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Is Geithner About to Go Gangster on the Banks?

Wednesday, March 25, 2009 | Teeka Tiwari
Was Monday's meteoric move higher a bullish orgy of renewed confidence, or simply a short-term bear capitulation top?

We have to ask ourselves, was the move really about Geithner's Toxic Asset plan, or did it have more to do with the shorts all running for the exits because they fear we could be at the end of the credit crisis?

Remember: bear market rallies have more to do with fear of an impending bull market rather than an actual bull market taking place.  The short seller lives in fear of the next bull market the way the long buyer lives in fear of the next bear market.

It's the same fear and greed cycle, just in reverse.

If we look hard at the plan, does it really have all the ingredients needed to bring about the end of the credit crisis?  I don’t know that it does, and I certainly want you to weigh in on the subject.

The plan boils down to the banks being compelled to unload their assets at a price set by competing bids by private money that will be backed by federal guarantees.  But what if the banks don’t want to sell?  Both CitiGroup and Bank of America have already publicly stated that they don't think making these asset sales is in the best interests of their share holders. 

That's the problem with not letting these guys fail.  The bankers feel that they have all of the power.

What we need to see is a declaration of power from the Treasury, a line drawn in the sand.  The fat cat bankers need to know that if they mess with the bull they're gonna get the horns.  Is Treasury going to get all “Godfather” on the banks and tell them, "sell us your assets on the cheap or we are going to put you out of business"? 

That is exactly the type of action that they need to take.

It's time to be bold, not meek and mild mannered.  These CEO types are getting fat off the food of OUR tables.  It's our money, and the government is supposed to be OUR advocate and steward.

Remember the golden rule: He who has the gold makes the rules.  How has the Treasury department forgotten that?

This plan would have a very good chance of working were it applied to banks that have gone into receivership.  But from what we read, apparently no one is allowed to go out of business anymore.  How cool is that?  You can run your business into the ground, make horrific mistakes that impact tens of millions of people, lose hundreds of billions of dollars AND you can stay in business!!!

The government's on the hook for trillions anyway ... what does Geithner have to lose by getting tough with the banks?  Not a gosh darn thing! 

Geithner needs to play hardball with these guys and take control of the situation.  To make this plan work, he must compel the banks to offload the bad assets at a price that makes sense for both private and public capital, period.

Maybe the “stress tests” that Geithner talked about a few months ago will be the guise used to compel the banks to “take the deal or else.”  The “or else” being the forced takeover of the bank by the FDIC.  Just how “gangster” will Geithner get?

There are very few genuine hardball, “stick to your guns” type of people left in this world; is Geithner one of them?  For the sake of our financial system, I certainly hope so.

If this plan fails to gain traction quickly with the necessary participants, it will set the stage for the next leg lower.  Without question, it would force a retest of lows on the DOW and S&P and quite possibly far lower than that.  Don't under estimate just how important this plan is for the future financial health of our country ... it's critically important.

You cannot have a recovery without a healthy banking system, period.  The bears will be all over this story, and on the slightest slip they'll be ready with their sell orders once again.

The whole game comes down to visibility ... if The Street sees nothing but endless blackness ahead of it, then the bear market goes on, but if it can see some light then you can make a case for the stabilization of prices.

Visibility entails having a workable model of when banks will be recapitalized, and when their write off period will be over.

This plan certainly shows the first glimmer of hope in that direction, but in a desert, every patch of shimmering sand can look like an oasis.



