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Wall Street Weekly | 02/13/2009 11:00 am

Dear President Obama: No One Voted for Despair and Change

By Liz Peek
© AP

Bears, Bulls, Chickens and Pigs: wOw’s Wall Street Weekly with Liz Peek (Week of 2/9) 

Editor’s Note: Liz Peek is a financial columnist and the author of wOw’s SHEconomics

Thank heavens it’s Friday. All week I’ve heard people wishing each other a happy weekend – starting about Tuesday! The nation is so weary, and so ready for some good news.

Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner surely didn’t give us any. Perhaps hopes were unrealistically high that Geithner could actually solve the banking system’s woes. Still, since the rollout of the new Financial Stability Plan was highlighted several times during President Obama’s first press conference, and since it was delayed several days, investors were expecting more.

Here’s the problem. The country’s banks are still sitting on hundreds of billions of mortgage-related assets for which there are no buyers. A 2007 accounting standard — FAS 157, the so-called “fair value” or “mark to market” rule — requires the banks to carry these assets at market value, rather than at cost. How do you determine market value when there is no buyer?

Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs are said to have marked their mortgage-related securities down to 25 cents on the dollar. That’s probably an overly cautious valuation. It’s pretty clear that some other banks have not taken as conservative an approach, and so may face further write-offs. With each charge-off, the banks have to scurry around to bolster their capital ratios, to meet government standards. Their ability to lend depends on their underlying capital; consequently, banks are nervous about expanding their loan portfolios.

One of the rumors circulating last week was that the government would suspend FAS 157 to give the banks some breathing room.  The rationale for this suggestion (which has been widely endorsed) is that at critical times the market price may be misleading. For instance, Vince Farrell of Soleil Securities Research reports that a firm called Vernon Capital recently reviewed $1.4 trillion of Alt-A mortgages. Some $948 billion of these loans are current, in terms of interest and principal payments being up to date. Notwithstanding this, the loans are marked at 50 cents on the dollar. Why? Because a distressed financial institution dumped a portfolio of such loans to avoid failure, and that sale set the price. Normally, these assets would be carried at par.

I think that suspending mark-to-market is a good idea. Those opposing the move say that investors would lose confidence in the balance sheets of the banks. What confidence? Citigroup and Bank of America are selling at single-digit prices; I don’t think you can paint a darker picture.

Geithner probably chose not to follow this route because the administration is heeding the populist anger over handouts to banks and bankers. One of the shortcomings of his plan was its relatively small size. Though he talked in trillions, a good part of that presumed flow comes from the private sector. For his part, he seems reluctant to ask Congress for more than the $190 billion of the $350 billion in remaining TARP funds to shore up bank capital. That will not be adequate, which then leads to the notion that the “stress test” of banks — which was also proposed — will indeed lead to greater government ownership of these companies.

Geithner’s proposal was also criticized because it won’t be implemented for weeks, if not months. While our new president   has been talking immoderately of emergency and catastrophe in order to ram the stimulus bill through Congress, he apparently didn’t impress Geithner with that same sense of urgency.

820 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

HA BIBI
LL, See pg4 response on Obama thread, LOL
By HA BIBI on 02/14/2009 2:28 pm
Libra Lady
Elaine…thanks for directing me there…great post…
By Libra Lady on 02/14/2009 2:43 pm
beverly linens
Who in the hell are you?
By beverly linens on 02/13/2009 6:00 pm
Diamond In The Rough
beverly………….who in the hell are you???????? You writing a book or something?
By Diamond In The Rough on 02/13/2009 6:41 pm
alex harvey
Where is his college thesis? Where are his college friends? The list goes on.
By alex harvey on 02/14/2009 4:38 pm
Elizabeth L
HaHa Why are you such a knucklehead ? Why?
By Elizabeth L on 02/15/2009 1:00 pm
Diamond In The Rough
Elizabeth………Good afternoon. You writing a book too?
By Diamond In The Rough on 02/15/2009 1:46 pm
jules verne
http://www.snopes.com/politics/obama/birthcertificate.asp I cannot believe that this mumbo jumbo is still going on. First of all I don’t believe that Obama has millions yet in his bank account. He may have in his campaign coffers, but he can’t use that to fight personal battles. and to clarify what you might think is the obvious, I didn’t vote for him and I am reserving my opinion to say whether he is a good or bad president, until he fails or succeeds. he is my president and i do support him. other’s say here that our right wing politicians need to let go of this and focus on more imporant things like the economy, unemployment, education, homeless people, energy, global warming, war, illegal immigration and terrorism, well so do our citizens. i cannot believe that this thread has gotten this much attention.
By jules verne on 02/15/2009 8:41 pm
Mugsy Peabody
I have no interest in spending any time with people who know pretty much nothing about this topic. My thoughts are offered to all of you on my blog: www. mugsypeabody.blogspot.com, under “Once there was a way ….”
By Mugsy Peabody on 02/16/2009 2:49 am
Diamond In The Rough
Mugsy…….Thank you for the site…….I will check it out.
By Diamond In The Rough on 02/16/2009 9:40 am
Mugsy Peabody
Thanks, Ms. DITR. Not much more pressure and you’ll get there!
By Mugsy Peabody on 02/16/2009 3:47 pm
Andromeda Jakes

DItR

Good for me I don’t come here as often I did.  Junk.

By Andromeda Jakes on 02/17/2009 8:53 pm
rocky rocky
Ms Peek, you wrote: ” … How do you determine market value when there is no buyer? …” If there are no buyers, doesn’t that mean there is 0 — no, zip, zero — market value? Wouldn’t that encourage the mortgage-holding banks then to negotiate with the home owners, perhaps offering to lower interest rates, make them fixed rather than ARM’ed — even offer discounts of other kinds? Bet lots of foreclosures could be avoided in a “0” value market …
By rocky rocky on 02/13/2009 11:23 am
Patty E
Good Point!
By Patty E on 02/13/2009 12:04 pm
Zera Lee
You have touched one of the biggest sticking points, Rocky. Fair Market Value: “The price that an interested but not desperate buyer would be willing to pay and an interested but not desperate seller would be willing to accept on the open market assuming a reasonable period of time for an agreement to arise.” In the current environment, there is technically no “fair market value” possible - yet there has to be some value assigned to the properties before they can be sold or refinanced. Mark-to-Market: Recording the price or value of a security, portfolio, or account on a daily basis, to calculate profits and losses or to confirm that margin requirements are being met. By abandoning mark-to-market, the banks can assign the full pre-crash value, distancing the listed price from the street price. My first idea was to limit how much an ARM could reset in a single year, but that was back when these foreclosures first started. I thought that would buy time to refinance before prices dropped too far. Now, perhaps replacement cost would be a good place to start?
By Zera Lee on 02/20/2009 4:44 am