappointed by a national bank, Alexander Hamilton would be cooping however.

Although perhaps even Hamilton would have second thoughts after witnessing the current financial mess.

Real1st
02-11-2009, 07:21 AM
Welcome to the end of the free market.

zrinkill
02-11-2009, 08:47 AM
Welcome to the end of the free market.

Hey!!! Look who is back.

Real1st
02-11-2009, 10:01 AM
Hey!!! Look who is back.

I mean come on seriously grow up.

You call me kid all the time like i am some kind of little boy and you claim you are some grown man but you aren't acting very mature.

Why try to lure me into a argument?

zrinkill
02-11-2009, 10:06 AM
I mean come on seriously grow up.

You call me kid all the time like i am some kind of little boy and you claim you are some grown man but you aren't acting very mature.

Why try to lure me into a argument?


I just said look who is back ...... thats it.

I do not even disagree with you in this thread.

Someone needs to relax.

SuspectCorner
02-11-2009, 10:13 AM
I just said look who is back ...... thats it.

I do not even disagree with you in this thread.

Someone needs to relax.

C'mon - "Look who is back?"

Sounds pretty antagonistic to me.

:laugh2:

Real1st
02-11-2009, 10:17 AM
I just said look who is back ...... thats it.

I do not even disagree with you in this thread.

Someone needs to relax.

I am relaxed.

But back on topic.

Its over for our economy. We are now moving into socialism and before we move all the way into socialism our economy will collapse first. If they keep printing and borrowing money we don't have then we will go into Hyper-inflation. Hell our currency is being destroyed as we speak. Obama is already proving his administration is going to fail. We need to build factories and start producing ****. We need to start exporting more than we import. Why you ask? Because that is how you grow an economy. Not by simply giving people free money and telling them to go spend it at the malls.

That is bull**** that is bring the cart before the horse. We have been living on a credit based bubble fake economy for decades. We keep printing and borrowing money we don't have. Its going to be bad for us in the future if our incompetent leaders don't get this situation fixed. Bush and congress should not have gave out all those bailouts. Obama should not be busting out this big *** stimulus pork bill.

They should just let the free market work let the incompetent bankers and CEOs get fazed out while other companies grow up and take their place. That is how the free market works. Yeah we would be still going through a recession but we would have gotten out of this recession probably mid this year and our economy would boom if we let the free market run like its supposed to. We are talking a possibility of Hyper-inflation folks. Does 1930s Germany or Zimbabwe ring a bell? God save us.

Real1st
02-11-2009, 10:47 AM
C'mon - "Look who is back?"

Sounds pretty antagonistic to me.

:laugh2:


It almost got me. :D