STRATEGY MEMO: Turning a Wall Street Giveaway Into an Economic Rescue for All Americans

by: David Sirota

Wed Oct 01, 2008 at 10:17


Note: Apologies for this post's length, but I felt that in order to make this really comprehensive, I had to have it go longer than most posts. It tries to summarize and boil down the negotiations over the complex issues involved in the credit market problem. For the sake of simplicity and navigability, it is broken into five separate parts, which you can scroll to individually: 1) The State of Play 2) Leadership Moves 3) Alternatives 4) Likely Outcomes and 5) The Progressive Bottom Line. Sign the Campaign for America's petition demanding a much better bailout here.

Following the astounding rejection of Henry Paulson's speculator bailout plan in the U.S. House of Representatives on Monday, a wave of doomsday propaganda from Washington, both presidential candidates and the media has flooded the airwaves - all aimed at trying to force public opinion to support handing over $700 billion to Wall Street, no strings attached. Barack Obama, who has raked in $10 million from investment firms, has even issued a statement questioning the patriotism of the Democrats and Republicans who dared to vote with the public and against the Wall Street bailout. He claims they are refusing to "do what's right for this country." But as the Washington Post poll today shows, the public isn't budging. Indeed, after 16 years of aggressive deregulation from both the Clinton and Bush administrations, the country has figured out that when the Establishment joins in unison to back something for Wall Street, it means taxpayers are about to get fleeced. And, as Princeton economist Paul Krugman noted, "To this day [the bailout proponents] have never been able to explain clearly why buying up bad mortgage assets at market prices will solve the credit crunch...The Wise Men, as far as I can tell, have never had a clear idea of what they're doing."

With the Dow flying up and down across the nation's television screens, all Americans are worried about our jobs, pensions and life savings. Many are also confused at what their government is going to do. And so as Congress prepares to reconvene on Wednesday,  here's the state of play, the likely outcomes, and what progressives must demand.  

David Sirota :: STRATEGY MEMO: Turning a Wall Street Giveaway Into an Economic Rescue for All Americans
STATE OF PLAY: LOBBYISTS CIRCLING FOR THE KILL

In two separate stories, The Politico reports that Corporate America is intensifying its efforts to ram the Paulson plan through Congress, despite the House's stunning rebuke. Specifically, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce - the most powerful corporate font group in the country - is overtly threatening retribution against any lawmaker that opposes the $700 billion bailout. Meanwhile, the lobbying industry is beginning to reap a windfall from industry clients expecting to profit off the Paulson plan.

Though House Democrats spent yesterday claiming that the original Paulson plan was amended to include stronger protections for taxpayers (CEO pay limits, aid for homeowners, equity stakes in financial houses for taxpayers, etc.), the Treasury Department was simultaneously holding a secret conference call with Wall Street analysts explaining how those new provisions were specifically written to be unenforceable (you can listen to the conference call here).

The conflicts and corruption surrounding the bailout have even impacted internal Democratic Party deliberations. At an afternoon press conference (video here or at right), Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-OR) recounted how when progressives and Blue Dog Democrats proposed a financial industry tax to pay for the bailout, Democratic leaders sent in Laura Tyson to kill it by saying "the street wouldn't like it." According to DeFazio, Tyson was brought in "under the guise of being a former Clinton economic adviser, forgetting to tell us she's on Morgan Stanley's board of directors." Despite her corporate ties (or perhaps because of them), Tyson is also simultaneously an adviser to Barack Obama's presidential campaign.

At the same time, the pundit class - which is, of course, also the investor class - is clamoring for immediate action on the Paulson plan, and calling the public stupid. As the best example, Tom Friemdan - a billionaire by marriage - uses his New York Times column today to assert that Americans are simply too dumb to understand what's going on, and are thus stupidly opposition to giving away almost a trillion dollars to Friedman's Wall Street friends who engineered this crisis.

LEADERSHIP MOVES: A GOP STRATEGY OR A DEMOCRATIC STRATEGY?

Much of the legislative wrangling is going to play out in the House, rather than the Senate. Unlike the upper chamber's members, every lawmaker in the the lower chamber is up for re-election and therefore the fear of voter backlash is a much more prohibitive factor in supporting this bailout in the House than in the Senate. That said, the Associated Press reports that the Senate is trying to attach a Republican-backed corporate tax cut to the bailout - one that the House has already rejected. If that passes, it could potentially create an insurmountable legislative gridlock between the chambers, or it could be just the crony-ish giveaway that greases the wheels.

As I noted in my reporting yesterday, a major question for the House Democratic leadership is whether to make the proposal that got rejected on Monday more conservative or more progressive?

If Democratic leaders make the bill more conservative - for instance, by loading it up with corporate tax cuts, as the GOP demands - it could eke through the House with almost all GOP support. Of course, this would be an unprecedented move, in that the House Democratic leadership would be using its power to steamroll its entire party and hand over the reins of legislative power to the minority party.

Alternately, the Democratic leadership could add in key Democratic priorities, such as toughened financial regulations, bankruptcy law reforms helping homeowners prevent foreclosure, direct government aid to mortgagees, a tax on the financial industry to pay for the bailout, and the job-creating $60 billion economic stimulus/infrastructure spending package the House passed a few days ago. This would sacrifice Republican votes for the Paulson plan, but it could unify the Democratic majority to pass the bill with mostly Democratic votes.

