Congressmen are talking in front of every microphone they can find. It’s reminiscent of their behavior before the first stimulus package, Bear-Stearns bail-out, and Fannie/Freddie bail-out. They all have great proposals; must act fast; throw in a dig or two about the opposing political party; give lip-service to being champions for the taxpayer; and, end up giving Paulson/Bernanke whatever they asked for. Here are a few things being thrown around:
US SENATOR REID: A ‘RUBBER STAMP’ OF MARKET RESCUE PLAN WILL NOT BE TOLERATED, CONGRESS TAKING SITUATION SERIOUSLY AND NECESSITY FOR LEGISLATION
SENATOR SHELBY: HAS CONCERNS THAT THE TREASURY RESCUE PLAN IS NOT WORKABLE
REP FRANK: ADMINISTRATION AGREES ON SHARE WARRANT STIPULATIONS, TREASURY PLAN WILL COST LESS THAN $700B WHEN ALL IS SAID AND DONE, HOUSE AND SENATE PLANS ARE "PRETTY CLOSE"
- Does not believe that hedge funds will be able to participate in the plan put forth by the Treasury.
- Notes that he and Senator Dodd are "essentially in agreement," Treasury opposed to executive pay, bankruptcy proposals.
- Does not believe it is essential that Congress complete its plan this week.
- Plans to pass legislation related to excessive risk next year, calls the rules a "very important agenda item."
- A stimulus package is on the table.IMF’S STRAUSS-KAHN: WELCOMES THE "BOLD STEPS" TAKEN IN THE US, FINANCIAL SYSTEM MUST BE RECAPITALIZED – FT ARTICLE
- blames a regulatory failure to reign in excessive risk takingNY GOV PATTERSON REPORTEDLY HAS A PLAN TO REGULATE PART OF MARKET FOR SHORT SELLING BONDS, LIMIT SPECULATION
- Notes the plan will apply to the credit default swaps market.
- Plan may take effect Jan 1, 2009.
Who to believe? I couldn’t tell you. But, I do have to laugh over the IMF’s "regulatory failure" line. What good are regulations, when they just change them at will to suit their next agenda? Will the "rescue" plan be delayed? Will they sign it tomorrow? We’ll know when we know. It’s been reported that some AIG shareholders are trying to raise the money to pay off the federal loan and keep the government from taking it over. Bank Of America (BAC) had an adverse effect on McDonald’s (MCD) stock, saying they wouldn’t be "boosting franchisee loans, advises franchisees to seek alternative financing." I thought these banks, with all this Federal Reserve/Treasury liquidity, were supposed to be making loans to shore up the economy. Guess BAC didn’t get the memo.
Today’s trading didn’t exude that all-important confidence that the government was hoping to inject. The longer Congress takes to pass "rescue" legislation, the more they destroy confidence. Actually, any plan will likely result in a no-confidence reaction. The fundamentals leading us into recession haven’t changed, and I don’t see how a rescue plan or new stimulus package, is going to help. The US dollar tumbled, gold ran up past $900, oil prices closed above $109, and the USD/JPY (risk indicator) took a hit. Crude oil for October delivery rose $16.37, or 17 percent, to settle at $120.92 a barrel at 2:46 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It was the highest settlement price since Aug. 21. The Dow closed down 372 points, Nasdaq down 95, S&P down 50. Here are a few charts. Reader rcg asked for the Verizon charts: keep in mind that telecom is taking a hit in recessionary times (but for longgggg term investment, one could do worse).
Dow daily
MCD daily
Recent Posts:
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- Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index – Drops to Lowest Level Since July 2009
- Economic Data and Earnings Schedule for July 26, 2010
- Is The United States Worthy of a AAA Sovereign Rating?
- Crude Oil Market Summary 7/19/2010 to 07/23/2010
- Economic Data and Earnings Schedule for July 23, 2010



{ 10 comments }
Good to see the political hacks sing while the ship goes down. I hope Reid, Frank, and Schumer (aka:The Three Whining Tenors.) aren’t able to board a life boat after pimping yet another Congressional travesty. “Patterson the Regulator”? Probably wont be anything left to the plot for a sequel.
Paulson did a great job to prevent all the dirty laundry at Goldman from coming out into the open. Goldman was in deep sh**t and he knew it since it was in his watch. Immediately comes the bailout and Goldman’s conversion to a bank. these executives took all the big bonuses on essentially wrong bets…guess they should return all their money back ?
