by MrBill » Fri 01 Aug 2008, 04:00:08
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('threadbear', 'I')f they let the banks fail, the dollar is sure to follow, and that's the one thing the status quo international elites don't want. A highly volatile currency or one that's plummeting in value, is unlikely to retain reserve currency status.
The best thing to do, is to socialize the losses AND all future profits by nationalizing F and F. As it stands now, the elites are using the tax payer to bail them out, but they will retain future profits, depending on the terms of the deal, which will likely be tailored in their benefit.
Yes. I agree. If they are going to be bailed out by the government by converting an implicit guarantee into an explicit guarantee then they should be properly nationalized so that any future profits go back to the taxpayer to pay for the bailout in the first place.
There was $5 trillion at risk. Bankruptcy is bankruptcy. That there are assets (mortgages) that can be sold-off for their salvage value after the fact means very little if Freddie and Fannie's debts exceed their capital and they run out of liquidity. You still have to find a buyer for all those outstanding mortgages.
Merrill Lynch sold-off $30 billion of their CDS for 22-cents on the dollar, and are still on the hook if their value falls by more than $1.7 billion as a potential liability. Freddie and Fannie's mortgage book is substantially larger. And given the huge market consequences of their demise there would be even fewer Lone Stars out there with that type of liquidity willing to buy up all those assets.
As it is Freddie and Fannie are the only buyers of mortgages at the moment because no other banks have the capital or the risk appetite to take on those assets in a still falling housing market. Despite having access to the Fed window for additional liquidity.
If you want to look at it rationally there was no reason that the stock market crash in 1929 had to turn into the Great Depression, but it happened. That is the problem with financial crashes. They take on a llife of their own, and once the downward momentum starts no one can say with any certainty where they will end. And a financial tsunami wipes out everything in its path. Not just risky debt and poor lending decisions, but everything and everyone caught up in its path.
We should not be in the position in the first place. How two quasi-public institutions came to be sitting on 80-percent of the US mortgage market without greater Federal oversight, and the mirage that they were not supported by an implicit guarantee is an international joke. But once the reality of the situation became clear policy makers had to sacrafice limb to save the patient's life. Not to have done so would have started an international stampede out of US treasuries and US dollars. As unpalatable as an open cheque policy towards Freddie and Fannie might be at least it guarantees their survival. Now step two is to nationalize them and finish the job.
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.