So When Will Banks Give Loans?
"Chase recently received $25 billion in federal funding. What effect will that have on the business side and will it change our strategic lending policy?"
It was Oct. 17, just four days after JPMorgan Chase's chief executive, Jamie Dimon, agreed to take a $25 billion capital injection courtesy of the United States government, when a JPMorgan employee asked that question. It came toward the end of an employee-only conference call that had been largely devoted to meshing certain divisions of JPMorgan with its new acquisition, Washington Mutual.
Which, of course, it also got thanks to the federal government. Christmas came early at JPMorgan Chase.
The JPMorgan executive who was moderating the employee conference call didn't hesitate to answer a question that was pretty politically sensitive given the events of the previous few weeks.
Given the way, that is, that Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. had decided to use the first installment of the $700 billion bailout money to recapitalize banks instead of buying up their toxic securities, which he had then sold to Congress and the American people as the best and fastest way to get the banks to start making loans again, and help prevent this recession from getting much, much worse.
In point of fact, the dirty little secret of the banking industry is that it has no intention of using the money to make new loans. But this executive was the first insider who's been indiscreet enough to say it within earshot of a journalist.
(He didn't mean to, of course, but I obtained the call-in number and listened to a recording.)
"Twenty-five billion dollars is obviously going to help the folks who are struggling more than Chase," he began. "What we do think it will help us do is perhaps be a little bit more active on the acquisition side or opportunistic side for some banks who are still struggling. And I would not assume that we are done on the acquisition side just because of the Washington Mutual and Bear Stearns mergers. I think there are going to be some great opportunities for us to grow in this environment, and I think we have an opportunity to use that $25 billion in that way and obviously depending on whether recession turns into depression or what happens in the future, you know, we have that as a backstop."
Read that answer as many times as you want - you are not going to find a single word in there about making loans to help the American economy. On the contrary: at another point in the conference call, the same executive (who I'm not naming because he didn't know I would be listening in) explained that "loan dollars are down significantly." He added, "We would think that loan volume will continue to go down as we continue to tighten credit to fully reflect the high cost of pricing on the loan side." In other words JPMorgan has no intention of turning on the lending spigot.
It is starting to appear as if one of Treasury's key rationales for the recapitalization program - namely, that it will cause banks to start lending again - is a fig leaf, Treasury's version of the weapons of mass destruction.
In fact, Treasury wants banks to acquire each other and is using its power to inject capital to force a new and wrenching round of bank consolidation. As Mark Landler reported in The New York Times earlier this week, "the government wants not only to stabilize the industry, but also to reshape it." Now they tell us.
Indeed, Mr. Landler's story noted that Treasury would even funnel some of the bailout money to help banks buy other banks. And, in an almost unnoticed move, it recently put in place a new tax break, worth billions to the banking industry, that has only one purpose: to encourage bank mergers. As a tax expert, Robert Willens, put it: "It couldn't be clearer if they had taken out an ad."
Friday delivered the first piece of evidence that this is, indeed, the plan. PNC announced that it was purchasing National City, an acquisition that will be greatly aided by the new tax break, which will allow it to immediately deduct any losses on National City's books.
As part of the deal, it is also tapping the bailout fund for $7.7 billion, giving the government preferred stock in return. At least some of that $7.7 billion would have gone to NatCity if the government had deemed it worth saving. In other words, the government is giving PNC money that might otherwise have gone to NatCity as a reward for taking over NatCity.
I don't know about you, but I'm starting to feel as if we've been sold a bill of goods.
•
The markets had another brutal day Friday. The Asian markets got crushed. Germany and England were down more than 5 percent. In the hours before the United States markets opened, all the signals suggested it was going to be the worst day yet in the crisis. The Dow dropped more than 400 points at the opening, but thankfully it never got any worse.
