iBankCoin
Joined Feb 3, 2009
1,759 Blog Posts

Whitney and Roubini Pod Casts & Comments from G. Soros

While you were sleeping:

Merideth Whitney spoke about bad banks

Also Dr. Roubini had a few things to say about the “ECB doing too little too late.”

G. Soros had some bad bank comments:

The Obama administration should come out of the gate with a comprehensive economic program that has two pillars in addition to a fiscal stimulus package. One would prevent housing prices from overshooting on the downside by making mortgages cheaper and more available and reducing foreclosures to a minimum; the other would enable banks to resume lending by adequately recapitalizing them. It would take several months to implement the program and a further period before it impacts the economy. But in the meantime, people could see that there is a way out, and that would help mitigate the severity of the downturn.

Adequate recapitalization of the banking system now faces two seemingly insuperable obstacles. One is that former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has poisoned the well by the arbitrary and ill-considered way he implemented the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). As a result, the Obama administration feels it cannot ask Congress for more money at this time. The other is that the hole in the banks’ balance sheets has become much bigger since TARP was introduced. The assets of the banks — real estate, securities, and consumer and commercial loans — have continued to deteriorate, and the market value of bank stocks has continued to decline.
The Opinion Journal Widget

Download Opinion Journal’s widget and link to the most important editorials and op-eds of the day from your blog or Web page.

It is estimated that an additional $1.5 trillion would be required to adequately recapitalize the banks. Since their total market capitalization has fallen to about $1 trillion, this raises the specter of nationalization, which remains politically and even culturally unpalatable.

Consequently, the Obama administration plans to use up to $100 billion from the second tranche of TARP funds to establish an aggregator bank, or “bad bank,” that would acquire toxic assets from the banks’ balance sheets. By obtaining 10-to-1 leverage from the balance sheet of the Fed, the bad bank could have $1 trillion at its disposal. That is not sufficient to cleanse the balance sheets of the banks and restart lending, but it would bring some welcome relief.

The bad bank could serve as a useful interim measure, except that it will make it more difficult to obtain the necessary funding for a proper recapitalization in the future. It will also encounter all kinds of difficulties in valuing toxic securities, and it will serve as a covert subsidy to the banks by bidding up the price of their toxic assets. This will generate tremendous political resistance to any further expenditure to bail out the banks.

For these reasons it would be a mistake to take the “bad bank” route, especially when there is a way to adequately recapitalize the banks with currently available resources. The trick is not to remove the toxic assets from the banks’ balance sheets but instead put them into a “side pocket,” as hedge funds are doing with their illiquid assets. The appropriate amount of capital — equity and unsecured debentures — would be sequestered in the side pocket.

This would cleanse bank balance sheets and transform them into good banks but leave them undercapitalized. The same $1 trillion that is now destined to fund the bad bank could then be used to infuse capital into the good banks.

Although the amount needed to recapitalize the banks would be more than $1 trillion, it would be possible to mobilize a significant portion of the required total amount from the private sector. In the current environment, a good bank would enjoy exceptionally good margins. Margins would narrow as a result of competition, but by then the banking system would be revitalized and nationalization avoided.

The scheme I am proposing would minimize valuation problems and avoid providing a hidden subsidy to the banks. Exactly for that reason it is likely to encounter strong resistance from vested interests.

If you enjoy the content at iBankCoin, please follow us on Twitter

7 comments

  1. Juice

    http://www.house.gov/apps/blog/tx14_paul/

    Ron Paul … if only anyone that mattered was listening.

    Check out ‘Cures for our Economic Disease’ & ‘Stimulus for Who?’.

    Short’n sweet.

    He needs to grab Obama by the balls & get him off the crap that he’s about to dump on the economy.

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0 Deem this to be "Fake News"
  2. CRONKITE

    This is very true Juice.
    It is a shame he did not receive any press or real attention.

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0 Deem this to be "Fake News"
  3. The Chart Addict

    Welcome. I appreciate your non-biased reporting, unlike some of the stuff we see on tv these days.

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0 Deem this to be "Fake News"
  4. CRONKITE

    Thank you Chart Addict.
    I will try to stay unbiased.

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0 Deem this to be "Fake News"
  5. jg

    gm cronkite.

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0 Deem this to be "Fake News"
  6. CRONKITE

    jg ?

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0 Deem this to be "Fake News"
  7. beatstreet

    where’s the link for whitney’s comments?

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0 Deem this to be "Fake News"