Saturday, April 11, 2009

The plan distinguishes between “toxic” securities, which should fall on the shoulders of banks and their shareholders, and “illiquid” ones

TO BE NOTED: From Bloomberg:

"Steinbrueck Drafts German ‘Bad Bank’ Financial Rescue Plan

By Patrick Donahue

April 11 (Bloomberg) -- German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck drew up a plan to remove toxic assets from bank balance sheets, based on government funding for financial institutions to set up so-called bad banks.

The Finance Ministry submitted the program to Chancellor Angela Merkel, and administration and finance-industry officials will decide on the details on April 21, the German government said in an e-mailed statement today.

Under the plan banks would create separate units, backed by 200 billion euros ($264 billion) in government funds, into which they’ll be able to transfer assets they can’t sell, Steinbrueck told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung in an interview.

Steinbrueck has come under pressure to develop a plan emulating those in the U.S. and U.K. to try to jumpstart lending. Six months before a federal election, the unity of the ruling coalition is being strained after Steinbrueck, a Social Democrat, drafted legislation to seize lenders, and the problem of toxic assets remains unsolved.

Steinbrueck has resisted earlier proposals to set aside funds for toxic assets, since it would require a sale of bonds. The finance minister told the newspaper he rejected the idea of a centralized “bad bank.”

The plan distinguishes between “toxic” securities, which should fall on the shoulders of banks and their shareholders, and “illiquid” ones, which the government will take over, and sell when markets improve, Steinbrueck told the newspaper.

Germany responded to the financial collapse in October by pushing a 500 billion-euro bank-rescue package through parliament in a week.

To contact the reporter on this story: Patrick Donahue in Berlin at at pdonahue1@bloomberg.net."

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