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Politics : Sioux Nation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Asymmetric who wrote (160464)2/12/2009 1:56:56 AM
From: Asymmetric  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 362543
 
FT's Wolf: U.S. Too "Politically Frightened" to Admit Truth About Banks, Part I
.
by Aaron Task in Investing, Recession, Banking
Posted Feb 09, 2009 04:10pm EST
.
The next phase of the bank bailout plan presented by Treasury
Secretary Tim Geithner (now slated for Tuesday) is expected to
be multi-faceted but missing one key element: An admission by
policymakers that major U.S. banks are insolvent.

There are two explanations why the Obama administration (like
its predecessor) refuses to even acknowledge this possibility
in public, says Martin Wolf, chief economics commentator for
The Financial Times:

* One, policymakers have better information than private
economists and really believe the big banks aren't insolvent,
i.e. they continue to view the crisis as a "liquidity problem,"
and believe so-called toxic assets will return from their
currently "artificially low" levels once confidence is restored.

* Two, policymakers "are not prepared to admit the truth"
because it means existing shareholders and bank managements
will be wiped out. It also means "admitting total failure" of
efforts to date to stem the crisis, says the author of Fixing
Global Finance.

Arguing today's toxic assets are "fundamentally worthless" -
and there's lots more losses coming - Wolf says the lack of
political will (or outright cowardice) to admit to reality
means "we're really in trouble." Why? Because confidence in
policymakers will continue to deteriorate as their ill-conceived
solutions continue to fail.

Once policymakers (ultimately) agree insolvency is really the
underlying problem, there are two options for dealing with the
banks:

* Nationalize them, and then inject government capital as
the U.K. government has started to do with RBS and Lloyds.
(a.k.a. The Swedish Solution)

* Put them into FDIC receivership or force them into bankruptcy,
whereby common stock and preferred debt shareholders get wiped
out and "senior" debt holders end up owning the banks.