Category Archives: Regulations and regulators

Rogoff: Central Banks At Risk of Sinking Along With Banks

This Guardian article by Kenneth Rogoff (hat tip Mark Thoma) sends a blunt warning: central banks are taking on so much dodgy debt that they will put themselves at risk if they continue extending support to their banking systems. Rogoff argues (as we have) that the banking system needs to shrink (an inevitable consequence of […]

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Freddie, Fannie and (Sort of) Federal Home Loan Bank Bailout

The deed is done. Freddie and Fannie are now officially in conservatorship. Uncharacteristically, I listened to the presentation by Paulson and Jim Lockhart, which was thin on details (particularly size of new facilities and investments). The bombshell was the aside that not only is there to be a new secured lending facility for the GSE […]

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Bye Bye Banks: Freddie and Fannie Preferred Holders to Take Big Hits?

The reporting on the main elements of the Freddie and Fannie rescue plan is converging as the content of official briefings leaks out. The stunner, which contradicts preliminary reports, is that the preferred shareholders in the GSEs will take losses. The Wall Street Journal reports that dividends on common will be eliminated and those on […]

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Trichet: "Reasonable Conjecture" That Investors Distorted Commodity Markets

Now it’s semi-official. A respected financial figure, no less a central bank chief with his reputation still intact, has said in bureaucrat-speak that speculation may indeed have had something to do with recent oil price moves. That view was nearly heretical until the rapid fall in oil prices began in July. From the Financial Times: […]

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NY Times: Freddie Overstated Its Capital

The New York Times, in “Loan Giant Overstated Its Capital Base,” sets forth an interesting bill of particulars as to where Freddie deviated from what one might consider a full and fair statement of its financial condition. Indeed, the article says that the widely-expected Sunday intervention was triggered by the GSE’s regulator determining that the […]

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Two Surprisingly Costly Bank Failures in Two Weeks

Reader Steve A has been on the Friday night FDIC bank euthanasia watch, and in the last two weeks, he has discerned a disturbing trend. If this pattern persists, it seems a sign that things in bank-land may be much worse than is widely acknowledged. From last week’s post, “This Week’s Bank Failure Surprisingly Costly,” […]

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NY Times: Fannie, Freddie Nationalization (aka Conservatorship) Imminent

Guess the powers that be were unwilling to risk playing chicken with the markets and losing. So much for the theory espoused by some that the government couldn’t put the GSEs into custodianship absent a breaching of statutory minimums (technically, by being insolvent under the “fair asset” valuation method, Freddie is already on plenty thin […]

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Euro Banks Tank as ECB Tightens Rules on Liquidity Facilities

The ECB, like the Federal Reserve, implemented bank liquidity facilities which (in oversimplified terms) allow them to pledge collateral in exchange for cash. The ECB has been more liberal in the types of collateral that it accepts, which has led to some pretty blatant gaming of the system (and God only knows how much slippery […]

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Bill Gross Says Nothing is Going Up, So Treasury Must Intervene

Bill Gross of Pimco’s monthly newsletter, “There’s a Bull Market Somewhere?” is out and making the rounds. The title refers to a Jim Cramer dictum. The bond chief uses it to argue that asset prices are declining on all fronts, which he then contends that the US government must reverse (boldface his): because in a […]

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Setser: "If trends continue…..Agencies won’t be able to rollover their debt"

Brad Setser is thoughtful and data driven, but he also isn’t shy about saying what numbers portend, even if he runs the risk of sounding a tad alarmist. We’ve had so much complacency, followed by concerted efforts to keep asset values and confidence aloft that an unvarnished presentation can come off as a dousing of […]

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Troubling Signs From Fed’s Jackson Hole Conference

It’s hard to discern what took place in a closed-door session at a remove, but some of the tidbits coming from last weekend’s Federal Reserve conference at Jackson Hole were worrisome. Note I didn’t have this sense about last year’s meetings, based on a reading of Jim Hamilton’s commentary (which may simply mean Hamilton was […]

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Why No Questions About Special NYMEX Trading Session?

Reader Paul e-mailed about the special, early opening of the NYMEX to permit pre-Gustav trading. As he correctly noted: I have NEVER heard of a US market opening early due to macro events; the usual move is to CLOSE during exceptional circumstances. Neither have I. This looks pretty suspicious. Did some influential parties need to […]

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