Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Robert Wenzel: The Bad News Bailout There is nothing good to say about the Paulson Bailout Plan. Nothing. From a short-term technical perspective, from a government oversight perspective, from a conflict of interest perspective, from a political perspective, and from a long-term perspective, serious problems exist each step of the way.

History of U.S. Government Bailouts From 1970 to the Present Great graphic. HT2HECPVEC

Henry Blodget: Bernanke Confirms Government Will Pay Too Much For Junk Assets Bernanke wants government to pay significant premium over current "firesale" price for troubled assets. Specifically, he wants to pay close to the "hold-to-maturity" price, which he argues is much higher than the mark-to-market firesale price. Bernanke and Paulson believes this is necessary to get banks to participate. This is a huge boon to banks and will likely hose taxpayers. Why? Because the government will not have time to figure out what the true "hold to maturity" value of these assets is. Instead, it will have to take the word of banks who have every incentive to dump their crap on taxpayers.

Paul Kedrosky: Illiquidity versus Insolvency We're trying to deal with illiquidity and insolvency, and intelligent people should be able to tell the difference, and act accordingly. We are going to have to deal with both issues repeatedly, so let's get on with it.

Ron Paul On The Crisis and Bailout The government's preferred solution to the crisis is the very thing that got us into this mess in the first place: government intervention.

Felix Salmon: Another Knee-Jerk Proposal From Christopher Cox Quite aside from the unsavory power-grab aspects of all this, it's pretty much impossible to think of a worse time for Cox to be calling for such regulatory legislation. We're in the middle of putting together a $700 billion bailout package here -- the last thing we need is the distraction of a debate about derivatives regulation which has been going on at a pretty high level for some years now

Diamond Hill and JMP Group To SEC: Take Your Short Seller Ban and Shove It Two companies that were added to the SEC's list of stocks that can not be shorted, JMP Group, the parent of JMP Securities, and Diamond Hill Investments, have contacted the SEC and requested to be removed from the list.

Buffett Decides To Play With The Insiders Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway will invest $5 billion in the investment bank Goldman Sachs. He obviously gets the power play that Goldman is putting into place.

The Virtues of Venture Capital - Video

David Friedman: Blogs vs Books According to the s17.sitemeter.com report, in the history of this blog there have been a total of 389,670 visits, with an average length 1:48 each. That adds up to about ten thousand hours.

Walt Mossberg: Google’s G1: First Impressions Google’s new G1 phone announced today is the first real competitor to the iPhone. Like Apple’s product, it’s a serious handheld computer with a powerful new operating system (called Android) and a clever touch-based user interface. Like the iPhone, it’s likely to be a major new platform for third-party software. But it’s also very different, and may appeal to different buyers.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

SPECIAL NOTICE: I have been booked to discuss the current economy and the government bailout, today, Tuesday September 23, on the G. Gordon Liddy Show. I will be interviewed live at 10:35 AM Eastern Time. I understand there will also be live Internet streaming from RadioAmerica.org and a podcast recording will also be available.


BANKS ARE IN PLAY: Randal Quarles Gets His Change In Fed Rules Goldman gets bank holding status, Quarles gets the increase in the size of a position the Fed considers a minority stake, it can't be any clearer that the boys are ready to start buying bank stocks at fire sale prices and that bank stocks are in play.

PEU: Welcome To Disaster Capitalism Carlyle grew from $5.8 billion to some $90 billion during the George W. years. It looks like that trend will continue....

Cliff Asness Is Mad as Hell Wall Street’s greed and short sightedness, and the consumers’ real-estate bacchanalia, was certainly a big part of recent events, but the biggest drivers in creating the current crisis were (IMHO) not the fault of private enterprise but, as usual, of the government.

Eric Margolis: U.S. Orgy of Debt When great empires run onto the financial rocks, their power quickly ebbs. France’s Sun King, Louis XIV, ended his once glorious rein in near bankruptcy caused by his long, ruinous wars with the British and Dutch. Louis XVI’s runaway borrowing to finance the American Revolution helped ignite the French Revolution. The Soviet Union’s collapse was caused by spending half its national income on arms, and failure to modernize industry.

Morgan Stanley, Goldman Search for Deposits; Banks Are `Lunch' Regional banks probably will become ``lunch'' for larger institutions, JPMorgan Chase & Co. analyst Steven Alexopoulos told clients yesterday. We are seeing deals that are highly opportunistic and speedily arranged, where targets are distressed,'' said Marco Boschetti, co-head of global mergers and acquisitions at the Towers Perrin consulting firm in London.

