[R-G] Can't Get There from Here

Suzanne de Kuyper suzannedk at gmail.com
Sat Feb 14 06:20:35 MST 2009


The posotive "stress test" will be impossible to effectuate without valueing
the costs of the toxic derivitive debts and their amount.  These derivitives
were set up precisely because when the buying frenzies burst, they could
never be counted, never evaluated.
For international financing to survive in a trustable form it must move from
just the USD to a basket of currencies, the faster the better.  Tragicly the
US financial system now is based on unreal and unworkable assumptions.  By
the sixties  the formal policy, the destruction of financial laws and
regulations was in concerted process culminating under G.W. Bush when
Habeous Corpus was no longer law, torture an annouced policy, using the war
on terror as screen.

Suzanne de Kuyper

On Fri, Feb 13, 2009 at 9:35 PM, Sid Shniad <shniad at sfu.ca> wrote:

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> http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-l-borosage/cant-get-there-from-here_b_165813.html
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> Can't Get There from Here
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> By Robert L. Borosage
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> Co-Director of the Campaign for America's Future
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> Truthdig: February 10, 2009
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> The Obama administration has made its first serious misstep. No, it wasn't
> the wooing of ingrate Republicans, or the dining with clueless reactionary
> pundits. It is much more significant. Faced with the failure of the
> Paulson-Bernanke banking bailout, the Obama administration has decided to
> double down. The new plan, described in broad outline by Treasury Secretary
> Tim Geithner on Tuesday , antes up another $1.5 trillion or more to keep the
> banks afloat. But it won't convince many that they are seaworthy.
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> The plan isn't likely to get the administration where it needs to go for
> two simple reasons. It is wrong about where we are starting from. And it is
> wrong about where we're going to. If you don't know where you are and don't
> know where you are going, it is very hard to get there.
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> The plan won't admit where we are: the major banks in the US are insolvent.
> They aren't addled by a temporary fever. They are broke. If they actually
> marked their toxic paper to the market price - where there is one - their
> losses would wipe out their capital, even including the billions kicked in
> by the government in the first round. Clearly, the Obama administration -
> like the Bush administration before it - hasn't accepted that reality.
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> The plan won't get us where we need to go: we need to restructure - and
> downsize - our financial sector. Its baroque excesses - billions in bonuses,
> golden parachutes, million dollar office renovations, $35,000 "commodes on
> legs," $50 million private jets, legions of employees - were constructed
> atop a housing bubble that finally burst. Now the banks and financial houses
> must be downsized, chastened, and regulated. As President Obama stated, "the
> party is over." But the administration's plan envisions a restoration, not a
> restructuring. We don't want to go there even if we could afford it.
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> Martin Wolf, the lead economics writer for the establishment Financial
> Times, notes that the plan was constrained by three assumptions: no
> nationalization, no losses for bondholders, no new money from the Congress.
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> No nationalization rules out the way the US normally deals with insolvent
> banks. The FDIC takes them over, replaces the management; the depositors are
> reassured, the shareholders take their losses to write off the bad debts.
> Then the FDIC restructures the bank, merges it or sells it back to private
> investors. It arranges an orderly and seemly burial. Without doing this with
> banks that are "too big to fail," the administration is left paying tribute
> to zombie banks that consume taxpayers' money while doing little if any
> productive banking.
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> No losses for bondholders means that taxpayers pick up the bill. With an
> insolvent bank, shareholders lose their investment. That's how the market
> works. If that isn't enough to cover the losses, then creditors take what is
> called "a haircut." A portion of the loan they made to the bank is written
> off or turned into equity (stock). But with neither the shareholders nor the
> creditors taking the hit, only taxpayers are left.
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> No new money from the Congress - surely a political reality with the rising
> popular fury at bailing out millionaire bankers - means that the plan is
> immensely complicated, combining guarantees from the Federal Reserve, small
> capital injections, inducements to lure private investors. But the whole
> point of the exercise is to restore confidence in the soundness of the
> banks. A jerry-built complicated package only makes everyone nervous that
> the whole contraption won't hold up.
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> How can Obama get back on track? The plan does have one potentially
> redeeming feature. It pledges that any bank requesting federal assistance
> will have to undergo what it calls "a stress test," a detailed assessment of
> the value of its holdings and liabilities. This is the first thing the FDIC
> does when it takes over a bank verging on collapse. An honest assessment
> allows the government to decide whether the bank is salvageable or not. (It
> is aided in this process by getting rid of the old managers who have a
> direct interest in covering up the depth of the hole they are in)
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> The Treasury could use this clause to "discover" that the banks applying
> for assistance aren't solvent - and then proceed to restructure them (never
> using the N word). Congress might sensibly instruct the administration to do
> just that. Otherwise, another trillion or so will be devoted to keeping the
> zombies alive, while the economy -- and the Obama presidency -- suffer.
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> But for this to happen, Obama will have to put grit in his policy, not just
> his rhetoric. As Steve Fraser recounts, in the last great depression,
> Franklin Roosevelt railed against the "money changers" from his first
> inaugural on, scouring them for squandering "other people's money, and
> promising to chase "these unscrupulous money changers" from their "high
> seats in the temples of American civilization."
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> But FDR combined bite with his bark. Again Fraser summarizes:
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> After 1929...new financial regulation was at the top of, and made up a
> hefty part of, Roosevelt's New Deal agenda during its first year. That
> included the Bank Holiday, the creation of the Federal Deposit Insurance
> Corporation, the passing of the Glass-Steagall Act, which separated
> commercial from investment banking (their prior cohabitation had been a
> prime incubator of financial hanky-panky during the Jazz Age of the previous
> decade), and the first Securities Act to monitor the stock exchange.
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> Over the past weeks, it is apparent that Obama has begun to educate
> Americans about the scope of the economic devastation that he must deal
> with. Now it is vital that his policies get as bold and radical as the
> crisis demands. The new banking plan isn't there.
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> [ Note : During Bill Clinton's presidency, Clinton and his financial
> advisors – including some of the people who have been appointed to prominent
> positions in Obama's government – aggressively promoted the return to
> financial hanky-panky by dumping the Glass-Steagall Act.]
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