Emac's Stock Watch | Fox Business
  • September 22, 2008 09:50 AM EDT by Elizabeth MacDonald

    Where Do We Go From Here?

    "Is there any reason why the American people should be taxed to guarantee the debts of banks, any more than they should be taxed to guarantee the debts of other institutions, including merchants, industries and mills of the country?" -- Senator Carter Glass, author of the Banking Act of 1933

    With that act, US Senator Carter Glass put his imprimatur on one of the most important pieces of financial legislation, the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933, a bill that was knocked to smithereens and destroyed in 1999 by Republicans and Democrats alike.

    The bill was crafted to put a firewall between staid deposit-taking banks and more dicey Wall Street activities such as selling stocks, bonds and later speculative derivatives that has all of Wall Street, and now the US government, staring morosely at this moldering pile of decaying tissue paper.

    A pile that the US taxpayer now owns via the US government's bailout of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, American International Group, and the $700 bn rescue of Wall Street's mortgage-backed securities.

    It's a mountain of dust that still threatens to smother Citigroup (C), JPMorgan Chase (JPM) and Bank of America (BAC), which has bought Merrill Lynch (MER), the recipient and repackager of all things Countrywide. Derivatives that proved the downfall of Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers.

    Derivatives that proved not just Wall Street, but Congress, with its terrible lack of regulatory oversight on the part of Democrats and Republicans alike, have no more sense than a flock of pheasants.

    And it's a pile that now threatens to swamp the US budget with record deficits never before seen in the history of this country and slam the already ailing US dollar.

    We must put up the guardrails once and for all.

    I urge you to read through to the bottom to see what is at stake and what must be done now to protect the financial system--and U.S. taxpayers.

    The Country's Mega-Dumpster

    Now we have the $700 bn bailout, the mega-bailout creating the mega-dumpster of all to buy that rotting paper that was crafted by habitually self-deceiving, hubristic hustlers on Wall Street, who, unburdened by conscience, felt entitled to follow their own codes of conduct as they went berserk enriching themselves.

    Readers, who I so appreciate, know I've been saying since last fall that the free market has turned into a free-for-all, that in the process Wall Streeters have now sewaraged the once white-shoe reputation of finance with a kind of thinking that exists only on the margins of the Bell Curve.

    It is their unfathomable stupidity, and the fact that these exotic derivatives that so enriched Wall Street but now have the same rights to the US Treasury as plain vanilla Treasurys, that is already engendering a voter outrage hot enough to melt platinum.

    And now we have come full circle, as with a great thundering thump, the Federal Reserve took the unthinkable step of converting the last two major investment banks standing, Morgan Stanley (MS) and Goldman Sachs (GS), into traditional bank holding companies.

    It's the end of Wall Street as we've known it.

    Are you being protected now?

    The clear as rain answer is no. There are positives and negatives though. "Nobody wants to swallow a bitter pill, especially a $700 bn one," says Jill Schlesinger, president of Strategic Point Advisors. "But we know for certain that doing nothing will result in financial calamity."

    Schlesinger adds: "In other words a fence at the top of a cliff is better than an ambulance at the bottom."

    *Government's coolants will start to take effect on the market. The insurer of last resort, the backstop of last resort, the US government, one of the last triple-A rated borrowers left standing, as well the temporary ban on short sales, will calm the markets starting this week. Watch out when the 10-day ban on short sales is lifted, as volatility will come storming back;

    *Don't expect interest rate cuts for now. The central banks' coordinated massive liquidity injection will cause interbank, overnight rates to drop, helping ease lending. The Federal Reserve may have temporarily lost control of the Federal Funds rate, which has risen above and below its set rate for some time now since last August when the central banks first intervened mightily with huge liquidity injections. Inflation will remain an enduring problem.;

    But Where Do We Go From Here?

    The US taxpayer will now buy distressed mortgage-backed securities not at fair market value but at the value hashed out after much arm-twisting between the Treasury and Wall Street, who wants to sell at above market prices. The brief two-pager on the plan purposely doesn't say that the government will buy this junk at distressed, fair market values.

    What Should We Do Now?

    *Keep Mark to Market Accounting. If market watchers who know anything about accounting thought this through, they'd know to stop pressuring the accounting rule makers to suspend fair value accounting because the taxpayer is now on the hook for these assets.

    Fair value accounting, called mark to market accounting, says companies must book values on their financial statements for their assets as if they were going to sell them today in the market place. Since hundreds of billions of dollars of mortgage-backed securities, $500 bn on Wall Street alone, can't be sold because no one wants to buy them, that means Wall Street must record these assets at lower and lower values, triggering record writedowns and losses, $514 bn and counting.

