Yearly Archives: 2008

Protests Against Bailout Bill Registering With Congress

We received this e-mail today from one of the Congressional staffers who has taken to corresponding with us (boldface ours): I know that people are often cynical about contacting their representatives. Frankly, they should be. Most days, the overwhelming volume of constituent contacts is form letter e-mails, pre-printed postcards, blast faxes, and automated phone calls. […]

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$5 Trillion Needed to Stop Bank Crisis, Says Japanese Expert

Ken Ohmae, former head of McKinsey’s Tokyo office (disclosure: I have a passing acquaintence with him and he was enormously well regarded in his day despite being a tireless self-promoter) says that the Paulson program is grossly inadequate and the magnitude of the US crisis is so large that a $5 trillion international facility is […]

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SEC’s Cox Calls for Authority to Regulate Credit Default Swaps

Nothing like a turf war to wake up a sleepy regulator. It seems rather telling that Cox has developed a sudden interest in the credit default swaps market a mere day after New York State announced that it will regulate the product (to the limited extent it can) starting January of next year. (Although the […]

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Bernanke Tells Congress Economy Will Contract if Bailout Bill Not Passed (Updated)

It is becoming clear that Bernanke simply does not get it. Just as he once thought subprime was contained, and has continued to misread the nature and trajectory of the credit crisis, so too he has said that there is a way out of it that involves little or no cost in terms of growth. […]

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Banks Take Bigger-Than-Estimated Hit on Freddie, Fannie Conservatorship

We have said more than once that a terribly misguided aspect of the Freddie and Fannie conservarorship was the elimination of dividends on the GSE’s preferred stock. Preferred was the best vehicle that struggling financial firms had for raising new capital. Eliminating the dividend lead to big losses in all financial preferred stocks, since investors […]

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Links 9/23/08

It Takes Just One Village to Save a Species New York Times John le Carré: Britons have been ‘stripped’ of civil liberties Telegraph Press Coddles Banks With Pulled Punches Gawker (hat tip Cash Mundy) Lehman Brothers reveal £100m pensions hole Times Online An Open Letter to the U.S. Congress Regarding the Current Financial Crisis John […]

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"Hedge funds suffer mass redemptions"

One sign that the credit crisis is accelerating: Nouriel Roubini’s forecasts are coming to fruition faster. In the past, Roubini has too often played the role of seemingly mad prophet in the wilderness until he is proven correct. His calls that the housing bubble would collapse in a nasty way, that subprime was most certainly […]

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New York to Regulate Some Credit Default Swaps

I’m glad someone is trying to keep his eye on the ball. With serial bailouts artists Paulson and Bernanke working full bore on their showstopper, they’ve somehow managed to overlook the most obvious culprit for a systemic crisis, namely, the credit default swaps market (yes, rescuing AIG was an effort to keep that market from […]

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Some (Sort of) Encouraging News on the Bailout Bill

Readers may recall I included an excerpt of an e-mail from a Congressional staffer in our weekend takedown of the bailout bill, which got pointed to widely, including on some political sites. This in turn has elicited more observations from insiders, this one a Congressional aide. Not only do the markets not like the bill, […]

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Markets Vote Against Bailout Bill; Dodd Circulating Variant, Takes Equity for Dodgy Debt (Updated)

Aha, Congress isn’t being so supine after all. Christopher Dodd, who in his initial press comments seemed to be behind the Paulson bailout plan, instead appears to be supportive of the general concept of Doing Something, as opposed to the particular embodiment served up by the Administration. Dodd is circulating a draft bill of his […]

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Hedge Fund Customer Assets Stuck for "Months" at Lehman

One of the reasons that Bear Stearns unraveled so quickly was that hedge fund customers and trading counterparties started reducing their exposures out of fear that their funds would become subject to a bankruptcy proceeding, leaving them unable to trade them. Worse, as some hedge funds are learning, customer agreements permitted Lehman (as most other […]

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China’s Sinopec to Cut Oil Imports

So much for the thesis that China’s oil imports would rise relentlessly, which by implication said they would be immune to the advanced economy slowdown. Sinopec, the largest refiner in China, is reducing its oil imports. But oil has bounced up and is now trading at over $100 a barrel. So much for the theory […]

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