Monday, February 23, 2009

most of the people who aren't supporting nationalization can't support nationalization

From Felix Salmon:

"
Nationalization: What Does Treasury Really Think?

Andrew Leonard makes a good point today: most of the people who aren't supporting nationalization can't support nationalization, because they have important roles in government, and if anybody in government talks about nationalization, they have to do so as part of a very detailed policy, naming the names of the banks to be nationalized, and making it clear that the rest of the banks won't be. Otherwise you risk a generalized and self-fulfilling stock-market rush to the exits, as far as banks are concerned.

Leonard also picks up on the phrase at the very end of the Treasury statement:

The consistent reiteration from the White House "that banks should remain in private hands" doesn't tell us what the Obama brain trust's true position on nationalization really is.

This is how the world has changed: it used to be that the Treasury secretary was forced to regularly and meaninglessly recite the phrase "a strong dollar is in the national interest". Today, the Treasury secretary is forced to regularly and meaninglessly recite the phrase "banks should remain in private hands". Even -- especially -- if he doesn't really believe it."

Me:

That's a fair point, except that Sen. Dodd has already laughed, which means that savvy investors know the game is up. That's how it is with politicians. From John Carney:

"Chris Dodd, who may have one of the worst records in the U.S. Senate when it comes to understanding the health of financial institutions, laughed when asked about whether the government should nationalize Bank of America."

"Why anyone in the world would feel reassured by listening to Dodd is beyond us. You'd be better off asking your cat if Bank of America would survive. To take just one notorious example, Dodd was talking up the financial health of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as late as last summer.

"This is not a time to be panicking about this. These are viable, strong institutions," Dodd said at a Capitol Hill press conference in July. Two months later the federal government had to take over both of those "strong institutions."

I realize he laughed at the B of A, but it's a sort of Talmudic point I'm making: Namely, if he laughed at the B of A, how much the more so he would laugh at Citi.

If Sen. Dodd or any other politician wants to calm fears, they should declare nationalization to be imminent.

No comments: