Posts Tagged ‘bailout’

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Fri Nov 14th 2008 at 4:52pm UTC

I Want My Bailout, Too…

Friday, November 14th, 2008

The piling-on begins: The AP reports:

Three big city mayors asked the federal government Friday to use a portion of the $700 billion financial bailout to assist struggling cities. They sought help with the pension costs, infrastructure investment and cash-flow problems stemming from the global financial crisis. The mayors  – Michael Nutter of Philadelphia, Shirley Franklin of Atlanta and Phil Gordon of Phoenix  – made their request in a letter to Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson. Nutter said cities are facing an economic crisis not seen since the Depression and need help just like financial institutions. “I want to make sure that cities and metro areas are at the table, that their voices are being heard, that our challenges and problems are well understood, so that we can get relief,” Nutter said.

Who’s next?

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Fri Nov 14th 2008 at 4:46pm UTC

Bailout to Nowhere

Friday, November 14th, 2008

I’ve had my share of tiffs with David Brooks, but he nails this one:

Granting immortality to Detroit’s Big Three does not enhance creative destruction. It retards it. It crosses a line, a bright line. It is not about saving a system; there will still be cars made and sold in America. It is about saving politically powerful corporations. A Detroit bailout would set a precedent for every single politically connected corporation in America. There already is a long line of lobbyists bidding for federal money. If Detroit gets money, then everyone would have a case. After all, are the employees of Circuit City or the newspaper industry inferior to the employees of Chrysler? …

If ever the market has rendered a just verdict, it is the one rendered on G.M. and Chrysler. These companies are not innocent victims of this crisis. To read the expert literature on these companies is to read a long litany of miscalculation. Some experts mention the management blunders, some the union contracts and the legacy costs, some the years of poor car design and some the entrenched corporate cultures … A federal cash infusion will not infuse wisdom into management. It will not reduce labor costs. It will not attract talented new employees. As Megan McArdle of The Atlantic wittily put it, “Working for the Big Three magically combines vast corporate bureaucracy and job insecurity in one completely unattractive package.”

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Thu Nov 13th 2008 at 3:08pm UTC

Where’s My Bailout …

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

Say it ain’t so… please ,someone. Bloomberg is reporting.

President-elect Barack Obama is pushing Congress this year to approve as much as $50 billion to save cash-starved U.S. automakers and appoint a czar or board to oversee the companies, a move that would require President George W. Bush’s support, people familiar with the matter said. Obama’s economic advisers are now convinced that if General Motors Corp. doesn’t get a financial lifeline soon, it will have to file for bankruptcy by the end of January. And if the companies don’t get almost $50 billion, Obama will be dealing with the issue again by next summer. Any czar or board would be patterned after the bailout of Chrysler in 1979 and New York City in 1975. Advisers such as former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker and former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers are said to be telling Obama that the cash is urgently needed now.

Congress would have to act in a lame-duck session that begins next week. Obama would need Bush’s backing to pass such a sweeping and costly measure in part because Democrats don’t have enough votes to force a floor vote or override a veto. Obama also would need strong support from auto-producing states such as Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin to pass such a sweeping and costly measure. Yet to be determined is whether most of the money would be drawn from the $700 billion financial rescue package Congress passed last month or from newly allocated funds.

By injecting himself into the talks about how to save General Motors, Obama is making an exception to his decision to steer clear of policy-making until he takes office. The president-elect also wants the Federal Reserve to extend emergency loans to General Motors, Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler LLC, according to Obama aides who spoke on condition of anonymity. The failure of those companies would likely bring down parts-makers, dealerships and suppliers in addition to inflicting a deep psychological blow.

Is this really true? A multi-billion dollar bailout for the Big Three whose management has systematically squandered away a huge post-war economic and technological advantage, have misunderstood their markets, who have blamed workers every chance they get, and who failed to learn from their rivals and refuse to harness the creative capabilities of workers. An auto czar – huh? I thought Obama was elected by a combination of African-Americans and the creative class. How does this square with his electoral coalition or his vision of a better future? This will just forestall the inevitable. Why not just allow them to be taken over by Japanese car companies like Toyota and Honda who could truly restructure them? For the life of me and the good of the country, I hope this report is wrong.

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Thu Oct 23rd 2008 at 9:55am UTC

Questioning the Homeowner Bailout

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

David Leonhart is absolutely right. While bailing out U.S. homeowners strikes the right chord politically, it is fraught with all sorts of problems.

There are two separate groups of people who are at risk of foreclosure, and they often get muddled in any discussion of the housing crisis. The first group is made up of people who, for whatever reason, will not be able to make their monthly payments. Some took out mortgages with initial monthly payments that they couldn’t afford. Others took out adjustable-rate mortgages whose monthly payments have ballooned to an unaffordable level. Still others have lost their jobs. …

The second group is quite different. It is made up of people who are at risk of foreclosure not because they won’t be able to keep up with their monthly payments — but because they may decide they don’t want to continue making them. These are the homeowners who are “under water,” which is to say their houses have lost so much value that they’re now worth less than the underlying mortgage. Homeowners with an underwater mortgage face a choice. Many will stay put and keep making their monthly payments … Others, though, are going to look at their home purely in economic terms and see an investment that may never pay off. Some of them will choose to walk away …

The problem with this approach — and it’s the heart of the problem with any big-time homeowner rescue — is probably obvious. As soon as the government announces that it will help everyone at risk of foreclosure, a lot of people are suddenly going to decide they’re at risk of foreclosure.

Homeowners who are under water will have an incentive to think of their homes in cold economic terms and threaten to walk away, while those who can just barely afford their monthly payments will have reason to slide into delinquency. Multiply 19 million mortgages by a couple of hundred thousand dollars, and the government could be left with $4 trillion in obligations.