To date, it looks like House Democratic leaders are leaning to the former, rather than the latter. Rep. Joe Crowley (D-NY), one of the Democrats' top recipients of corporate cash, told Roll Call that the focus is on convincing 12 more Republicans to support the bill - rather than instead getting more Democrats to support it. ABC's George Stephanopoulos says it is "unlikely" that the Democratic leadership will move to "get more Democrats on board" and instead will probably tilt right to get more Republican support.

At the same time, the media commentariat pushing the bill is clamoring for immediate action and no substantive changes at all - the assumption being that the public is drop-dead stupid. Bloomberg News' Al Hunt, for instance, told PBS's Charlie Rose that Democrats should add in meaningless "cosmetic" changes to give lawmakers cover to switch their votes - as if those lawmakers wouldn't face scathing criticism from their re-election opponents at home. Likewise, the New York Times' David Brooks claims "there's no time to find a brand-new package." But that is far from true.

ALTERNATIVES: PROGRESSIVES MOVE TO STRENGTHEN THE LEFT-RIGHT COALITION

Seeking to strengthen the Left-Right coalition of Democrats and Republicans who defeated the Paulson bailout on Monday, progressives introduced a bailout alternative at a Capitol Hill press conference on Tuesday afternoon. They outlined the No BAILOUT Act, which would strengthen financial industry regulation of short selling and other speculative gamesmanship through the Securities and Exchange Commission, change accounting rules to let banks show more assets, and empower the FDIC to open up banks' books, restructure bank management, and provide short-term liquidity to the credit markets - with no automatic outlay of taxpayer cash. The bill already has the support of the Service Employees International Union, and the political strategy behind the initiative is shrewd: It aims to solidify all of the Democratic and Republican "no" votes against any bill still structured like Paulson's $700 billion giveaway, and includes admirably progressive themes.

In terms of details, the upside of the alternative plan is two-fold: It not only introduces the concept of re-regulation into the bailout debate, it also proposes a much more measured way of providing prudent, public-minded taxpayer support to the financial sector than simply turning on the U.S. mint's printing presses and handing over blocks of cash to Manhattan and Greenwich millionaires.

The plan is modeled off concepts outlined in the Washington Post by both former FDIC Chairman William Isaac and University of Texas economist James Galbraith and conceptually supported by some House Republicans because it costs no taxpayer money up front.  

According to a bill summary, the legislation would require the FDIC to survey the banking industry and issue short-term loans (through an exchange of "net worth certificates" and bank promissory notes) to those banks that qualify. In exchange for the short-term infusion of capital, banks would "be subject to strict oversight by the FDIC including oversight of top executive compensation and if necessary the removal of poor management." As Isaac noted, this exact program was enacted by Congress during the S&L scandal of the 1980s and helped "resolve a $100 billion insolvency in the savings banks for a total cost of less than $2 billion."

According to a bill summary, the legislation would require the FDIC to survey the banking industry and insure banks additional loans by basically buying IOUs from banks that qualify. But because this program would technically be an exchange of FDIC "net worth certificates" and bank promissory notes, no money would change hands unless a bank failed. Banks could simply assume they have the capital loans from the FDIC for purposes of their own lending and balance sheets. In exchange for this short-term infusion of capital and government guarantees, banks would "be subject to strict oversight by the FDIC including oversight of top executive compensation and if necessary the removal of poor management." As Isaac noted, this exact program was enacted by Congress during the S&L scandal of the 1980s and helped "resolve a $100 billion insolvency in the savings banks for a total cost of less than $2 billion."

The tricky part of the plan deals with the accounting rules.

Right now, federal law mandates that banks assess their assets on a "mark-to-market" basis - that is, what their assets could be sold for right now, rather than what they could be sold for in the future. The theory is that during a housing and financial crisis, the "mark to market" value of mortgages is artificially low, even though those mortgages represent houses with actual value (for instance, because no one wants to buy mortgages right now, many mortgages are valued at zero on a mark-to-market basis, even though they represent homes that could ultimately be sold for value). Because what a bank can lend out is a multiple of the assets they own, proponents of the accounting change argue that the mark-to-market system is forcing banks to devalue their assets and therefore contract credit. They say that changing the accounting rule to allow banks to list their assets at an "economic value standard" (ie. higher than mark-to-market) will therefore loosen up credit.

The problem with this accounting change is that it would allow banks to leverage even more against assets whose value is still unknown. That, says some opponents, could simply push off - and potentially make more intense - an inevitable day of collapse in the banking system.

LIKELY OUTCOMES: FOUR POSSIBLE PATHS

This morning, Barack Obama and John McCain both reiterated their support for the Paulson bailout plan, but also called for a wide expansion of the FDIC's authority to guarantee bank deposits. The Wall Street Journal now reports that House leaders are considering a re-vote on the plan that was rejected on Monday, only with this expanded FDIC authority tacked on. For lawmakers who will be asked to switch their vote, that change - though positive - seems like thin gruel to justify such a monumental reversal to constituents back home.

