Tuesday, April 7, 2009

The bankruptcy proceeding would determine the fate of the securities firms and other financial companies owned by the BHC

TO BE NOTED: I read it: It seems that my preferred options are possible:

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COP Report: Assessing TARP Strategy After Six Months

The April oversight report for COP is entitled Assessing Treasury’s Strategy: Six Months of TARP. In this report, COP offers a preliminary look at Treasury’s strategy and offers a comparative analysis of previous efforts to combat banking crises in the past.
Over the last six months, Treasury has spent or committed $590.4 billion of the TARP funds. Treasury has also relied heavily on the use of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet which has expanded by more than $1.5 trillion (not including expected TALF loans) in conjunction with the financial stabilization activities it has undertaken beyond its monetary policy operations. This has allowed Treasury to leverage TARP funds well beyond the funds appropriated by Congress.

The total value of all direct spending, loans and guarantees provided to date in conjunction with the financial stability efforts (including those of the FDIC as well as the Treasury and the Federal Reserve) now exceeds $4 trillion. This report reviews in considerable detail specific criteria for evaluating the impact of these programs on financial markets.

Watch Chairwoman Elizabeth Warren introduce COP’s latest report.

With this report, COP hopes to assist Congress and Treasury officials in weighing the available options as the nation grapples with the worst financial crisis it has faced since the Great Depression.

Read the Report

Read:



"Option A: Liquidation: Receivership and Breakup or Sale of Distressed Banks.
Rather than subsidizing large distressed banks as going concerns through government
investment under the TARP, critically undercapitalized banks could be selected for effective
liquidation by being placed into the receivership of the FDIC. Then the FDIC would help
resolve the failure, as it has done more than a dozen times already this year.361
At the same time, the BHC that owns the large bank would almost certainly enter
bankruptcy under Chapter 7 or 11 of the federal Bankruptcy Code. (The bankruptcy proceeding
would determine the fate of the securities firms and other financial companies owned by the
BHC). The result of the receivership and bankruptcy proceedings would likely be to wipe out the
As receiver, the FDIC could place the bank in liquidation – sell any or all of the bank’s
assets, organize a new bank containing assets of the bank, merge all or part of the bank into
another bank, or transfer assets or liabilities of the bank to another bank. As it did in the savings
and loan crisis of the late 1980s and as it has done when individual banks have failed in the past,
the government would continue to protect savings and checking account holders by moving
those accounts to another bank or by paying amounts in FDIC-insured accounts directly to the
account-holders.

361 See Congressional Research Service, The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC): Summary of
Actions in Support of Housing and Financial Markets (Mar. 5, 2009) (CRS/7-5700) (hereinafter “CRS FDIC
Report”).
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interests of the BHC’s stockholders; in some cases the holders of debt obligations in the BHC
could recover part of their investment.362
The FDIC’s Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program would soften the negative impact
of increased liquidations on BHC bondholders.
363 By guaranteeing senior unsecured bonds
(including some bonds that are convertible into common stock), the FDIC agreed to treat these
bonds more like deposits. This has reduced the likelihood that liquidations will chill investment
or have spillover effects on other banks. The fees that bond-issuers pay under the program
would also mitigate the costs of its operation, although it is unclear to what extent the FDIC will
have the resources to deal with liquidations of large institutions.364
In either a receivership or conservatorship, the FDIC can remove failed managers. It can
also sell assets at their current market value both to raise funds and to remove the bad assets from
the bank’s balance sheet, and it can sell off parts of its business. The FDIC could also
conceivably use this authority to break up one or more large, systemically significant institutions
into several smaller, more manageable banks.
Treasury could supplement this approach for systemic reasons with broader protection for
bondholders. This was the approach of the Swedish government, which guaranteed all fixed
obligations. Such a guarantee would be extremely expensive. However, the reason to expand
the existing FDIC Guarantee Program would be to reassure credit markets generally, or,
specifically, to avoid a chain of defaults set off by the consequences of credit default swap
obligations coming due as a result of a bond default.
Option B: Receivership
As an alternative to a windup, the government could place a distressed bank into
conservatorship. As conservator, the FDIC would try to restore the bank’s safe and sound
condition (leaving insured and hopefully other deposit holders in place) and carry on the bank’s
business in the meantime.
365
This approach is similar to the steps that were taken in countries with crises in relatively
concentrated banking sectors in the recent past, including the United Kingdom currently. It is
The preservation of the interests of existing
shareholders is not a constraint on the FDIC’s exercise of its authority.
362 While only bankruptcy courts have the authority to wind down bank-holding companies and non-bank
institutions, Congress could provide that authority to the FDIC or another agency moving forward. See Panel
Regulatory Reform Report, supra note 164.
363 See generally Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program (online
at www.fdic.gov/regulations/resources/tlgp/index.html) (accessed Mar. 22, 2009); CRS FDIC Report, supra note
361, at 5-6.
364 See Part A of Section One, supra, for a discussion of the FDIC’s financial condition.
365 Simon Johnson, The Quiet Coup, The Atlantic (May 2009) (online at
www.theatlantic.com/doc/200905/imf-advice).
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also similar to the approach of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation during the New Deal.
The only successful cases noted in Part B of this section of the report that do not effectively fall
into the conservatorship category was the RTC experience, which, of course, involved numerous
smaller insolvent institutions that disappeared during the crisis.
Treasury could obtain FDIC-type powers over institutions that received TARP funds,
similar to the powers the UK government has exercised over some banks. Simply by insisting on
voting control as the price for further capital infusions, Treasury would be in a position to
exercise more control and to guard the interests of taxpayers."

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