Yep. Not just struggling homeowners, but people who speculated on Miami or Scottsdale or Las Vegas real estate will now be in for a bailout. Plus, the economy will never correct itself if the government keeps artificially propping up real estate assets.

When I tell friends in Europe or Canada that Americans can simply walk away from mortgages, they are in shock. One key reform has to be to make U.S. mortgages a permanent, binding contract that can’t be walked away from.

Martin Kenney
by Martin Kenney
Wed Oct 15th 2008 at 7:06pm UTC

The Nature of This Crisis Matters

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

This Monday, the world’s governments took a final plunge on fixing this crisis by basically assuming the debts of the world’s important banks. In the U.S., the politics of who receives the bailout and who doesn’t will be interesting. In my mind this gamble poses two questions:

1)  Will it be enough to prevent a collapse of the financial system?

This is a difficult question to answer.  I have my doubts.

If this extreme program operates as many think it might, it would guarantee that a certain set of banks would not collapse. The reasoning seems to be that these guarantees will unfreeze credit markets. For this the governments of the world will take hundreds of billions of bad bank loans, default swaps, structured investment vehicles, and all manner of so-called assets (probably worth zero or close to zero) onto their books. The sheer scale of what is being proposed can be seen by the aftermath of the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy. We now know it had worthless loans and assets of, at least, $100 billion. Some Europeans are saying that Lehman’s collapse cost them about $300 billion. We also know that almost always in such bankruptcies the true cost is greater than what is initially reported. Let us extrapolate from this and assume (because to take on all of them would be unimaginable) that when the Treasury/Fed say they will bail out banks, they only mean a few key banks and leave the rest to their own devices (there is evidence for this suspicion as the large regional banks such as Sun Trust and Zion did not participate in the huge rally on Monday). So, which banks will be bailed out? My guess is Goldman Sachs (Paulson and Robert Rubin’s ex-employer), Citi, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and a few others (did Wells Fargo buy Wachovia so that it could enter this charmed circle?).  P.S. – We now have confirmation of which firms are being bailed out: JPMorgan, Goldman, Citi, BoA, Wells Fargo, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, State Street Bank [thank you Barney Frank], Bank of NY Mellon [thank you Hillary and Schumer].

Will this unfreeze credit markets? I think it is unlikely for two reasons: One, if you are an unprotected bank, then why would you lend at all? If you are one of the protected, then banks why on earth would you lend to any organization outside the circle of protected banks? The assumption appears to be that the actors in the system will now assume everything is fine and begin lending. If as everyone expects a recession is coming and most firms are highly leveraged, lending would be very risky. What type of collateral for a loan could you receive that would be worth as much in a bankruptcy tomorrow. Of course, one could have loans or investments a la Warren Buffett in Goldman Sachs or GE, which charge nearly usurious penalty interest rates of 10 percent and radically dilute the common stock holder, i.e., our pension funds and 401Ks.

The world’s governments have taken what appears to be a final step by assuming on the debt of their largest and privileged banks, they are committing future taxpayers to valorize today’s debt. They are not yet willing to admit openly that the taxpayers are buying garbage and moving it from the banks to themselves. Governments appear to hope that by moving some portion of the garbage to the taxpayer the problems will go away. This is similar to the belief among Bear Stearns, Lehman, and AIG executives that hiding garbage debt inside their firms and then lying about it to the public would make the garbage disappear.

So will this newest plan unfreeze credit markets and encourage banks to loan again? Unlikely, but no one has a crystal ball.

2) The second question is this: Is the financial system telling us something far more profound about the underlying economic situation?

Why is this the most important question? If this is a profound crisis in the core of the economic system, then these approaches are merely treating symptoms and are destined to fail (sort of like treating metastasized cancer by surgically removing parts of the body). Remember, Ben Bernanke has been called the “foremost expert on the Great Depression” by his fellow mainstream economists. Bernanke essentially lays the problems of the Great Depression on bad financial policy by the Federal Reserve and other fiscal and monetary mistakes. This belief says that government fiscal and monetary policies, if well administered, can circumvent capitalist economic crises. Marxists and Schumpeterians are not so sanguine. Particularly Marxists argue that the Great Depression was the expression of fundamental discontinuities in the underlying economy and, if this is the case, then attempts to patch the current system up are bound to fail – and probably in the process waste resources and time.

Let me play out the reasons that we may be in a more profound crisis and, if this the case, why the current ever more panicked efforts by governments to swallow private sector debts cannot provide a basis for a sustainable recovery.

a) The forces of globalization are still underway and, as many of have been saying, they are putting downward pressure on incomes in the developed nations, which, of course, are the consumers of the products of the developing nations. A small telltale of this, IBM announced dramatically increased profits on only slightly higher sales. My guess is that these profits were made by substituting low-cost developing world service providers for their high-cost developing nation employees. This dynamic will continue putting pressure on wages in the developed nations and contributing to a deflationary dynamic.

b) Real wages have stagnated in the U.S. since 2000 for all but the wealthy.

c) Income inequality has increased globally and, as a result, the vast majority find themselves less and less capable to consume.

d) The technological revolution of digitization has changed the central source of value creation from the assembly line to the designer/engineer.

e) The entire credit complex that was built up after World War II that Vance Packard decried and the cult classic The Hidden Persuaders may be at its endpoint. This would mean a deleveraging on a scale never before seen in human history. Is it possible that we can no longer borrow from the future because the future is now?

If our situation is, as I suspect, more profound, then the newest bailout will fail, and this will be clear soon.