Posted on 09/26/2008 2:38:35 PM PDT by MeanWestTexan
The single-biggest mistake in the Paulson bank-rescue-plan marketing effort has been the failure to explain clearly how taxpayers are going to recoup $700 billion used to buy toxic assets at auction in order to unfreeze the banking system. In other words, folks dont understand how taxpayers will be paid back, and may actually make profits, which will enable the new government debt to be erased after the Treasury bank-rescue is completed.
Heres the key point: Any loan package bought by the Treasury will be 100 percent taxpayer owned. Period.
Lets walk through this hypothetical for a moment. Through a market-driven auction, the Treasury will purchase some dollar amount say $100 billion of loans that banks will sell. The Treasury will then buy those loans at the prices that fill the auction, starting with the lowest prices and working up. Now, the Treasury will hold those bonds either to maturity or for a sale in the open market if rising prices in the market make that sale attractive. In other words, suppose the Treasury buys a bond package at 20 cents on the dollar. They hold it for a while, and if market conditions improve, they sell it for 50 cents on the dollar to some buyer (e.g., an investment fund, a private-equity fund, a hedgie). The Treasury will make the sale at the higher price in order to gain a profit for taxpayers.
In the meantime, as the Treasury holds the loans, the government will get monthly cash-flows coming in on the mortgages, or on any other loans that it owns. So it is win-win for taxpayers. First, taxpayers get the cash flow generated by the assets. (Something like a 10 percent interest rate.) Second, if the loan is sold for profit, the taxpayers will own that profit. And the new law must of course stipulate that all the cash flows and/or profits go for debt-reduction to protect taxpayers.
I dont think a lot of folks understand this win-win scenario. Let me repeat: The taxpayers own the bonds the Treasury buys; the taxpayers own the cash flows generated by the bonds; the taxpayers own the profits when the bonds are sold; and the taxpayers benefit when the profits and cash flows are used to pay-down government debt.
Actually, for taxpayers, its a win-win-win-win.
Think about this. The troubled assets purchased by the Treasury right now are likely to be very under-priced because of the chaotic and frozen market conditions. But over time, through monthly cash-flow payments or through loan sales, taxpayers will get all their money back and in great likelihood a handsome profit.
I have been in conversation with leading House Republicans all day. And they understand these key points. Unfortunately, this understanding did not materialize in their original meeting with Mr. Paulson a few days ago. But now the actual reality is sinking in.
Another point: Republican leader Eric Cantor has an excellent idea for a federal bond insurance guarantee for straight mortgage-backed paper, financed by private-sector insurance premiums. That will improve investor confidence in mortgage bonds and will make those bonds highly marketable. Importantly, senior Treasury officials have told me that Mr. Paulson will accept the insurance idea as an option in the final bill, alongside the ability of the Treasury to purchase distressed assets.
Sources also tell me that other conditions will be necessary to bring the House GOP along. First, the ACORN slush fund must be removed. Second, the so-called union proxy to run a slate of corporate directors is a big problem. Third, all profits from the Treasury rescue mission must be used to reduce the national debt 100 percent. Fourth, Republican members are opposed to bankruptcy judges setting mortgage terms and interest rates (Sen. Obama also is opposed). Fifth, the so-called government equity ownership of banks is distasteful because it effectively creates a corporate tax increase on banks at a time when they are struggling. And last, the Treasury secretarys request for $700 billion is regarded as way too high.
Essentially, House Republican leaders want a slimmer, cleaner Paulson plan supplemented by Mr. Cantors mortgage-bond insurance program. I think its a good package that would be great news for stock and bond markets that are now ailing badly. It would set the stage for a gradual return to normalcy on the part of bank lenders, including loans to small businesses, consumers, and homeowners. It would be a pro-growth package at a time when the economy desperately needs a prosperity tonic.
09/26 03:54 PM
While I wanted Cantor as VP, this idea may just completely save our collective asses.
The BIG problem is Larry, WE won’t be paid back, ACORN and other left wing fronts get the profits.
Read the article.
Read slower, all the way to the end.
What does that bovine scat mean?
Great send me the stock! and the dividends from payments!!
Wall Street is holding worthless paper and wants the taxpayer to hold that worthless paper, and be glad to be such a winner.
I’m not sure I get the part where I’m supposed to say “thank you, sir, may I have some more.”
Exactly.
bump ... looks like a set of good ideas here.
I really worry that Cantor is unintentionally turning this bailout into a socialist plan. Buying assets is just that the US government buys the paper assets. It is not the government socialization of a market, but rather the government stepping in an buy in a market.
Now it seems Cantor want to turn this into a government insurance plan like FDIC. The government buy assets is a one time thing. A government back insurance of financial paper is an on going government program. We will have socialized some of the risk in the financial markets.
And this is a bigger insult then your feeble attempt
to cover for these looters.
‘I think its a good package that would be great news for stock and bond markets that are now ailing badly.’
Larry, no matter how you call it it’s still socialism. Go cheerlead somewhere else and stop with the Orwellian doublespeak.
Hog manure!!! If these bankpapers, etc. were as likely to be paid back (w/ a profit-Ha ha), why in Hades are the holders in trouble?
A better idea.......give anyone, any business, company etc., a big cut in their taxes (capital gains tax, corp. tax, income tax, etc.) for taking on this “bad paper”. Then the gov’t and those the politicians won’t have their sticky socialist/communist fingers in the pie.
JMHO
A Cantor ping to show that our faith was well-founded.
If that were true we’d have a deal right now.
The only way I can read this bill is that Government wants to be in business on my dime and get the profits, I presume for some later brilliant use.
“What does that bovine scat mean?”
Uh, the principal and interest payments from the homeowners go to treasury.
99% of the loans are “performing” -— that is, the people pay.
Nope, this is competition for me.
I’ve been buying loans on the cheap and get my pound of flesh if need be.
This would actually hurt me, as it would take loans off the market.
So what do I "own"?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.