Monday, April 20, 2009

Fed lending can’t solve “the fundamental problem — the shortage of capital in the banking system.”

TO BE NOTED: From the WSJ:

"
Three Reasons Why Fed Lending Isn’t a Panacea

The Federal Reserve has been fighting the persistent global credit crisis with a proliferation of lending programs that producing acronyms even faster than the Pentagon can. “I think the facilities have worked quite well,” the new president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Bill Dudley, said in a speech over the weekend. “But the facilities haven’t been a panacea for three reasons.”

His three:

  • (1) Fed lending can’t solve “the fundamental problem — the shortage of capital in the banking system.” He added that “until the banking system is viewed as being sufficiently well-capitalized and is able to expand its lending activity significantly” the economy will suffer.
  • (2) Legal limits require the Fed to lend only when the would-be borrower offers sufficient collateral; it can’t lend unsecured or provide guarantees. (The Treasury can, however.)
  • (3) Initiatives such as TALF (Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility) are off to a slow start because of “the reluctance of investors to participate” in part because of “worries about what participation might lead to” given the political environment. Dudley pronounced these worries “misplaced.”
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