Showing posts with label TAF. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TAF. Show all posts

Friday, May 1, 2009

The Fed was "talked" into extending the term-length of eligible TALF loans in order accommodate the CMBS market

TO BE NOTED: From News N Economics:

"The Fed adds CMBS to TALF

Friday, May 1, 2009

This was expected. From what I hear, the CMBS market has been going haywire lately - investors trying to get ahead of the Fed's announcement:

The Federal Reserve Board on Friday announced that, starting in June, commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) and securities backed by insurance premium finance loans will be eligible collateral under the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF).

The CMBS market came to a standstill in mid-2008. The inclusion of CMBS as eligible collateral for TALF loans will help prevent defaults on economically viable commercial properties, increase the capacity of current holders of maturing mortgages to make additional loans, and facilitate the sale of distressed properties. CMBS accounted for almost half of new commercial mortgage originations in 2007.

...


The Board also authorized TALF loans with maturities of five years. Currently, all TALF loans have maturities of three years. TALF loans with five-year maturities will be available for the June funding to finance purchases of CMBS, ABS backed by student loans, and ABS backed by loans guaranteed by the Small Business Administration.
The Fed was "talked" into extending the term-length of eligible TALF loans in order accommodate the CMBS market. The duration of commercial real estate loans are typical longer other types of loans.

It should be noted that by extending the term of TALF loans, the Fed's exit strategy just got a little more hazy. If inflation pressures start to turn around, which is not expected for at least a year or two out, the Fed will not be able to unwind the longer-term TALF funds. For this reason, I expect that the Fed will move a little more slowly and cautiously with the TALF prgram than it has with its other liquidity programs (like the MBS program, TAF, TSLF, etc).

Rebecca Wilder"

Saturday, November 1, 2008

" But as the Fed cuts rates, the liquidity supply becomes more viscose. "

From Alphaville, a post about addiction:

"Artificial markets: the bailout isn’t working

Or at least, it’s not working in the way that it’s being made out to.

If the objective - or rather, objectives - of the world’s governments through their suite of emergency financial measures is to sustainably normalise markets and stabilise the world economy, then they are palpably failing.

What the bailouts are doing is bailing out: at an incredible rate. The headline result of that is a normalisation, but of course, it’s artificial. The real test of the success of the bailout would be working out what would happen if you took it away again.

_______

Consider, for example, the launch - and apparent success - of the Fed’s commercial paper facility. On Monday, new issues of longer-term CP soared ten-fold: 1,511 issues with a value of $67.1bn."

The drug's not working as planned, but it is creating an addict.

Here's my comment:

ov 01 18:28Posted by Don the libertarian Democrat [report]

"Here’s a part philosophical, part-hypothetical and part-sincere conclusion:

The problem with all of the current liquidity measures - in the US and abroad - is the same as that with the Fed’s other lending facilities: those like the TAF or the PDCF, which have been in operation for over a year. The facilities do not restore confidence, they simply nurture dependence.

To wit: the Fed isn’t de-risking the market, it is merely undercutting the risk appetite of all the market’s other participants, and in doing so only further damaging the likelihood of them participating again.'

I agree with you, but why keep flogging ourselves? This was noticed at the time. We're way down the moral hazard/addiction road.

We've supplied the needle, supplied the drug, and, if you consider Paulson's forcing 9 banks into TARP, injected the drug ourselves. All that we haven't done is cause an overdose, but there's still plenty of time for that.