<<quote>>
Who Bears the Costs of Post-Crisis Recovery ?

Posted By Barry Ritholtz On January 20, 2010 @ 7:20 am

For over a year now, I have been advocating a Swedish rather than
Japanese approach to crisis. The Swedes decided to protect their
banking system at all costs; the Japanese protected their banks at all
costs.

That subtle distinction is the difference between a rapid recovery and
a slow, agonizing one.

Some people think this is an academic debate — a distinction without a
difference. However, when you see who bears where the actual costs of
this fall, it is apparent that the it is an enormous difference.

Unfortunately, the US  (mostly) went the Japanese route. Exceptions
are the automakers and a handful of FDIC closed banks. Instead of
waxing philosophical, let’s look at who pays the costs of this – and
who does not.

Shareholders:  In the Swedish approach, the Shareholders get wiped
out. In the US/Japanese model, they take a big hit — a loss of 90%+ of
their value — but they got to keep there stock shares. Hope springs
eternal for an eventual recovery.

On Wall Street, other than Lehman Brothers (LEH), all other
shareholders were saved. Bear Stearns (BSC), Citigroup (C), Fannie Mae
(FNM), AIG, BofA, (BAC) Goldie (GS), Morgan Stanley (MS) — all were
kept afloat.

Ironically, the insolvent firms that were forced into a reorganization
– GM & Chrysler, Washingon Mutual, etc. –  actually are the ones
following (at least partially) the Swedish style model: Restructure,
Wipe Out Debt, Recapitalize, Relaunch as a new, clean firm.

Bondholders:  There are 3 parties that undeservedly were bailed out,
and the head of the class are the bondholders.

Except for Lehman and FDIC closures, most bondholders were rescued:
Bear Stearns Bondholders received 100 cents on the dollar — that was
their reward for exercising terrible judgment when lending money to a
reckless irresponsible insolvent investment house (so much for [fear
of] Moral Hazard). Same for Citi, Fannie Mae,  Bank of America. We
still don’t know what the final impact will be for AIG Bondholders,
but expectations are for the full monty.

When future historians discuss the bailouts of 2008-09, and discuss
who were the greatest financial recipients of taxpayer largesse, they
will be referring to the bondholders.

Counter-parties:  For reasons not yet explained, Paulson, Bernake and
Geithner essentially gifted to speculators and hedge fund traders a
guarantee that all their back alley bets would be made good. This is
truly perplexing, as they are probably the least deserving group
receiving taxpayer money.

Management:  Several senior execs have lost their jobs, but they have
been the exception. A recent study found that 92% of TARP firm [1]
senior execs, boards of directors, and C-level management were still
running the firms they had been. It is perplexing to those of us are
trying to figure out the penalties for driving your firm over a cliff
. . .

Taxpayers: So far, the US taxpayer has laid out all of the costs of
the bailouts. TARP appears to be mostly repaid, and the new TBTF tax
should recover the rest. But the question the FCIC should be asking is
why are taxpayers a backstop fro traders and speculators?

Borrowers:  Banks are lending dramatically less, as they slowly
recapitalize their balance sheets, borrowing from the Fed at 0% and
lending back to the Treasury at 3%. Best guesses are that this year
and last will see a $1 trillion less dollars than normally would be
loaned to credit worthy borrowers. This is directly due to the
Japanese approach that allows bad balance sheets and enormous bank
under-capitalization to continue.

Workers:  Are going to suffer for a long period of slow job recovery
due to the above. If banks were forced into the normal FDIC insolvency
 process, the economy and employment would likely recover must faster.

Savers:  Zero % interest rate. Estimates are this costs depositors
$250Billion per year.  ’nuff said

Bank Customers:  All banks customers are now buying services from
firms in a sector with much less competition.

First Time Home Buyers: Although they get a minor tax credit, various
government policies are maintaining home prices at levels far in
excess of where the market would take them. Outside of the big
foreclosure zones, they are feeling the impact of the subsidies and
bad policies.

The bottom line: Bailouts have specific winners and losers . . .

Previously:
Attack of the Zombies ! [2] February 26th, 2009
http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2009/02/attack-of-the-zombies/

92% of TARP Firm Sr Management is Unchanged [1] (January 4th, 2010)
http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2010/01/banking-sector-remains-literally-unchanged/

See also:
What we can learn from Japan’s decades of trouble [3]
Martin Wolf
FT, January 12 2010
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/3c5b388e-ffb2-11de-921f-00144feabdc0.html

<<unquote>>
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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