Tuesday, October 7, 2008

I Can't Keep Up With The Bailing

Floyd Norris, from his post called "Keep Bailing":

"The next big move may be from Washington. Having so far failed to get the bank lending system functioning, the government may well choose to go into the direct corporate lending business. Ideologically, that would have been repugnant to both Republicans and Democrats only a few weeks ago. But there is great fear that the recession could get much deeper and last much longer if business and consumer credit dries up completely, and that worry evidently trumps old beliefs."

Via Calculated Risk:

"From Bloomberg: Libor for Overnight Dollar Loans Jumps as Credit Freeze Deepens

The London interbank offered rate, or Libor, that banks charge each other for such loans rose 157 basis points to 3.94 percent today, the British Bankers' Association said. The corresponding rate for euros climbed 22 basis points to 4.27 percent, the highest in four days. The Tokyo interbank rate stayed at the highest level this year and the Libor-OIS spread, a gauge of cash scarcity among banks, widened to a record.
And, from the Washington Post:

"Yesterday, the rate at which banks lend to one another -- the London interbank offered rate, or Libor -- was 4.3 percent for a three-month loan. In normal times, it would be not much higher than the 2 percent bank lending rate set by the Fed. The premium is a measurement of the mistrust among banks and translates into higher rates for businesses and consumers, if they can get loans at all. "

And so:

"While Europe struggled to stop new bank failures, in the United States, alarm has increasingly focused on the commercial paper market, where all sorts of businesses and local and state governments turn for money for day-to-day operations. For the past week, that market has been nearly paralyzed, and yesterday, the cost of such borrowing soared.

"The big gorilla is really liquidity," said Edward Liebert, treasurer of Rohm & Haas and chairman of the National Association of Corporate Treasurers, 100 of whose members discussed the crisis in a conference call Thursday."

Which resulted in:

"Last night, the Fed was drawing up plans to set up the special fund to buy short-term commercial paper. The purchases would benefit banks as well as non-financial companies.

The fund will be financed by a loan from the Fed, and any losses would probably be covered by the Treasury using its new $700 billion bailout package. Fed and Treasury lawyers were hammering out details last night.

Purchasing commercial paper through the new special entity would increase risks for the Treasury, and ultimately taxpayers, while potentially relieving companies of the downside risk of bad behavior, financial experts said. One senior U.S. bank executive said it was "like taking the fire sensors out of the building."

One benefit of such an action is that it would free up money for lending and lower the interest rates banks pay to borrow money to conduct business...

To which Tyler Cowen asks:

Is there a positive spin to this?

Because before he had said:

"How to tell if things are going very badly

If the Fed ends up guaranteeing commercial paper and/or interbank loans."

Or:

"Another step the Fed could take to try to jolt the financial system out of its current torpor would be to cut its target for short-term interest rates. The federal funds rate is currently 2 percent, and many financiers on Wall Street argue that an emergency rate cut, as early as today, would help the situation."

Hopefully, via Calculated Risk:

"By eliminating much of the risk that eligible issuers will not be able to repay investors by rolling over their maturing commercial paper obligations, this facility should encourage investors to once again engage in term lending in the commercial paper market. Added investor demand should lower commercial paper rates from their current elevated levels and foster issuance of longer-term commercial paper. An improved commercial paper market will enhance the ability of financial intermediaries to accommodate the credit needs of businesses and households."

As for the second option, William Gross says:

"They must also take another bold step: outright purchases of commercial paper. They should also cut interest rates to 1%, because we are experiencing asset deflation, and the threat of headline inflation is long past."

Got that. I can't keep up with the bailing. Thank God for the excellent news sources we have nowadays to try and keep up with this mess.

By the way, I'll try and deal with deflation in another post, if I'm still conscious.

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