Wednesday, February 25, 2009

If there is no recovery, we’ll deal with it at that time and we can bolder at that time.

From The Baseline Scenario:

"Wait And See

with 3 comments

Here’s the economic strategy update. Yesterday, Ben Bernanke apparently convinced the market that no major banks will need to be taken over due to lack of capital. If he knows this, I’m not sure exactly why we need the stress tests. But we now know the outcome of those tests.

At the same time, Chairman Bernanke has made (or reiterated) a clear call on the economic recovery. Look at p.A2 in your morning WSJ; in the third panel of the chart, the heading tells you all: “Real GDP contracts… Bounces, then moderates.”

There is no sign of a potential lost decade here. The central range of the forecast for 2010 is entirely above 2 percent, leaning towards 3 percent (Q4 on Q4).

So the banks have - by assumption - sufficient capital. The stress test will be relative to this baseline; you can see that the “maximum stress” will be pretty mild and, very important, short-lived.

President Obama therefore can present and emphasize his (admirable) long-term goals, as he did last night.

I just have one question. How exactly do we get growth over 2 percent in 2010 (and after)? The global economy is getting worse, consumer and business confidence is weak everywhere (tell me if you know different). There is no sign of housing turning around, consumers are cutting back, and large organizations are all planning to trim costs for the next financial year. Our policy response so far: moderate fiscal stimulus, underfunded housing policy, and small potatoes for the banking system. Monetary policy sounded bold a month ago; now less so (again, if your central forecast is so rosy, why embark on risky or controversial further monetary expansion?)

The answer is: wait and see. If we get a recovery, then we are fine. If there is no recovery, we’ll deal with it at that time and we can bolder at that time.

I remember hearing the exact same thing from the Paulson Treasury after the failure of Bear Stearns.

Written by Simon Johnson

February 25, 2009 at 8:26 am

Posted in Commentary"

Me:

Two quotes. From Reuters:

http://www.reuters.com/article/mnaNewsIndustryMaterialsAndUtilities/idUSN1248357020090112

“Whether Citigroup will be better off accepting prices today or deferring sales remains to be seen,” Sonenshine said. “In both cases, AIG and Citi, we are looking at the slow but inevitable disaggregation of overextended financial services companies that have demonstrated an inability to manage risk.”

The WaPo:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/02/24/AR2009022403351.html

“The government hopes to complete the tests in the next several weeks, officials said.

Companies that need government money will be required to issue preferred shares that pay the government a regular dividend, basically the same terms on which the government has invested almost $200 billion in more than 400 banks since November. The key difference is that the preferred shares can be replaced with common shares.

The change is critical because of the accounting rules that govern what kinds of money banks can count as capital. The basic rule is that capital is money a bank never needs to repay. The most basic form of capital is money raised by selling common shares.

Many investors do not regard preferred shares as capital because the dividend on those shares rises sharply after five years, encouraging repayment.( NB- Don )

The Treasury Department pushed banking regulators in November to declare that preferred shares counted as capital, but investors were not convinced.

Some leading financial analysts and economists have doubts that the plan will work. They said that banks must be recapitalized on a massive scale, if necessary through a process in which the government would seize the most troubled companies, strip them of toxic assets and then return them to private hands.

“I think the end game of this has to involve receivership for most of the largest financial institutions. Receivership and then reprivatizing them,” said Kenneth Rogoff, a Harvard economics professor. “You can’t guarantee that it’s going to work. But looking at the history of financial crises, there are very few examples of another successful exit strategy. And every month we wait to act adds to the depth and duration of the recession.”

These tactics have proved useless so far. Investors will only jump in if subsidized, or they can get assets from these businesses at a deep discount. It’s hard to see how this works, even if the economy slowly gets better. It’s not clear that anybody really trusts these companies.

As for the awful crime of hoping that the taxpayers get paid back, or Bernanke’s comment about the “Franchise Value”, they defy belief.

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