Tuesday, February 10, 2009

He asks, quite rationally, if Obama’s presidency is already a failure

From Operation Armageddon:

"Martin Wolf shreds TARP 2 February 11, 2009 – 1:20 am

by Rolfe Winkler, CFA

An absolute must-read column from FT’s chief economics commentator, Martin Wolf. He asks, quite rationally, if Obama’s presidency is already a failure. He came in with a huge amount of political capital, with the freedom to propose bold moves that might take control of events. And yet he is clearly letting events take control of him, with Congress taking the lead on the stimulus plan and, even more ominously, allowing his Treasury Secretary to continue the failed policies of the prior administration.

Geithner made a comment toward the end of his Senate testimony that betrayed his fundamental misunderstanding of the crisis. How is his new plan going to get us through our banking morass? He said that by offering more government “financing,” private capital will return to these markets to absorb bad assets. I literally screamed at my television when he said that. Financing?!?! You still think this is a liquidity problem?!!? Assets aren’t being bought because they are over-priced, not because buyers can’t get the money to finance their acquisition. The problem, Mr. Geithner, is insolvency. Asset prices are still far too high, for them to be resolved their prices need to fall. If this wipes out the world’s financial system then so be it. Better we get on with cleaning up the mess than shoving more cheap “financing” into the system only so it can shit out still more toxic assets to be cleaned up later. We’re neck deep in bank excrement already; will the Obama administration wait for us to be totally submerged before it cares to offer details about how it plans to address the problem?

But Wolf is far more erudite and thoughtful than I…

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 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.

Geithner will not be the guy to get this done correctly. He’s too tight with Wall Street, having cut his teeth at the NY Fed. Given the choice, it seems he’d rather watch the system implode than take aggressive government action to recapitalize banks the right way.

Not only is he constitutionally incapable of doing the right thing, even if he tried, he wouldn’t have the gravitas to deliver. Our financial problems are towering; a towering figure is required to lead us to the solution. Only one man fits the bill.

Paul Volcker."

Me:

  1. Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    I agree with you. It was a terrific post.

    By Don the libertarian Democrat on Feb 11, 2009

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