about this blog
- Elizabeth MacDonald is the stocks editor for Fox Business Network. She is recognized as one of the top prize-winning business journalists in the country, and has received 14 awards, including the top prize in business journalism, the Gerald Loeb Award for Distinguished Business Journalism, and the Newswomen's Club of New York Front Page Award for Excellence in Investigative Journalism.
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Is the Panic Overblown? at Emac’s Stock Watch | Fox Business
[...] In an earlier blog, I noted an idea from R. Glenn Hubbard, former chairman of the President’s Council on Economic Advisers under President George W. Bush and Chris Mayer, an economics professor at Columbia Business School. Their plan aims to directly put a floor under housing-and in turn distressed mortgage securities at the white-hot core of the crisis–by bailing out borrowers (see “Forget the Bailout: Here’s a Better Way“). [...]
Bob Meyer
I never cease to be amazed at the number of experts who are so much smarter than the market. Not one of them said "Drop Sarbanes-Oxley, stop guaranteeing mortgages, get rid of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and let business do what it does best - move assets into the most productive areas". If the experts were so smart they should be making money out of this mess right now without having to get Hank Paulson to rig the markets in their favor. The uncertainty produced by these ridiculously "porked" proposals is scaring everyone into not lending money. You never know what the government is going to do next. Last week they sent in the FBI to find criminal bankers, and you can be sure that they will find them. The subsequent witch trials will have the defendants charged with casting spells over borrowers to break their wills and make them buy houses they couldn't afford. I'm not saying there was no fraud involved with some loans, but often the victim is all too eager to co-operate. There's an old saying among con-men - "You can't cheat an honest man" that expresses this very well. The really crooked loan brokers have already fled, there's no more money to be made. All that will be left are the honest men trying to salvage their banks. The FBI won't care. There's been a crime and we need to publicly punish someone! If you doubt this then try to find out what crime Michael Milken actually committed. Imagine that you are going to see your banker and you find armed FBI agents seizing his records. Guilty or not, your banker's career and possibly the bank itself are finished. One or two arrests on TV and there will be bank runs just like your grandfather told you about. Then Henry Paulson will to on TV and decry the "lack of confidence" in American banks (of course arresting bankers on TV had nothing to do with this) and declare that with only a few trillion dollars more he can fix it!
joseph
If you really look at what has happened as a fact look at yourself for example. We owe more to the banks then ever. In short the banks own everything.
Don Graden
After hearing last night's debates, I'm a small business owner and I can only pay so much taxes before I will have to close the doors. I pay right now inventory tax to my city, county taxes, state taxes, and gov taxes, payroll taxes, and after hearing what the dem's are wanting taxes for anyone over $ 250,000,00. Now i'm a very small business, $ 250,000,00 is not a lot of money in one year,how ever I pay alot of this back in taxes, this will leave me with what, more taxes to pay. I do not think I can pay anymore before I place a white flag over the door and a sign that will read It's all your's Obama. Do you think that back in the day, we as usa citizens would let this happen, the answer would be no. Has the house of representatives ever heard of the boston tea party? When do you think the Gov will come over to the peoples side, so far it is still a dark hole we are looking through. Only time will tell.
DT
IT PAYS TO STEAL BIG! Today our corrupt, bought and paid for politicians, rewarded crooks on wall street for stealing and actually losing money doing it. Our politicans decided it would be in our best interests to give our taxpayer dollars to make up for their losses. Did I hear any politican say they would be giving back the tens of millions they got as contributions from these crooks? I didn't think so. Let this be a lesson to young people, if you want to be a crook, be a big one. Small theft will surely land you in jail. But, steal big enough and pay off enough politicans and you can walk. Next up is to see politicans and wall streeters teaching college courses and writing books on the steps to take to steal trillions and get away with it. Yea baby I can see the infomertials now with politicans and wall streeters having the whole system on dvd for sale at $249, but if you act now, $199.
GLORIA
The best way to solve it is to vote all of the congress out of office this November, but this of course will never happen. Most of the congress are rich and do not know what the average American does. They might have come from humble beginnings but once you are in Congress they become fat cats spending your money on anything they want.
