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America's Banks: Are They Really Insolvent? [View article]
America's Banks: Are They Really Insolvent? [View article]
On Feb 12 05:29 PM truth_seeker wrote:
> If bank "insolvency" is truly a mere accounting trick, perpetrated
> by the greedy who wish to buy victim-bank assets at firesale prices
> and who also wish to capture huge chunks of market share (or whatever
> devious purpose I didn't think of), then why don't the banks in mortal
> danger explain their situation in a more public way? Last night
> I was trying to answer whether WFC is anywhere near insolvency, but
> all you see on their balance sheet is "Net Loans," i.e., no breakdown.
> Why couldn't say BoA, JPM, Citi and WFC simply say "look, here's
> our detailed loan portolio, by amounts, loan types, geography, etc.
> Then one could undertake fundamental analysis, project cashflows
> for various scenarios and understand best, middle and worst scenarios.
> But they are not doing this, they simply claim to be well capitalized,
> CEO buys stock, some other useless action. If and until they do
> this with numbers in a detailed way, one has to ask what they are
> hiding.
America's Banks: Are They Really Insolvent? [View article]
This is a really interesting idea. Can you provide any links or further reading on the way the Danish handle home mortgages. I've never heard of the ability to buy back your debt on the secondary market.
On Feb 12 06:15 PM TERN wrote:
> If the market valuation (or lack of) "toxic" assets is at the heart
> of the problem, and the current market for these assets is not providing
> realistic pricing, then the US would do well to look at the Danish
> system of mortgage financing, where the home owners themselves have
> the option of buying back their debt.
>
> If the CDO's could be untangled enough to yield lists of home owners
> that owe the debt, surely many of them would be highly interested
> to buy their debt off at more than 30 ct on the dollar!
> Online auctions would quickly show the true market values, and this
> would help all banks in the process of "mark to market".
>
> Temporary nationalization might be the blunt force needed to create
> this new and functioning market, but it might not even be necessary.
>
>
> Adopting the Danish model would also go a long way to prevent such
> a mess in the future.
America's Banks: Are They Really Insolvent? [View article]
On Feb 12 09:21 AM old boat guy wrote:
> Saying that Krugman and Roubini don't know what nationalization is
> is rather stupid--you give up your entire argument.
America's Banks: Are They Really Insolvent? [View article]
Obviously, such a solution is likely over optimistic. In fact, the likely result of such an argument would be one for stag-deflation over the next decade or more, but to some this may be more palatable than trying to force all our write downs into the open as soon as possible which is what a nationalization strategy would necessarily be trying to achieve.
In the end, I'm not trying to argue one way or another in this article. I'm just trying to give readers a more rounded view of what I think is increasingly turning into a one-sided and alarmist call for nationalization of our nations banks.
On Feb 12 07:58 AM CautiousInvestor wrote:
> You should reread what Krugman and Roubini are saying. The basic
> argument is that the US banking system has $1.5 trillion of equity
> but is facing likely writedowns above this amount or around $1.8
> trillion. If this comes to pass, it would wipe out the equity of
> US banks.