Monday, November 3, 2008

"As we've argued, the long line for the bailout suggests we're giving away cash to cheaply. "

On Clusterstock, Joe Weisenthal sees that the terms of TARP are far from onerous:

"Socialist planners don't have price signals to go by, so historically they've been forced to use cruder measures, like line length. If the line for bread stretches around the block, maybe that means bread is priced too cheap. As we've argued, the long line for the bailout suggests we're giving away cash to cheaply. And it seems the line is growing

WSJ: Treasury and banking regulators say as many as 1,800 publicly held institutions could apply for government investments in coming weeks, out of concern that failing to do so could make them losers in a banking sector reshaped by the Treasury's $700 billion rescue plan.

Depending upon conditions still being crafted by Treasury, thousands more private banks could apply for government capital as well, a Treasury spokeswoman said Sunday."

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