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Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Donald Lambro :: Townhall.com Columnist
Geithner's gambit a tough sell
by Donald Lambro
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WASHINGTON -- This week's $1 trillion question is whether Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner's public-private bank bailout plan will lure enough investors into buying up bad assets to end the nation's lending paralysis.

Wall Street cheered the plan -- as well as a welcome increase in home sales -- by sending the Dow Jones up nearly 500 points on Monday. But economists and cautious leaders in the financial community had their doubts.

The plan calls for using the fast-dwindling remainder of the $350 billion share of the bank-rescue money when economists say a great deal more will be needed to finance the government's share of the buyout deal.

Financial experts told me Monday that private-investment funds were going to be hesitant about buying up assets "when no one knows how much they are really worth."

Former Securities and Exchange Commission chairman Arthur Levitt told The Washington Times on Monday that investors will be "very, very cautious" about participating in Geithner's plan.

New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, the scourge of American capitalism, said Geithner had talked President Obama into "recycling" the Bush administration's "cash for trash" plan that then-Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson tried last year -- only this time with a few more bells and whistles.

But Geithner's scheme is a one-way bet that's doomed to fail, Krugman argued. If the government's incentives to buy the bad assets drive up their value, investors and banks profit; if they don't, taxpayers will be left holding the bag. Krugman, a bleeding-heart socialist, thinks the feds should take control of the insolvent banks, as Sweden did in the 1990s.

University of Maryland economist Peter Morici levels similar complaints. The plan Geithner "is cooking up could unnecessarily stick the taxpayers with big losses on those toxic assets and give the banks big, unearned profits. It could save many bank executives' careers, while running up the federal deficit even further and undermining international confidence in the dollar," Morici said.

Other economists maintain there are not enough funds left in TARP's resources (even with government loans and guarantees) to bankroll a plan aimed at potentially trillions of dollars in bad assets. Treasury will need at least another $400 billion to make a noticeable dent in the toxic assets clogging up the financial industry's books, said Wall Street economist Mark Zandi at Moody's financial-rating company.

"The plan could fail to remove enough toxic assets from the balance sheets of the banks to unlock private credit markets," Morici said. "Ultimately, the resulting federal deficits and domestic economic paralysis could make financing federal budget deficits, through domestic and foreign borrowing, extraordinarily difficult."

The Obama administration's latest attempt to bring some stability to the financial system comes at a time when it is getting poor to failing grades for its handling of the economy thus far. Continued...

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About The Author

Donald Lambro is chief political correspondent for The Washington Times.

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Housing Sales UP
Administration needs to buy toxic assets so that credit frees up.

What are these people buying homes with? Did they get a loan or they all paying cash like the government did with AIG?


Face it - the commie libs have taken WS
Libs have taken Wall Street - same concept as their domestic commie red belief system - you get the value from someone else( the loan from the person who can't pay the interest), from somewhere else( another investment entity that didn't make the loan but bought it and repackaged it with some algorythmic ratings), then you calculate that take( the new money you make it on calculating again what it's worth and taking some amount for that work), ahead of time with future collections not yet achieved (since joe home loan can't pay in the near future), and claim you have all the money in the world right now (it's an ASSET) - then you package it all up in a derivative swap( it's so complicated noone can understand*THAT IT ISN'T WORTH A DAMNED DIME FROM THE WORD GO) that you make some fees and swapola and paycheck bonuses on, and sell it to the private/public whatever, or some other 401k sucker or entity that does what you do ready to do it again.
It's a wonderful system, and Timmy is gonna buy up all the poison. It's funny how ASSETS are toxic , isn't it ? One used to be taught that LIABILITIES are toxic, but now assets are...LOL
roflmao
They are such LIARS from the word go.
( Uhh, if you only knew the all jargon you could understand how brilliant and edumacated they are and why it all works... YES OF COURSE THAT'S HOW THEY INVESTED WITH MADOFF, ALL THE BRILLIANT POINTS OF LIGHT that worshipped him, too)
Amazing.
Toxic ASSETS - not toxic liabilities....
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