Mar
05
Posted (Van Santos) in Business on March-5-2009

For months now, the Fed and the Treasury Secretaries (Paulsen and Geithner) have expressed confidence in the free market. Extreme market conditions call for unprecedented actions by the government, all in the name of propping up the U.S. financial system. What if, however, there is more at work?

Yesterday, the Fed refused to provide information on what financial institutions obtained money. The reasoning? Such information would potentially damage the reputations and/or create a lack of confidence in banks that obtained money.

Fed Refuses to Release Bank Lending Data, Insists on Secrecy

The Fed refused yesterday to disclose the names of the borrowers and the loans, alleging that it would cast “a stigma” on recipients of more than $1.9 trillion of emergency credit from U.S. taxpayers and the assets the central bank is accepting as collateral.

If you note, the same article points out:

Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and then Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said in September they would meet congressional demands for transparency in a $700 billion bailout of the banking system.

What changed between September and now? Aside from the economic desperation increasing more than anyone could have expected, not much else. Auditors, economists and government officials all knew the financial institutions were facing insolvency. The financial markets were well aware then, as they are now, the banks were on the brink. As such, it is hard to make the argument that confidence in banking system would be tarnished by releasing information showing who received money.

The damage is done; the horse is out of the barn.

While reassuring to hear the Fed say transparency would be forthcoming, the reality is the Federal Reserve acts independently of Congress and the President. This body has the ability to do whatever they wish, without the need for government approval and have no duty to explain their actions to a governing body.

Maybe the lack of transparency comes from the Federal Reserve deciding who is going to survive the crisis? Maybe the Federal Reserve is taking advantage of the credit crisis in order to reshape the financial system after years of neglect.

I do not wish to sound paranoid, or some crackpot conspiracy theorist, but looking at the whole body of evidence it is clear the Federal Reserve, as well as the Treasury, is withholding information for some unknown reasons. Be it a lack of economic understanding, or something more calculated, it’s clear there is an undercurrent the general public is being left out of.

If the actions of the Federal Reserve are designed to select the survivors of the financial crisis, and not let the market direct such a decision, this would be a clear sign that the idea of capitalism as the world believed it to be was a failure.



 
Sep
06
Posted (Van Santos) in Business on September-6-2008

Another bank hit the skids today – Silver State Bank in Nevada.

Silver State had 12 branches in Nevada and Arizona as well as loan offices in Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Washington, Oregon, California and Florida.  As of June 30th, Silver State had $2 billion in assets and $1.7 billion in deposits.  All insured deposits will be assumed by Nevada State Bank and brances will be open on Monday.

Ok, a small bank isn’t too bad but there is news that Fannie Mac and Freddie Mac will be taken over by the government this weekend.  In terms of big business events, this one is HUGE.  According to the article the cost to the tax payer is yet known but you can be 99.999% sure that any share holder equity will be wiped out.  (Translation – the stock will be worthless)

While I would never have been a long term share holder of either company, I think it is highly irresponsible for for Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson to come out and claim there would be no Bail Out of either company. Also, in July, each company said they had plenty of capital to withstand the mortgage meltdown.  Either conditions drastically changed or the companies were lying to investors, as well as the public.

Expect banks to continue to fail over the next several months but, remember, we are not in a banking collapse, we are experiencing a correction.