Tuesday, December 2, 2008

“Additional Actions Needed to Better Ensure Integrity, Accountability, and Transparency”.

I'm planning a closer reading ( not my usual line by line, because it's too tedious and repetitive ) of the GAO report on TARP, which I've read, but here's a first taste from my response to Stacy-Marie Ishmael on Alphaville:

"Government Accountablity Office has just published its take on the Tarp, which can be summed up in ten of the GAO’s own words: “Additional Actions Needed to Better Ensure Integrity, Accountability, and Transparency”.

The GAO report is a multi-pronged review, covering:

the activities that have been undertaken through TARP as of November 25, 2008; the structure of OFS, its use of contractors, and its system of internal controls; and preliminary indicators of TARP’s performance.

In other words, it’s a long, dense document (running to 72 pages). We’ve read it, so you don’t have to.

Methodology:

GAO reviewed documents related to TARP, including contracts, agreements, guidance, and rules. GAO also met with OFS, contractors, federal agencies, and officials from some participating institutions.

The Treasury must:

work with the bank regulators to establish a systematic means of determining and reporting in a timely manner whether financial institutions’ activities are generally consistent with the purposes of CPP and help ensure an appropriate level of accountability and transparency

develop a means to ensure that institutions participating in CPP comply with key program requirements (e.g., executive compensation, dividend payments, and the repurchase of stock)

formalize the existing communication strategy to ensure that external stakeholders, including Congress, are informed about the program’s current strategy and activities and understand the rationale for changes in this strategy to avoid information gaps and surprises

facilitate a smooth transition to the new administration by building on and formalizing ongoing activities, including ensuring that key OFS leadership positions are filled during and after the transition

expedite OFS’s hiring efforts to ensure that Treasury has the personnel needed to carry out and oversee TARP

ensure that sufficient personnel are assigned and properly trained to oversee the performance of all contractors, especially for Contracts priced on a time and materials basis, and move toward fixed-price arrangements whenever possible

continue to develop a comprehensive system of internal control over TARP, including policies, procedures, and guidance that are robust enough to protect taxpayers interests and ensure that the program objectives are being met

issue final regulations on conflicts of interest quickly and review and renegotiate mitigation plans to enhance specificity and compliance

institute a system to effectively manage and monitor the mitigation of conflicts of interest

That is quite a list, and reviewing it does little to inspire confidence in the Treasury’s initial plan. The GAO is saying, in effect, that Paulson, Kashkari et al need to sit down and seriously think through some quite fundamental issues.

An assessment with which the Treasury largely agrees:

In written comments, Treasury generally agreed with the report and eight of the nine recommendations

The point of dissension? Per Neel Kashkari’s response via letter, included in the GAO report, the Treasury has a “different perspective on what is needed to evaluate how individual institutions participating in the CPP are spending the funds they receive under the program.”

The GAO, for its part, “believes that monitoring aggregate information across the participants would help ensure an appropriate level of transparency and accountability.”

At least interim assistant secretary Kashkari is open to suggestions, noting that the Treasury “

welcomes further discussion on general metrics for evaluating the overall success of the capital purchase program.”

“We believe that Treasury has made significant efforts to ensure transparency and good communication with our external stakeholders, but more can and will be done in these areas,” he added.

Which is helpful, since:

GAO plans to continue to monitor these and other issues including future and ongoing capital purchases, other transactions undertaken as part of TARP (e.g., capital purchases in Citigroup and American International Group), and the status of other aspects of TARP.

Actually, we take it back. You should read the report in full, because it provides a wealth of detail on the various acronyms currently deployed to save the financial world, as well as lots of useful numbers (like table 1: “Amount of Capital Investment and Characteristics of the Qualified Financial Institutions Participating in the Capital Purchase Program, as of November 25, 2008″)."

Good job.

Here's my take, on first reading:

Dec 03 03:22Posted by Don the libertarian Democrat [report]
  1. "We spoke with representatives of the eight large institutions that initially received funds under CPP, and they told us that their institutions intended to use the funds in a manner consistent with the goals of CPP. Generally, the institutions stated that CPP capital would not be viewed any differently from their other capital—that is, the additional capital would be used to strengthen their capital bases, make business investments and acquisitions, and lend to individuals and businesses. With the exception of two institutions, institution officials noted that money is fungible and that they did not intend to track or report CPP capital separately. We will continue to monitor the activities of these institutions as well as the plans of others in future reports as well as any oversight provided by Treasury and its agents or the regulators. The banking regulators indicated that they had not yet developed any additional supervisory steps, such as requiring more frequent provision of certain call report data for participating institutions, to monitor participating institutions’ activities.26 For example, it is unclear whether Treasury plans to leverage bank regulators, which in the case of the largest institutions have bank examiners on site, to conduct any oversight or monitoring related to CPP requirements. However, unless Treasury does additional monitoring and regular reporting, Treasury’s ability to help ensure an appropriate level of accountability and transparency will be limited."

    CPP=Capital Purchase Program

    How could you do anything other than an aggregate monitoring given that you don't know exactly what the money was used for?

    Let's be real: The money has been given to the banks to use as they see fit. The government has no real control over it, and aggregate monitoring, presumably, will just tell you if someone is lagging in lending in certain areas, etc. But so what? There's no going back.

    The only real question is how well these banks do for themselves. We sure don't want them losing a lot of money. That's why this program doesn't work. On the one hand,the bank's interests ( solvency and profits ) and the government's interests ( please loan now ) aren't necessarily the same. On the other hand, since we've loaned them a bunch of cash, we want them focusing on their bottom line so we don't lose money on the deal. There is no one set of agreed upon standards to judge the program on. Given that, the next report won't be much clearer, if at all.

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