CureZone.com   Educating Instead of Medicating Like CureZone website on Facebook
Home > Forums17983 visitors online now Add To Favorites Log On    Join/Sign Up    User Finder   Inbox New

Banks’ ‘Catatonic Fear’ Means Consumers Don’t Get TARP Relief

Forum: Conspiracy Theories,  Job Search
Read This First:  BSA  RN  ALL R  ~BSA  ~RN  RRR  RR  R  Image Embedded  Video Embedded Audio Embedded   Images   Description   Conspiracy Books   Rules
  Home
   Forums
      Conspiracy Theories Forum   Job Search
Search CureZone:
 
 
  • Image Embedded ADP Reports 693,000 Private-Sector Jobs Lost in December by TheObserver   4 year  1,088  Conspiracy Theories / Job Search
    • U.S. factories in November fell twice as much as forecast by TheObserver   4 year  974
      • Banks’ ‘Catatonic Fear’ Means Consumers Don’t Get TARP Relief  by TheObserver   4 year  1,062
        This is my avatar. Click here to see my profile.
        TheObserver
        Banks’ ‘Catatonic Fear’ Means Consumers Don’t Get TARP Relief
        PM TheObserver
        Date: 1/8/2009 6:07:08 AM   ( 4 year ago )
        Hits:   1062   Size: 10599 char.  
        URL:   http://curezone.com/forums/fm.asp?i=1330226
        Bad Message Alert: Alert Moderators on This BAD Message   Good Message Alert: Alert Moderators on This GOOD Message

        Banks’ ‘Catatonic Fear’ Means Consumers Don’t Get TARP Relief
        Email | Print | A A A

        By James Sterngold

        Jan. 5 (Bloomberg) -- As the new owner of $172.5 billion of preferred shares and warrants in 208 U.S. financial institutions, the Treasury Department hasn’t succeeded in thawing frozen credit markets, leaving taxpayers propping up an industry that won’t lend to them.

        While inter-bank lending rates have fallen since Congress approved the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program on Oct. 3, most bank lending to consumers remains tight and interest rates high. The average credit-card rate was 14.33 percent on Dec. 16, according to IndexCreditCards.com in Cleveland, almost unchanged from 14.41 percent in October 2007.

        That’s prompted criticism from Alan S. Blinder, a professor of economics at Princeton University in New Jersey and a former Federal Reserve vice chairman, who says the government should take a more active role as a stakeholder in the nation’s banks.

        “With the banks in a state of catatonic fear now, they’re just sitting on the capital,” Blinder said in an interview. “I don’t fault the banks one bit, since this shows Wall Street they’re safer, but then this doesn’t get you much improvement. If you’re taking money from the public purse, we should get something in return, and we’re really not.”

        Jeffrey Garten, a professor of international trade and finance at the Yale School of Management in New Haven, Connecticut, and a Commerce Department undersecretary during the Clinton administration, says banks should be forced to increase their lending or risk having taxpayer money taken away.

        “The government isn’t acting aggressively enough to demand a quid pro quo,” Garten said. “The public good is the key to the private good in this case. It’s not the other way around.”

        $8.5 Trillion

        Although the government has committed more than $8.5 trillion to energizing the economy, and the Fed cut a key lending rate almost to zero, banks haven’t made it easier to borrow. The Fed said consumer credit fell by $6.4 billion in August, the largest drop in 65 years, and then by $3.5 billion in October, the first time since 1992 that there were two months of declines in a year.

        In its most recent quarterly Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey in October, the Fed reported that about 85 percent of U.S. banks said they had tightened standards on commercial and industrial loans to companies with more than $50 million in annual sales, up from 60 percent in July. Ninety-five percent said they increased the cost of those loans. About 70 percent said they made it more difficult to obtain prime mortgages, and almost 65 percent said they did the same for consumer loans.

