The Treasury Morphs Into A Hedgefund
Moon of Alabama
September 23, 2008 This evolved over the various versions. The original Paulson proposal said:
All media reports and blogs I have read about this assume that the Treasury under this plan would only buy Mortgage Backed Securities, i.e. bonds backed my mortgage payments. But the above language also includes Credit Default Swaps. Insurance contracts or derivatives, that guarantee the recoverability of MBS and change their value in relation to an MBS' value. The language in the Treasury Fact Sheed on the proposal is even wider:
It seems like the fact sheed exceeds the breadth of the released proposal. Oh, you say, the Democrats in Congress will prevent the Treasury from morphing into a investment bank backed by $700 billion of taxpayer capital? Here is Senator Dodd's expanded proposal of the Paulson plan. The language is even worse than in the original:
The Dodd version gets lauded by Krugman, DeLong and other 'liberal' luminaries. This while the bailout language morphed from "mortgage related assets" to "any financial instrument." The Dodd version added some nice little extras for a homeowners in distress and some oversight provision. But it also extended the scope of the Paulson plan far beyond housing and mortgages towards an all encompassing bailout for any financial issue. Since 2003 Dodd collected
over $4 million in contributions from Securities and Investment
companies. His top five doners include Citibank, SAC Capital Partners
and Royal Bank of Scotland. That may well be the reason why he does not
want to keep the bill restricted to mortgage related assets but wants
to include any financial instrument. If this becomes law, Paulson and whoever replaces him in January will have the authority to buy Asset
Backed Securities from car loans and credit card loans. He will be able
to buy and sell derivatives based on ABS that have build in leverage
effects. The Treasury may even deal in synthetic Collateral Debt
Obligations and derivatives base on those. It can buy and sell shares
of public dealt companies, precious metals, future contracts on these
and it can speculate on interest moves of Russian government bonds. Are there any big long future positions on the Canadian dollar the U.S. president does not like? Just get the Treasury buy them up. Congress is giving it the right to do so. With a capital of $700 billion and the authority to buy and sell any highly leveraged financial instruments, the Treasury will become one gigantic hedge fund that can and may well act to move multi-trillions. If such an entity makes one wrong move, it can bankrupt its owners within a few hours. The Treasury is too knowledgeable to make such mistakes? So were two Nobel Price winners at LTCM. |
:: Article nr. 47444 sent on 23-sep-2008 19:39 ECT
www.uruknet.info?p=47444
Link: www.moonofalabama.org/2008/09/the-treasury-mo.html
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