david dissadent
New Member
http://blogs.ft.com/gapperblog/2008/09/a-700bn-shot-at-the-wrong-financial-target/
The FT is arguing that recapitalising would have been a better use of the $700 billion, i.e. that buying bank equity to inject cash into the banks rather than buying the so called unsellable assets.
I dont quite grasp the difference at the minute, other than it would be a far better buy for the taxpayer.
What I will also say is that there are people who would love to buy these 'distressed assets' or 'toxic waste' of off the banks. Bright people who can understand them can make a really good guess at the future of the housing market and would be happy to pay for these CDOs et al. Just not at the price the banks want to sell them for. If the banks accept market price for them then they are going to have to start huge write downs of the rest they have on there books as a market is created. I may be wrong but thats where I think the problem is. The taxpayer is not going to make a profit from these, they are going to buy them at a minimal mark down and the banks are laughing all the way to the errrrr, accounts department. Well for a while anyway.
I also wonder about how long this will be effective for? After all the federal reserve allowed banks to swap these assets for treasuries to the tune of several hundred billion dollars already. And still they were failing.
Clearly something very drastic needs to be done and Im not footing the bill, well not directly. Id rather see a swap of a couple of hundred billion dollars for assets as a loan to the banks for a couple of months and let a new administration work with the legislature and think long and hard about what they are going to do. Being bounced into something by the cunts in the Bush administration just sends me screaming for the hills.