With all this in mind, there appears to be one of four likely outcomes:

1. Congress Does Nothing: Under this scenario, House leaders bring the bill back for another vote, perhaps with the FDIC expansion on it, and the "no" votes do not switch, either because the changes aren't enough, or because they support the No BAILOUT Act instead. Though the media has billed this outcome as Armageddon, many economists think this is a better solution than simply dumping $700 billion of taxpayer cash on Wall Street. Ultimately, the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve would be able to use its authority to nationalize banks and restructure them, much like Sweden successfully did in the early 1990s. As economist Dean Baker has said, "There is no plausible scenario under which the no bailout scenario gives us a Great Depression. There is a more plausible scenario (but highly unlikely) that the bailout will give us a Great Depression."

2. Congress Passes the No BAILOUT Act With Bipartisan Support: If House leaders agree to allow a vote on the progressives' alternative (a big "if"), it could pass with the same coalition of Republicans and Democrats that voted "no" on the Paulson plan.

3. Congress Passes the Paulson Plan With Bipartisan Support: Depending on the strength of the corporate lobbying campaign, House leaders could re-vote on the Paulson plan and change 12 votes. This, however, would require 12 lawmakers to switch their votes on the most monumental and high-profile economic legislation in a half century - likely meaning electoral retribution at home.

4. Congress Passes A Progressive Bill With All Democrats: There remains a chance that House Democratic leaders will restructure the Paulson plan to give the Treasury Secretary far less money and authority to address the credit markets' liquidity problem, and also tack on key progressive priorities including bankruptcy law reforms, aid to homeowners, economic stimulus (infrastructure spending, etc.), financial regulations and a financial industry tax to pay for any losses to taxpayers. As historian Rick Perlstein notes, this is exactly the kind of strategy Franklin Roosevelt employed in the face of the Great Depression. He used the crisis as the rationale and vehicle for true progressive reform.

THE BOTTOM LINE: WHAT PROGRESSIVES MUST DO

The initial defeat of the Paulson plan on Monday - which was brought about with major grassroots/blogospheric pressure but little progressive institutional support - provides the progressive movement a unique and historic opportunity of converging factors it may never have again: A Republican president desperate for a Democratic Congress to pass a massive spending bill whose stated objective is to save the economy; a public that strongly supports tougher financial regulations and social spending, and opposes taxpayer bailouts to billionaires; an imminent election making legislators fear voting against their constituents; and a legislative body that has shown it feels so much popular pressure it is now willing to defy the moneyed Establishments of both parties. For progressives, this means four things:

1. Press for the New Deal, or at Least the FDIC Plan: Out of the likely legislative outcomes, progressives should be demanding that House leaders say what Rep. Donna Edwards (D-MD) said at a press conference on Tuesday (video here or at right): "It's a clean slate and its our job for our constituents and for the country for us to say there's another way." That means throwing out Paulson's plan, going back to the drawing board, and constructing a plan that creates a Reconstruction Finance Corporation-type agency to buy some bad loans; nationalizes and restructures failing banks; invests heavily in job-creating infrastructure programs; provides direct aid to homeowners; includes new regulations for Wall Street (ie. banning short-selling shenanigans, reinstating and updated the Glass-Steagall Act, etc.); reforms bankruptcy laws to help homeowners renegotiate their loans; expands the FDIC's scope and authority; and pays for any taxpayer losses with a tax on the financial industry. Short of this, we should support the effort to by House progressives to use the No BAILOUT Act to forge a Left-Right congressional coalition around a bill that at least strengthens the FDIC and protects taxpayers.

2. Demand the House Leadership Allow A Vote on An Alternative: At this moment, the House Democratic leadership has not indicated whether it will even allow a vote on an alternative to the Paulson plan. At minimum, progressives must demand a vote on an alternative. That request will undoubtedly face opposition from party leaders, who know that the alternative could pass or at minimum, provide cover for legislators to vote against the Paulson plan.

3. Strongly Oppose the Paulson Bailout...Or Anything Worse: With so many award-winning economists and experts like George Soros saying Paulson's $700 billion, no-strings-attached plan could actually worsen our economic problems, and with Obama acknowledging that this giveaway will hamstring his potential administration's agenda, progressives must continue their "Hell No!" campaign against the White House proposal, should the Democratic leadership continue pushing it (and especially if Senate Democrats actually make the Pauslon plan worse by attaching a corporate tax cut to it). Wild-eyed cries to "do something!" have been the major arguments for the Paulson plan - and such substance-free hysterics are not even close to convincing or substantive rationales for spending 5 percent of our entire nation's economy on such a poorly conceived and potentially destructive plan - especially considering that plan gives most of the power to the same kind of Wall Street tycoon who helped engineer this situation.

4. Insist Progressive Groups Get Off the Sidelines: To date, many major progressive institutions have done nothing to shape or advance this debate, despite it being the most important economic deliberation in at least a generation. For instance, most major labor unions - though not all - have only tepidly opposed the Wall Street bailout. Though groups like TrueMajority and the Working Families Party are working hard to mobilize bipartisan grassroots opposition, other groups like Moveon.org are coupling their own admirable grassroots pressure with self-defeating opportunism - airing ads bashing John McCain for the bailout, despite the fact that both McCain and Obama support the Wall Street giveaway and despite the fact that such politicization could destroy whatever productive Left-Right coalition can be built in opposition. Such behavior is motivated by an election-year desire to prioritize partisan affiliations and relationships over organizations' stated goals of advocating a progressive agenda, regardless of party. Many organizational leaders don't want to get crosswise with a Democratic Party establishment and a Democratic Party presidential candidate swimming in Wall Street cash and thus supporting this bailout. But the time for that kind of partisan pandering and power worshiping by progressive groups is over. It's time for them to get engaged in a real, hard-hitting way.

