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By Dirk van Dijk

Apparently there is no limit to the arrogance and sense of entitlement at the nation's largest banks. From yesterday's Wall Street Journal we get this:

Some banks are prodding the government to let them use public money to help buy troubled assets from the banks themselves. Banking trade groups are lobbying the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) for permission to bid on the same assets that the banks would put up for sale as part of the government's Public Private Investment Program (PPIP). PPIP was hatched by the Obama Administration as a way for banks to sell hard-to-value loans and securities to private investors, who would get financial aid as an enticement to help them unclog bank balance sheets.

Let's recap a bit. Banks make a ton of bad loans and have come to the brink of insolvency. The government has to guarantee their debt and injects billions and billions of dollars to shore up their capital base on extremely generous terms. Then the banks all whine and complain that the government might want some say about how much of that capital goes out the back door in the form of mega-sized bonuses to the very same people who lead the world to the edge of the economic abyss.

The ever-powerful Bank Lobby leans on Congress so that it will lean on the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) to substantially ease the mark-to-market accounting rules, so they do not have to reflect the market value of the toxic assets on the balance sheet. The claim was that the bids in the market did not represent "true value," but were a fire-sale price.

It is true that there was not a lot of activity going on in the mortgage-backed securities market, especially the non-GSE backed paper that was created by the investment banks that held the worst loans. In an attempt to revive this market, Treasury Secretary Geithner came up with the PPIP program, where the government would invest side-by-side with private investors to buy up this bad paper.

Then, another arm of the government -- the FDIC -- would guarantee loans so the private/public investment partnership could leverage things way up. If the deal goes south, the private investor can then simply walk away from the deal.

The underlying assumption was that the reason there was no market for this stuff was that there were no buyers -- not that the sellers could not afford to sell at the "true value" of the assets. The latter is far more likely to be the case. They have the real motive to try to pretend that the assets are worth more than they actually are.

Buyers, on the other hand, would be inclined to bid against each other until a rational price level was found. In any case, the idea was to get this paper off the books of the banks.

Now the banks want to be able to buy the stuff themselves, with the government (FDIC) backing. This is insane. Any bank that is selling this stuff should be absolutely prohibited from buying it -- not only the assets on their own books, but from any other institution as well. A shell game where J.P. Morgan (JPM) buys the toxic assets from Citigroup (C), which then buys the assets of Bank of America (BAC), which in turn buys the assets of J.P. Morgan is not significantly different from the banks buying their own bad paper.

The PPIP program, if properly carried out, does have some advantages over the original ex-Secretary Paulson "Cash for Trash" plan that was at the heart of TARP when it was first passed. On any individual deal, if the private investor makes money, then the government will also make money. However, given the leverage and the non-recourse nature of the debt, the private side will make out like a bandit and the government will make a modest return.

On an individual deal that goes south, the private side will lose what they put in, but that is a small fraction of the total loss, so the government will get kicked in the teeth. This structure does give an incentive to the private investor (who will make the investment decisions) to bid as low as possible on each asset to maximize their potential return. If the banks are allowed to bid on their own assets, or engage in wash-sale transactions with other banks, then there is no such incentive. Indeed the incentive is for them to overpay as much as possible. They get the cash up front from selling the asset, and then when the paper goes bad, the government takes most of the loss.

Incidentally, if the government were to truly follow the rule of law, they are required to fight this idea. The money for the public side of the public private partnership comes from the TARP program. The authorizing legislation for the TARP states:

(e) Preventing unjust enrichment. In making purchases under the authority of this Act, the Secretary shall take such steps as may be necessary to prevent unjust enrichment of financial institutions participating in a program established under this section, including by preventing the sale of a troubled asset to the Secretary at a higher price than what the seller paid to purchase the asset. 12 USCS § 5211(e).