There are lots of reasons the markets remain unstable - fears of a global recession, companies offering poor profit projections for the rest of the year, and the continuing uncertainties brought on by the credit crisis. But another reason, I now believe, is that investors no longer trust Treasury. First it says it has to have $700 billion to buy back toxic mortgage-backed securities. Then, as Mr. Paulson divulged to The Times this week, it turns out that even before the bill passed the House, he told his staff to start drawing up a plan for capital injections. Fearing Congress's reaction, he didn't tell the Hill about his change of heart.
Now, he's shifted gears again, and is directing Treasury to use the money to force bank acquisitions. Sneaking in the tax break isn't exactly confidence-inspiring, either. (And let's not even get into the less-than-credible, after-the-fact rationalizations for letting Lehman default, which stands as the single worst mistake the government has made in the crisis.)
On Thursday, at a hearing of the Senate Banking Committee, the chairman, Christopher J. Dodd, a Connecticut Democrat, pushed Neel Kashkari, the young Treasury official who is Mr. Paulson's point man on the bailout plan, on the subject of banks' continuing reluctance to make loans. How, Senator Dodd asked, was Treasury going to ensure that banks used their new government capital to make loans - "besides rhetorically begging them?"
"We share your view," Mr. Kashkari replied. "We want our banks to be lending in our communities."
Senator Dodd: "Are you insisting upon it?"
Mr. Kashkari: "We are insisting upon it in all our actions."
But they are doing no such thing. Unlike the British government, which is mandating lending requirements in return for capital injections, our government seems afraid to do anything except plead. And those pleas, in this environment, are falling on deaf ears.
Yes, there are times when a troubled bank needs to be acquired by a stronger bank. Given that the federal government insures deposits, it has an abiding interest in seeing that such mergers take place as smoothly as possible. Nobody is saying those kinds of deals shouldn't take place.
But Citigroup, at this point, probably falls into the category of troubled bank, and nobody seems to be arguing that it should be taken over. It is in the "too big to fail" category, and the government will ensure that it gets back on its feet, no matter how much money it takes. One reason Mr. Paulson forced all of the nine biggest banks to take government money was to mask the fact that some of them are much weaker than others.
We have long been a country that has treasured its diversity of banks; up until the 1980s, in fact, there were no national banks at all. If Treasury is using the bailout bill to turn the banking system into the oligopoly of giant national institutions, it is hard to see how that will help anybody. Except, of course, the giant banks that are declared the winners by Treasury.
JPMorgan is going to be one of the winners - and deservedly so.
Mr. Dimon managed the company so well during the housing bubble that it is saddled with very few of the problems that have crippled competitors like Citi. The government handed it Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual because it was strong enough to swallow both institutions without so much as a burp.
Of all the banking executives in that room with Mr. Paulson a few weeks ago, none needed the government's money less than Mr. Dimon. A company spokesman told me, "We accepted the money for the good of the entire financial system." He added that JP Morgan would use the money "to do good for customers and shareholders. We are disciplined to try to make loans that people can repay."
Nobody is saying it should make loans that people can't repay. What I am saying is that Mr. Dimon took the $25 billion on the condition that his institution would start making loans. There are plenty of small and medium-size businesses that are choking because they have no access to capital - and are perfectly capable of repaying the money. How about a loan program for them, Mr. Dimon?
Late Thursday afternoon, I caught up with Senator Dodd, and asked him what he was going to do if the loan situation didn't improve. "All I can tell you is that we are going to have the bankers up here, probably in another couple of weeks and we are going to have a very blunt conversation," he replied.
He continued: "If it turns out that they are hoarding, you'll have a revolution on your hands. People will be so livid and furious that their tax money is going to line their pockets instead of doing the right thing. There will be hell to pay."
Let's hope so.
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30 Comments so far
Show AllJust follow the money people. That will show you who the crooks are.
The "Masters of the Universe" aka Trans-National Banks are laughing all the way to their banks.