Brian
anyone remember what happened to Marie Ationette? we should, as a people, rise as one and storm the capitol, ousting the lot of them. next run down the street to the White House and kick those morons out. then head north to Wall St set it ablaze. what do ya say? I'm in!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
John Ryding
Why Actors Should Not Design Stimulus Plans! I have to point out that Russell Crowe's math is a bit off. If 300 million americans get $1 million each that's $300 trillion not $300 billion!! 300,000,000 x $1,000,000 = $300,000,000,000,000. The U.S. would rapidly become Zimbabwe, where inflation last measured was 100,000% and rising rapidly. But what's $299.7 trillion between friends?
hidclare
I 2nd SueHal comments...its not just the republicans, it was also the democrats. Please read, read ,read all info before speaking out. Out politicians, lobyists and high paid greedy CEO's are the ones who got us into this mess...they need to donate their big fat paychecks and severence paychecks back into the system to at least make a dent in fixing this problem!
Tom K.
Rob from the rich, give to the poor. It has such a wonderful ring to it, Hollywood can't resist writing yet another script on the same theme.
Paragrouper
Sadly, our representatives seem unwilling to listen to reason, whether from economic experts or from their constituents. Each American needs to carefully review how they choose to place their votes--and then vote "no" for every incumbent who votes "yes" for the bailout.
Grant
Stand by for Mission Accomplished Part 2: Hank and Ben's Big Adventure.
haylie newton
god this suxx why in the hell r we even in this mess
j t (r-co)
here's an idea america. not only should we fire our congress members that vote yes, but lets take a stand. if they do pass this bill, i say we take all of our money out of whatever banks they are bailing out and put our money in the other banks and credit unions. these banks deserve to go out of business for their poor decisions and greediness. if the government wont do it, i say we as americans take a stand and stop these banks from ruining more lives and costing us more money.
A Believer
If we go down this slippery slope of government bail-outs ( I can't bring myself to calling this a "rescue" ), then heaven help us. For the love of God, are we here in this great country that blind? Why are we risking our future to these bunch of losers in Washington? Store up your treasures in heaven, my friends. May God have mercy on us all.
chuck
Question everyone should ask: what do politicians of both stripes really know about economics. Of course they depend on industries like banking for moeny for thier campaigns for election and reelection. I can tell u just listening to a variety of talk radio shows both liberal and conservative: the people are upset. Now the leaderships of Congress,white house and treasuty showed a lack to the public and this idea on thier part was poorly marketed. I believe that congressmen need to the read the fine prints of thier legislation. Second I'd like to see some of these politicans spend a day in the private sector to see how real people work and live. They should understnad the anger that is now rising. Frankly committees in congress shouldn't waste time on this issue. They should remain and examine how the real estate market prices got depressed,how the subprime mortgage exploded like it did, and how just how serious the credit crunch is. Call in thier own lobbyist to query to see how deep this rabbit hole runs. Sometime being haste in solving the problem could only makes matters worse. Blame for this fiasco is all around.
