Posted on 05/31/2009 12:56:05 AM PDT by BGHater
From the headlines of the Wall Street Journal: Banks Aiming to Play Both Sides of Coin Industry Lobbies FDIC to Let Some Buy Toxic Assets With Taypayer Aid From Own Loan Books (subscription required, but Calculated Risk has an excerpt). I thought the headline had to be a mistake until I read the article.
To recap: The Public-Private Investment Program provides subsidies to private investors to encourage them to buy legacy loans from banks. The goal is to encourage buyers to bid more than they are currently willing to pay, and hopefully close the gap with the prices at which the banks are willing to sell.
Allowing banks to buy their own assets under the PPIP is a terrible idea. In short, it allows a bank to sell half of its toxic loans to Treasury at a price set by the bank. Ill take this in steps.
Assume that a bank has a portfolio of loans on its books at $100 and that, when held to maturity, those loans will turn out to be worth $90. In the absence of any transaction, it will end up losing $10.
First, imagine the bank is buying these loans from itself with no government support. Lets say it decides to pay itself $80. Obviously this does nothing no cash has changed hands, and the bank still has the toxic loans. It might take a $20 loss today, but it will gain $10 by holding those loans to maturity, so its net loss is still $10.
Second, imagine that the bank creates an investment fund where its own money is matched dollar-for-dollar by Treasury money. If the fund buys the loans from the bank at $100, then the fund will eventually lose $10. That loss will be split between the bank and Treasury, so now the banks net loss is only $5, because the other $5 of losses is absorbed by Treasury. Conversely, if the fund pays less than $90 for the loans, the gains will be split with Treasury, so the banks net loss will exceed $10. If it pays exactly $90, then the bank is no better or worse off than before the transaction.
In other words, its exactly the same as if half of the loans were sold to Treasury, with the bank holding onto the other half. From the banks perspective, it wants the price to be as high as possible.
Third, imagine that the equity in the investment fund is split evenly between the bank and Treasury, but it is leveraged up to six-to-one by a loan that has an FDIC guarantee. This has the effect of capping the banks downside if the loans do really badly. The guarantee wouldnt kick in if the loans end up being worth $90, but lets say they end up being worth $70. Now if the fund pays $90 for the loans, that is about $6.50 of bank money, $6.50 of Treasury money, and $77 of FDIC-guaranteed loan. So the bank loses $6.50, Treasury loses $6.50, and the FDIC loses $17. With no transaction, the bank would have lost $30.
The third scenario is the PPIP.
So if banks are allowed to buy their own loans, they will have the incentive to overbid for those loans. As long as the price they pay exceeds the eventual value of the loans, they will come out ahead, even without the loan guarantees. This is bound to close the gap between buyers bids and sellers reservation prices by ensuring that at least one buyer (the bank) will bid more than the reservation price set by the seller (the bank). And the way these investment funds are set up, the private equity partner the bank will be the one deciding how much to bid; the whole point of these partnerships was to get the government out of the business of valuing assets. In short, since the government doesnt have the expertise necessary to guard the henhouse, well let the fox do it.
Do you think this is so crazy it couldnt possibly be what the banking lobby is asking for? Consider this:
[Norman R.] Nelson proposed to the FDIC that banks be allowed to control as much as half the capital in a buyers group. In some cases, he wrote, the selling bank should be able to participate as the only private-sector equity investor.
(Nelson is general counsel of the Clearing House Association, a trade group representing ten of the worlds largest banks.)
The blather being spouted in support of this self-dealing is so blatantly disingenuous it makes you wonder if this is some sort of joke.
Banks may be more willing to accept a lower initial price if they and their shareholders have a meaningful opportunity to share in the upside, Norman R. Nelson . . . wrote in a letter to the FDIC last month.
Um, no. Participating as buyers will only ensure that banks will be motivated to overpay. If they think that the price is too low, they would prefer to just hold onto the asset especially now that the stress tests have made clear that no bank will be forced to liquidate assets under pressure.
Bankers see it as a win-win, said Tanya Wheeless, chief executive of the Arizona Bankers Association, which has urged the FDIC to let banks buy their own assets through PPIP.
Thats absolutely true for them, that is.
Towne Bank of Arizona plans to sell some of its soured real-estate loans into PPIP and wants to profit from the program. We think it would be attractive to our shareholders to be able to share in whatever profits there are from the venture, said CEO Patrick Patrick.
It seems like this proposal is too extreme for some people in the banking lobby to support; neither Scott Talbott of the Financial Services Roundtable nor Edward Yingling of the American Bankers Association was quoted.
You would think that the government would slap down this idea in a second. But heres the FDIC spokesman on the issue: Its an issue thats been raised and an issue were aware will need specific guidelines.
Now, even if banks arent allowed to buy assets directly from themselves, there are still reasons to be worried. If you think of the banking sector as one big entity, then its obviously in the interests of that entity to buy assets from itself exactly as described above only with Bank A buying from Bank B and Bank B buying from Bank A (or more complicated permutations as required). In other words, there is a massive incentive to collude. Now, collusion is illegal. So the question is whether the banks can get themselves into an equilibrium where they all overpay for each others assets thereby benefiting everyone without actually conspiring to do so. This is like when one airline raises prices and immediately every other airline follows suit theres nothing illegal about it, even though the end result is the same as if they had colluded.
But lets not make it easy for them. If this proposal has any chance of going anywhere, then Tim Geithner or Sheila Bair should come out and reject it right now.
More welfare for the oligarchs.
This is kind of like the debit cards used after Katrina to buy alcohol and tobacco, with more zeroes attached. It’s a natural progression of government assistance to people who just need public money to correct their private errors.
“Banks Want Government Subsidies to Buy Assets from Themselves”
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Well, the first thing that came to my mind, was the image of an owner of a restaurant, who needs a bailout for his depressed business in this economy. So, he gets a big infusion of cash from the government to help keep his business running.
But, also, now he goes back to the government to say that he’s incurring a lot more expenses these days and he now needs some help on that end of things. Since he and his whole family eats all their meals at the restaurant, he needs the government to cover the business expense of those meals for him, too...
LOL...
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