Gary North: The Truth About Gasoline Shortages This is rationing by lining up. It is the alternative to rationing by price. Rationing by lining up creates no financial incentive for suppliers of the item in short supply to allocate new supplies to the region of the country which is experiencing a shortage. Instead, delivery schedules remain the same as they did prior to the shortage. This continues the shortage.

Biggest Drop In Dollar In Seven Years Concern about the price the U.S. could pay to rescue the financial system is crushing the dollar.

Important Public Appearances This Week--Paulson Twice


Monday, September 22, 2008

Robert Wenzel: Henry Paulson, American Oligarch We are in the midst of one of the greatest power and money grabs in the history of the world. I am stunned by the Russian style oligarch aggressiveness and boldness of the moves made this weekend, led by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson.

Christopher Espinal: Prices and Information The critique of the underlying assumption of perfect information has become the center of a movement to a new form economics called New Information Economics, as named by economists Joseph Stiglitz and George Ackerloff

Puttng Power In The Hands of Hank Paulson Decisions by the Secretary pursuant to the authority of this Act are non-reviewable and committed to agency discretion, and may not be reviewed by any court of law or any administrative agency...

Ian Welsh: Hank Paulson’s Raid on the Treasury The more I look at the Paulson "plan" the more I come to the conclusion it's just an old fashioned stickup, says Welsh.

Ian Welsh: More and More Surreal: Paulson Can Buy Non-American, Non-Mortgage Assets It's not clear to me why Hank hasn't insisted on being made Emperor of the New American Empire in name as well as power, he's asked for everything else.

Paulson Says Foreign Banks Can Use U.S. Rescue Plan "Yes, and they should. Because ... if a financial institution has business operations in the United States, hires people in the United States, if they are clogged with illiquid assets, they have the same impact on the American people as any other institution," Paulson said.

U.S. Money Market Fund Plan Won't Help Investors of Reserve Primary Fund On Sunday, the Treasury said that it will "provide coverage to shareholders for amounts held by them in such funds as of the close of business on Sept. 19, 2008." The Reserve Primary Fund officially broke the buck Tuesday, Sept. 16, thus it won't be covered.

Democrats Begin to Set Own Bailout Terms Congressional Democrats began to set their own terms on Sunday for a plan to rescue the nation’s financial institutions, including greater legislative oversight of the Treasury Department, more direct assistance for homeowners and limits on the pay of top executives whose firms seek help. Hank will run circles around the Democrats.

Big Financiers Start Lobbying for Wider Aid Financial firms were lobbying to have all manner of troubled investments covered, not just those related to mortgages. At the same time, investment firms were jockeying to oversee all the assets that Treasury plans to take off the books of financial institutions, a role that could earn them hundreds of millions of dollars a year in fees.Nobody wants to be left out of Treasury’s proposal to buy up bad assets of financial institutions.“The definition of Financial Institution should be as broad as possible,” the Financial Services Roundtable, which represents big financial services companies, wrote in an e-mail message to members on Sunday...The lobbying became particularly intense because Congress plans to approve a package within just two weeks, without the traditional hearings and committee process.“Of course there will be fierce lobbying,” said Bert Ely, a financial services industry consultant in Alexandria, Va. “The real question is, Who wouldn’t want to be included in the package?”Mr. Ely said the open-ended nature of the Treasury’s plan could be interpreted to mean that the government was open to acquiring “any asset, anywhere in the world.”“The question that I am raising — is there any limit?” Mr. Ely said...William H. Gross, chief investment officer of Pimco, which manages about $830 billion in assets, would like to be an asset manager for the government, he said.

Doug French At The Las Vegas Hard Asset Conference The Hard Asset conference, held in between the Fannie-Freddie and AIG bailouts, is having a hard time attracting attendees to the Mandalay Bay Hotel and Casino, with this year continuing a trend of shrinking attendance.

Official FACT SHEET: Proposed Treasury Authority to Purchase Troubled Assets "The timing and scale of any purchases will be at the discretion of Treasury and its agents."

Brad DeLong: Perhaps the Skimpiest Proposal for the Most Extensive Grant of Authority I Have Ever Seen The only thing that comes close is the Marshall Plan--and the Marshall Plan was run by an independent agency, the ECA; the ECA had to get its funding appropriated every year.

Money Markets Faced $500 Billion In Redemption Requests Last Thursday Morning Had the redemption requests remained on the books, it would have resulted in a crash of the commercial paper market and would have forced a near industry-wide halt in money market fund redemptions.

Official Treasury Update On Money Market Funds Guaranty Program The temporary guaranty program will be designed to provide coverage to shareholders for amounts held by them in such funds as of the close of business on September 19, 2008

The Witch Hunts Begin: The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, seeking to jump start a hunt for suspected manipulation of financial stocks, will require hedge fund managers, brokerages and institutional investors to describe under oath their bets on the firms.