So Enron gets to cook the books and go to prison, who cooked what in this round and will anyone go anywhere? I was really suprised when I was approved for a mortgage in 2007 after climbing out of a semi-deep hole over the previous 2 years from credit card irresponsibility. Sure the purchase was on a 130k repo we snagged up with more less no down payment for 100k. But if a bank can work it, consumers are not going to say no. I would of rather waited another couple of years and rented or have something almost free fall in to my lap instead of taking a deal that should not of been offered to me because of my recent credit debacles. We are the all powerful economy that relies on credit to build credit. The only way we save is if it is effortless(sign and save) and the only way we survive is overdraft privledge. It is the keeping up with the Jones’s attitude and mentality that tells us to live above our means along with the Wal-Mart crap availability that reinforces the idea that you can have it all. So as the middle class climbs out of the overcluttered basement and closes the overhead door over the three car garage full of no cars what are they going to do when life gets tough. I didn’t see cable companies or dish network lose customers because people needed that money for 385/g gas. Forget telling the American people who is a t fault, if this is just the beginning and the bailout is handled Iraq/Katrina style, we will need to tell the American people to salvage, conserve, and learn to ride a bike. crime will triple and we will become a target of an International punching bag. If it all goes well, the masses will never know waht happened and we can float on through toward the next big disaster that nobody is predicting.
the bail out is bull shit! we as common folk of the united states did not put these people where they are today their own GREED did! We should not be held accountable for their sins, come judgment day i have to answer for myself and thats plenty…..screw the bailout recession in this country might bring some of those big wigs and their ungratefulness back down to earth where WE all live and will have to suffer together not just the middle class and the poor like usual, but this time a lesson should be taught to the gamblers of our nation.
I THINK THEY SHOULD HAVE TO PAY IT BACK THIER OUT OF THEIR OWNE POCKET. AND THEY SHOULD BE CHARGE AS IT IS CRIME. IF I GET IN TROUBLE IS THE GOVERMENT GOING TO BAIL ME OUT OF MY MONEY TROUBLE”S. I THINK THEIR SHOULD JAIL TIME FOR THESE PEOPLE.
the united states is the 8th wonder of the world! ; but the government is bullshit! federal,state,and county,the suits worship the golden calf and i hate that shit!until the people rise up and say fuck-you! no more assholes,were stuck in gov-muck.
Not One Dime!
• $700 billion in taxpayer money would be wasted in a federal bailout – it would be the wrong people paying the bill, the wrong people making the decision, and the wrong reforms to fix the underlying causes.
• The industry (not government) should set up a distressed debt fund to provide liquidity to mortgage-backed paper until maturity.
• A new Financial Services Authority should be established, replacing the SEC and other federal regulators.
• Other key reforms are needed and outlined here: to election financing, bankruptcy courts, mortgage lending, executive compensation, director certification, accounting practices, and risk-weighted capital.
• Commentary on “financial bailout†by governance expert David Brown
The House Republicans have it right – they may not know exactly how to solve the current financial crisis but their “gut†is working fine when they realize that a massive $700 billion taxpayer bailout of Wall Street does not pass the “smell test†and is just not a good idea.
Such a bailout is neither necessary nor helpful. It does nothing to address the root problems, and, as a frustrated mid-western father said on TV news last night, “When you reward bad behaviour, you get more bad behaviour – any parent or teacher knows that.â€
So, what are the problems and solutions?
Problem 1: the wrong people are paying the bill.
Principle 1: those who reap the rewards should take the risks.
Solution 1: the financial services industry needs to step up and solve its own mess.
Lenders and institutions who issued and hold all the “mortgage-backed†paper that is currently distressed need to pool their resources and set up a massive liquid fund to buy all that paper.
Today’s financial crisis is the result of lending decisions that took too much credit risk (the risk that mortgage borrowers might default), and because these mortgages were re-packaged and re-sold several times, this credit risk has been spread across much of the financial system and much of the world. The uncertainty around the eventual credit risk loss (how many homeowners will eventually default) has caused a liquidity crisis, where the holders of these “hot potato†distressed debt cannot sell them for any price.
The short term solution is indeed an injection of liquidity, but not taxpayer or government liquidity. The industry itself has more than enough liquidity available, and as Friday’s $10 billion share offering by JP Morgan Chase showed, can readily raise more at the drop of a hat.
An industry fund would hold mortgage securities until their natural maturity and refinancing in a stable environment, and be able to minimize credit losses by re-negotiating mortgages in a free market place, reaching the fairest possible deals between distressed homeowners and lenders.