        Mortgage Rates

        While mortgage rates have declined, they haven’t fallen as fast as bank borrowing rates, meaning financial institutions are demanding more profit for every dollar they lend. Average rates on 30-year residential mortgages fell to 5.14 percent last month, according to data compiled by McLean, Virginia-based Freddie Mac. That’s down from 6.67 percent in June 2007, before the worst turmoil in the housing market. At the same time, the spread of mortgage rates over the 10-year Treasury bond yield rose to 2.958 percentage points from 1.567.

        The spread of rates on so-called jumbo mortgages, those of more than $729,750, is close to a record at 1.6 percentage points above the rate for smaller mortgages that conform to terms of ones Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae will purchase, according to financial data firm BanxQuote in White Plains, New York. A year ago the difference was 0.23 percentage points.

        High interest rates have angered consumers. The Fed has offered relief in the form of rule changes that allow banks to raise rates only on new credit cards and future purchases, not on existing balances. Banks will also have to give cardholders 45 days notice of changes in terms, up from 15 days. Those changes aren’t scheduled to take effect until July 2010.

        ‘We Own Them’

        “We own them now, and we should use that to make sure they stop ripping us off,” said Gail Hillebrand, head of the financial-services campaign at Consumers Union, an advocacy group based in Yonkers, New York. “We shouldn’t allow banks to use the money to support things that hurt consumers and taxpayers. What we’re looking for is responsible behavior, not social benefits.”

        Bank profits or returns on the government investments are secondary concerns, Hillebrand said.

        That view is opposed by free-market advocates such as Gary Becker, a professor of economics and sociology at the University of Chicago and a Nobel Prize winner, who says the primary aim of the government bailout should be a hasty withdrawal from investments that shouldn’t have been made in the first place.

        “If you believe in a private-enterprise system, you use competition to control the banks, not a stakeholding,” Becker said. “It would be a grave mistake to use these private institutions for social goals.”

        Paulson Changes Course

        Diane Casey-Landry, chief operating officer of the American Bankers Association, a trade group in Washington, said that bank profitability had to come ahead of any demand to ease lending.

        “Taxpayers should get a return on their investment,” Casey-Landry said. “We have to go back to a time when we realize not everyone is entitled to get a loan. What is going to get us out of this recession is sound lending to people who are going to pay it back, not throwing money at people who can’t.”

        When Congress passed the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act in October authorizing TARP, the funds were supposed to be used to acquire troubled mortgage-related assets from banks in order to ease credit.

        “The underlying weakness in our financial system today is the illiquid mortgage assets that have lost value as the housing correction has proceeded,” Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said on Sept. 19. “These illiquid assets are choking off the flow of credit that is so vitally important to our economy. When the financial system works as it should, money and capital flow to and from households and businesses to pay for home loans, school loans and investments that create jobs.”

        TARP Allocations

        Two weeks after the legislation was passed, Paulson changed course and said it was more important to recapitalize the banks, allowing them to determine how best to deploy their capital.

        Since then, Treasury has allocated $250 billion to buy non- voting preferred shares of banks paying a 5 percent annual dividend, as well as warrants convertible into equity. The investments range from $25 billion each in JPMorgan Chase & Co., Citigroup Inc. and Wells Fargo & Co. in San Francisco to $1.6 million in Westminster, California-based Saigon National Bank.

        In addition, $40 billion has gone to New York-based American International Group Inc.; another $20 billion to Citigroup in New York, along with a $5 billion guarantee against possible losses; $20 billion to purchase consumer and small-business loans; and $13.4 billion to Detroit-based automakers General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC.

        ‘No New Lending’

        Last week the government announced that $5 billion of TARP funds would be used to purchase preferred shares and warrants in GMAC LLC, the automaker’s financing arm, with Treasury separately lending another $1 billion to GM to support GMAC’s transition into a bank holding company.

        With the exception of GMAC, which immediately began offering loans to GM customers with lower credit scores in order to halt the decline in auto sales, most financial institutions that received TARP funds have been reluctant to lend.

        “Right now there is no new lending, and without new lending it’s going to be difficult for the economy to recover,” Roger Altman, founder and chief executive officer of boutique investment bank Evercore Partners Inc. and an assistant Treasury secretary in the Carter administration, said in a Dec. 29 interview with Bloomberg TV.

