Wall Street Journal
U.S. Sets Plan for Toxic Assets
By Deborah Solomon
March 21, 2009
WASHINGTON -- The federal government will announce as soon as Monday a three-pronged plan to rid the financial system of toxic assets, betting that investors will be attracted to the combination of discount prices and government assistance.
But the framework, designed to expand existing programs and create new ones, relies heavily on participation from private-sector investors. They've been the target of a virulent anti-Wall Street backlash from Washington in the wake of the American International Group Inc. bonus furor. As a result, many investors have expressed concern about doing business with the government in this climate -- potentially casting a cloud over the program's prospects.The administration plans to contribute between $75 billion and $100 billion in new capital to the effort, although that amount could expand down the road.
The plan, which has been eagerly awaited by jittery investors, includes creating an entity, backed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., to purchase and hold loans. In addition, the Treasury Department intends to expand a Federal Reserve facility to include older, so-called "legacy" assets. Currently, the program, known as the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, or TALF, was set up to buy newly issued securities backing all manner of consumer and small-business loans. But some of the most toxic assets are securities created in 2005 and 2006, which the TALF will now be able to absorb.
Finally, the government is moving ahead with plans, sketched out by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner last month, to establish public-private investment funds to purchase mortgage-backed and other securities. These funds would be run by private investment managers but be financed with a combination of private money and capital from the government, which would share in any profit or loss....
21 March 2009
Here Comes Turbo Timmy's Troubled Toxic Asset Clearance Sale
Category:
Bad Bank Plan,
Bailout,
Financial Crisis
20 March 2009
SP Futures Hourly Charts at 1:45 EDT: Vertigo
Recall that today is a quad witch in the options expiration, which typically bring a great deal of market manipulation in the days preceding.
The rally failed at 800 resistance, which would the neckline of an inverse H&S bottom, and the answer to bully's prayers.
Since the economy is not recovering six months ago, we expect that failure to stick and a new leg down to precipitate. This setup is easier to see on the second chart which is The Big Picture.
As always, we will wait for confirmation of this breakdown before taking positions of size. However the trend of our hedges has shifted to the short side at the second failure at 800 on the hourly charts.
Category:
Sp Hourly Chart
The AIG Scandal Is Merely a Symptom of Our National Agony
The AIG bonuses are a calculated distraction.
This is the heart of the problem:
We will have no recovery until the system is reformed and brought back into a sustainable balance. To achieve this end, the banks must be returned to business of banking again, with the reinstatement of Glass-Steagall. The hedge funds must be restrained through fundamental regulatory reform.
A private agency like the Fed is not capable of performing these tasks. The Fed, for all the rhetoric that surrounds it, is a private enterprise owned by the banks. The effectiveness of self-regulation and the rational efficiency of markets are the great myths that have led us to our current crisis.
The Fed as the great regulator for multiple markets is an attractive choice for the government, because when it fails the government may point the finger of blame, and absolve itself of all responsibility for our ruin as they are attempting to do now.
Slate
The Real AIG Scandal
By Eliot Spitzer
March 17, 2009, at 10:41 AM ET
It's not the bonuses. It's that AIG's counterparties are getting paid back in full.
Everybody is rushing to condemn AIG's bonuses, but this simple scandal is obscuring the real disgrace at the insurance giant: Why are AIG's counterparties getting paid back in full, to the tune of tens of billions of taxpayer dollars?
For the answer to this question, we need to go back to the very first decision to bail out AIG, made, we are told, by then-Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, then-New York Fed official Timothy Geithner, Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein, and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke last fall.
Post-Lehman's collapse, they feared a systemic failure could be triggered by AIG's inability to pay the counterparties to all the sophisticated instruments AIG had sold. And who were AIG's trading partners? No shock here: Goldman, Bank of America, Merrill Lynch, UBS, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank, Barclays, and on it goes.
So now we know for sure what we already surmised: The AIG bailout has been a way to hide an enormous second round of cash to the same group that had received TARP money already.
It all appears, once again, to be the same insiders protecting themselves against sharing the pain and risk of their own bad adventure...
Category:
AIG,
Financial Crisis,
malinvestment,
Reform,
Spitzer
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