Credit risk and liquidity risk are the two simplest and easiest risks to understand and quantify in the financial industry. They are offset by capital, by stock market equity built up by these institutions in the good years. The owners of these shares, be they Chinese and Arab sovereign wealth funds, mutual and pension funds, or you and me, reaped the reward when profits were being made, and are the right people to be asked to shoulder the burden when losses are being incurred. That’s how the market is designed, that’s why the stock market doesn’t come with deposit insurance.
Problem 2: the wrong people are making the decision.
Principle 2: those who benefit from decisions shouldn’t be involved in making them (“conflict of interestâ€.)
Solution 2: regulate the regulators (“stop the madnessâ€.)
Haven’t you wondered why President George Bush, a conservative Texas Republican, Senator John McCain, a maverick Arizona Republican, and Senator Barack Obama, a community activist Illinois Democrat all agreed to pay out $700 billion of your money so quickly? Along with all the rest of the Senate and House Democrats?
Conflict of interest. Lawmakers and regulators are both directly and indirectly tied to the financial industry. Their direct ties are their own assets and financial futures: to become President or Senator in the United States today requires millions of dollars in personal wealth, and 50 per cent of wealthy families’ assets are invested where? In the stock and bond markets. They are using your money to bail themselves out, and using their power and influence to make sure their families stay wealthy. In Russia, you might expect the powerful elite to lord it over the common people, but in America we have to find a way to curtail it.
The indirect ties are even more dangerous. For years, federal politics have been dominated by moneyed lobbyists and special interest groups, and if you think Big Oil has power in Washington, that’s nothing compared to Big Banks. I am amazed that House Republicans have even had the courage and character to raise a few potential objections to the biggest boondoggle in American history.
What can we do about it?
• Election finance reform: until lobbyists and special interest groups are truly limited in their ability to influence elected politicians and their appointed regulators, decisions will continue to be made in their interests and not in the independent interests of the country. This is not getting better, it is getting worse: the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and Homeland Security Act are two of the most pervasive federal government interventions in history, enacted by a so-called conservative Republican President and a bi-partisan Congress. Neither was needful, and neither has served its purpose. Unless the purpose is to enrich special interest groups, lawyers, accountants, and security firms, and to put as many people as possible on the public payroll. The bailout would be a third leg to this stool, creating a federal financial institution that would last for 30 years, employ tens of thousands of people, and reduce the efficiency of markets at a time when China, India, Brazil and the GCC are building new capital markets to compete with us. Can anyone spell socialism?
• Regulator reform: establish an independent financial services authority (FSA) that regulates and oversees all the pillars of the industry – banking, insurance, securities, pensions, thrift, etc. Roll in the existing federal regulators, including the SEC – it has become impotent and fossilized under too many years of political appointments and aimless direction. Leave FDIC to provide deposit insurance, but establish a close accountability relationship between the new FSA and FDIC. Leave the Federal Reserve to do what it’s supposed to do – monetary policy and interest rates – but don’t pretend that the Fed can or should regulate industry.
• Fire the current regulators: Senator McCain is bang on when he says the SEC chief should be fired, but if you stop there, you have not communicated the right message of accountability: “if you fail, you can’t stay.†Secretary Paulson and Fed Chair Bernanke have to go, too, tomorrow morning would not be too soon for the two men who almost let the financial system go belly up, then almost bankrupted us expecting us to bail them out. Shame.
Problem 3: the wrong reforms are being put in place.
Principle 3: those who don’t learn from the past are condemned to repeat it, and repeat it, and repeat it.
Solution 3: regulate the right things, upstream and without wasting hard-earned taxpayer money.
We are rushing headlong to enact a Sarbanes-Oxley Act part II without realizing that part I was an unmitigated disaster – if that railroad crossing had worked, why didn’t it stop this train?
There are sensible, simple reforms that we can and should undertake today to avoid crisis after crisis in governance in the years to come:
• Go back to basics on home lending: loan-to-value ratios (i.e. require home owners to make a down payment, so that they have equity at risk), debt-service ratios (i.e. require lenders to check that a borrower can afford to pay), income verification, and portfolio diversification (to limit exposure to geographic or other market segments.)
• Fully adopt and enforce Basel II: the international accord that requires lenders of all types to hold adequate capital against their assets, weighted by risk (particularly credit risk, including residual credit risk in derivatives and financial instruments.) If lenders had sufficient capital cushion, they wouldn’t be needing a bailout today.