The fascist oligarchy has blatantly and in your face stolen 700 billion dollars BORROWED by the taxpayers to be REPAID by the taxpayers with INTEREST. They lied about what they were going to do with it. Now they are using it to raise salaries and bonuses and consolidate into larger yet organizations that are "too large to fail" meaning of course that more trillions will be borrowed by taxpayers, and given to them to be repaid by the taxpayers with interest. And we allow it. Not even a peep of protest "in the streets". Voting? Oh yeah. Go vote for the candidate of your choice. Then everything will be hunky dory. Be sure to vote for a third party candidate. That'll surely change things. There is only one answer, you know it, I know it and the fascist oligarchy knows it. That is why they have begun to deploy the U.S. military within U.S. borders. Now do as you're told, peon! Put up or shut up.
-- EKATON --
http://market-ticker.denninger.net/archives/618-Congress-What-Bernanke-and-Hank-Arent-Telling-You.html
I found this link VERY interesting. The bailout of the banks always seemed suspicious to me and as this link points out it IS Little more then a looting of the US Treasury.
The graph on this page points out that prior to 1968 1 dollar in new debt created 1 dollar in GDP growth.
The Capitalist model of today is predicated upon ongoing GDP growth (as phony as that number is).
Today it takes 5 dollars of debt to produce 1 dollar GDP growth.
The fundamental flaw in debt based Capitalism, the debt soon takes over. Job growth, GDP growth and the like are only illusions as they are financed by debt.
In 2014 the number will hit zero , meaning that 1 dollar in debt will produce ZERO growth. Thereafter it drops into negative territory meaning debt fuels a crash in the size of the US economy.
The fix is thus revealing. Rather then write down this debt they are creating more and shifting as much wealth into the hands of the elites as possible under the guise of "saving the economy".
Its a Con game.
You betcha it is. And both "major" parties and their candidates are in it up to their hemorrhoids. Such suckers we are to "hope" for anything better from either one of them. They put us here and they will keep sucking until the larder is bare. I would like to say "poor us", but we are the ones who keep putting them in office ....
I, for one, will not participate in this fraud on the people, but I will suffer from it, none the less. What will it take to wake us up? It's not that we have no choice, we simply refuse to choose better. Why?
Alan MacDonald
Great article ---- Yes, the truth is starting to come out about the 'dark secret' of the bailout designed by the ruling-elite 'corporatist Empire' that controls our supposed democracy from behind the facade of their two-party, 'Vichy' sham of a government.
Here's an even more blunt version of that truth from Peter Symonds from WSWS:
"Amid this tempest tearing through world capitalism, the leaders of the G-20 are preparing to meet in Washington on November 15 to discuss measures to shore up the global financial system. If they manage to agree on anything, it will be that the brunt of the economic crisis must be imposed on working people in the form of job losses and severe cuts to social spending in order to defend the wealthy elites --- as has already been the case with all of the rescue packages so far announced."
full article:
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/oct2008/worl-o25.shtml
SNAFU.
And the architects of Capitalism begin the end game.
The puppets raise the fear that the economy is dying, say there is no other option but to "bail them out" with hundreds of billions - a decision taken by puppet politicians and applauded by puppet mainstream media propagandaists.
The "bailout" is the biggest conjob in history which will if we don't say NO, to the worst possible outcome...take Capitalism to the logical conclusion and it is does not make for a pleasant "reality" to live in.
The Ruling Elite know that the use of force to achieve global domination will only be met with resistance, by controlling all the resources be it real or illusion (money) they can achieve it without any resistance as we have been programmed to believe that money is part of the reality of life and that all real resources have value on it, they don't, we have been programmed to believe this.
As such many people are more concerned about the financial crisis delusion rather than the very real threat to the Earth through global warming, pollution and resource stripping.
The Ruling Elite want you to stay inside the pyramid and think only what they tell you to think inside the pyramid. There is no pyramid in reality and there is an infinite number of possibilities to think and do.
A system has to die before a new one can be born, why allow this system to fester and enslave us all?
