Kirkhill said:Edward,
Can you help me with this one?
How much of the world's currency and holdings are denominated in US funds? And against that what fraction does $1 Trillion represent?
Democrats decry 'humbling' Wall St. Bailout
U.S. Treasury chief pitches $700-billion plan to Congress
BARRIE MCKENNA
From Monday's Globe and Mail
September 22, 2008 at 4:12 AM EDT
WASHINGTON — Calling it a "humbling time for America," U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has begun the tough task of selling a Wall Street bailout that could exceed $1-trillion to nervous investors, scared bankers and a skeptical Congress.
Democrats, including presidential hopeful Barack Obama, complained the bailout plan doesn't do nearly enough for "Main Street" as the economy lurches toward recession.
And in a sign that the crisis isn't nearly over, the U.S. Federal Reserve moved last night to save the two last independent Wall Street brokers - Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley - by approving their transformation into bank holding companies and propping them up with emergency loans. Longer term, the move enables the companies, which survive on the willingness of lenders to keep them afloat, to bolster their capital and take deposits like other banks.
The central bank also granted the two firms' London-based brokerage subsidiaries, as well as Merrill Lynch & Co.'s London branch, access to the same line of credit, normally only available to commercial banks.
Fears that Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley might collapse was one of the key triggers for the U.S. government's decision to buy up bad loans.
Over the weekend, Mr. Paulson unveiled details of the most sweeping U.S. incursion into free markets since the Great Depression, urging Congress to pass his plan by the end of the week or risk plunging financial markets back into chaos again.
"I hate the fact that we have to do it, but it's better than the alternative," Mr. Paulson told Fox News Sunday - one of four network shows the former Wall Street banker appeared on yesterday to push the plan.
"This is a humbling, humbling time for the United States of America."
Democrats and Republicans alike appear ready to go along, however grudgingly.
The government plan is bold and sweeping. It calls on Congress to give the government virtually unlimited authority, including the power to override courts, to buy up to $700-billion (U.S.) worth of soured residential and commercial mortgage-related assets, from financial institutions operating in the country. And he called on foreign governments in Europe and elsewhere to take similar measures.
World financial markets reopen today after last week's wild and historic gyrations, triggered by the collapse of venerable investment bank Lehman Brothers, the bailout of insurer AIG and the fire sale of broker Merrill Lynch.
Taking the bad loans off their books will ease credit conditions, encourage banks to lend again, and ultimately save taxpayers money, Mr. Paulson argued.
"This is not something that we wanted to do. This was something that was very necessary," Mr. Paulson said.
And yet crucial details remain unresolved, including how to put a price on assets for which there is no market. Nor is it clear what loans or companies it will target, or when the government would begin making purchases. A leading banking industry group - the Financial Services Roundtable - warned yesterday that the government loan program, unless properly managed, could cause a further downward spiral in the value of mortgage investments.
Mr. Paulson also said foreign financial institutions will be eligible for the plan, as long as they have substantial operations and employees in the U.S. Hedge funds, on the other hand, would not.
The financial turmoil has instantly made the economy the overriding issue in the fall election, and both sides are trying to play it to their advantage.
Democrats said they are ready to go along with the bailout. But they insisted there must be a quid pro quo, including more direct aid to homeowners, stricter terms to ensure the government gets its money back and much tighter regulation of everything that happens on Wall Street, from executive salaries to lending practices.
"This plan can't just be a plan for Wall Street, it has to be a plan for Main Street," Mr. Obama said as he campaigned in Charlotte, N.C. And he called Mr. Paulson's bailout a "concept with a staggering price tag, not a plan."
Mr. Obama, like other Democrats, wants more help for homeowners struggling to stay in their homes, curbs on excessive Wall Street salaries and quicker action on overhauling bank regulation.
And yet the Democrats don't seem willing to risk blocking or delaying the bailout plan to get what they want.
Speaking in Baltimore, Mr. McCain accused Mr. Obama of playing politics amid the turmoil. "At a time of crisis, when leadership is needed, Senator Obama has not provided it," Mr. McCain said.
With the weekend announcement, the government has now committed about $1-trillion to clean up the mortgage mess.
tomahawk6 said:... Normally foreclosed properties sell for what the bank is owed which is a discount between the property value and the outstanding loan balance ...
tomahawk6 said:I suspect the discount was already factored into the bailout price. The Treasury is hardly going to pay face value. I just dont see a downside to this deal right now. The Federal Budget alone is something like $2.9 trillion. These loans also generate monthly payments which will go into the Treasury.
GAP said:These investment houses unloaded Billions of $$ around the world over the last couple of years....is the bailout going to cover these ...now....international investors?
My sense of things is that the US Treasury, is not just the US's lender of last resort, it is, like the Bank of England before it, also the world's banker.
E.R. Campbell said:No!
At least I hope not.
It is quite enough toaskrequire the US taxpayers to clean up Wall Street's mess; Bay Street and The City (and Beijing) can and must look after themselves.
BUT, the fed has extended 'protection' to the UK branches of Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, so ... ???
Kirkhill said:... the situation is seldom as bleak as reported.
The Atlantic's Steven Landsburg on the bailout:
What's clear is that a bunch of financial institutions have made mistakes and lost money. What's unclear is why anyone (other than the owners and managers) should care. People make mistakes and lose money all the time. Restaurants fail, grocery stores fail, gas stations fail. People pick the wrong stocks, they buy the wrong cars, and they marry the wrong spouses without turning to the Treasury for bailouts.
So what's special about banks? According to what I keep reading, it's that without banks, nobody can borrow, and the economy grinds to a halt.
Well, let's think about that. Banks don't lend their own money; they lend other people's (their depositors' and their stockholders'). Just because the banks disappear doesn't mean the lenders will. Borrowers will still want to borrow and lenders will still want to lend. The only question is whether they'll be able to find each other.
That's one reason I feel squeamish about the official pronouncements we've been getting. They tell us bank failures will make it hard to borrow but never that bank failures will make it hard to lend. But every borrower is paired with a lender, so it's odd to state the problem so asymmetrically. This makes me suspect that the official pronouncers have not entirely thought this thing through.
[...]
In other words, I'm not sure these big Wall Street banks are really necessary, and I'm not sure we'd miss them much if they were gone. Maybe there's something I'm missing, but if so, I think it should be incumbent on Messrs. Bernanke, Paulson and above all Bush to explain what it is.
Ilya Somin, at The Volokh Conspiracy, chimes in:
Ultimately the key question is this: why shouldn't these banks be treated like any other business whose management has displayed bad judgment and lost a great deal of money as a result? Capitalism works because we insist that businesses bear the cost of their own losses, a process that gives them strong incentives to make good decisions and transfers their wealth to others with better judgment if they persist in screwing up anyway (as the big banks have done in this case). Perhaps really big banks are somehow special and deserve bailouts that we would deny to other businesses. But there is a heavy burden of proof on those who claim that this alleged specialness really exists and that it justifies hundreds of billions of dollars in public expenditures, unchecked executive power, and unprecedented control of the economy by the federal government. Like Landsburg, I am skeptical that the burden has been met.