Michael
In the interest of full-disclosure, I am a Realtor. I think this bailout is insane and incredibly short-sighted. Taking my Realtor hat off and putting my MBA hat on, let me offer the following: I understand that liquidity is the problem, but injecting money does NOT guarantee that liquidity will improve nor will resolve the inventory glut. Looking at the St. Louis Fed's credit numbers, credit is at literally an all-time high. This is like putting water in a blocked toilet and flushing again and again...it doesn't break the blockage. Now, I have not necessarily heard how this directly translates to dealing with: 1. Oversupply of inventory, created by 2. Rampant foreclosures which seems to be at the core of the crisis. I think the most conceptually simple approach (the devil is always in the details) is: 1. Provide a 40, 50, 60 year amortization for loans in trouble (maybe at rates like Glenn Hubbard shares above), not a 30-year rework...which essentially gets you to a minimally different payment. a. This keeps homes off-market, creating price support due to static demand competing for a reduced supply (inventory) of homes. This has the ancillary benefit of keeping property values up (not artificially, but by ACTUAL, desired home ownership) which benefits state and local economies (who rely on property taxes) 2. Trade off a portion of the equity on the back end of the sale for the privilege of doing this, say 10%, for the opportunity to do this. This would have the effect of neighborhood stabilization (for remaining homeowners who might just get fed up and leave the keys on the counter and go at some point, if they see their homes go underwater to the tune of $100k or $200k) a. Create a private investment fund for raising funds for this endeavor, perhaps with tax free benefits paying, say, 7%, after all, at 10% return on the back end, you would make 3% differential (mind you, I haven't done an NPV analysis or time-value of money analysis on this). Moreover, this would ESTABLISH VALUE of these mortgage assets due to increased (or, really, commencing) cashflows from the DISTRESSED loans (after all, 1/2 of something is better than 100% of nothing). This should increase cashflows in the credit market and permit the ability to loan in the market. The differentials (the other half of the loans in distress) would be funded through the private investment fund noted above. If there were a gap remaining there, THEN fund THAT. I mean, we are putting 1/14th of the GDP into Wall Street in one bill. That’s insane. The net-net is: You keep supply of available homes down. Due to the implicit requirement of having any given home needing to overcome its emcumbrances, these homes should not churn until value (and equity) is acquired. That is equity that can be used to move up somewhere down the road, or provide a legacy to these homeowners' family and children. Michael
SueHal
This is very confusing. The only thing I do understand is the fact that our representatives added a whole bunch of extras that are totally unrelated to the 'bailout'. I am leary of the media and all their reports of gloom and doom and the sky is falling. When Nancy Pelosi came out yesterday and praised the fact that alternative energy was given bucks-I began to question her motives in this whole affair. Just how far would the media and the Dems go to try and get a win in Nov.-Pelosi showed she wasn't really concerned with the 'so-called crisis' when she focused on energy and when she intentionally blamed Republicans in her floor speech. I will remain confident-things may get rocky but after awhile it will settle down. I will not allow the media to whoop me up into a frenzy.
Ken
A look at different plans is a great idea! Not adding crap to a bad plan
Peter
Yeah Russy Crowe....thats the ticket..... One problem, where does that money come from? Yeah, great suggestion.....lets inflate our way out of the problem. Russy, little advise...go pick up some economic 101 books, historical great depression books and actually study how great depressions around the world have come to be before ya open your mouth on the subject. It's fine that you want to study a script and act, but don't open your mouth on any other subject, except maybe what good Australian beer ya had lately.
Douglass Montrose-Graem
SIMPLE SOLUTION for junk-mortgage crisis, without tax-payer funds SIMPLESIMPLESIMPLE in THREE WORDS: "Commoditize" junk mortgages! Unbundle present "securitized" junk mortgages and re-bundle them into bundles of COMMODITIES ready to be listed on the planet's most efficient and largest financial/commodity exchange, the CHICAGO MERCANTILE EXCHANGE [ticker symbol CME] - these new commodity bundles shall offer great variety to suit many PRIVATE investors differing tastes: bundled by state of origin, maturity, quality etc. Repeat -the buyers shall be NOT the tax-payers, but PRIVATE funds! This dove-tails nicely with the US Treasury's present plan to have an army of appraisers appraise them BUT under this plan the appraisal is the first step to have them listed on the CME for a PRIVATE SOLUTION of our crisis. References: please google my last name "montrosegraem" to get to my website which lists 50 years of top-level experience in finance and public affairs.
Granny
McCoy passes through the Gates to Eternity to a backstreet alley a street drunk sits there with a bottle "What planet is this ? " :throws bottle: Yeah, kinda like that
Granny
Bush wanted to dump the 2 trillion in SS coffers all along. He never got it. BUT - did get the 2 trillion via other venue. Hey - Rome burned in LESS time than Lehman fell.
Alana
I think almost any alternative would be better than this stinking mess. I cannot believe politicians are actually contemplating giving more power to themselves to fix this when they are the ones who screwed it up in the first place.
Granny
Privatized citizen retirement accounts - dividends from ALL federally acquired or 50% greater loaned out to corporate entities. Don't miss this ballgame.