本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛What is the difference between the U.S. Treasury and a gigantic hedge fund?
Beats us.
Deal maker Hank Paulson has transformed the Treasury Department into a larger, more powerful form of Goldman Sachs, with extensive direct lending abilities and profit-making stakes in companies including Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and American International Group, all financed using debt. Now Treasury is considering a new solution to the financial crisis that would leave the department even more intertwined in the business of the financial markets: directly taking stakes in troubled U.S. banks.
Duke University finance Prof. Campbell Harvey asks why the Treasury should stop there. He says the Treasury should instead inject capital into all U.S. banks through a single, centralized fund. Just putting money into troubled banks may stop the bleeding, but it won’t heal the wounds of the credit crunch, he says. To get the economy on its feet, the Treasury needs to support good small and midsize banks, who grease the wheels of small businesses that drive the economy. “In order for the equity injection capital to multiply and create credit, you need to target good banks, not just bad banks,” said Harvey, who wants the government to take passive equity stakes for injecting as much as 2% to 5% of the equity capital into each bank.
Deal Journal talked with Harvey about his plan.
Wait. First, what’s wrong with TARP?:
Harvey says Treasury will end up paying rich prices for troubled mortgage securities. In addition, the troubled assets relief program will take a few weeks to get organized, and it “suffers from the ‘throwing good money at bad’ problem–i.e. the premium price will effectively bailout some distressed financial institutions that should simply fail,” Harvey said. It also isn’t clear to many people how TARP–which is to buy mortgage securities at the highest level–would help clear the credit markets. “Right now the credit system is considered frozen,” Harvey said. “Unfreezing the commercial paper market won’t help because many are too small to use it.”
How would Treasury inject money into all U.S. banks?
“The equity stakes would be short-term, five to seven years, and completely passive,” Harvey said. So wouldn’t Treasury just be a big hedge fund or private-equity fund? “You can think of it as a giant hedge fund that specializes in the financial sector. It’s almost identical to setting up a hedge fund. The difference, of course, is that the primary contributor is the government, and they can set their own terms,” Harvey said. “What could be interesting is that you could open it up to private investors. You know that just about every hedge fund would have loved to do the AIG deal, but they couldn’t do it. But if you open it up to them as a centralized fund, they could contribute investments. It might be hedge funds, large investors, it might be Warren Buffett, it might be sovereign funds. All of this would reduce the upfront cost of the taxpayer, but we would expect the taxpayer to get a return on this.”
Why all U.S. banks?
“If we want to get the maximum on the capital, you have to get good banks, not just the bad ones,” Harvey said. “You can imagine that a ‘bad bank’ takes the capital and does nothing with it; we need to spur lending and growth. If you’re a bank at the margin, you do not deserve a special equity injection, because it’s not going to do anything. You don’t want to throw that money into a bad bank….Our strategy has been to put one fire out after another, which is a reactionary strategy rather than pointing out this stuff at the beginning. I prefer a passive strategy rather than the government running AIG.”
This sounds just like what Sweden did:
Indeed it does, with a big difference: Sweden was helping out far fewer banks. But when the country unwound their positions, they made a decent return for the taxpayer, Harvey noted.
What about saving the “too big to fail” banks?
Harvey said spending all that money on saving big financial institutions is a big mistake, akin to one Japan made in the 1990s. “The growth does not come from large organizations, it comes from the small- and medium-growth businesses, so we need something that generates the credit-generation processes to fuel small and medium businesses. Treasury helping small and midsize banks will also help companies that depend on them. To bail out some troubled bank, it’s not clear that will have the multiplier effect that you want,” he said.
Hank Paulson will be leaving soon. Who at Treasury would be savvy enough to manage this?
Economist Vernon Smith noted today of TARP, “Treasury has no expertise in this ridiculous new venture” of auctioning mortgage securities. Harvey said “hedge funds pick winners and losers.” By making a blanket investment, Treasury wouldn’t have to choose as hedge funds do.
On the bright side, Treasury might win more fans among free-market capitalists as a hedge fund than as a Soviet-era politburo.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
Beats us.