Weekend Edition
September 20-21, 2008


Robert Wenzel: An Open Letter To Ron Paul Yes, you have lost the nomination battle, but, sir, you have gained an army.











Lawrence H. White: There Is No Non-Distorting Rescue The probability is 100% that it will turn into the wrong kind of rescue, says White.

Dean Baker: Questions on the Bush Bailout Package The Bush proposal to throw out hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars to buy up this debt will do little if anything to prevent another round of collapsing banks. We will again see desperate weekends with Treasury and Fed honchos running around trying to save the next major basket case, says Baker.





Bess Levin: What Happened When Pakistan Banned Short Sellers? A huge rally, followed by a slow and devastating collapse.



Silas Barta: Time To Review The Put-Call Parity Theorem The point to remember is, let's say I want to take a short position in a stock. That would be represented by "-S" in the above equation. But let's say you found out that was banned! No problem...borrow money, buy a put, and write (sell) a call. Problem solved!












WSJ: Short-Selling Ban May Have Loopholes Like I wrote yesterday, SEC Chairman Chris Cox is delightfully incompetent.





Bob Murphy Asks The Big Question: They banned short selling, why not just ban selling altogether?



McCain Says Fed Should Stop Government Bailouts-Good point. He's obviously talking to Phil Gramm, again.



Forget A Seven Day Halt; The Reserve Seeks to Halt Fund Redemptions, Period Has $60 Billion In Withdrawal Requests!!


Things That Go Poof The headline below, obviously, would catch my eye. The Fed is now backstopping the mutual fund industry and, yet, corporate officials are apparently still hesitant to park money there. My enquiring mind wanted to know more. I clicked on the story. Poof, Wham, Bam, Gone.

Caught Not Paying His Taxes, Top Tax Legislator Writes A Check Rep. Charles Rangel(D-NY) wrote six checks for about $10,800 in back taxes, and then penned an open letter to New Yorkers Friday, saying he has done nothing dishonorable. File under: Balls, Hypocrisy.


FDIC Statement: Ameribank Fails

Official Statement Treasury Announces Guaranty Program for Money Market Funds For the next year, the U.S. Treasury will insure the holdings of any publicly offered eligible money market mutual fund – both retail and institutional – that pays a fee to participate in the program.

Statement by Secretary Henry M. Paulson, Jr. on Comprehensive Approach to Market Developments The federal government must implement a program to remove these illiquid assets that are weighing down our financial institutions and threatening our economy.

Deepak Lal Elected President of the Mont Pelerin Society His book, Unintended Consequences includes explanations for the growth of capitalism in the West based on the differences between encouragement of marriages and wealth concentration among close relatives and Western prohibitions on marriages to close relatives and thus dispersing of wealth.

John Blundell On Sudha Shenoy 1943-2008

September 19, 2008


Robert Wenzel: In Defense Of 'Rumor' Mongering Short Sellers Investment banking stocks are crashing and regulators are all in a huff. They are aggressively harassing short-sellers.


Robert Higgs: Episodes of Crisis and Abrupt Growth of Government Leave Legacies These legacies, which may be institutional or ideological, sometimes lie dormant for long periods before they exert effects on the course of events.


Paul Krugman: Comrade Paulson Seizes the Economy’s Commanding Heights Top U.S. financial officials emerged from a briefing with congressional leaders Thursday night with an agreement to work quickly toward a broad-ranging fix for the crisis roiling U.S. and world financial markets.

Eric Salzman: "Time to Launch Operation Stalin!"Early this afternoon when Putnam closed their Money Market Fund and BNY Mellon broke the buck I think the Government issued the order to launch "Operation Stalin".


Felix Salmon: When Regulators Panic Maybe this is just the financial equivalent of x-raying shoes at the airport: it makes it look as though Something Is Being Done

Barry Ritholtz: The US Is Now a Banana RepublicThis is nothing short of a total panic by people who have no clue what they are doing. And to think, I mocked Russia for being a nation run by market commies.


Mike Hammill: What’s A Swap Line? The currency swap lines were designed to inject liquidity, which can help bring rates down.

Pauk Kedrosky: The SEC Is Blocking Shorting of NAHC, Which Is Nigerian Aviation Holding Company It's not enough they have all the best scams; they get shorts blocked too.

Paul Kedrosky: Silver State Bancorp Is on the Short Sale Ban List It's a failed bank already seized by the FDIC.

PEU: Carlyle Group's Founders at $2.7 Billion Their growth under the Bush administration has been spectacular.









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