Thursday, November 13, 2008

"About 80% of the time, capitalism doesn't need protection from the government."

Barbara Kiviat reports about a talk by Larry Fink:

"Larry Fink, the BlackRock CEO who has found himself playing a central role in our recent financial tumult time and again, gave a speech today at a conference put on by NYU's Schack Institute of Real Estate. It was a pretty good speech, so even though I'm getting around to it late in the day, I thought I'd put up a greatest hits version of what he said. Namely:

•We are starting to see some stability in financial markets. The $9 trillion being committed by central banks around the world has, in fact, had something of a calming effect. In September, BlackRock saw a $55 billion run on its money markets (even with no credit issues), but now that money is coming back in.

•The way to fix the housing crisis is to roll out a program similar to the one we had for servicemen returning from the second World War. The rough idea is that the feds put up $30 billion to $50 billion a year in subsidies for the next few years to lower interest rates by 4 to 4.5 percentage points on new mortgages and refinances. (Fink is hardly the first person to make the argument that the quickest way to stabilize home prices is to gin up demand. His belief that modifying loans one by one is too slow to help may or may not be related to BlackRock's adventures in subprime mortgage CDOs.)

•Overall, it's a really good thing governments have stepped in like they have. About 80% of the time, capitalism doesn't need protection from the government. But then there are the tails of the distribution—both on the upside and on the down. We're now in one of those tails. Letting Lehman go, though... no one at the time understood what a big mistake that would be.

•One of the things we'll have to do to get the economy back on track is an FDR-style stimulus package in terms of job creation.

•The equity markets will rally between now and the end of the year. We're seeing a huge re-allocation from bonds to equities, partly because declines in stock prices have made institutional investors like pension funds underweight in equities. We might get back to where the market was on October 30. But not where it was on September 30.

•Foreign investors are really angry about all those crappy assets we sold them. We're going to have a lot of Treasuries to sell, so we better hope they get over their anger. BlackRock trading partners in Saudi Arabia, Singapore and Kuwait called when Barack Obama was elected president to say they were really proud of what America did on Election Day, that it made them believe America is, in fact, the place they always thought it was. This sentiment will make it easier for us to sell them our debt.

•Why the SEC has not yet reinstated the uptick rule is a true mystery.

Barbara!

Here's my comment to this excellent report:

  1. donthelibertariandemocrat Says:

    "Overall, it's a really good thing governments have stepped in like they have. About 80% of the time, capitalism doesn't need protection from the government. But then there are the tails of the distribution—both on the upside and on the down. We're now in one of those tails. Letting Lehman go, though... no one at the time understood what a big mistake that would be."

    I seem to be alone in believing that investors were counting on a bailout, and that's why Lehman was such a disaster. So I don't agree with him that no one saw it would be a huge mistake.

    One reason I believe this is that wonderful quote you have from him about capitalism. That's the real and prevailing attitude among investors. They believe that government should step in during financial crises. They're not Cato fellows, whatever they say.

    That's why so much risk was taken, and that's why investors, banks, everyone, had no real world Plan B as opposed to a bailout, and that's why I believe you couldn't go against those expectations. Without government intervention, even a disaster like TARP, investors would have gone totally off the wall.

    Just my opinion. So thank you for bringing this talk to my attention. I had missed it. I'll try and find the whole talk now. To be honest, I'm finding these talks by these finance people like Fuld, Liddy, Fink, Thain, most illuminating.

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