Bernanke's $700 Billion Bazooka

Jeff Macke  Sep 24, 2008 11:45 am

Bernanke's $700 Billion Bazooka
 
The Chairman takes aim.
 

 

Just now, Chairman Ben Bernanke said "This is a matter for psychology."

I was a Psych major, and a pro trader. I can speak to this.

We should talk about the crisis of confidence at work here; that too often gets lost in the noise. Ultimately, there's no "real" price for anything. Not even gold.



Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson wants $700 billion - a number that says "The government is going to take this entire problem down, all at once."

If you do it $150 billion at a time, the Treasury will end up with more than $700 billion on its books. $700 billion is intended to get guys like Warren Buffett to step in - guys who'll be thinking, "No sense letting the government sop up the excess returns generated by holding these things to maturity; I'll buy them myself, before the morons from Treasury get here."Minyanville's Why Wall Street Will Never Be the Same

$700 billion is a bazooka. If you arm your Treasury Secretary at all, you give him a bazooka, rather than a BB gun, precisely because you don't want him to have to shoot.

A BB gun invites invasion. A bazooka makes a point. I'm not in favor of government intervention at this point, but, if it's going to happen, it should happen big. That $700 billion was shooting for a comprehensive solution.

For the people selling, the difference between Congress going for the whole megillah or doing it in tranches is this: In tranches, every block that gets used up makes it less likely that another one is coming (because you gotta go back to Congress to beg some more). In effect, the government would eliminate a certain block of toxic assets but, in so doing, would make the rest of the group even more toxic (and therefore less likely to be backstopped by the government, and still untouchably by private hands).

If the government lays out all $700 billion, the last asset sold should, in theory, be at the same price or more expensive than the first. The illusion of the "holdouts" rising in value will, in theory, inspire private equity to get on board.

If the government does this in tranches, there will be literally no end to the outflow. If they do it in one, enormous, statement-making block, it's possible the system will start running again.

Either one hurts, but these are your choices, as a taxpayer: Do you want to get shot by a BB gun 10,000 times, or once by a bazooka? Now consider the same choice - but with the possibility that choosing the bazooka means there's a remote chance you won't get shot at all.

It would seem "Letting the Actual Criminals Get Shot" isn't a choice anymore. That being the case, I'll take the bazooka - and hope that I'll get lucky and escape being blasted at all.



Is there another Bear Stearns out there?
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Comments (23) See All Comments »
09-24-2008, 2:52 pm
I'm comfortable with that.

I have two professions. One is trading the other is wearing make-up and running my mouth.

What's going on in DC is horrible for the former but pretty good for the latter. A nice perso
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09-24-2008, 4:22 pm

So the US is already the conservator/owner of the Freddie Mac,Fannie Mae 6 trillion in mortgages/guarantees, of which over 4 trillion is in mortgage guarantees.
On the one hand the US will be buying mortgage securities one way or the o
Read More
09-24-2008, 4:40 pm
Jeez, just listening to some of the House testimony makes me wonder how some of these guys got elected.
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09-24-2008, 6:03 pm


they need to facilitate the trading of these assets rather than take them on. what is proposed will delay recovery for years and lead to hyperinflation if not outright revolution.

what is sad is plenty of people have seen t
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09-24-2008, 7:53 pm
If you actually want to take a bail-out course of action, there really must NOT be a-priori known "rules" like some people demand. Government is no different as an optimal deal-maker from a private entity -- opposition must be kept guessi
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