The next few days will answer the most fundamental questions we face as a country. After dishonest fearmongering misled us into a war in Iraq, are we finally "shock resistant," as Naomi Klein says? Can we force our Congress to represent the wishes of the vast majority of the public? Or is the political, media and financial propaganda system simply too powerful to prevent an economic crisis from being used as a rationale to reward those who created the crisis? As the House's stunning vote on Monday showed, We the People still have a bit of a say in our democracy. Now it's time to make sure what We the People wants is what we end up getting.


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I'm not sure why you're so in love with the FDIC plan (4.00 / 1)
It's actually basically the same plan as the Paulson one,

except: the swap of paper money for some form of IOUs is done through the FDIC instead of the Treasury and there is no specified limit on how much paper money the FDIC may give away. In the Paulson plan, it's an exchange of paper bonds for assets and equity. In this plan, it's an exchange of paper loans for an IOU. It's essentially the same thing, except more emphasis on recapitalization. Do you know enough about economics to understand whether the real problem is capitalization or whether it is the perception of the toxic assets? Willing to stake your definition of progressiveness on it?

Compounding the flaw of the bill is that it relaxes the accounting requirements (going from GAAP to RAP), allowing, in a time when transparency is the greatest problem, the banks to cook their books more, not less.

It's also hardly shocking that the former Republican FDIC governor would ask for it all to be done through the FDIC.  

The short selling business has nothing to do with progressives; it's a technical move to slow market volatility. You don't want it in normal times because lowering market volatility in exchange for lowering market efficiency isn't a tradeoff you want 99% of the time. The Feds already have the power to limit it in times of crisis, which they've already done.

If the progressives should ask for one thing, it's time to sit down and figure out a reasonable alternative, rather than asking for a vote on a half-baked plan that has the same mechanism (more or less) as the Paulson plan, plus some other stupidness.


Also, speaking of lobbyists... (0.00 / 0)
It is small banks that have really pushed for the $100,000->$250,000 deposit insurance increase. I'm not really convinced that it would make much difference on runs on a bank (the amount of additional money protected is probably minimal); they lobbied hard for the change so that they can compete against money market funds offered by investment houses.

I'm generally for smaller banks against bigger banks, but let's not pretend that this was put in the bill to stop the financial crisis - it's a gift to small banks to give them a competitive leg up, not as way to stop the financial crisis (or not in any meaningful way).


[ Parent ]
$700B- vs $0+ (0.00 / 0)
The Paulson bill has a scary $700 billion dollar price tag, but will actually cost some undetermined amount less than that.  This has a nice and friendly $0 price tag, but will cost some undetermined amount more than that.

I don't get why everyone is falling all over this plan, either.  One thing is very clear, this is not a progressive plan that rescues mainstreet and lets the relief trickle up.


[ Parent ]
yes (0.00 / 0)
And it seems to me that within Sirota's explanation of mark-to-market lies strong evidence that we the taxpayers are going to get something significant back.

[ Parent ]
From the Paulson/Dodd plan that is (0.00 / 0)


[ Parent ]
I'm not convinced (4.00 / 2)
How is allowing banks to hide their losses more easily (by adopting RAP) supposed to solve a financial system that is frozen by lack of transparency? This helps us get our money back how?

Getting rid of mark-to-market has been a wet dream of Republicans for the last 2-3 years (mostly because banks claimed it hurt their competitive position - aka favored shareholders). Seems hardly a progressive solution.  


[ Parent ]
I may be misreading this but (0.00 / 0)
I was referring to this:
The theory is that during a housing and financial crisis, the "mark to market" value of mortgages is artificially low, even though those mortgages represent houses with actual value (for instance, because no one wants to buy mortgages right now, many mortgages are valued at zero on a mark-to-market basis, even though they represent homes that could ultimately be sold for value).

This seems to me to be a point in favor of the bailout supporters' argument that the taxpayers could actually make money on this.


[ Parent ]
And by 'make money on this' (0.00 / 0)
I am referring to the Paulson/Dodd bailout plan.

[ Parent ]
Well, (0.00 / 0)
The problem is that dumping the mark-to-market accounting will allow banks to balloon their balance sheets and look healthy when, in fact, they can't sell those mortgage-backed securities for anything now. It would be paper wealth at this point, and obscure the trouble they are in.

The fact that no one wants to buy them means that there may be a profit opportunity here, which would speak in favor of the Paulson/Dodd plan. Their intrinsic value may be higher than what banks can pay right now, but no one is exactly sure what the intrinsic value is; i.e., how low will housing prices go?

However, the intrinsic value that the government/banks may or may not be able to sell them for in the future is not really relevant to how the firms are doing right now. Changing the accounting just allows them to play games with paper money at this point.



[ Parent ]
Yeah (0.00 / 0)
Now that I've read the entire post, I must say that I don't see the great appeal of the "No Bailout" plan. I am uncomfortable with the accounting changes and dubious whether the liquidity issue would be addressed adequately.

