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To: patron_anejo_por_favor who wrote (197418)4/22/2009 12:32:24 AM
From: Cactus JackRespond to of 306849
 
Bravo from Denninger:

market-ticker.org

The Fed's Hoenig: Liar
Oh cute - from Thomas Hoenig:

The current federal bailouts of big financial firms is distorting the economy and prolonging the crisis, said Kansas City Fed President Thomas Hoenig in testimony to Congress on Tuesday. The Troubled Asset Relief Program has not restored confidence in the banking system, he said. Banks that are well capitalized should be left alone. Banks that need just a little help should be required to raise more capital. Banks that are not viable should be liquidated, he said.

So where have you been during the last 18 months you jackass?

You're a Fed President and your boss has been presenting a "united front" through all of this bullshit, going back to August of 2007 with the original "surprise" discount rate cut.

He has also been "cheerleading" throughout claiming that firms are ok and there will be no recession, when the signs of the bubble bursting and the obvious debt-to-GDP ratio has been staring people in the face for twenty damn years!

NOW, when you're finally under oath and have to say what you really think, you come out with this?

Where the hell have you been Hoenig? I've been screaming about all of this - from the fraud onward - for more than two years. You've been oddly silent about the need to put the fraudsters into receivership and wipe them out, and then suddenly, today, you pop up with THIS?

Was that your conscience calling or did you finally realize that lying to the American People for the last two years has just made the situation worse and that we are now staring down the barrel of a full-on economic depression as a direct and proximate result of The Fed's bullshit machinations and games - and you will ultimately be held to account?

Here's what you said on October 13th 2008 you revisionist:

"We have to show the confidence that the plan will work and then begin to act accordingly if we are going to move through this crisis. The fact is that we have been crises before, we've managed through them and we will do it once again. I was involved in supervision and regulation during the banking crisis in the 1980s. During those trying times it seemed every bit as tense as the crisis we have now. But steps were taken, plans were implemented, we got through it and we were wiser for it."

Oh really? We were wiser for it? That's why The Fed was so wise as to remove reserve requirements through the 80s and 90s, including the most recent changes, it was so wise as to ignore leverage being cranked from the usual 10:1 upward of 30:1 or more, and instead of performing its regulatory function with firms that were making clearly unsound mortgages as well as packaging and selling them into the market as "AAA" securities when the sellers knew the borrowers had not documented income and assets The Fed did nothing?

Wiser eh? I call this willful blindness and I call your testimony today a snake-like attempt to slither off as you have finally come to realize what I and a few others have been saying for over two years - that the inevitable reality of failure in the path that just six months prior you not only supported but promoted is about to come home to roost and detonate in The Fed's FACE.

Not only that but it is clear from the above paragraph (and the entirety of the referenced document, which came AFTER the EESA/TARP proposal) that you were in full support of bailing out these institutions - and now you're trying to distance yourself from what you've finally realized is a mathematically-impossible plan that will not and cannot work.

Welcome to the Depression Mr. Hoenig; your place of accountability in being directly responsible for it happening has been reserved.



To: patron_anejo_por_favor who wrote (197418)4/22/2009 1:46:54 AM
From: patron_anejo_por_favorRespond to of 306849
 
Funny, I asked a question about why dilution wasn't bad for (some) stocks....and the same day, Michael Milken answered it!

online.wsj.com

Why Capital Structure Matters
Companies that repurchased stock two years ago are in a world of hurt.

By MICHAEL MILKEN
Thirty-five years ago business publications were writing that major money-center banks would fail, and quoted investors who said, "I'll never own a stock again!" Meanwhile, some state and local governments as well as utilities seemed on the brink of collapse. Corporate debt often sold for pennies on the dollar while profitable, growing companies were starved for capital.


Chad CroweIf that all sounds familiar today, it's worth remembering that 1974 was also a turning point. With financial institutions weakened by the recession, public and private markets began displacing banks as the source of most corporate financing. Bonds rallied strongly in 1975-76, providing underpinning for the stock market, which rose 75%. Some high-yield funds achieved unleveraged, two-year rates of return approaching 100%.

The accessibility of capital markets has grown continuously since 1974. Businesses are not as dependent on banks, which now own less than a third of the loans they originate. In the first quarter of 2009, many corporations took advantage of low absolute levels of interest rates to raise $840 billion in the global bond market. That's 100% more than in the first quarter of 2008, and is a typical increase at this stage of a market cycle. Just as in the 1974 recession, investment-grade companies have started to reliquify. Once that happens, the market begins to open for lower-rated bonds. Thus BB- and B-rated corporations are now raising capital through new issues of equity, debt and convertibles.

This cyclical process today appears to be where it was in early 1975, when balance sheets began to improve and corporations with strong capital structures started acquiring others. In a single recent week, Roche raised more than $40 billion in the public markets to help finance its merger with Genentech. Other companies such as Altria, HCA, Staples and Dole Foods, have used bond proceeds to pay off short-term bank debt, strengthening their balance sheets and helping restore bank liquidity. These new corporate bond issues have provided investors with positive returns this year even as other asset groups declined.