        Stifling Innovation

        A report released Dec. 2 by the Government Accountability Office in Washington questioned whether Treasury is policing the cascade of federal money closely enough.

        “Although Treasury has said that it expects the institutions to increase the flow of credit,” the report said the department “has not yet determined whether it will impose reporting requirements on the participating financial institutions.”

        David John, a senior fellow with the Heritage Foundation, a public policy and research group in Washington, said it was inappropriate for the government to demand policy changes from the banks and that doing so would be counterproductive because it would stifle innovation. Instead, he said banks should use the capital to recover stability and then be forced to return the taxpayer funds.

        “Bureaucrats take no risks, they have no ideas,” John said. “If this recoups a profit for the taxpayer, great, but a slight loss would be acceptable. I don’t see it as a long-term value to be an activist shareholder.”

        ‘No Road Map’

        There are no partisan lines separating those who favor a passive investment strategy and those who want the government to play a more active role.

        “I do not see the Treasury or the Fed as active investors in the banks, and it would be a mistake if they were,” said Martin N. Baily, a chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers in the Clinton administration and now a senior fellow at the Washington-based Brookings Institution. “The goal is to stabilize the financial sector and to be mindful of the costs to taxpayers. Perhaps there will be positive returns on these investments, but not necessarily.”

        Bruce Josten, executive vice president for governmental affairs at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, a pro-business group, said taxpayers had a right to expect a loosening of credit by the banks, though the government “shouldn’t micromanage them.”

        “I don’t think there’s one good answer here,” Josten said. “There’s no paint-by-the-numbers road map. It’s all improvised.”

        For Garten, the unprecedented nature and scale of the problems means that policy makers and taxpayers will have to get used to a new way of thinking as long as the crisis lasts.

        “There’s a philosophical conflict in the American mind because we’re just not used to this level of intervention,” Garten said. “That hang-up is not compatible with the depth of this crisis.”

        To contact the reporter on this story: James Sterngold in Los Angeles at jsterngold2@bloomberg.net

        Last Updated: January 5, 2009 00:01 EST

        Reply to This Message   Post a Reply to this message by using a plain text editor  Post a Reply to this message by using an advanced HTML text processor called FCK  Post a Reply to this message by using an advanced HTML text processor called Tiny MCE
        Printer-friendly version of this page
        Email this message to a friend
        Bookmark this page/Add to Favorites or press Ctrl+D
        Alert Webmaster & Moderators
        Bad Message Alert: Alert Moderators on This BAD Message  Good Message Alert: Alert Moderators on This GOOD Message
        How do you feel about this message?     Agree     Disagree       Hide this question

        0 of 0 (0%) readers agree with this message.  Hide votes     What is this?
        How do you feel about this message?     Agree     Disagree       Hide this question

        This message was cross-posted across the next forums: 1.   Conspiracy Theories Forum
        2.   Job Search Forum
        Find & Order All Messages Posted by TheObserver
        by













































 

 

 


 

Donate to CureZone

 


Share:  Facebook  MySpace  Digg  Reddit  StumbleUpon  Furl this page  Delicious  Magnolia  Mixx  BlinkList  dzone  Spurl  Simpy.com  Fark.com  BlogMarks  Wists.com  Google

Translate This Page:

French    German    Spain    Italian    Dutch    Russian    Portuguese    Japanese    Korean    Arabic    Chinese Simplified



 


Guest Book - Liver Flush FAQ - News - Link Exchange - Add URL - How To Exchange Links? - About Global Directory

Terms of Service - Privacy Policy - Spam Policy - Disclaimer - Guidelines & Rules - Forum Trolls - Fair use notice

Staff's pages:  Owen - Wrenn - Maya


CureZone Newsletter is distributed in partnership with www.netatlantic.com


Contact Us - About - Donors - Stats



Copyright 1996 - 2012 curezone.com


fetched in 0.30 sec at 6/19/2013 3:39:37 AM, requested by 107.21.156.140, referred by http://curezone.com/forums/fm.asp?i=1330226 , requested 1 pages in this session, y=6