"The Idea That Won't Die
We seem to be sweeping back around to the original TARP idea -- buying up the banks' 'toxic assets' to allow them to clear the decks and start lending again. It's not completely clear to me whether this is being pushed mainly by the carryover regulators like Sheila Bair who are trying to sell the idea to the Obama team or whether it's actually the Obama team that's now carrying this ball. But just as it was when this was Paulson's and Bernanke's idea back in the Fall, the whole premise is based on the idea that the US taxpayer buys these securities for far more than they're worth( I AGREE ) -- which we could do more honestly, if no more wisely, by just giving the banks a bunch of money to help them get back on their feet after losing so much money( TRUE ).
The tell is in the article that got this ball rolling in the Journal on Saturday (emphasis added): "Ms. Bair said the assets could be purchased at fair value, the figure banks use to value their own assets. Such a move would remove the challenge of placing a price on assets that rarely trade." In other words, buy these things at what the banks insist they're worth( YEP ), even though everyone seems to recognize that the essence of the problem is that the banks are still sitting on massive losses they're still unwilling to account for. (The same article in the Journal notes a study which holds that the banks have so far accounted for only about half their losses.)
The lesson here is the one Orwell was teaching in his famous essay on language. Garbled language leads to garbled thinking and is an invitation to lying. "Toxic assets" is simply the buzz word for stuff banks bought for far more than it was worth. Period. All these buy-back schemes involve buying them for the price the banks want them to be worth.( YEP )
It's like a scene out of some bizarro, Wall Streetified Antique Road Show. The bankers come in with their old china and cabinets from the attic that they're sure are worth $20,000. Sadly, the appraiser informs them they're only worth about $850. Only of course they're not from the attic. They bought them only last year convinced $20,000 was a steal back at the height of the antique crap craze. And now they're condemned to roam the byways of America looking for an appraiser or antique buyer who will finally recognize the true value of their crap and pay them $20,000 to help them get their money back. Unless of course we agree to pay them $20,000 for it now and let them get back to their lives and stop all the craziness.
I think we'll probably need to spend a lot more money unwinding the mess the banks got us into. But I don't see how this verbal nonsense is any more than a way to keep the shareholders of the banks whole."( THAT'S MY VIEW )
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