• Regulate executive compensation: require companies to pay incentive compensation based on proven historical audited earnings, and require executives to pay back compensation that was paid on illusory or inflated earnings. Ensure that risk is factored into executive compensation, i.e. defer compensation on uncertain earnings until they are certain. Consider putting caps on executive pay – while it is an unwelcome intrusion in the market place, it may be the only way to stem this rising tide of greed and the vicious cycle it engenders.
• Go slow on adopting IFRS (international financial reporting standards): historic cost accounting has served us well for hundreds of years. By adopting “mark to market†Euro-accounting rules, we are moving to a system that will see much more volatility in earnings, losses that by-pass the P&L and are charged directly to equity, and so many complicated accounting practices that investors, bankers and directors will be unable to understand financial statements. The new FSA and the current PCAOB need to be involved in deciding on adopting IFRS or not – this is too important a decision to be left to accounting pros. Recent reforms to financial instrument and pension accounting have already contributed to market uncertainty.
• Empower bankruptcy courts: while home owners who received mortgages in the sub-prime lending mania should be expected to diligently and responsibly pay back as much as they can, we should give bankruptcy courts the power to force lenders to take settlements, whether that means a partial write-down of principal, or interest relief. This is not only fair to people who were enticed to borrow, but it is probably necessary to shore up real estate prices which will be critical to restoring long-term sustainability to the capital markets and limiting the calls on the distressed debt fund.
• Require Board members to be certified: if we expect directors to act professionally, to provide independent oversight to corporations, and to give confidence to investors and lenders, they need to understand governance, strategy, risk, metrics and compensation, and how they link together and drive each other. And we need to be assured that they do. The United States is lagging its industrial competitors in director education and certification. Unfortunately, its director association, the NACD, is weak and not adding value. A national director certification program should be established and mandated. Programs run out of Chicago and Stanford are a good place to start. For some reason, the Ivy League and the northeast are not firm foundations for such a national program, but they could be brought into a tent that qualified programs built.
Will it take courage, character and competence to enact these simple reforms and to rebuild confidence in our financial system? Absolutely, but this suite of reforms is exponentially more effective, and exponentially less expensive, than the current bailout package seriously being considered by our leaders in Washington. Not one more dime of our money!!
David A.H. Brown is a leading corporate governance practitioner; he is co-founder of the Directors College at Niagara-on-the-Lake, and is principal of Brown Governance Inc.
Contact:
David A.H. Brown
9 Antares Drive, Ottawa, Canada
Tel: 613-447-4277
e-mail: brown@browngovernance.com
September 28th, 2008
I have but 1 question. Why should the American People be held accountable for these peoples inability to manage not their money but someone elses and then expect us the American to pay it back for them? When I was a homeowner and a viable worker I paid my own debts. I was then hurt at work and unable to work for almost 4 years, during this time I lost everything I owned because no one bailed me out. My failure was not my fault but as a result I had to file Bankruptcy. Now we have all of these MORONS that misshandled their money with the exception of what they stuck in their pockets and the Government is expected to bail them out to the tune of 700 million dollars. I say they need to sell of their assets ie Cars, Second houses, boats, collections of precious whatever they own and then whatever money is owed after that loan it to the Bastards and make them pay it back. Don’t come after the American people and our hard earned money to pay back your debt. We need to hold them accountable for their sins and keep us in the clear. We work hard for what we have and we should not be expected to give any away to help Wall Street
i have an idea for the bail out. Have the banks who now have forclosed on the properties rent/lease them to creditable people, I know it’s not all of the payment that should have been made but it’ something so it’s not a total loss. This way the banks would have to hire people to run these departments which it turn would help the economy and stimulate spending because people would be back to work. Or another thought is if the goverment buys all of this bad debt they should turn these homes into the housing project, meaning, the goverment asistance program they have for people who can’t fully afford housing, they pay half or even more of the rent, if the property is occupied by one of these people the money goes right back into the program with possibly a profit, since the majority of people that lied on their 1003/ mtg application about their income will be the ones being put back in a home and the goverment will not be paying a landlords mortgage for them, the goverment will collect the funds. I’m sure there are stipulations on everything but it’s just a thought. MY THOUGHT!!!!!
If Wall Street lost $1 trillion yesterday where did it go? Did they leave it in the restroom at that last gas station. Ofcourse not! Liquidity is bull shit. There is no $1 trillion so there is no $1 trillion loss. I could bailout Wall Street right now. I have my check book right here. It wouldn’t mean anymore coming from me than it does coming from Washington. There is no spoon!!!!