Teeka Tiwari
Chief Investment Officer
ETF Master Trader
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27 Comments

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  1. parag (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    teeka tiwari hits the nail on the head.he is like the "arjun" in the "mahabharat" who sees only the eye of the fish & nothing else.
  2. othoschild (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    My bank is already in process of paying back the very small amount of TARP it was forced to take (for "participation sake"),in PDQ fashion. The CEO referred to the whole deal as the worst bait-and- switch he has ever seen. I agree completely. This whole thing reeks.
  3. Earl (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Poor old Tika has lost it at last. He is raving and snarling at the gutless wonder, Tim Geithner as to what he should to, etc. etc. as if there were some reality in all this. Tike has enough experience to know, one would think, that in this time there is not reason, no rules and no sensibilty. When you have rather simple minded technocrats like Geithner running the Treasury and spending our money by the trillion there is truly no hope for the rest of us. Of course this is when the runaway bulls are picking up millions of points buying everything while the brains are debating " is the bottom in yet?" No sense to it all, but that is truly the secret of the markets. Meanwhile, keep your eye out for black swans.
  4. TABI (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    The report was fantastic,since i have been receiving reports,i am sure this is one of the best that has profited me enough

    Regards

    John Bisong
  5. David (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Will the plan work? Yes. It was always going to work once treasury and the fed got on the same page and said they would provide whatever liquidity was necessary. That was before Lehmans went into bankruptcy so the problem that caused the freeze up in the financial system was that they did not do what they said they were going to.



    Now that a stress test has been formulated they can identify those at risk of failure and make a decision to either provide some Tarp funds or wind them up.

    I do have some difficulty with the administration deciding who survives and who doesn't but remember the golden rule. He who has the POWER makes the rules.

    The public elected the administration and if you believe in democracy you end up having to put up with the bad as well as the good and if you don't like the outcome you have the ability to influence future decision making at the next election.

    If the stress test does not give reason to believe the organisation is at risk of imminent failure then it should be the organisations choice as to what assets they retain or sell. That too is democracy in action.

    Having the facility there will still help even if it is not actually needed in the end.
  6. John (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    An easier way to deal with the problem is to change the laws that require the regulators to close banks that are not meeting the capital requirements, so that the regulators can have forebearance. The banks are being killed by slavishness to mark to market. That would do more for the balance sheets of the banks than anything. Then private capital can come in and invest money in the banks with the idea of making a profit from the toxic assets. That's better than giving deals to a few big money insiders.
  7. bob.kostiuck (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    OK - so the banks want to do right by their shareholders. The public ARE shareholders, until thy pay back to bailout money. And never mind that some of the banks (WFC? MS? GS?) "did not need" the billions. Pay it back and so what you want. Until then do what WE want.
  8. Pat (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Bang on analysis...whatb scares me is that the Feds fear being labelled as "communists" if they make moves to take over the banks...and that is what likely holds them back. As a tax payer I am fed up with helping these incompetent execs and for that matter (up here in Canada)the auto workers who expect more than what they are worth to the companies. Your npresident is hoefully ready to change his name to Barak "Obuyin"!

    Pat
  9. Joe (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    This is a difficult situation made more difficult than it needs to be by the refusal to allow these companies to go into receivership or a chapter 11 pre-packaged bankruptcy. The failure to reform the onerous mark-to-market rules and/or to establish a new ratings system specifically for loans collateralized by real estate has exacerbated the problem exponentially. This new program is an interesting attempt but probably another swing and a miss for the Obama Treasury department. The FDIC guarantees are a major problem and it seems odd that they will be directly guaranteeing debt in a way similar to that of the FHA. It’s called the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, not the Federal “Debt” Insurance Corporation. The stockholders and bondholders of troubled financial and other companies need to take a haircut through prepackaged bankruptcies. That includes the auto companies. When investors bought the equity and the debt, they knew there was a risk and bought anyway. Now this new giveaway by the executive branch transfers the risk from these troubled companies to the citizens of this country and gives the purchasers of “toxic” assets a non-recourse loan to purchase those assets. The additional contingent liability will be enormous, but I guess the Fed can just print up or electronically create more trillions of dollars out of nothing to cover their guarantees.
  10. Larry (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Teeka,



    I'm under the impression that these "toxic assets" are the 2nd and 3rd tier repackaging of the resold mortgages (derivatives?) that were at risk of default. If so, wouldn't these be hard to track down since they were sold to foreign investors in foreign markets?

    L.B.

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