    Yes, governments affected by the Latin American debt crisis temporarily suspended mark-to-market accounting, where companies price-tagged their assets based on prevailing market prices (meaning these things were bottoming fast because no one wanted them). At that time, they let companies under their purview use historic pricing.

    Marking to Taxpayers

    Suspending it temporarily over the past year prior to government intervention might have made sense.

    But now that the government has stepped in with massive bailout money, marking this Kryptonite to market now is the right thing for taxpayers as it will keep costs down. Wall Street and banks who will take the profit hits can access the expanded Fed discount window--or merge. Enough is enough.

    Doing otherwise, letting Treasury buy at any price, should make foreign funding sources look askance at the country's balance sheet--and think twice about buying our Treasurys, (what analyst Brad Setser rightfully calls "the quiet bailout"), a shunning which is already happening by China.

    The valuation swings between these assets at companies are huge. In the most recent quarter, for example, A.I.G. had $20 bn of subprime mortgages marked at 69 cents on the dollar and $24 bn in Alt-A securities valued at 67 cents on the dollar.

    But Lehman officials on one of its last conference calls with investors said it was valuing similar subprime mortgage securities to those held by A.I.G. at 34 cents on the dollar; its mark on the Alt-A holdings was 39 cents.

    Why should you care about this? Again keeping mark-to-market accounting will save taxpayers money as housing continues to bottom.

    Meredith Whitney, a top Oppenheimer bank analyst, has already reported that major banks are understating the severity of the house price declines in their assumptions, which means they could be overstating the value of their mortgage-backed securities (see blog "Top Analyst Warns Banks Too Optimistic About Housing").

    Futures markets have priced a peak-to-trough decline of 33%.  We are now about 20 percentage points off the peak of July 2006. I say 35% to 40% is more reasonable. We have a long way to go.

    Bank of America (BAC) and JPMorgan Chase (JPM), through 2008, are using 25% to 30% and 24% peak-to-trough declines, respectively. Citigroup is using just a 23% peak-to-trough assumption.

    Will the Treasury Do the Right Thing?

    Watch out.

    The new bailout provision says explicitly that: "Decisions by the Secretary pursuant to the authority of this Act are non-reviewable and committed to agency discretion, and may not be reviewed by any court of law or any administrative agency."

    This puts the Treasury's actions beyond the rule of law, which means the Treasury can at will buy this Kryptonite at any price it deems fit with no accountability.

    All Treasury has to do is make a report to Congress twice a year on its progress. I can see the conflicts of interest looming from lobbyists who want their consultants to get a piece of this action.

    So....

    *Protect the Fire Sale. There will be political pressure from financial companies on the new government mega-dumpster, a bum's rush, "me first" arm wringing. The Democrats are right to call on the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to conduct oversight and to keep the bankers' mitts off the new entity. It happened during Sweden's credit crisis in the ‘90s--the Swedish government shelled out 4% of GDP to recast problem credits.

    But politicians in Sweden mucked it up, delaying the end game. That 4% by the way in our case would equate to a $552 bn burden to taxpayers, but it ended up being much less eventually in Sweden because the government sold off assets at a profit--once meddling politicians got out of the way.

    Also, just by way of comparison, the Resolution Trust Corp. in the early '90s restructured 750 insolvent thrifts, took on about $225 bn in bad S&L assets and sold them for $140 bn.

    *Dial down Freddie and Fannie. Now. The new law forces the two behemoths, which taxpayers now own, to start winding down their book of business starting in 2010. But they only have to do so after they, by a new law, get to ratchet up their book of businesses to a total of $1.7 tn to help with the housing crisis.

    The new law says they must dial back, starting in 2010, by 10% a year until they hit $250 bn each, down from $850 bn each.

    Do you think future Congresses will have the intestinal fortitude to see this through?

    *Do More Bank Mergers. Now. Pre-emptive, bazookanomics policy is the order of the day. Why not with bank mergers? Some 1,187 banks and S&Ls went under in the ‘90s thrift crisis, equal to more than $454 bn in assets. So far there have been 11 failures this year equal to about $40 bn. There are now 117 banks on the FDIC's problem watch list, up fm 90 in the prior quarter and 60 a year earlier. Washington Mutual's (WM) $170 bn in deposits would give a shock to the FDIC claimant pool of about $43 bn or so (much of those deposits have been lent out in the form of loans).

    *Force Wall Street to Ante Up. Force a new FDIC style insurance premium pool that investment banks must pay in to back their businesses. Taxpayers, who have bailed it out, deserve no less.

