THE SO-CALLED “LEGACY LOANS PROGRAM” that would create “PUBLIC-PRIVATE INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS” is ILLEGAL and should be HALTED
As of this date (May 30, 2009), little has been disclosed concerning the status of the so-called Public-Private Investment Partnership (PPIP) that would allow for purchasing toxic mortgage-backed assets. The PPIP will provide up to 94 percent "non-recourse" government loans for up to $1 trillion of assets which are worth less than half of their original value at today's prices. The Treasury's plan is an attempt to keep ...more »
As of this date (May 30, 2009), little has been disclosed concerning the status of the so-called Public-Private Investment Partnership (PPIP) that would allow for purchasing toxic mortgage-backed assets. The PPIP will provide up to 94 percent "non-recourse" government loans for up to $1 trillion of assets which are worth less than half of their original value at today's prices. The Treasury's plan is an attempt to keep asset prices artificially high so that the losses will not be realized until they've been shifted onto the taxpayer. The following is an apt description of what this “giveaway” program would result in:
"From early reports regarding the toxic assets plan, it appears that the Treasury envisions allowing private investors to bid for toxic mortgage securities, but only to put up about 7% of the purchase price, with the TARP matching that amount - the remainder being "non-recourse" financing from the Fed and FDIC. This essentially implies that the government would grant bidders a put option against 86% of whatever price is bid. This is not only an invitation for rampant moral hazard, as it would allow the financing of largely speculative and inefficiently priced bids with the public bearing the cost of losses, but of much greater concern, it is a likely recipe for the insolvency of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and represents a major end-run around Congress by unelected bureaucrats.”
This means we are using public funds to protect the bondholders of some of the most mismanaged companies in the history of capitalism, instead of allowing them to take losses that should have been their own. All our policy makers have done to date has been to squander public funds to protect the full interests of corporate bondholders. Even Bear Stearns bondholders can expect to get 100% of their money back, thanks to the generosity of Bernanke, Geithner and other bureaucrats eager to hand out the money of ordinary Americans.
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