Personally, I would much rather devote energy to a plan that was dramatic and unequivocally progressive.


[ Parent ]
I know that it's almost unspeakably (4.00 / 1)
silly to trust so-called 'experts', but Krugman makes what some stupid voters might considers good points.

[ Parent ]
forget the philosophy for a moment please (0.00 / 0)
of "Progressive" and "conservative" and get fiscally responsible.  The plan is build on ideas that have been analyzed to actually work.    That's the goal here to have something that will actually work and simply labeling something as some sort of political philosophy versus what will work at the lowest impact to taxpayers and the economy is another.  

Do you really believe that handing over $700 Billion dollars to one guy who can do as he pleases, which is immediately overpay way too much for any asset, where pricing mechanisms are completely undefined,  is good for the economy in the long run?

Can I sell you the Brooklyn Bridge?

NoSlaves.com  


The Economic Populist


[ Parent ]
Analyzed to work in what?? (0.00 / 0)
The FDIC plan was used in the early 1980s as a way to recapitalize banks. It worked in that limited situation but there's no guarantee that the only problem afflicting the market is lack of capital.

In my mind, the DeFazio plan says it has a $0 cost, but really it allows unlimited government-backed lending by the FDIC head with no congressional oversight. Why should I trust him more than Pauslon?

I'm skeptical of the oversight of Paulson too, but the fundamental strategy of the bailout plan seems relatively sound. Either the market has a capitalization problem or it has a trust problem. Lots of economists disagree amongst themselves which problem the market actually has. Allowing the feds to pursue both strategies (recapitalization, disposing of bad debt), as needed, seems to be the right tack in my mind.  


[ Parent ]
uh (0.00 / 0)
hello, there was a major commercial real estate component to the S&L crisis and they used a RTC to get those assets off of the market and this is the method they used.  It worked.

No, they are saying to create a RTC and you have simply not seen the legislative text because they are writing it up.

Finally you can have a credit crunch AND a trust issue AND a recapitalization issue at the same time.  Nothing is exclusive.

No, the issue is the pricing of the assets!  Paulson gets gobs of money and there is no oversight...it's a bunch of smoke and mirrors..they created an oversight board and guess who sits on it?  Paulson!

So, he can pay, overpay, immediate outlay of cash for assets....

This is the reason the CBO is saying Paulson's plan might make the crisis worse!  It's the pricing of the assets.

NoSlaves.com  


The Economic Populist


[ Parent ]
no it's not the same at all (0.00 / 0)
a RTC is absolutely not the Paulson model and this is no outlay of cash and you have a floating asset evaluation, not the same at all!

in terms of the mark-to-market that is simply a mechanism to quickly loosen up the credit crunch by enabling all sectors to increase their asset evaluations on their books....also affecting a credit, or the ability to loan money.  

They should probably suspend it temporarily to re-evaluate this accounting method on assets that are not so liquid, such as real estate.  

The Bill does NOT ban Short Selling!

It ban Naked short selling and reinstates the uptick rule.  This is where the hedge fund managers come in and for simplistic reasons "buy" up more stock than is issued and in bulk, in large amounts so it negatively affects the overall price of a stock and they make gobs of money.  Naked shorts and block trades have been occurring as a method to drive down stocks.

I know this topic is complex but folks try to wrap your head around some of these ideas first before judgment.

NoSlaves.com  


The Economic Populist


[ Parent ]
Yes, it is (0.00 / 0)
The RTC was set up to liquidate the S&L's, including all of their loan assets. It's similar to the idea of liquidating the complex debt instruments of banks that are in trouble now.

Ending the mark-to-market rule would allow banks to paper over their losses - if they can't sell the mortgage backed securities for anything now, why should they be allowed to count them as strong assets? It only obfuscates the real problems the banks have; the fact is that on the market today the assets are worthless. It doesn't fee up any capital to magically mark them as worth something.

And banning any form of short selling is an attempt to tamp down on market volatility in exchange for lowering economic efficiency. The Feds already banned naked short selling, probably for the duration of the crisis. When the market is operating normally, why would you want to permanently ban naked short selling? Naked short selling can actually increase the liquidity of some shares in normal market conditions, allowing for greater efficiencies. Furthermore, permanently banning this in the midst of a period when it's already banned is not going to do anything to solve the credit crisis.


[ Parent ]
false (0.00 / 0)
You clearly don't understand the difference between naked shorts and regular shorts.

No, the Fed banned all short selling on 799 stocks temporarily, not just naked shorts.

And you don't understand Issac's proposal either and how it is an accounting mechanism which would enable no immediately outlay of cash and also allow a floating evaluation of the asset.

Read up!

NoSlaves.com  


The Economic Populist


[ Parent ]
Yeah right (0.00 / 0)
1) Logically, naked shorts are not allowed when no shorts are allowed. Permanently making them not allowed by this bill will do nothing during this crisis period; for the stocks that people are worried about, they are already not allowed.

Shorts are when you borrow a share of stock and sell it to someone else, hoping that you can unwind the deal by buying the share back at a lower price to return it to the borrower. Both you and the borrower make a profit; you by exploiting the drop in price, the borrower by taking a commission.

