Sunday, November 9, 2008

"“I am a big believer in government establishing the market clearing price for these assets because nobody else is doing it.”

Here's an argument for buying toxic assets with TARP in the FT:

"Plans for the US government to buy troubled assets as part of its $700bn financial sector rescue should not be abandoned or delayed in the transition to the Obama presidency, a top securities industry official has warned.

In an interview with the Financial Times, Tim Ryan, president of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, said: “I do not think we can put this on hold for two months. We would not put foreign policy on hold for months during the transition.”

The plan to buy so-called toxic assets from banks was the original centrepiece of the $700bn financial sector rescue approved by Congress, but was overshadowed when the first $250bn was diverted to buy stakes in banks.

There are still few details as to which securities the government will buy, and how, and many question whether the Obama administration will implement the asset purchase scheme at all.

Traders say uncertainty over the fate of the purchase plan is compounding all the many existing difficulties restarting trading in these troubled assets."

Mr Ryan, a former head of the Resolution Trust Corporation which cleaned up the mess after the Savings and Loan crisis, added: “I am a big believer in government establishing the market clearing price for these assets because nobody else is doing it.”

He said as long as banks remained unsure about what their assets were worth, capital injections would have only limited impact on their willingness to extend credit."

Here's my question:

In order for the government to buy these toxic assets they have to be priced. How are they going to be priced since they can't be priced now? Why does the government have to do that by buying them? In other words, how can you buy something that isn't priced?

One thing is clear. TARP, contra Anna Schwartz, can both recapitalize banks and buy toxic assets. They aren't necessarily mutually exclusive.


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