"Bair Says Luring Banks to Asset Plan May Be Challenge (Update2)
By Alison Vekshin
March 27 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair said getting banks to sell into the U.S. toxic-asset purchase program could present a challenge as policy makers try to stabilize the nation’s financial system.
“If there’s an issue with the program, it’s going to be trying to get banks to sell assets,” Bair said today in a speech at the University of Massachusetts’ Isenberg School of Management in Amherst. “If I have concern, it’s the pricing may not be where seller and buyer are willing to meet,” she said.
Under the program announced by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner on March 23, the government will use as much as $100 billion in rescue funds to help private firms buy impaired assets that are clogging the balance sheets of U.S. banks. The plan calls for the Federal Reserve to partner with private investors to buy the securities, with the FDIC guaranteeing the pools of real-estate loans to attract buyers.
The program poses an “acceptable risk” to the FDIC, Bair said today.
“We will not get investors back into banks and get the government out of the banks until we get the balance sheets cleaned up and give investors some certainty about what these legacy real-estate assets are really worth,” she said.
Bair, 54, was a professor of financial regulatory policy at the Isenberg School before becoming FDIC chairman in 2006.
‘Money-Maker’
The U.S. banking industry, which posted its first quarterly loss in 18 years during the period ended Dec. 31, is beginning to show signs of improvement, Bair said today.
“I’m cautiously optimistic that we’re digging out of this, that we’re addressing the abuses of the past,” she said.
At a March 19 Senate Banking Committee hearing, Bair urged lawmakers to give the FDIC authority to wind down bank holding companies and non-bank financial institutions as well as failed lenders.
“We have suggested that where Congress really should focus its efforts is the lack of a resolution mechanism for very large, systemically important financial institutions,” Bair said. “The FDIC has those types of authorities now for banks.”
Congress also is considering a request to let the FDIC borrow as much as $100 billion from the Treasury, up from $30 billion, to cover losses from bank failures.
‘Borrowing From Taxpayers’
Bair said the FDIC is raising the fees it charges banks to maintain the deposit insurance fund, which the agency uses to repay customers when a bank collapses, to avoid “borrowing from taxpayers.”
The FDIC’s Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program, which backs new senior unsecured bank debt, has been a “money-maker” for the agency, generating $6 billion in premiums, she said.
Bair was among the first regulators to press the mortgage industry to modify loans for borrowers at risk of losing their homes to foreclosure as the subprime crisis worsened.
The FDIC insures deposits of up to $250,000 per customer at 8,305 institutions with $13.9 trillion in assets. It is responsible for winding down failed banks, including 21 that collapsed this year."
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