Naked shorts are when you agree to sell the share before you find someone willing to let you borrow a share. This can be beneficial in some situations when shares are illiquid and the market needs greater liquidity to accurately price the share; this contributes to market efficiencies. Right now, most bank shares are highly illiquid, so there has been a lot of naked shorting.

This has only increased market volatility by putting a bunch of shares for sale on the market for assets that the market can't value. Hence, the ban on shorting in general, which subsumes naked shorting.

I'm not sure why you'd want to ban this practice in normal market conditions and it's already banned now on all the stocks that anyone cares about. So the #2 provisions of the no-bailout bill seem stupid to me.

2) Eliminating the mark-to-market rule is also stupid. The GAAP rules say that you have to mark your asset as being worth whatever the market says it is worth at that time; so if you hold a share of GE, you have to mark it as worth what it is selling for on the market. Seems reasonable.

The problem is right now that the bid-ask spreads for these mortgage-backed securities (to steal an example) is something like 20-60, and the market is highly illiquid, so there is no historical price. Do you mark it as worth 20 or 60? It's a tough accounting question. However, the right answer isn't that it is worth what you originally paid for it (say 100; this is the RAP proposal). That's just making up paper capital. There's no way you could sell it for more than 60 (and it's pretty questionable that you could even get that).

So all you've done is wave a wand and pretend that your assets are worth more than you could actually sell them for. If conditions improve, you're fine and your assets may actually become worth that on the market. If things get worse, your "papered-over" balance sheet will have less and less connection to reality; the street and the government will not know how deep you've stepped in it until the day that you run out of money and have to cease operations. It's a fantastically bad idea with a huge downside.

So you read up or come back with better arguments.


[ Parent ]
I stopped reading after you misrepresented Friedman (0.00 / 0)
I'm in a quandary here.  I really like this site and religiously read just about everything here.  Though I disagree with stuff occasionally, I am basically sympathetic to the point of view of David, Matthew, Paul and the others.

So, I was looking forward to reading a more in-depth post.  But then I was disappointed to see David repeat, again, the utterly false charge (in my opinion) that Obama was questioning the patriotism of those who opposed the Paulson plan.

Still, I read on, recognizing that some agree with David about the anti-patriotism claim, until I got to the point when David said that Friedman called Americans too stupid to understand.  That characterization of Friedman's column is demonstrably unfair. If anything, he was calling Congress stupid, not the public at large.  (Apparently, the line David referred to was when Friedman expressed a fear that "some voters" don't understand, which is far from calling them too stupid to understand.)

Now, I will probably read the rest of the diary, because I do retain an interest in David's views.  I am making this comment simply to emphasize that, these kinds of mischaracterizations seriously undermine the credibility of what, I assume, is otherwise thoughtful, and thought-provoking commentary.  And that is a shame.


this is a pretty tendentious complaint (0.00 / 0)
Just to defend Sirota here, Friedman said "some voters, whom I fear also don't understand, swamped them with phone calls." Perhaps they don't understand because they are too busy doing their quantum mechanics homework, but Friedman's essential point was that the bailout plan was the plan that should have passed and the reason it didn't was that voters did not understand how important it was to pass it.

This seems entirely in line with the elite commentary on the failure of that plan (due, yes, largely to the phone calls of voters who "don't understand"): it is so obvious that this plan is a good one that the fact that it didn't immediately pass is due only to people reacting emotionally.

Note, by the way, the other common theme: Friedman doesn't explain what, exactly, it was the voters needed to understand so that they would have realize the unbearable necessity of passing that terrible bill. Instead, we get a standard cartoonish Earth-is-flat explanation of how "this magical thing called credit" works.

So perhaps he does think voters are too stupid?

Or! Wait! I have another idea. Friedman doesn't have a good explanation and is just faking it like he faked all that shit about how we have to go to Iraq to spread the flatness of the Earth.

(Sorry if I sound angry and bitter -- it's not against you, it's against what to me seems so obviously a repeat of the rush to war in 2003, with the "experts" lining up to hector us on the naiveté of not doing exactly whatever they randomly pulled out of the sky.


[ Parent ]
Here's the difference (0.00 / 0)
I interpreted Friedman as saying that representatives should know better, while lamenting that "some voters" may not understand.  I also inferred that he was blaming Congress and the Administration for not better educating the public, which I think is an important point.

Maybe you're right that this Friedman-criticism is small potatoes.  But it struck a chord with me because I've been noticing a trend around here recently, where opponents are unnecessarily demonized.  David even gratuitously noted that Friedman had married into wealth.

The irony is that I think that Friedman is guilty of the same kind of over-simplification of the views of others.


[ Parent ]
it's rough and tumble (4.00 / 2)
There's a huge amount of fighting right now among "normal allies", including fellow commenters on OpenLeft. I actually think it's a good thing; we are yelling at each other and in the process generally getting clear on things. (I think it also reflects a fundamental optimism, as we feel far more in control of what is coming up on the horizon -- our opinions matter again.)

Whether Sirota was mean to Friedman is not too much worth arguing over. But the metapoint is important, I think; not only do many of us disagree with the massive power grab by Paulson -- but it offends us on a really deep level, as if so much of the last eight years hadn't happened.

