Tuesday, February 24, 2009

His investing advice is: “shake hands with Uncle Sam”

From Clusterstock:

"
Bill Gross Says We Can't Nationalize Citi or Bank of America

billgross.jpgBill Gross, the bond king who runs the giant Pacific Investment Management Co, has just released his monthly letter. It's provided in question and answer format. He says that our banks are too complex and too central to our economy to be successfully nationalized by the government.

I think Roubini, Dodd and Greenspan haven’t thought this one through. The U.S. isn’t Sweden, and not just because our blondes aren’t au naturel. Their successful approach revolved around a handful of banks but we have 7,500, as well as many S&Ls and credit unions, which would have to be flushed into government hands. Regulators are overwhelmed as it is, and if you thought Lehman Brothers was a mistake, just standby and see what nationalizing Citi or BofA would do. Our banks remain at the heart of domestic/global financial transactions and daily clearing, while those Scandinavian banks were not. PIMCO would not dispute the need to further capitalize systemically important banks via convertible bonds held by the government, which unfortunately dilute shareholders’ interests. To go further, however, and “haircut” senior debt or even existing preferred stock similar to that issued via the TARP would create an instability policymakers should not want to risk. In turn, forcing creditors to take haircuts would undermine other financial sectors such as insurance companies and credit unions. The goal of future policy should be to recapitalize lending institutions while maintaining the basic infrastructure of credit markets. Outright nationalization and haircutting of creditors will do just the opposite.

His investing advice is: “shake hands with Uncle Sam” – buying agency mortgages, and other developing areas of government policy support in the credit markets."

Me:

Don the libertarian Democrat
(URL) said:
"Pimco’s Bill Gross Regrets Not Buying Treasuries Amid Rally
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By Kathleen Hays and Michael J. Moore

Dec. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Bill Gross, manager of the world’s biggest bond fund, says he regrets not buying Treasuries in what is shaping up to be the best year for U.S. government debt since 2000.

“If we had our druthers, if we went back 12 months and we had known then what we know now, it would have been all invested in Treasuries,” Pacific Investment Management Co.’s Gross said in a Bloomberg Television interview from Newport Beach, California. “The question going forward is ‘Is it the winner over the next 12 to 24 months?’ We don’t think so.”

See, the Bond Guru missed the Flight To Quality. I say that he missed this because he never thought that the government would be so foolish as to let Lehman fail. Neither did I.

But there's no analogy with the banks. We've already given them billions and might have to give them billions more. That is not letting a business fail in my book. What we're trying to decide is if we're getting our monies worth. I say that we aren't. We're trying to not to let these buffoons lose us any more money.

Ask Bill if any of these bankers can run Pimco for a day.

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