Robrob
Philosopher
- Joined
- Aug 29, 2011
- Messages
- 5,497
That and as long as we want to make an $18 billion profit.We are stuck with these "too big to fail" institutions so taxpayers must prop them up until the bitter end?
That and as long as we want to make an $18 billion profit.We are stuck with these "too big to fail" institutions so taxpayers must prop them up until the bitter end?
ie Let the bet ride.That and as long as we want to make an $18 billion profit.![]()

Four years after the Lehman Brothers crisis, housing finance remains a mess. But the Trouble Asset Relief Program (TARP), the crisis-era measures aimed at saving the banks, stabilizing credit markets, and preventing the auto companies and the insurer AIG from plunging into liquidation, have largely succeeded. And at a very low cost to the taxpayer. By and large, the recipients of cheap government capital have returned the cash they took—and with interest. The central component of TARP was the Capital Purchase Program, in which Treasury bought interest-yielding preferred shares in banks and received warrants in return. Here is the latest daily TARP update. Between the CPP and extra aid given to Citigroup and Bank of America, Treasury put $245.1 billion into banks. So far, those recipients have returned $231.11 billion of that capital. Add in dividends ($15.2 billion), proceeds from the sale of warrants ($9.19 billion), and cash raised from selling Citigroup and Bank of America stock ($9.36 billion), and the taxpayers have received a total of $264.86 billion back. That’s a profit of nearly $20 billion.
WASHINGTON -- The government's watchdog for the $700-billion Troubled Asset Relief Program on Wednesday disputed suggestions the bailout fund would turn a profit for taxpayers, and warned that many small banks are still struggling to repay.
"It is a widely held misconception that TARP will make a profit," said a report by Christy Romero, the special inspector general for the TARP program, known as SIGTARP.
....The Obama administration has said TARP has turned a profit on about $205 billion injected into banks, but still projects losses for the entire fund.
The report to Congress said that one recent cost estimate put TARP losses at about $68 billion and noted that banks and other financial institutions still owe $118.5 billion. And those figures don't include the potential harmful effects of the government precedent of wide-scale bailouts.
Policymakers "should not be focused alone on money in and money out. TARP's costs and legacies involve far more than just dollars and cents," the report said.
"While TARP and other government responses to the financial crisis may have prevented the immediate collapse of our financial and auto manufacturing industries, and improved stability since 2008, the trade-off is not without profound long-term consequences," the report continued. "A significant legacy of TARP is increased moral hazard and potentially disastrous consequences associated with institutions deemed 'too big to fail.'''
Romero and her predecessor in the watchdog position, Neil Barofsky, have been highly critical of the way the Treasury Department has run TARP. And they have pushed back strongly against the administration's positive stance on TARP's impact and financial outlook.
Last week, administration officials predicted that the U.S. likely would make a profit of as much as $163 billion over the next decade on all the bailout initiatives that began in 2008 to rescue the financial industry.
That result largely would be due to $179 billion in excess profit from the Federal Reserve over the next 10 years, from its extraordinary expansion of its balance sheet to help bail out the industry and stimulate the economy.
The Treasury Department did not project a profit for the entire TARP program. The administration estimated in February that lifetime losses from TARP would be $67.8 billion, largely because of the GM and Chrysler bailouts, as well as mortgage assistance programs.
It's so convenient to redefine the sole objective of TARP as "to turn a profit on the AIG investment" once you determine that that is the only thing that it has really accomplished. Such is the risk inherent in relying on Newsweek's The Daily Beast as a source. It is a blog. Dan Gross, the author, seems to be on an "everything's fine, despite your lyin eyes and mounting bills" kick in his reportage.
So we're breaking up these "too big to fail" companies now, right?Actually, that wasn't the sole objective or even the main objective. It's just icing on the cake. The main objective was to avoid a serious financial crisis that would have had severe negative consequences for the general economy.
So we're breaking up these "too big to fail" companies now, right?
Here's my question... will it be enough?
Here's my question... will it be enough?
I remember hearing a lot of horror stories several years ago... Obama putting the same people in charge that failed to prevent the meltdown in the first place, regulations that were seen as too limited, offices set up to enforce regulations that had no staff, etc...
Has all that been handled?
That's a bit like saying, "but the horse won".
This housing bubble and bust was caused by a demand for the MBS that offered a decent return on investment compared to bonds. Yes everyone understands you don't get better returns without taking additional risk, but that risk was underestimated. Here is a news-flash - no one ever sees that we are in an unstable bubble until near the very end - then when the realization causes a stampede to sell & crash. So the idea that we can regulate bubbles out of existence or see the risk miscalculation in advance is foolish. We are just preventing the previous problem, like generals prepared to fight the last war.
Yes, I know Obama did not (and could not/should not) appoint people to to leadership positions within various companies.Aside from the extraordinary GM debacle, -Obama didn't put anyone in control of private enterprises. It may not always be obvious, but Obama is a president constrained by law, and not an emperor in charge of all he surveys.Here's my question... will it be enough?
I remember hearing a lot of horror stories several years ago... Obama putting the same people in charge that failed to prevent the meltdown in the first place, regulations that were seen as too limited, offices set up to enforce regulations that had no staff, etc...
Has all that been handled?
Hey I agree... people will always try to "walk the edge" in order to maximize their returns. But you can try to minimize the potential damage that can be done by those engaging in risky behavior.The problem wrt Dodd-Frank isn't that it doesn't address currently hot issues, but that the entire approach is wrong. You can make as many rigid rules as you like and hire as many enforcers as you like and in a decade or three the important issues will have changed an ways to walk the grey-edges of the law will appear, and the people walking the edge may well pay-off politicians to not react to these changes (if they are even obvious).
I agree with this too, in a way. I do think the housing crisis could have been avoided if companies like Standard&Poors were reporting the risks of the derivatives properly.No - the government should be far more interested in properly labeling of investment risk rather than regulating it.
Basically, no business in the world today operates on cash -- they all operate on bank-based credit and rely on the banks to sort where the money goes. Wal-Mart, for example, has managed to cut its prices and margins so low precisely because it "owns" almost none of the merchandise on the shelves and never had to pay for it. Instead, it basically acts as a consignment store; when you buy an item, the money that you spend goes directly (via the banks) to the wholesaler or manufacturer. The wholesalers and manufacturers, in turn, can manage to put their goods on the shelves because the banks have fronted them operating credit, so they can manufacture against expected profits when things are finally sold.
Who would you put in charge? Janitors? Engineers? Rocket scientists? Doctors?OK, can you tell me what we're getting for our trillion dollars? I haven't heard an answer that makes any sense yet, other than the usual variations on "if we didn't do it then all hell will break loose."
Do you think it makes sense for bankers to be the ones in charge of fixing the banks?
The "bailout" is the woo.
I think the risk is that people need credit... most people can't buy a house without a mortgage, some businesses cannot get off the ground without a bank loan.So what about letting AIG and Citi fail and bailing out the folks they owe money to, instead? Seems logical to me. That way we get rid of the cause of the problem without the systematic failure. Epic failures like these deserve non-existence as a result.