This would seem to be a clear-cut case of unjust enrichment that Congress was trying to prevent when it put this language into the law. I know that the rule of law has become "quaint" when it comes to the bailing out of the banks, but there has to be a limit somewhere. After all, if the banks participated in kidnapping for ransom, would we allow that to happen simply because the proceeds would help out their balance sheets?

FDIC Chair Shelia Bair needs to tell the bank lobbyists a resounding NO to this proposal, if not call security and have them thrown out of her office for being so arrogant as to suggest such a thing. Adding to the amount of toxic sludge on the balance sheet is not the way to unclog the balance sheets of the banks.

If the banks get their way, it will turn the potentially promising PPIP program into yet another rape of the American taxpayer by the banks. Enough with the Welfare Queens of Wall Street. It is time for someone in Washington to stand up to the bankers. That would be change we could believe in.

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  •  
    Arrogance? Dirk van "Jerk" Dijk paints with a broad brush, just as the vast majority of his cohort has done ever since Paulson came up with the "brilliant" idea to infuse banks with capital, many of which doing so only for the good of the country but against their own best interests. I suggest that the "arrogance" is primarily coming from the Government as well as the press which has kept the vast majority of the rubes clueless as to how the TARP really works while the Government is engaged in a "game" has no rules. The Administration and the regulating agencies keep making things up on the fly. If ever there was ever an illustration as to why Congress and the Executive should keep their hands out of the private sector this is a prime example.
    May 28 02:39 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    what else can you expect from these rogues that we have elected. polictics, and getting elected is their 'job' and the influence they have, bribes the get are the 'payment' for their services. there are very few government programs that are not a rape of the tax payer. Like the 2nd law of thermodynamics, that is the unalterable truth, whatever the political structure may be - capitalist/socialist/c... Smart individuals find their way to the powers that be and get laws enacted in their favor. Hats off to the banks & banksters. They are the creme de la creme of our society.
    May 28 03:33 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Nothing of surprise here. When NOBODY takes the hit, EVERYBODY takes the hit. What you are witnessing is the end of a 500 year cycle, the final death throes of the modern fractional banking system. When any system starts its collapse, elites in power ransack the last bit of wealth on their way out the door. This barbaric rape, loot and pillage on a system wide scale. Where is the outrage?
    May 28 03:33 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Is there any limit to bank arrogance?

    In a word... no.
    May 28 03:42 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    NO. THERE AREN"T ENOUGH PRISONS FOR THESE CRIMINALS.

    theburningplatform.com...
    May 28 04:04 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    How do they do it? Just when one thinks there is an end of what banks can think up to rape, loot and pillage (to quote Market Sniper) they come up with another outrageous idea. Congress the thinks about it and either makes the outrageous idea part of TARP or some other program that gives the banks access to the public trough.
    I know, academically, that massive bank failures probably would have been the catalyst for Depression II, however one wonders if it might have not been better. In hindsight I think there were plenty of solvent banks in the U.S. to carry on with business as usual so goodbye investment banks and AIG (I can dream can't I?).
    May 28 04:08 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    I hear Gitmo might be available in the near future.


    On May 28 04:04 PM James Quinn wrote:

    > NO. THERE AREN"T ENOUGH PRISONS FOR THESE CRIMINALS.
    >
    > theburningplatform.com...
    May 28 04:09 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Gitmo is too warm and cozy. Need to send them to Adak Alaska.


    On May 28 04:09 PM anarchist wrote:

    > I hear Gitmo might be available in the near future.
    May 28 04:25 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    And then they call it economic recovery... nice
    May 28 06:11 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    When the MSM says "recovery" they mean the banks. When peoplel talk about "less bad" they mean the banks. They forget to mention that it is the tax payers trillions of dollars insuring the banks live to see another day.

    However, main street is not recovering. Main street is getting worse. Main street will be living in the street if that is what it takes to keep the bankers afloat.
    May 28 07:04 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    I do not know much about bank arrogance, but I do know much about government and Congressional arrogance. It is on display every day of every week of every year. That is why we are in our current financial mess and most other messes.
    May 28 09:09 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Cool. Numerous posts about how banks are acting like Congress.

