Wall Street Bailout, Congressional Cover-up, or Sarbanes-Oxley?
Every new controversy demands a look at similar situations of the
past. Just what is a bailout anyway? In the early 80's, Lee Iacocca arranged a
government loan and tax concessions to bring Chrysler Corporation back from the
brink of bankruptcy--- during the Carter Administration, to save you a Google.
The economic domino effect of a major corporate death was clear,
and Congress acted wisely when it saved this American icon from extinction---
the loans were repaid. But was it poor management or shortsighted government
that caused the problem. Politicians massaged and empowered the labor unions,
implemented minimum wage legislation, and protected the steel industry from
foreign competition.
Similar financial problems existed throughout the automotive
industry and lower cost, better product was just starting to come ashore.
Bailout or fix-up? Voteless corporations were perfect patsies then, and remain
so today. But the average Joe's investment in the success of these perennial
scapegoats for bad government has risen from zero dollars to all of our
dollars. Every failure takes a piece of your retirement program with it.
All employed John Q's are investors; all taxpayers are investors;
all Americans have a vested equity interest in the success of all publicly
traded corporations in our "regulated capitalism" economy. Most
politicians still can't connect the dots, and seem to be formulating policy
based on the latest consensus of public blogs.
It wasn't the financial institutions that decided to make mortgage
money available to practically anyone who wanted to own a home--- regulators
permitted (encouraged) a relaxation of the qualification requirements. In
effect, they enabled the predatory lending practices that misguided many first
time homebuyers.
The easy-money lending practices, and sky rocketing housing
prices, brought speculators into the mix and home flipping became as popular as
Monday Night Football. Speculators accept the risks of loss; it's what they do.
But allowing the creation of high risk where none is expected is unacceptable.
The creative products developed by the financial institutions must be examined
more closely and labeled more effectively.
Speculative bubbles always implode--- this time taking down
speculators and marginally qualified homebuyers alike. It's ever so easy to
blame the corporations, but who called off the regulators? Brokerage Firms have
entire divisions whose only job is to make sure that nobody looks cross-eyed at
any SEC regulation (real, contemplated, or anticipated).
The SEC itself requires full disclosure from all registrants. The
interests of the customer are always placed first--- except of course, as was
the case with Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs), when an act of Congress
prohibits the SEC from having a look. Could they have stemmed the tide? It
doesn't matter. What matters is that complicated products are reviewed more
carefully in the future.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have a similar tale not to tell.
Congress was closely involved in their charade as well, with conflicts of
interest that are certainly worthy of extensive investigations, but, again, not
now. Now we need to get this credit driven economy out of the emergency room
and back out there where it belongs, greasing the wheels of all industries,
growing jobs, and reaffirming the strengths of our system.
This is not a situation where an innocent government is bailing
out an evil industry that has lost its credibility (the financial sector
deserves little credibility). This is an opportunity for Congress to save and
strengthen an economy that has suffered from a government-initiated relaxation
of lending rules, a government-mandated ban on regulation of derivative
products, and accounting rules that just don't make sense for mortgage backed
(or any fixed income) securities.
Politically, using the financial institutions as a scapegoat is
easy and, judging from Internet polls, effective. John Q is furious, but at
only half of the problem causers, and for the wrong reasons. How many of you
have stopped making your mortgage payments just because the market value of
your home has fallen?
Less than 5% would be a fair estimate. Yet a much more significant
amount of the collective mortgage debt in the USA (not in any stage of default)
has been arbitrarily erased from institutional balance sheets. Even within the
"toxic" products the government would purchase, 80% of the loans are
solid and meeting their monthly commitments. The cash flow from these products
is more than adequate to keep things moving, were it not for Sarbanes-Oxley.
Congress passed the Sarbanes-Oxley Act in 2002, placing some very
stringent, inappropriate, and inflexible reporting rules on financial
institutions. Under this law, financial assets must be valued at fair market
value--- even if they are not for sale! The Working Capital Model eliminates
this problem entirely, but it is difficult to apply when the individual
securities are not identifiable.
More than 95% of Americans are making their mortgage payments
right on schedule, yet there is no market for the financial products that
contain these mortgages. Consequently, balance sheets reflect trillions of
dollars less than the maturity value of the securities held by the financial
institutions.
Eureka! Regulate the product creating mechanism better, so that
the productive value of the underlying assets is measurable. But, in the
meantime, suspend the Sarbanes-Oxley restrictions and re-evaluate their
applicability to packaged mortgage products in existence now.
Bonds, mortgages, preferred stocks, etc. are contracts that are
honored 99% of the time. They are held for the income they promise. These
promises are being met while the government tells holders that they can't be
booked at full value. Have they all gone mad?
This is no bailout of an industry, it's a transfusion of capital
needed to allow an industry to comply with legislation that just doesn't make
sense. And while the politicians posture and pontificate, bluster and blame,
banks are failing and irreparable harm is being done to John Q's nest egg.
Yours and mine!
Telling me that my house has dropped in market value does me no
harm, and I continue to make my monthly payments--- and the lower (more
realistic) market value may reduce my carrying costs. Telling banks that the
mortgages they are collecting on need to be written down because they can't be
sold is lunacy.
Tell John Q more about the source of the problem, and different
heads would roll.
Steve Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.com/
http://www.kiawahgolfinvestmentseminars.com
Author of: "The Brainwashing of the American Investor: The
Book that Wall Street Does Not Want YOU to Read", and "A
Millionaire's Secret Investment Strategy"
Wall
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Wall Street Bailout, Congressional Cover-up, or Sarbanes-Oxley?
More than 95% of Americans are making their mortgage payments
right on schedule, yet there is no market for the financial products that
contain these mortgages. Consequently, balance sheets reflect trillions of
dollars less than the maturity value of the securities held by the financial
institutions.