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[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Steven Brant
Sent: March 16, 2008 1:14 PM
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Subject: [TriumphOfContent] Rescue Me: A Fed Bailout Crosses a Line (The NY
Times)


http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/16/business/16gret.html

The New York Times

March 16, 2008

Fair Game

Rescue Me: A Fed Bailout Crosses a Line

By GRETCHEN MORGENSON

WHAT are the consequences of a world in which regulators rescue even  
the financial institutions whose recklessness and greed helped create  
the titanic credit mess we are in? Will the consequences be an even  
weaker currency, rampant inflation, a continuation of the slow bleed  
that we have witnessed at banks and brokerage firms for the past year?

Or all of the above?

Stick around, because we'll soon find out. And it's not going to be  
pretty.

Agreeing to guarantee a 28-day credit line to Bear Stearns, by way of  
JPMorgan Chase, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York conceded last  
Friday that no sizable firm with a book of mortgage securities or  
loans out to mortgage issuers could be allowed to fail right now. It  
was the most explicit sign yet of the Fed's "Rescues 'R' Us" doctrine  
that already helped to force the marriage of Bank of America and  
Countrywide.

But why save Bear Stearns? The beneficiary of this bailout, remember,  
has often operated in the gray areas of Wall Street and with an  
aggressive, brass-knuckles approach. Until regulators came along in  
1996, Bear Stearns was happy to provide its balance sheet and  
imprimatur to bucket-shop brokerages like Stratton Oakmont and A. R.  
Baron, clearing dubious stock trades.

And as one of the biggest players in the mortgage securities business  
on Wall Street, Bear provided munificent lines of credit to public- 
spirited subprime lenders like New Century (now bankrupt). It is also  
the owner of EMC Mortgage Servicing, one of the most aggressive  
subprime mortgage servicers out there.

Bear's default rates on so-called Alt-A mortgages that it underwrote  
also indicates that its lending practices were especially lax during  
the real estate boom. As of February, according to Bloomberg data, 15  
percent of these loans in its underwritten securities were delinquent  
by more than 60 days or in foreclosure. That compares with an  
industry average of 8.4 percent.

Let's not forget that Bear Stearns lost billions for its clients last  
summer, when two hedge funds investing heavily in mortgage securities  
collapsed. And the firm tried to dump toxic mortgage securities it  
held in its own vaults onto the public last summer in an initial  
public offering of a financial company called Everquest Financial.  
Thankfully, that deal never got done.

Recall, too, that back in 1998, when the Long Term Capital Management  
hedge fund required a Fed-arranged bailout, Bear Stearns refused to  
join the rescue effort. Jimmy Cayne, then chief executive at the  
firm, told the Fed to take a hike.

And so, Bear Stearns, a firm that some say is this decade's version  
of Drexel Burnham Lambert, the anything-goes, 1980s junk-bond shop  
dominated by Michael Milken, is rescued. Almost two decades ago,  
Drexel was left to die.

Bear Stearns and Drexel have a lot in common. And yet their differing  
outcomes offer proof that we are in a very different and scarier  
place than in the late 1980s.

"Why not set an example of Bear Stearns, the guys who have this  
record of dog-eat-dog, we're brass knuckles, we're tough?" asked  
William A. Fleckenstein, president of Fleckenstein Capital in  
Issaquah, Wash., and co-author with Fred Sheehan of "Greenspan's  
Bubbles: The Age of Ignorance at the Federal Reserve." "This is the  
perfect time to set an example, but they are not interested in  
setting an example. We are Bailout Nation."

And so we are. After years of never allowing any of our financial  
institutions to fail, they have become so enormous that nobody will  
be allowed to sink beneath the waves. Otherwise, a tsunami would  
swamp the hedge funds, banks and other brokerage firms that remain  
afloat.

If Bear Stearns failed, for example, it would result in a wholesale  
dumping of mortgage securities and other assets onto a market that is  
frozen and where buyers are in hiding. This fire sale would force  
surviving institutions carrying the same types of securities on their  
books to mark down their positions, generating more margin calls and  
creating more failures.

As of last Nov. 30, Bear Stearns had on its books approximately $46  
billion of mortgages, mortgage-backed and asset-backed securities.  
Jettisoning such a portfolio onto a mortgage market that is not  
operative would, it is plain to see, be a disaster.

But, who knows what those mortgages are really worth? According to  
Bear Stearns's annual report, $29 billion of them were valued using  
computer models "derived from" or "supported by" some kind of  
observable market data. The value of the remaining $17 billion is an  
estimate based on "internally developed models or methodologies  
utilizing significant inputs that are generally less readily  
observable."

In other words, your guess is as good as mine.

To some degree, what happened at Bear, of course, was a classic run  
on the bank - the kind immortalized in Frank Capra's homage to  
financial responsibility, "It's a Wonderful Life." As fears about  
Bear's financial position heightened, its customers began demanding  
their cash and big hedge funds that were using the firm as an  
administrative back office or lender moved their accounts elsewhere.

In addition, institutions that had bought credit default swaps from  
Bear Stearns, insurance policies that protect against corporate bond  
defaults, were scrambling to undo those trades as the firm's ability  
to pay the claims looked dicier.

"For the government to print money at the expense of taxpayers as  
opposed to requiring or going about a receivership and wind-down of  
any insolvent institutions should be troubling to taxpayers and  
regulators alike," said Josh Rosner, an analyst at Graham Fisher &  
Company and an expert on mortgage securities. "The Fed has now  
crossed the line in a very clear way on 'moral hazard,' because they  
have opened the door to the view that they are required to save  
almost any institution through non-recourse loans - except the  
government doesn't have the money and it destroys the U.S.'s  
reputation as the broadest, deepest, most transparent and properly  
regulated capital market in the world."

And here is the unfortunate refrain. Investors, already mistrusting  
many corporate and government leaders, were once again assured that  
nothing was wrong - right up until the very end. So is it any wonder  
investors react to every market rumor of an impending failure with  
the certainty that it's true? In too many cases, the rumors turned  
out to be true, notwithstanding the attempts at reassurance by  
executives and policy makers.

Only last Monday, for example, Bear put out a press release saying,  
"there is absolutely no truth to the rumors of liquidity problems  
that circulated today in the market." The next day, Christopher Cox,  
the chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, said he was  
comfortable that the major Wall Street firms were resting on  
satisfactory "capital cushions."

Three days later, it was bailout time for Bear.

HERE is the bind the Fed is in: Like the boy who puts his finger in  
the dike to keep sea water from pouring in, the Fed finds that new  
leaks keep emerging.

Regulators must do whatever they can to keep the markets open and  
operating, and much of that relies upon the confidence of investors.  
But by offering to backstop firms like Bear, who were the very  
architects of their own - and the market's - current problems,  
overseers like the Fed undermine a little bit more of that confidence.

Another worry? How many well-capitalized institutions remain at the  
ready to take over those firms that may encounter turbulence in the  
future? Banks just do not have the capital that is needed to rescue  
troubled firms.

That will leave the taxpayer, alas. As usual.

Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company


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