Put another way: I don't find David's remarks mocking Friedman's condescension in any way problematic; you do. You don't see Friedman's "stance" on these matters identical in style and substance -- and equally reprehensible -- to his stance on the war; I do.

That, in the end, is a major source of the anger and conflict in the comments on OpenLeft these days.


[ Parent ]
It's not demonization, it's a matter of perspective (0.00 / 0)
I understand what you're saying, and yes, Friedman has written in a way that has more trepidation than he usually does in deriding non-elite non-experts, but I'm not willing disregard his entire body of work in interpreting this column any more than Sirota is.  And I do understand that there are different interpretations of this possible based on whether you focus on the specifics of the article as a standalone or in the context of the role he has played for 15 years as a popularizer of market interests as he has understood them.  This is the moment in his lifetime he's most scared for the U.S.? Tells you something about him...he lived through the Vietnam War, Watergate, Reagan, the return of creationism, the Patriot Act, 2 million deportations since 1996, etc.  

However, even in the text, though, look how he's talking down to you and at the same time trying to again establish that without the elite being saved FIRST, the people are doomed:

Well, you say, "I don't own any stocks - let those greedy monsters on Wall Street suffer." You may not own any stocks, but your pension fund owned some Lehman Brothers commercial paper and your regional bank held subprime mortgage bonds, which is why you were able refinance your house two years ago. And your local airport was insured by A.I.G., and your local municipality sold municipal bonds on Wall Street to finance your street's new sewer system, and your local car company depended on the credit markets to finance your auto loan - and now that the credit market has dried up, Wachovia bank went bust and your neighbor lost her secretarial job there.

We're all connected. As others have pointed out, you can't save Main Street and punish Wall Street anymore than you can be in a rowboat with someone you hate and think that the leak in the bottom of the boat at his end is not going to sink you, too. The world really is flat. We're all connected. "Decoupling" is pure fantasy.

Granted, I would talk down to him the same way because I think he's an idiot, but then, I never claimed to be a saint - just that it's not wrong to point out that Friedman is pretty far from acting like one either.


[ Parent ]
The "decoupling is pure fantasy" line was the biggest insult, (4.00 / 1)
since the ownership class has been trying to decouple itself from the rest of America for 30 years now.  I'm pretty sure the decision was taken shortly after the Carter-era oil shock that the quality of life of the middle class would have to go down, so that they would import and consume less.  The Bush-era "depress the middle class while shoveling money to the owner class, so they can withhold control of key American assets from the Arabs and Chinese" is a continuation of the long decoupling.  Trade and the movement of manufacturing overseas was expected to gut the middle class as well.  In their view gutting the middle class was the right thing to do.

But now that they need to take money from us to prop up their escapade, "decoupling is pure fantasy."  Thanks, Tom.


[ Parent ]
Its Tom Friedman (0.00 / 0)
He knows stupidity from the inside out.

"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
Here's what Mr. Sirota conveniently left out of Krugman's Article (0.00 / 0)
"So now what? Like Jamie Galbraith, I'd [Krugman] rather see Dodd-Frank-Paulson, which is much better than the original plan, pass than not. The true cost to taxpayers will probably be close to zero, and it would buy some time. But I'm not passionate about this. The real financial rescue still lies in the future, probably under the Obama administration."

I expect glaring omissions and misstatements from Republicans.  It's sad when Democrats/Progressives do it.  We should be better than that.


[ Parent ]
Friedman (0.00 / 0)
is a notorious corporate puppet who has no clue on economics at all.  He writes economic fiction, tales spun and woven from corporate propaganda press kits.  

NoSlaves.com  


The Economic Populist


[ Parent ]
Thanks for the analyses and explanations (0.00 / 0)
Now, if anyone that supports the Paulson/Pelosi bill would like to provide a comprehensive analysis demonstrating how that plan will impact our economy. I'm still waiting.

Only issue I have is the whole thing about Obama calling people "unpatriotic". I think you are over-interpreting his words.  But, more critically, your condemnation of him is not needed and, in the end, I think I reduces the effectiveness of your argument.  Minimally, it will give those that will reject your position out-of-hand a ready means to attack you and never address the core of your analyses.


"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


I'm not saying it will work... (4.00 / 2)
but the basic theory of the Paulson plan is that the reason the credit markets are freezing up is because no bank trusts any other bank as to how much they are worth. Banks are also worried about runs on themselves, so have been building huge capital stocks (which means they have no money to loan to businesses, etc).

The idea of the Paulson plan is that it clarifies the balance sheets of the banks by taking off the really hard to value assets, which, in theory, allows banks to trust each other again (because their remaining assets will be, in theory, the relatively "clean" ones). It also recapitalizes them to some extent by swapping cash for equity. This should allow them to start lending again.

The effects of letting the credit market seize up are already becoming apparent. The New York Times had an article about how local governments can't get loans for construction projects, and have to cover existing debts with usurious loans. It will mean big job cuts in construction and local government if we can't get the situation under control. There's also a similar problem for small business, as many of them use short-term loans to make payroll. If you can't make payroll, guess who gets fired?

Now, as to whether the plan will work or whether there might be a better strategy, I'm not sure (the nationalization plan, in a perfect world, seems better. But that's a complete political non-starter. It's not on the table). So the logic of the Paulson plan is pretty straightforward.  


