Sunday, January 25, 2009

"this is a systemic crisis to be solved through hands-on remedies such as the partial nationalisation of the sector. "

From the FT:

"
On Wall St: The battle to save the banks

By Francesco Guerrera

Published: January 23 2009 17:31 | Last updated: January 23 2009 17:31

“You can’t win them all”.

The much-abused phrase has long been a safe haven for losers. Defeated politicians, beaten sportspeople and fired chief executives have all found solace in its convenient blend of fatalism and statistical truth.

I always preferred the adage’s flip, sunnier, side: the reassuring concept that you can’t lose them all either.

But the US government’s response to the financial crisis is challenging that belief. Far too many of the actions taken by the authorities in aid of the financial system have run into trouble( TRUE ).

From the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the nationalisation of AIG, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, to the double-dip bail-outs of Citigroup and Bank of America/Merrill Lynch, Washington’s decisions have had an uncanny knack for backfiring.( YES )

The result is that we are still grappling with the same problems as when the crisis started 18 months ago: frozen capital markets, financial institutions in poor health and banks’ unwillingness to help the economy with new loans.( YES )

The fact that the latest “cure” – the creation of a “bad bank” to buy toxic assets – looks suspiciously like the “super-SIV” that bombed in November 2007 is testament to the lack of a cogent plan. ( IT'S CRAP )

Before quick-witted readers wheel out cliches about hindsight, 20/20 vision and, for the US contingent, “Monday morning quarterbacking”, I will let bygones be bygones.

Former Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, the hitherto New York Federal Reserve president Tim Geithner, now ensconced at Treasury, and Fed chairman Ben Bernarke had to take rapid decisions during a once-in-a-generation turmoil.

They did their best in incredibly challenging circumstances( TRUE ). But it was not good enough, at least judging by the devastated share prices, battered balance sheets and broke consumers that currently make up the “financial landscape” of the world’s largest economy.( I AGREE )

As the Obama administration takes charge, it should learn from past mishaps.

Here is my personal, hindsight-enhanced list.

1) If you can’t stand the heat get out of the kitchen. The government’s decision to buy stakes in dozens of banks without demanding board seats and management influence has been counter-productive. It blurred the lines of accountability and left taxpayers and share- holders in doubt as to who runs the companies.( THIS IS CALLED A HYBRID. IT'S ESSENCE IS TO BE MESSY AND COSTLY. )

2) No strings attached is not cool. Without a formal requirement to report to the government, banks have all but ignored pleas to lend more. Instead, they used the federal money for a variety of self-serving purposes, ranging from buying their own debt to boost profits (Morgan Stanley) to paying billions of dollars in bonuses (Merrill Lynch).( A HYBRID )

3) Bigger is not always better. True to his past as a Goldman Sachs banker, Mr Paulson took a deal-making approach to saving troubled institutions. A flurry of takeovers (JPMorgan/Bear Stearns, BofA/Merrill, Wells Fargo/Wachovia) ensued. The result was much larger banks with an even higher concentration of risk. Wouldn’t a break-up of some institutions into more easily digestible pieces, have been worth a try?( YES )

4) Inconsistency is not a virtue( IT'S A CURSE ). Each ailing institution got a bespoke bail-out and share- holders and debtholders received widely- diverging treatments. In some cases, chief executives of bailed-out companies were fired (AIG, Fannie), but spared in others (Citi, BofA).

The confusion has unnerved investors and prompted them to hammer companies’ share and debt at the first signs of trouble. But perhaps the biggest flaw in the authorities’ response to the crisis has been the refusal to treat the problems as system-wide.( I AGREE. BAGEHOT. )

Their preference for ad-hoc measures, their hope that one more deal would do the trick of restoring confidence to the markets, had the opposite effect. As Bear Stearns snowballed into Lehman, AIG, Merrill and Citi, investors came to abhor piecemeal solutions.(THEY WANT AND EXPECT A TOTAL GUARANTEE. HOW HARD IS THIS? )

The Obama era should begin with the admission that this is a systemic crisis to be solved through hands-on remedies such as the partial nationalisation of the sector.( HEAR HEAR )

The authorities were never going to win all the battles during such a drawn-out campaign but they should ensure they do not lose the remaining ones.( VERY GOOD POST )

francesco.guerrera@ft.com"

Of course, it isn't going to be easy no matter what we do.

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