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Why TARP Tanked


From Harvard Prof. Lucien Bebchuk:

 

"The plan for buying troubled assets -- which was earlier announced as the central element of the administration's financial stability plan -- has been recently curtailed drastically. The Treasury and the FDIC have attributed this development to banks' new ability to raise capital through stock sales without having to sell toxic assets. But the program's inability to take off is in large part due to decisions by banking regulators and accounting officials to allow banks to pretend that toxic assets haven't declined in value as long as they avoid selling them."

(http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/corpgov/)

So basically, since the government relaxed its accounting standards, letting banks value their cruddy mortgage-based securities at whatever price they like, they had absolutely no incentive to sell them (at fair market value - er, a much lower price).   So they can go about business as  usual.

You know, sort of like taking out a home equity loan without telling the bank the house has burned down.  Known as "fraud" in insurance circles. 

Um, the emperor's still naked, Mr. Geithner...


6 Comments

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From your linked blog:

The stress tests focused on whether, by the end of 2010, the accounting losses that a bank will have to recognize will leave it with sufficient capital on its financial statements. The bank supervisors explicitly didn’t take into account the decline in the economic value of toxic loans and securities that mature after 2010 and that the banks won’t have to recognize in financial statements until then.

Sounds like we're being set up for another round of possible banking crises post 2010. Rec'd.

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When enron cooked its books, everyone got upset. guess now it's okay!

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Well I, for one, am immensely reassured by the stress tests. I feel much better now. I'm tossing out all my Xanax cuz everything's hunky-dory. Can't blame Wall St. for tryin' to make a buck, tho. If they don't want to sell their junk right now, we just have to figure out another way to transfer great sums of wealth from the increasingly poorer workers of America to Goldman Sachs and Co. down the road.

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Excellent point!

The Obama adminsitration seems not to recognize that the problem that caused the crash was fraud on the part of the banking industry and on the part of those who sold the bogus financial instruments. It simply takes one's breath away to think of the staggering losses caused by open fraud and then to think that not one criminal investigation is under way to make sure those who hatched and carried out these schemes goes to jail. Not one.

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Oh Oleeb, you's just playin' that ole blame-game again. This ain't the time for games, ole boy, it's the time for the serious business of makin' sure those bankers can keep up the lifestyle to which they've become accustomed. Or, I dunno, maybe that's just the xanax talking... been going through Don Key's trash...

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Mistakes were made.

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