Deal maker Hank Paulson has transformed the Treasury Department into a larger, more powerful form of Goldman Sachs, with extensive direct lending abilities and profit-making stakes in companies including Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and American International Group, all financed using debt. Now Treasury is considering a new solution to the financial crisis that would leave the department even more intertwined in the business of the financial markets: directly taking stakes in troubled U.S. banks.
Duke University finance Prof. Campbell Harvey asks why the Treasury should stop there. He says the Treasury should instead inject capital into all U.S. banks through a single, centralized fund. Just putting money into troubled banks may stop the bleeding, but it won’t heal the wounds of the credit crunch, he says. To get the economy on its feet, the Treasury needs to support good small and midsize banks, who grease the wheels of small businesses that drive the economy. “In order for the equity injection capital to multiply and create credit, you need to target good banks, not just bad banks,” said Harvey, who wants the government to take passive equity stakes for injecting as much as 2% to 5% of the equity capital into each bank.
Deal Journal talked with Harvey about his plan.
Wait. First, what’s wrong with TARP?:
Harvey says Treasury will end up paying rich prices for troubled mortgage securities. In addition, the troubled assets relief program will take a few weeks to get organized, and it “suffers from the ‘throwing good money at bad’ problem–i.e. the premium price will effectively bailout some distressed financial institutions that should simply fail,” Harvey said. It also isn’t clear to many people how TARP–which is to buy mortgage securities at the highest level–would help clear the credit markets. “Right now the credit system is considered frozen,” Harvey said. “Unfreezing the commercial paper market won’t help because many are too small to use it.”
How would Treasury inject money into all U.S. banks?
“The equity stakes would be short-term, five to seven years, and completely passive,” Harvey said. So wouldn’t Treasury just be a big hedge fund or private-equity fund? “You can think of it as a giant hedge fund that specializes in the financial sector. It’s almost identical to setting up a hedge fund. The difference, of course, is that the primary contributor is the government, and they can set their own terms,” Harvey said. “What could be interesting is that you could open it up to private investors. You know that just about every hedge fund would have loved to do the AIG deal, but they couldn’t do it. But if you open it up to them as a centralized fund, they could contribute investments. It might be hedge funds, large investors, it might be Warren Buffett, it might be sovereign funds. All of this would reduce the upfront cost of the taxpayer, but we would expect the taxpayer to get a return on this.”
Why all U.S. banks?
“If we want to get the maximum on the capital, you have to get good banks, not just the bad ones,” Harvey said. “You can imagine that a ‘bad bank’ takes the capital and does nothing with it; we need to spur lending and growth. If you’re a bank at the margin, you do not deserve a special equity injection, because it’s not going to do anything. You don’t want to throw that money into a bad bank….Our strategy has been to put one fire out after another, which is a reactionary strategy rather than pointing out this stuff at the beginning. I prefer a passive strategy rather than the government running AIG.”
This sounds just like what Sweden did:
Indeed it does, with a big difference: Sweden was helping out far fewer banks. But when the country unwound their positions, they made a decent return for the taxpayer, Harvey noted.
What about saving the “too big to fail” banks?
Harvey said spending all that money on saving big financial institutions is a big mistake, akin to one Japan made in the 1990s. “The growth does not come from large organizations, it comes from the small- and medium-growth businesses, so we need something that generates the credit-generation processes to fuel small and medium businesses. Treasury helping small and midsize banks will also help companies that depend on them. To bail out some troubled bank, it’s not clear that will have the multiplier effect that you want,” he said.
Hank Paulson will be leaving soon. Who at Treasury would be savvy enough to manage this?
Economist Vernon Smith noted today of TARP, “Treasury has no expertise in this ridiculous new venture” of auctioning mortgage securities. Harvey said “hedge funds pick winners and losers.” By making a blanket investment, Treasury wouldn’t have to choose as hedge funds do.
On the bright side, Treasury might win more fans among free-market capitalists as a hedge fund than as a Soviet-era politburo.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net