Highly critical opinion piece by Bloomberg columnist along the lines
of a very popular school of thought among progressives: something
needs to be done urgently but this is not it.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601039&sid=aMaWyNFImi4o
-----------------------------------------snip
What's stunning is how little the taxpayers would get in return for
their money under Paulson's package, and how illusory much of the
banks' newly minted capital would be.

Under the plan, Treasury would buy some companies' troubled assets at
above-market values. To boost their capital, Paulson would have to pay
the companies more than what their balance sheets say the assets are
worth. Then other companies would use the rigged prices to write up,
or avoid writing down, the values of similar holdings on their own
books.

So, the taxpayers get hosed on the asset purchases. Other banks use
the trumped-up prices to cook their books. And investor confidence
supposedly is restored.

That brings us to this question: Why would a smart guy like Hank
Paulson -- the former boss of Goldman Sachs -- advance such a dumb,
shady plan? Let us count the reasons:

No. 1: It delays our national reckoning until after the presidential election.

Paulson first floated a bailout Sept. 18, at the very hour when shares
of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley looked like they might
go into a death spiral. It's not so much a bailout, as it is a
timeout. He had to follow up with something, anything, to stop the
freefall from resuming. It didn't have to make sense.

So it doesn't. The plan is about creating the illusion of stronger
financial institutions, not strengthening them.

The banks know this. Otherwise, they would have stopped charging each
other near-record rates for three-month loans by now. The reason they
haven't is because they're still afraid their customers -- other banks
-- might go broke.

No. 2: The reckoning will be worse than you can imagine.

If Paulson were serious about recapitalizing rickety U.S. banks, he
would infuse them with hundreds of billions of dollars of fresh
government money, in exchange for ownership stakes. And if he wanted
to create market liquidity for all those troubled assets on their
books, he would be ordering banks to disclose everything there is to
know about them, so Mr. Market could figure out their present value.

He can't let that happen. Not now. If everyone could see how much the
toxic waste is worth, the writedowns would be so huge that many banks
would have to be declared insolvent.

Better to let the next administration deal with the clean- up. The
trouble is, the longer the government waits to address the banks' lack
of capital, the worse it gets, barring a miracle.

No. 3: He's helping his friends.

Is there any doubt? Let's see.

As of yesterday, Morgan Stanley Chief Executive John Mack owned 2.75
million shares of his company's stock, valued at about $67 million. If
Mack can get Morgan Stanley to trade reams of sketchy paper for
billions of dollars of our Treasury's cash, without diluting any of
his stake in the company, who benefits?

Paulson would have us believe it's you.

No. 4: There's an excellent chance the Congress will pass it. Leave
someone else to figure out the costs another day.


-raghu.

--
Today is National Existential Ennui Awareness Day.
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