"The depth of the current crisis is such that the last two tasks of the financial system (risk trading and portfolio management) are being performed abysmally, and the first, the intermediation of financial surpluses and deficits, has effectively ceased to be fulfilled by our financial markets and banks. Financial intermediation has all but ground to a halt.
Many systemically important financial markets are closed to new issuance. Even secondary markets (for trading and pricing existing asset stocks) are badly impaired. Banks have all but stopped lending to households and to non-financial enterprises. Where banks are notionally still present as lenders, the financial terms and non-financial conditions (collateral and other covenants) are often prohibitively onerous."
Please read it all. Here's my comment:
After laughing for about ten minutes, and then crying for another ten minutes, these are my, now wait for them, votes:
(4) Blind fear and panic rule the roost in the banking sector. Bankers are shell-shocked and paralyzed. More Prozac please. ( I’m taking Xanax )
(C) Nationalise the banks (paying as little as possible to the existing shareholders), fire the existing management and board of directors, and have the government appoint a new executive and a new board that are serious about meeting lending targets. With 100 percent share ownership by the state, there is no risk of lawsuits about the executive or board of the bank not meeting their fiduciary duty to the shareholders. Full state ownership would make transparent and formal what is already true in substance: but for the financial support of the government (past, current and promised/anticipated in the future), there would no longer be more than at most a handful of viable cross-border banks in the north-Atlantic region.
( I’ve been for this from the beginning,not because I like it, but because I could see that TARP or other Hybrid Plans would make a Pig’s Breakfast eventually look like a delicacy )
Posted by: Don the libertarian Democrat | November 26th, 2008 at 2:21 am |