[A few days old, but still interesting.]

from SLATE:
Fed Cred
The Federal Reserve comes (almost) clean about all the crazy stuff it
did in 2008.

By Annie Lowrey
Posted Thursday, Dec. 2, 2010, at 6:50 PM ET


The Federal Reserve has made public an enormous trove of data about
the emergency measures it took during the worst of the credit crunch
and the ensuing recession. It's confusing stuff: arcane spreadsheets
showing more than 21,000 transactions totaling more than $3.3 trillion
via an alphabet soup of programs. (Gratuitous example: the
Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity
Facility, or, well, ABCPMMMFLF.) Still, the revelations provide a
fascinating glimpse into the workings of the Fed in the apocalyptic
days of 2008, when the world economy was on the verge of collapse.
They also leave one major question unanswered.

First things first: Why did the notoriously shy Fed post the detailed
data this week? Because Congress forced it to. The Dodd-Frank
financial-reform law included a provision, authored by longtime critic
of Fed secrecy Sen. Bernie Sanders, requiring the disclosure of the
information by Dec. 1. Right on deadline, the central bank opened up.
During its multitrillion-dollar rescue of the financial system, the
Fed continued its usual policy of omertà, shrugging off requests from
politicians and journalists for information about the trillions in
emergency loans it was making. By way of explanation, the Fed told
Bloomberg at the time that the country was facing "an unprecedented
crisis" wherein "loss in confidence in and between financial
institutions can occur with lightning speed and devastating effects."
Essentially, the Fed worried that more information might make a very
bad situation even worse.

But now—with the recovery under way and bank profits healthy again—the
Fed has coughed the data up. The trove shows which firms used what
facilities, when, for how much, and on what terms. (The Wall Street
Journal has a handy tool so that the curious don't need to wade
through spreadsheets.)
It makes for interesting reading—or, at least, holds some interesting
revelations even for those not tickled by the sight of spreadsheets.
Consider the case of investment-banking giant Goldman Sachs, whose
transactions with the Fed are here. The company, among the most
profitable on Wall Street, has boasted that it would have been able to
survive the crisis without government assistance. President Gary Cohn
said it explicitly in Vanity Fair last year, in a piece by my fellow
Moneybox columnist Bethany McLean. "I think we would not have failed,"
he said. "We had cash."

That always seemed disingenuous at best. And we now know the firm
borrowed more, earlier, and for longer than its executives would at
the time admit. In more than 60 transactions before the collapse of
Lehman Bros., starting in earnest in April, the firm went to the
government for cash. "At that time, the market had not recognized the
depth of the problems," says Karen Shaw Petrou of Federal Financial
Analytics. "It really shows how ill-prepared they were for a liquidity
crisis."

The day after Lehman failed—the epicenter of the credit crunch, when
the entire global market panicked—the Goldman Sachs' broker-dealer
borrowed $18 billion, while its London subsidiary borrowed an
additional $6 billion. Its daily borrowing peaked in October at more
than $35 billion. Other revelations confirm suspicions about how weak
the biggest banks became. Barclays, the British bank that absorbed
much of Lehman, owed the central bank nearly $50 billion at one point.
Citi sought help more than 170 times.

The cache also shows that a much broader range of companies used the
Fed facilities than previously imagined. For instance, the Fed, via
its commercial paper facility, aided hog-builder Harley Davidson,
Japanese carmaker Toyota, and construction equipment giant
Caterpillar. It also helped a plethora of foreign banks, from the
Swiss bank UBS to the government-owned Korean Development Bank.

Some are now questioning whether the Fed should have bailed out
foreign entities. But "bail out" is probably the wrong term. The Fed
took on risk by providing loans, but it says it expects to incur no
losses. And the risk-reward calculus was pretty easy, since what the
Fed was facing was the collapse of the global banking system.

"We knew the Fed helped foreign companies," Petrou says. "But this
speaks to the Fed's credit. In the midst of a global financial crisis,
the Fed mustered liquidity support when all of the other central banks
were acting slowly. The Fed became the global central bank—and that
was a very good call, given that everyone's backs were against the
wall."

Supersecret hedge funds also availed themselves of the Fed's help.
Indeed, firms like Magnetar—of the infamously skeezy Magnetar
trade—borrowed billions from the government via the Term Asset-Backed
Securities Loan Facility. The main purpose of TALF was to help ease
the market for assets backed by things like student loans and credit
cards, with the goal of restoring the flow of credit to consumers. Now
we know that TALF also provided low-cost loans to firms like Magnetar
and Pacific Investment Management Co., or PIMCO.

So, what don't we know? One missing piece is a complete set of details
about collateral—what firms gave the Fed in exchange for the
loans—Bloomberg notes. That's important stuff. To provide an
admittedly silly example, say I offered to give you an asset worth
$1.1 million in exchange for $1 million in cash. You might do it if I
handed you a pillowcase filled with diamonds. But you might not if I
handed you a finger painting, insisting it was a Picasso.

Starting on Sept. 15, 2008, when Lehman collapsed, the Fed announced
it would start accepting the equivalent of finger paintings in
exchange for cash—something it previously had not had to do. The
Primary Dealer Credit Facility took more than $1 trillion in
junk-rated assets—hundreds of billions rated CCC or lower, the real
risky sludge. (Notably, all loans extended under the facility were
paid back in full, with interest.) But details on the collateral
remain incomplete. The Dodd-Frank law required "information
identifying the types and amounts of collateral pledged or assets
transferred." For three of six facilities, the Fed only provides
general information about the type and rating of the collateral.
(Obviously, that information can be useless.)

And there will be many more such questions to come. The trove is
enormous. And a lot of people—investors, politicians, economists,
bankers, Fed watchers—are working their way through it. Among them is
Sanders. Other "members of Congress and I will be taking a very
extensive look at all aspects of how the Federal Reserve functions,"
he promised in a press release. That means more headaches for the now
slightly-less-secretive Fed.

-- 
Jim Devine / "The conventional view serves to protect us from the
painful job of thinking."   - John Kenneth Galbraith
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