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Writers Articles And Opinions |
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22 May 2009 By Dave Lindorff What a joke the Obama administration
is becoming, as it keeps trying to prop up failing
industry after failing industry.
First we had the president becoming First Car
Salesman, offering federal guarantees for GM and
Chrysler car warrantees so that potential car
customers wouldn’t turn away from those two companies’
showrooms fearing that the manufacturers would go bust
and leave them holding the bag. Then he started
touting the cars themselves, saying they were “great
products” and that people should go out and buy them.
Now we have the White House and Treasury Department
assuring us that all 19 of the country’s biggest banks
are going to survive the credit crisis and the
economic slump, and that they are all basically sound.
Okay, so some of them, like Bank of America which has
to come up with $35 billion in new capital, need cash
infusions or need their books juggled—a total of $100
billion for all 19 banks--but as Fed Chairman and
Chief of Rehabilitation and Promotion (that’s CRAP)
for the banking industry Ben Bernanke, is assuring us,
“All the banks in the stress tests are solvent.”
Really. Forget about all those troubled assets folks.
They are solvent. Honest.
These stress tests are really a joke, though. Consider
that the government (and in the end each individual
American taxpayer) is now a huge stakeholder in every
bank that received bailout funds. If one of these
stress tests were to honestly report that one of these
“too big to fail” banks was insolvent, or that it
would become insolvent if the recession got worse,
that would cause a collapse in that bank or, at a
minimum, a plunge in its share value, with the
government being the loser.
Do we really think CRAP Bernanke and Treasury
Secretary Tim Geithner are going to do that?
The only way to do a real stress test would be the way
the Fed and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and
other bank regulators used to do them: in complete
secrecy. Banks, after all, which even under the best
of circumstances lend out 10 times their assets, are
critically dependent upon the confidence of their
depositors. Any sign that a bank is in trouble and the
depositors and even business customers like those who
maintain credit lines at an institution, start to
flee.
So what these stress tests are really is not honest
evaluations of the financial conditions of these
banks, but rather, public relations exercises designed
to boost the public’s confidence in them. Even then,
though, the tests were anything but rigorous. One test
was based on an assumption that the nation’s
unemployment would reach 8.8 percent sometime next
year, with housing prices falling another 14 percent
in 2009. But official unemployment is already at 8.9
percent and is still rising, and housing prices are
falling more than that level. The so called “worst
case” stress test assumed unemployment rising to 10.3
percent in 2010 and housing prices losing another 22
percent in 2009, but in fact, things could well be
much worse than that, both for unemployment and
houseing prices, by 2010.
So really, the fact that these easy “stress” tests
resulted in a conclusion that the 19 banks in question
need to raise a total of $100 billion in new capital
in six months should be a cause for alarm, not
confidence.
Add to that the fact that the government’s and the
banking industry’s proposed solution to the capital
shortfall, since there are likely to be few investors
who will want to shovel new money into these zombie
banks, is to convert the money which the government
has already loaned to the banks in return for
preferred shares in those institutions into common
shares, which counts as capital. If you think about
it, while this shifting around of money on the banks
books may yield better numbers, it doesn’t really
provide the banks with one dollar more of cash to
lend, or to cover bad debts. What it does do is take
government money which could conceivably be recovered
in the event of a bank failure, and convert it into
paper that could easily end up having a value of 0 in
the event of a bank failure. If a bank were to go down
the tubes, its common shares would have no value at
all, and then that’s what our TARP funds would also be
worth: zero.
No wonder Obama and his term of financial “wizards”
are touting the alleged strength of these banks!
So it has come to this. After getting rid of an
inarticulate and know-nothing president and a
manipulative, secretive and anti-democratic vice
president, we now have a White House filled with
comics and hucksters shilling shamelessly for the both
the automotive and the banking industry, both of which
are candidates for roles in a “Night of the Living
Dead” remake.
This should not give us confidence about other
government claims, like when President Obama and his
State Department and Pentagon “wizards” stand up and
tell us that they have a plan for the mess in Iraq or
the other mess in Afghanistan, or that they even know
what they are doing in and to Pakistan.
Congress has been a joke for years. Now the White
House is becoming a laughing stock. It is, I’m afraid,
all starting to look like one big joke, and it’s on
us.
EsinIslam.Com
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