The late Nobel laureate Merton Miller and I, although good friends, long debated whether this kind of capital-structure management is an essential job of corporate leaders. Miller believed that capital structure was not important in valuing a company's securities or the risk of investing in them.

My belief -- first stated 40 years ago in a graduate thesis and later confirmed by experience -- is that capital structure significantly affects both value and risk. The optimal capital structure evolves constantly, and successful corporate leaders must constantly consider six factors -- the company and its management, industry dynamics, the state of capital markets, the economy, government regulation and social trends. When these six factors indicate rising business risk, even a dollar of debt may be too much for some companies.

Over the past four decades, many companies have struggled with the wrong capital structures. During cycles of credit expansion, companies have often failed to build enough liquidity to survive the inevitable contractions. Especially vulnerable are enterprises with unpredictable revenue streams that end up with too much debt during business slowdowns. It happened 40 years ago, it happened 20 years ago, and it's happening again.

Overleveraging in many industries -- especially airlines, aerospace and technology -- started in the late 1960s. As the perceived risk of investing in such businesses grew in the 1970s, the price at which their debt securities traded fell sharply. But by using the capital markets to deleverage -- by paying off these securities at lower, discounted prices through tax-free exchanges of equity for debt, debt for debt, assets for debt and cash for debt -- most companies avoided default and saved jobs. (Congress later imposed a tax on the difference between the tax basis of the debt and the discounted price at which it was retired.)

Issuing new equity can of course depress a stock's value in two ways: It increases the supply, thus lowering the price; and it "signals" that management thinks the stock price is high relative to its true value. Conversely, a company that repurchases some of its own stock signals an undervalued stock. Buying stock back, the theory goes, will reduce the supply and increase the price. Dozens of finance students have earned Ph.D.s by describing such signaling dynamics. But history has shown that both theories about lowering and raising stock prices are wrong with regard to deleveraging by companies that are seen as credit risks.

Two recent examples are Alcoa and Johnson Controls each of which saw its stock price increase sharply after a new equity issue last month. This has happened repeatedly over the past 40 years. When a company uses the proceeds from issuance of stock or an equity-linked security to deleverage by paying off debt, the perception of credit risk declines, and the stock price generally rises.

The decision to increase or decrease leverage depends on market conditions and investors' receptivity to debt. The period from the late-1970s to the mid-1980s generally favored debt financing. Then, in the late '80s, equity market values rose above the replacement costs of such balance-sheet assets as plants and equipment for the first time in 15 years. It was a signal to deleverage.

In this decade, many companies, financial institutions and governments again started to overleverage, a concern we noted in several Milken Institute forums. Along with others, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, we also pointed out that when companies reduce fixed obligations through asset exchanges, any tax on the discount ultimately costs jobs. Congress responded in the recent stimulus bill by deferring the tax for five years and spreading the liability over an additional five years. As a result, companies have already moved to repurchase or exchange more than $100 billion in debt to strengthen their balance sheets. That has helped save jobs.

The new law is also helpful for companies that made the mistake of buying back their stock with new debt or cash in the years before the market's recent fall. These purchases peaked at more than $700 billion in 2007 near the market top -- and in many cases, the value of the repurchased stock has dropped by more than half and has led to ratings downgrades. Particularly hard hit were some of the world's largest companies (i.e., General Electric, AIG, Merrill Lynch); financial institutions (Hartford Financial, Lincoln National, Washington Mutual); retailers (Macy's, Home Depot); media companies (CBS, Gannett); and industrial manufacturers (Eastman Kodak, Motorola, Xerox).

Without stock buybacks, many such companies would have little debt and would have greater flexibility during this period of increased credit constraints. In other words, their current financial problems are self-imposed. Instead of entering the recession with adequate liquidity and less debt with long maturities, they had the wrong capital structure for the time.

The current recession started in real estate, just as in 1974. Back then, many real-estate investment trusts lost as much as 90% of their value in less than a year because they were too highly leveraged and too dependent on commercial paper at a time when interest rates were doubling. This time around it was a combination of excessive leverage in real-estate-related financial instruments, a serious lowering of underwriting standards, and ratings that bore little relationship to reality. The experience of both periods highlights two fallacies that seem to recur in 20-year cycles: that any loan to real estate is a good loan, and that property values always rise. Fact: Over the past 120 years, home prices have declined about 40% of the time.

History isn't a sine wave of endlessly repeated patterns. It's more like a helix that brings similar events around in a different orbit. But what we see today does echo the 1970s, as companies use the capital markets to push out debt maturities and pay off loans. That gives them breathing room and provides hope that history will repeat itself in a strong economic recovery.

It doesn't matter whether a company is big or small. Capital structure matters. It always has and always will.

Mr. Milken is chairman of the Milken Institute.