    And the Federal Reserve should force publicly traded investment banks and force their parents too, to have capital cushions at these units equal to 15% of net assets, with no debt nonsense in it or junk like credit defaults swaps or preferred shares in Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae. I mean true, liquid assets.

    It is nonsense of the highest order to let these teenagers gear themselves up 40 to 1, for example, (Merrill Lynch) with no adult supervision from the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Hillbilly #5

Hey look on the bright side, let's not let IndyMac go out of sight so fast. One pair of flapping lips from a NY Senator and WHAM - run on deposits. I'd argue in fact that taking on this burden of GS and MS both going venue of commercial bank - that they too now are at risk of JUST that - a run on deposits - whether triggered from one or more pairs of flapping lips - JUST LIKE INDYMAC ! Last I checked, which was an hour ago, citi tops FDIC's holding company list. The way I see it is citi comes down like the infected animal it is and has been, whether it's speared or it just dies of disease, I think it's coming down - short of the new rules on shorting, I think today could have been citi's demise. Now, opinion is like varieties of salt ? It's all sodium chloride -hmm- no. Maybe that's the truth, but either way - here citi is listed TOP of all US bank holding companies... ? Hmm, Bank of America tops off the tank on CountryWide back in November with 2 billion, while citi gets 11 billion from mister mystery man in Dubai. BAC can't consume citi. Where will citi go ? Please don't tell me GS or ML starts courting citi ? Or worse - the Fed takes on citi to let it flush out the infection with liquid money - freshly mixed at that. Worth less with each drop manufactured ! More SWF for citi coming ? Is there another side to all of this ? Is Paulson protecting the institutions from acquisition BY ? Abu Dhabi ? Is this actually some half breed protectionism when it's not necessary - to keep us further in a state of denial that we live in a global arena now financially / economically ? Take over if one phone call away from someone in Abu Dhabi on their private golf course in the desert - DOMED ! Gotta love our energy decisions of 40 years past - so that a few US corps could play the roles of the Clampeds - Middle east got to become the REAL Beverley Hillbillies - 10 billion dollar cement pond and all. Strange how a decision in energy policy to use petro in the US renders the entire US financial system not at risk of being hit by a jet airplane, but being bought up or transferred. Dubai has made no mistake to seek status of the world's financial center and this spring, Saudi Arabia chimed in stating it wants to become the world's formal world trade center. Come to think of it ? I never realized, let's add up ALL the petro dollars we've sent to the middle east over the years - and compare that to losses now. I'd expect no compare. Easily we've PAID for that indoor ski resort in the desert in Dubai. Has anyone here SEEN? the city plans for Dubai ? Where HALF of the world's cranes are right now ? Their Disney is bigger than the US Disney's combined. I wouldn't be surprised if the entire park is domed ! Dubai claims the world's 2nd largest mall right now, and ? the world's first too ! It's Logan's Run in 2008 ! augh! For a culture not well known for its materialistic consumerism, it is unfitting to have the world's largest malls ? Soon to be though the world's largest banks - AND trade organizations. Odd how that all ends up. Either way, one interesting spin is ALL of this is because some yayhoo's in the US wanted to cash in on oil. THE most competent I've ever heard Bush promote himself during a speech was indeed when he was asking congress early in to have full control of deciding what US corporations get the ANWR contracts. My oh my - he went off on 'Since the late 1960's, we've been looking at this region. And now ? we are capable of slant drilling off the ..." just goes on, very competent on the drilling technology indeed. Surprise there to me ? The reference that "Since the 1960's we've been looking at ANWR region " heh Now now... Either way, it's the yayhoo's who even dare promote MORE petro as a solution - THEY are the ones who GAVE the middle east all the US workers dollars renamed Petro Dollars - to be spent on indoor ski resorts. It's actually not spin, it's the truth, and come to think of it ? I can't say I see this view promoted anywhere, but it fits to me. As Perot would say "Gotta see the big pitcher" ah, the days of "Too much gridlock in washington" sound bites. hmmm

September 22, 2008 at 11:55 am

Lynne

The new bailout provision says explicitly that: “Decisions by the Secretary pursuant to the authority of this Act are non-reviewable and committed to agency discretion, and may not be reviewed by any court of law or any administrative agency.” This one item alone begs for every media outlet in the country to sound the call of alarm. We are supposed to give Paulson, the man who has sat by watching this mess grow (no doubt growing his own net worth in the mean time) free reign? His cronies must love that idea as they will sell the government worthless paper at inflated prices while Main Street loses jobs and can't look for one because gas and food prices are sky rocketing. Not to sound too fanatic but this is what happens when a nation removes God as its ultimate authority. Conscience? What conscience?

