Mike Larson - Weiss Research expert on housing, interest rates, mortgages, and consumer finance.

The truth behind the “public/private” asset plan

by Mike Larson on March 27, 2009

in Banking, Debt, Economy

You have to love the way this public-private asset purchase plan is constructed. Ingenious how the administration has figured out a way to massively subsidize the banking industry and claim that’s not what it’s doing. This FT article makes clear what is really going on (I have read similar critiques at several other blogs). Here is an excerpt:

“The Geithner-Summers plan, officially called the public/private investment programme, is a thinly veiled attempt to transfer up to hundreds of billions of dollars of US taxpayer funds to the commercial banks, by buying toxic assets from the banks at far above their market value. It is dressed up as a market transaction but that is a fig-leaf, since the government will put in 90 per cent or more of the funds and the “price discovery” process is not genuine. It is no surprise that stock market capitalisation of the banks has risen about 50 per cent from the lows of two weeks ago. Taxpayers are the losers, even as they stand on the sidelines cheering the rise of the stock market. It is their money fuelling the rally, yet the banks are the beneficiaries.”

How do the mechanics work? Have a look (and try not to let your eyes glaze over; this is important stuff because AIG bonuses are small beer compared to what’s going on here) …

“Consider a simple example: a toxic asset with face value of $1m pays off fully with probability of 20 per cent and pays off $200,000 with probability of 80 per cent. A risk-neutral investor would pay $360,000 for this asset.

“Along comes the government and says it will finance 90 per cent of the investor’s purchase and, moreover, do so as a non-recourse loan. Non-recourse means the government’s loan is backed only by the collateral value of the toxic asset itself. If the pay-out is low, the loan is defaulted and the government ends up with the low pay-out rather than full repayment of the loan.

“Now the investor is prepared to bid $714,000 (with rounding) for the same asset. The investor uses $71,000 of his/her own money and $643,000 of the government loan. If the asset pays off in full, the investor repays the loan, with a profit of $357,000. This happens 20 per cent of the time, so brings an expected profit of $71,000. The other 80 per cent of the time the investor defaults on the loan, and the government ends up with $200,000. The investor just breaks even by bidding $714,000, as we would expect in a competitive auction.

“Of course, the investor has systematically overpaid by $354,000 (the bid price of $714,000 minus the market value of $360,000), reflecting the investor’s right to default on the loan in the event of a poor pay-out of the toxic asset. The overpayment equals the expected loss of the government loan. After all, 80 per cent of the time (in this example) the government loses $443,000 (the $643,000 loan minus the $200,000 repayment). The expected loss is 80 per cent of $443,000, equal to $354,000.

“The idea of “private sector price discovery” is therefore flim-flam. There would be price discovery if the government’s loan had to be repaid whether or not the asset paid off in full. In that case, the investor would bid $360,000. But under the Geithner-Summers plan the loan is precisely designed to be a one-way bet, for the purpose of overpricing the toxic asset in order to bail out the bank’s shareholders at hidden cost to the taxpayers.”


Related posts:
  1. Toxic asset plan gets rolled out; Government going about this the wrong way We’ve been waiting for weeks for the details of the government’s plan to buy up toxic assets from banks. Today,...
  2. All I can say is “Amen” Here’s a good read over at The Daily Beast on the Obama banking recovery plan (my emphasis added). An excerpt:...
  3. More comments on the Geithner plan There are all kinds of views, both positive and negative, on the Geithner toxic asset plan today. You can read...

{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }

1 John 03.27.09 at 1:52 PM

So with all this government subside of the financial sector, can we expect this bear market rally to continue for a while? Has the market already bottomed? Larry seems to think so.

2 Roland 03.27.09 at 8:18 PM

Thanks for sharing the truth Mike. It’s becoming clearer what the Treasury is up too with the toxic assets. How much money are we talking about in toxic assets? Is this the 100 billion figure? Everyone keeps using the term “taxpayer.” When will the taxpayers start paying for all this?

3 dave 03.28.09 at 3:36 PM

Those of you who haven’t called, faxed, or e-mailed your representatives on this issue should do so now. This plan should have the citizenry completely outraged and if we the people don’t see it that way then it will be shown in history that this generation was one solely comprised of ignorance.

4 dave 03.29.09 at 9:14 PM

Mike,

The real story is that the banks who have this toxic stuff will buy their own toxic crap under the Geithner Plan. They will get a much better price for it since they are overbidding on their own asset by a leveraged plan. This explains it very well….http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-arbfLTCtI&e What a travesty. We are being looted in broad daylight.
d@

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