[ Parent ]
Thanks for the effort (4.00 / 1)
Seems to me that the issue of banks "not trusting" other banks is a panic driven response.  I mean, don't these bankers talk to each other and share a common interest in seeing that the lending markets don't freeze up?  Won't a bit of time help them to calm down and start making decisions based on business principles rather than fear?

If the problem is that local and state governments can't get the funds to supoort their infrastructure and other projects, can't the Federal Gov. step in to help them directly, and cut the "diseased" banks out of the transaction?


"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
Great explanation (0.00 / 0)
Thanks.

I'm reluctantly for this thing. A lot of my reluctance stems from a lack of confidence that I understand what is going on and that it is in fact understandable at all.

I think a lot of folks are confused by all of it -- I know I am -- so it's helpful to get a clear, concise explanation like this.


[ Parent ]
just to present the "capsule" other side (4.00 / 1)
In the same spirit, the objections (leaving aside more "populist" stuff like golden parachutes) go like:

1. if the banks -- who do this for a living and are supposedly free-market accountable -- are uncertain as to whose assets are good, how can the government be any less so? (The assets are not "hard to value" because the math is hard and Paulson has a bigger computer so he knows the secret; nor are they hard to value because banks are being "over-emotional" about things and Paulson is a Vulcan.) So -- the objection goes -- this $700 billion is being gambled by a man who has even less accountability than the original gamblers.

2. if the cities can't get loans, why doesn't the government loan them the money? If Massachusetts needs an urgent loan, why don't we allow the government to make the loan direct, instead of dumping $700 billion down a hole? Same goes for small businesses -- why can't the government put up collateral for certain kinds of loans banks are otherwise unwilling to make?

2, more broadly, and succinctly: why are so many progressives at such a crucial moment so resistant to breaking the "rules" of free market voodoo? At the very time when those rules are revealed to be largely fraudulent ideologies of power?


[ Parent ]
And not to sound like a broken record or anything ... (0.00 / 0)
... but if you're on Facebook, please let politicians know how you feel there too.  Updates in your feed will let your friends know what's going on and help spread the word virally.

There's already a thread on Chuck Schumer's page, and Baratunde weighted in breifly on Nancy Pelosi's page.  

We've got a list in progress of politicians' pages on Facebook on our wiki -- if you know others, please add them!

jon


I feel ill (4.00 / 1)
ABC's George Stephanopoulos says it is "unlikely" that the Democratic leadership will move to "get more Democrats on board" and instead will probably tilt right to get more Republican support.

Democratic leaders sent in Laura Tyson to kill it by saying "the street wouldn't like it." According to DeFazio, Tyson was brought in "under the guise of being a former Clinton economic adviser, forgetting to tell us she's on Morgan Stanley's board of directors." Despite her corporate ties (or perhaps because of them), Tyson is also simultaneously an adviser to Barack Obama's presidential campaign.

What can I say?

I wish they would let me on Rachel Maddow's show. I'd ask, out loud and as provocatively as I should, "What sort of 'Change we can believe in' is this? If Obama is going to be a whore for Wall Street, he should apologize for duping the public about his change message."

As for MoveOn, shame on them. They've done some good work, but they are betraying the country, and for what? So a few more Dems can get elected, whether they're of the Nancy Pelosi type or whether they're of the Donna Edwards type?

They should also be excoriated.

435 Dem Primaries 2012
Coffee Party Usa
TheRealNews.Com


he never defined change (0.00 / 0)
and this is why....unfortunately way too many will catch way too late and to make matters worse...there is now no alternative.

NoSlaves.com  


The Economic Populist


[ Parent ]
Robert, you haven't been around much lately.... (0.00 / 0)
I would be shocked if Clinton votes against this...so where is your alternative candidate?  We all know you certainly weren't in Kucinich or Ron Paul's camp.

[ Parent ]
kuicnich (0.00 / 0)
is who I would have voted for in the primary actually.

I was thinking that today...let's see how Clinton votes...that's going to tell quite a bit.

She did a great floor speech though on HOLC trying to promote it.

I'm not a "clintonista" either, just a policy head.

NoSlaves.com  


The Economic Populist


[ Parent ]
Hmmm...perhaps you arrived on the scene too late... (0.00 / 0)
I certainly remember you spent a lot of time trying to suggest Clinton was the substantially better candidate on the economy.  I don't remember you ever clearly stating your preference for Kucinich even though he didn't drop out until rather late.  

I knew Clinton would vote for this bill and now that it is so you have no ground to stand on because when you were calling for alternatives we know you meant Clinton.  She has always been the only other viable Democrat, for better or for worse, this cycle...she has voted for this bill.

Any one is really an economic progressive knows we have a long way to go to ever get the party over to our side and the huge length of that path is in large part thanks to Bill, Hillary, and the DLC.  The despair here and on other sites is rather odd.  The political will of our party, especially when it comes to protecting us from the fat cats, has been in question for decades and some act like this is the straw that broke the camel's back.  To me the fact that neither Obama or Clinton would promise single-payer health care made it entirely apparent just where the near future lies for the party.  Their argument and that of their apologists was that there isn't the political will to do so.  Well, if that was the case why is this bill and vote such a surprise?  


[ Parent ]
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