September 22, 2008 at 11:46 am

K. King

This article is very difficult to read/make any sense of. How about phrasing in plain English for those of us who don't speak "Wall Street" or "Ivy League Economist"? I consider myself a reasonably intelligent person and could not make heads or tails of this piece. It is admittedly my first time reading anything by Elizebeth MacDonald, so perhaps there is a learning curve?

September 22, 2008 at 11:46 am

Jethro

Anyone seen Mr. Dryesdale ? Uncle Jed teld me to come down to the bank and pull out our money in light of all the darkness - oh wait, that's not right, how did Uncle Jed put it, oh never mind, I'm here to get all our money Ms. Hathaway, is Mr. Dryesdale in ? Why no Jethro, what's this about you wanting to take your money out. We very much want the Clamped business. ?

September 22, 2008 at 11:32 am

Robert Geason

How do we, the taxpayers , get the Millon's from the golden paracutes from the people who fleeced most of us . $42Millom is a lot of dough for running the USA in the ground. Thank you Robert Greason

September 22, 2008 at 11:31 am

greedom

Mention of the impact of 43 Billion for WaMu to the FDIC ? I still ask myself, gee, if the FDIC is in the mid-50 Billion range as to what it has in its coffers ? Then how easily 85 Billion is just given in aid eh ? To AIG ? What ? Should we have dumped the FDIC in this arrangement and put it under the new federally managed (no time yet to even get into what bright idea that is- temporary or not) AIG ? This is silly to cry wolf on FDIC's coffers when hundreds of billions are brought to the surface as if someone went a hunting in the woods and hit some bubbling crude.

September 22, 2008 at 11:26 am

greedom

Lately -perhaps we should consider shorting western civilization.

September 22, 2008 at 11:24 am

B

Ms Macdonald Your last paragraph sums the situation up quickly and correctly except for one sentence; Having the SEC involved with oversight. The SEC has already prooven itself inept at regulatory oversight.

September 22, 2008 at 11:18 am

DanW

Elizabeth, I just heard an interview from a retired banker that opened up another thread in this debacle. He brought up a possible root cause for how we got here and I am not hearing anything in this bailout addressing why we got here. The premise is made that under the CRA (Community Reinvestment Act) financial institutions were forced as a part of doing business to make bad loans in the sub prime market. The banker mentioned ACORN (Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now) and other such groups, for forcing these institutions under the CRA to make these loans. In 1995 Clinton relaxed the regulation to enable these groups and in 2003 Bush tried to stabilize the situation. If permitted, to pass in 2003, the CRA changes may have prevented the current meltdown. So I am asking you to raise the question, what is included in this package to address the root cause so that any fix we put into place doesn’t just patch the past, but fixes it going forward. Regards, Dan W.

September 22, 2008 at 11:07 am

TimBarton

Thanks for bringing more insights and perspective to what is going on. I am not one to the financial wizards, but it sure is apparent that the smoke is clearing from their constructed mirrors. We are beginning the see their house cards which were unfortunately sold to all too many unsuspecting investors. The guardrails keeping banks in banking affairs, equities clearly in investment firms and insurance products done by insurance companies should have been kept in place. I have been in the insurance industry working with clients for more than 3 decades at one point during my career I became securities licensed. After working in securities and all manners of insurance the conflict of interest in the product blended firms became all too apparent. As a result I went back to only insurance work all the while wondering how long the financial craziness would last. It is time to reorder, put the guard rails back up, get the federal government refereeing the rails and out to the business of nationalizing private companies. With the guard rails up private financial companies can focus on their particular niche and doing it well. Let the customers choose the blends of products best suited to their situations without the pressure of a “financial planner” and the behind the scenes conflict of interests.

September 22, 2008 at 11:00 am

greedom

Citi tops the FDIC holding companies. Beats Goldman now. I'm still waiting for citi to fall So, I wonder, what will be the plan for citi ? If the US gov. takes citi under its wing - wow Time for me to buy an alarm clock that works if so, because this must be a nightmare.

September 22, 2008 at 10:41 am

greedom

Let's make the US Tax payers the new CEO of Goldman. They can act collectively through a website to make the decisions based on vote. We'll bring in democratic processes to 'regulate' the deregulators.

September 22, 2008 at 10:39 am

greedom

Well, AS the article asks in the beginning from Senatir Glass... Should the US tax payer pay for this ? Well, I say if the tax payer is going to pay for investments gone awry ? Due to whatever cause or lack of competence in preventing risk ? Then let's put these investment firms to use for the US tax payer. So, what's this ? Government sponsored investment banks ? Why I think I hear IRS refund coming ?

September 22, 2008 at 10:37 am

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