Thursday, February 12, 2009

Can bankers really trump the American government in this fashion?

From Simon Johnson:

"Robbery Note - From The Banking Oligarchs This Morning

with 13 comments

The modern bank robber calmly hands a note to the teller, asking for money and making a moderately specific scary threat. The robber, of course, expects the teller to hand over unmarked bills without a fuss.

This morning’s “research” note from a major international bank is entitled, “Falling Short: The government needs to buy toxic assets,” and the heart of their one page argument is, with the emphasis as in the original,

One main stumbling block to the purchasing of troubled assets has been pricing, specifically how does the government price a diverse set of assets in a way that does not put the taxpayer on the hook. However, this should not be the standard by which we judge the efficacy of the plan, because a more prolonged deterioration in the economy will result in a higher terminal unemployment rate and a greater deterioration of the tax base. As such, the decline in tax revenues will crimp many of the essential services provided by the government. Ultimately, the taxpayer will pay one way or another, either through greatly diminished job prospects and/or significantly higher taxes down the line to pay for the massive debt issuance required to fund current and prospective fiscal spending initiatives. We think the government should do the following: estimate the highest price it can pay for the various toxic assets residing on financial institution balance sheets which would still return the principal to taxpayers.

Tell me if you think I am overreacting - it has been a difficult week - but I interpret this as saying: “give us as much money as you can, or else.” And the “or else” appears to be unemployment up around 20% and debt/GDP in the red-for-danger zone.

Can bankers really trump the American government in this fashion? It’s painful to read, but probably helpful that the oligarchs put their cards (and notes) on the table so brazenly. This is, after all, a critical fight to save American democracy, and it’s good to know what we are up against.

Written by Simon Johnson

February 12, 2009 at 7:54 am"

Me:

I’m going to check The Onion. This quote is too good. But check this out from Clusterstock:

http://www.businessinsider.com/bofas-bernstein-calls-for-his-own-eventual-layoff-2009-2#comment-49939b104b5437310048fe68

BofA’s Bernstein Calls For His Own Eventual Layoff (BAC)
Dan Colarusso

So let us get this straight. Bank of America stock strategist Rich Bernstein says the Federal government’s bank rescue plan won’t work and that Washington should let the failing ones…well….fail.

That may cause some teeth-gnashing by his boss, Ken Lewis. As Bernstein’s note hit the wires, his corporate master was testifying about his own Girl Scout cookie sales and work with Mother Teresa (at least that’s how our new hero, Rep. Michael Capuano parsed it). Bernstein said the government should increase deposit insurance, seize assets, shut “large” banks and encourage takeovers.

His note also said:

“The history of bubbles clearly shows that the significant consolidation of the financial sector is inevitable. The latest Treasury program is simply another attempt to stymie the consolidation process.”

I really can’t believe what I’m reading.

No comments: