Thursday, April 23, 2009

She said they wanted to “kick the tires” to ensure” that it “is a clean process without conflicts.”

TO BE NOTED: From the WSJ:

"
FDIC Chief Says Banking Sector ‘Past the Crisis Stage’

Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair said on Thursday that some parts of the banking sector were recovering but could still face pain on the horizon, as delinquencies could keep rising due not to exotic mortgage products but rising unemployment and tougher economic conditions.

Bair appearing at a conference last month. (Boomberg News)

“I think we are past the crisis stage,” she said in a speech to the Bretton Woods Committee in Washington. “I think we are in the clean up stage now.”

Some of her observations:

  • 1) “The Federal Reserve in particular has been heroic in the various facilities they have implemented to provide stability and increase liquidity in the system…Treasury obviously has also played a very strong leadership role with their ever unpopular TARP program, but a necessary program, to make sure that banks have the capital buffers that they need to keep lending and support the economy.”
  • 2) She said a FDIC’s new “Public-Private Investment Program” would be tested during a trial phase in June. She said they would be “very careful with that program. Very transparent.” She said they wanted to “kick the tires” to ensure” that it “is a clean process without conflicts.”
  • 3) The FDIC’s Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program, which backs debt issued by banks, hasn’t lost any money since being implemented last Fall. “WE don’t expect to have losses,” she said. “We’ve actually collected over $7 billion in premiums for that program.”
  • 4) She reiterated her call for the power to break down a large nonfinancial company, being careful to distinguish that her agency could do it but they weren’t necessarily angling for it. “I think we would be a logical place for that. We aren’t asking for it, but we know how to close an institution. And we’re equipped for it.”

Copyright 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved"

And Bloomberg:

U.S. Plans Test Sales of Distressed Assets, Bair Says (Update2)


By Margaret Chadbourn

April 23 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. government will conduct a trial run of its Public-Private Investment Program by June using at least $1 billion of distressed loans in a pilot sale, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair said today.

The FDIC is working with the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve to complete planning for the program, Bair said today at a conference in Washington. The program will use as much as $100 billion of Troubled Asset Relief Program funds to remove impaired assets from banks’ balance sheets.

“We’re working very hard on getting that and we hope to have a pilot sale by at least early June,” Bair told reporters after giving a speech. “We do have some interested banks that are willing to be our guinea pigs.”

The Obama administration unveiled the program March 23 as the centerpiece of its effort to clean up the U.S. banking system after the worst financial collapse since the Great Depression. The effort aims to use government matching funds and debt guarantees to attract private investors to buy loan pools. The government said the plan will provide as much as $500 billion of buying power to purchase banks’ distressed assets.

The FDIC has received a “tremendous amount of investor interest” and has lined up banks willing to unload illiquid loans into public-private investment funds, Bair said. The agency is considering allowing banks selling loans to also take equity stakes in the investment funds, she said.

The pilot sale “will allow for public observation and input -- consistent with the FDIC’s commitment to openness and transparency throughout this process,” Bair said in a statement released after she announced the plan.

Stress Reviews

The government is to begin giving companies preliminary results from “stress” examinations of 19 of the largest U.S. banks, meant to determine whether the lenders need additional capital to withstand worsening economic conditions. The FDIC is conducting the tests with the Fed, Treasury and the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.

“We are past the crisis stage; I think we’re in the clean- up stage now,” Bair said today. “It’s going to take some time and everybody needs to be patient, and it is not going to be pretty.”

The housing market is beginning to show “glimmers of hope,” especially in California where excess inventory is beginning to be sold, she said.

Bair repeated her call for a systemic risk regulator to oversee financial markets and endorsed setting up a mechanism to unwind troubled non-bank financial companies in the same way the FDIC resolves and closes failed lenders. Such authority could “impose greater market discipline,” she said.

U.S. Comptroller of the Currency John Dugan, speaking at the conference after Bair, said the Fed should have the power to close non-bank financial companies, and regulation of the industry needs to be consolidated among fewer agencies.

“The crisis really did demonstrate just how badly we needed that window to cover large non-bank systemically significant firms,” Dugan said today at a Washington conference. “The Fed is the logical choice to expand that role.”

Bair and Dugan spoke at a forum on global financial reform, sponsored by the Bretton Woods Committee, Deloitte and Boston University’s Morin Center for Banking and Financial Law.

To contact the reporter on this story: Margaret Chadbourn in Washington at mchadbourn@bloomberg.net."

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