Thursday, March 5, 2009

A gradual disintegration of bank franchises will be met with more credit contraction and some new panics

From The Baseline Scenario:

"We Cannot Afford To Wait To Recapitalise US Banks (Letter To The FT)

with 9 comments

(The following is now available in the on-line edition of the Financial Times; link to original Martin Wolf article added here)

Sir, Martin Wolf’s excellent article on the pros and cons of nationalisation suggested, quoting Nouriel Roubini, that we could wait six months to determine how solvent US banks are before making decisions (”To nationalise or not to nationalise is the question“, March 4). This is possible but surely risky.

At Wednesday’s close, the junior subordinated debt of Citigroup (for example debt underlying the Citigroup XV 6.5 per cent Enhanced Trust Preferred Securities) yielded 27.6 per cent, and similar securities at many other large US banks yield high double digit amounts. With such yields on debt, anyone conducting business as a creditor with these banks must think twice. Why not withdraw the business to another safer bank, or just halt such business, until we understand the US government’s ultimate plan? If enough businesses and individuals take such actions, the core franchise of Citigroup and other similar large US banks could collapse. The government, six months from now, will be left with distressed bank franchises that are worth far less than they are today. At that point politicians and policymakers will probably determine it is only fair that creditors bear part of the cost, thus justifying the current high default risk priced into bank debt. This scenario, which is ever more likely as we wait, illustrates why authorities must take actions urgently.

A gradual disintegration of bank franchises will be met with more credit contraction and some new panics, thus deepening the recession and further reducing solvency of banks. The only credible solution is to embark immediately on a Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation-type intervention, recapitalisation, and early reprivatisation of US banks. The recapitalisation needs to be so large that it is near impossible to imagine an economic outcome where they fail in the next five years. That requires several trillion dollars, not the small sums left in the Trouble Asset Relief Programme and earmarked in the new US budget. Without these urgent measures, whether we nationalise or not, we are risking a highly undesirable outcome.

Peter Boone, Chairman, Effective Intervention; Centre for Economic Performance, London School of Economics, UK

Simon Johnson, Senior Fellow, Peterson Institute for International Economics; Professor, MIT Sloan School of Management, US

Written by Simon Johnson

March 5, 2009 at 9:00 pm"

Me:

“The only credible solution is to embark immediately on a Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation-type intervention, recapitalisation, and early reprivatisation of US banks.”

I agree. But answer me this: Bernanke and Bair said this week that the FDIC cannot seize large banks. Since we do not let banks go bust in the US, and the FDIC can’t do their usual job of seizing banks when the insolvent banks are large banks, what was the plan in place in case a large bank became insolvent? It seems that the plan was to merge the large bank with another large, surely a good idea, with the government paying whatever the costs of this merger would take. This is now clearly seen to be a de facto explicit guarantee.

Also, since the government pressed the B of A to take over Merrill, doesn’t the government now believe that it has an obligation to save them if this merger causes them problems.

If this is correct, what could the solution to this crisis be other than a total overhaul of our banking system? The only question is when we should start. I say now, even though it will involve risks. But so does every plan. After all, we are going to need a plan to deal with large insolvent banks going forward, unless we outlaw them.

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