Posted on 04/16/2009 10:58:14 PM PDT by pissant
Barney Frank's track record as a financial analyst is, shall we say, mixed. The House Financial Services Chairman said for years that a collapse of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac would pose zero risk to taxpayers. For most people, a mistake of that magnitude would trigger introspection, if not humility. But not the sage of Massachusetts. He's cooking up another fantastic subsidy -- and like the last one, he swears taxpayers won't feel a thing. In his words, "it would cost the federal government zero." Uh oh.
Mr. Frank believes state and local governments are paying too much when they issue debt because rating agencies don't give them the ratings Mr. Frank feels they deserve. So last year he pushed a bill to effectively force Standard &Poor's, Moody's and Fitch to raise their ratings on municipal bonds, but the legislation got sidetracked amid the financial turmoil. Now Mr. Frank is back, bigger than ever.
(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...
how much debt do we need anyway?
Barney Frank’s track record as a financial analyst is, shall we say, mixed. The House Financial Services Chairman said for years that a collapse of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac would pose zero risk to taxpayers,well that dodn’t work out to good and he isn’t jail yet?
Yes, its low until it's not. Anyone remember Orange County? Or how about WOOPs Bonds?
Paying a higher rate is the market's way of punishing an entity for its own mismangement and bad decisions. Once again, we'll have the gov't rewarding failure.
What's wrong with this picture?
Idiot. Insurance would mean the granting of a put to the bondholders, making the bonds effectively riskless. Like other options, it has value because of the possibility it will be paid off. It costs money!
Further, making municipal bonds riskless will effectively remove a major restraint on borrowing, because lenders won’t have to worry about default. It will be Freddie/Fannie all over again, only worse, without oversight, and bigger.
It should also be noted that municipalities are most likely to have problems when a systemic economic event (e.g., severe recession) occurs. That means that when the payoffs become necessary, they will be huge, and come at just the time when the government is short of money (unless it prints it).
What a dangerous, incompetent, nutty jerk!
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