    When you start talking about putting members of Congress in Gitmo, you'll be getting warmer.

    By the way, Etrade isn't acting arrogant toward me.
    May 28 10:58 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Banksters have taken over. We are back in the era of robber barons, with the difference Govt. is on their side. It is beyond arrogance when people at AIG demand and get bonuses.

    Well capitalism as we knew it or imagined it to be is all gone. We have this new thing- worst of both capitalism and socialism - privatize the profits and socialize the losses.

    Obama is going to distrubute a lot of wealth and make us all very poor.
    May 28 11:36 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Banksters have taken over. We are back to the era of robber barons, with the difference Govt. is now on their side. When AIG people demand bonuses and actually get them, we have a problem.
    May 29 01:36 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Here's my thinking.
    Lets use TARP money to fund the building of more prisons.
    Not country club prisons.
    Real, Supermax type prisons for bankers, stock swindlers and corporate executive types that thought that stealing from America's childrens futures for their own financial betterment was a good idea.

    I'm completely sick of this sense of entitlement these guys have and demand that the Fed prosecute all of them for whatever fraud they committed that lead to this current state of affairs.
    May 29 10:51 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    All of this moaning won't add a single bull to you peoples 23% short list.
    May 29 12:45 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    As long as there are more lobbyists than politicians in DC the corruption will continue. Problem is; the people who are in a position to change the system are the ones who are benefiting from this corruption. Short of becoming one of the corrupters or the corrupted, there's not much hope for the average American.
    May 29 02:53 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Here's how it will all pan out: the banks will survive with bloated chiefs and executives still pulling in millions for truly very little talent except how to grap the most for themselves whilst rubbing shoulders with politicians and other influencials on the gravy train.

    The politicans will still be in power, or on standby waiting their next turn, and you and I, our parents, children, and grandchildren will still be picking up the tab.

    And the media will still be reading cue cards that tell us we're lucky to live in such a wonderful democracy which takes such good care of its citizens.

    And we'll still be stupid enough to let it go on.
    May 29 03:45 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Andrew, you wrote: "And we'll still be stupid enough to let it go on."

    Exactly how do you propose that the average citizen stops it from "going on"? Thru the ballot box when we are only allowed to vote for a pre-chosen candidate from one of the two equally corrupt major parties or perhaps an independent who has zero chance because he doesn't have the party machine and money behind him? Or maybe joining a feel good protest rally that will be totally ignored by the political power elite? Or perhaps you will grab your hunting rifle and march on DC to overpower the military establishment and establish a new better govt.?
    Face it dude - the average middle class American is SCREWED!
    May 29 05:13 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    You pay your money and you take your chances, banks. If there's no market for your "securities" when your luck runs out, the value of your securities is zero. Doesn't matter what they might be worth another day, or if the buyers are mistaken about their value, or if you can con somebody to keep the pot running till you can figure out a way to palm them off as something worthier. Your assets, your judgment, and your game plan sucked, and you crapped out. It happens. Life goes on another day. How much more that is not yours do you think you should get to suck on while you nurse your denial?

    Another point deserves more stress -- ALL of this has been initiated either against or in an end-run around the loudly-expressed (and correct) will of most of the citizens on whose backs it is to play out. 1000 to 1 against the initial bailout, which was brushed aside like a mildly-annoying insect by a majority of our elected officials, including the one who was preparing to be elected our President on the basis of his "concern for the common man," so glaringly absent in most recent administrations (if anybody still believed that, after his vote on FISA). At the US federal level, the people's voice was disenfranchised long ago; the current system is too lost to ever be valid for real human beings again. Unless we find our voice in a truer context, we'll sink and drown with this ship. It was really a magnificent craft once, but IMO what's been left isn't worth dying and sacrificing the future for. But we are. The CA vote is hopeful. Maybe the states are our best venue now.
    May 29 05:21 PM | Link | Reply
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