Friday, October 10, 2008

Why Explicit

Felix Salmon on government guarantees:

"On the other hand, if Big Bank is state-owned, there's an implicit government guarantee on its liabilities: the German word for it is Anstaltslast...

And once Treasury has a majority stake, I think bondholders are safe. Otherwise, what's the point of taking that majority stake in the first place?

Once bondholders are safe, of course, the institution in question will be able to start tapping the interbank markets again. And that could help the entire banking system.

But why do this on a case-by-case basis? A blanket government guarantee of all banking-sector liabilities should have the same effect. Just like the initially-conceived TARP was overtaken by events and became an equity-injection device, the plan to take equity stakes could well be overtaken by this weekend's meetings and become a universal guarantee instead. (Of course, such a guarantee should absolutely be accompanied by equity stakes in banks, otherwise the government has all downside and no upside.)"

This seems where we're going, whether it's implicit or, in reality, explicit.


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