Equalitism Now!
peace and love
Alan MacDonald
Pope Seri Gribbitus, you correctly note that:
"The Ruling Elite know that the use of force to achieve global domination will only be met with resistance, by controlling all the resources be it real or illusion (money) they can achieve it without any resistance as we have been programmed to believe that money is part of the reality of life and that all real resources have value on it, they don't, we have been programmed to believe this."
Yes, this error of Empire was also made, to their dismay, by Louis XVI and the British Empire.
Our current, better disguised ruling-elite 'corporate financial Empire' which controls America behind the facade of its two-party, 'Vichy' sham of faux-democracy, apparently never learned their high school history lessons; that the American Revolutionary 'minute men' at that bridge in Concord were not paid as well as Blackwater mercenaries ---- in fact, they were not paid at all to kill the Empire which was tyrannizing them.
We CAN use the ballot box to stop it. A clear alternative is available. Why don't we chose him?
My thanks to the reporter who got the quote. You know you are being robbed, but it is good to get actual validation sometimes. And if the NYT has caught on, even the stodgiest intellect can now understand.
Dodd is going to have a "Blunt conversation"? How about a conversation with a blunt instrument? (Oh I mean like arrest warrants for fraud.) There is so much blame to go around with politicians, lying pundits, bankers, one does not even know where to start.
Will anyone, anywhere draw up indictments? If so, your fame will be guaranteed as was Stephen Colbert's when he surprised us all by speaking truth to power.
Joe
Because you are right about where the blame lies, I believe we will have to insist that these folks don't walk. The dance is already beginning. I say again, I don't think anyone is afraid of going before Senator Dud and his committee, he was up to his rear end in this as were most of them.
Except for Ralph
1)
"If Treasury is using the bailout bill to turn the banking system into the oligopoly of giant national institutions, it is hard to see how that will help anybody. Except, of course, the giant banks that are declared the winners by Treasury."
This comment misses the point: the "banking system" is already an oligopoly and the creation of even bigger financial conglomerations (like the merger of Bank of America and Merrill Lynch)is increasing the risk of an even worse financial catastrophe further.
The Glass-Steagall Act, passed during the Great Depression, demanded a clear separation between commercial banks, investment banks and insurance companies, it`s demise under the Clinton Administration together with the Commodity Futures Modernization Act (for the full sordid details go to:
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/05/29/9274) or google this site with "Foreclosure Phil" (David Corn`s current article on CD is also excellent)
paved the way for the current disaster (an overview of the political deregulation can be found here:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/wallstreet/weill/demise.html)
The big error in all the commentaries is, that the word "government" is falsely used, since the US government no longer represents the interests of the people but the special interests of a financial and economic elite. Those right-wing commentators who claim that the current crisis is not the result of "free-market" ideology but of government intervention (see weblinks above) into these markets forget to mention the fact, that "government" and Congress for that matter have simply executed the wishes of Wall Street (and other) lobbyists. So perhaps to avoid confusion, we should use another term?
2)
.."Read that answer as many times as you want - you are not going to find a single word in there about making loans to help the American economy."
This again totally misses the point: The US does not need "more loans", it needs less loans. The national debt is now so high that all things considered, the US is really bankrupt (at least insolvent). For an eye-opening Crash Course on the great illusions about the current economic system PLEASE GO TO:
http://www.chrismartenson.com/crash-course ("All dollars are loaned into existence")
This Crash Course is excellent food for thought because it shows how insane the concept of perpetual growth is in a limited natural word and puts the debt system into the context of energy and environmental policy.. It asks very important questions like
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"How long can an economy be sustained when debt levels rise exponentially but real incomes are declining?"
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(A recipe for disaster- so the current crisis cannot be solved without changing the UNDERLYING MONETARY AND ECONOMIC SYSTEM)
The incredible Mc Cain / Palin attacks on Barack Obama´s remarks about "re-distributing the wealth" in America shows how absurd the political situation has become: Mc Cain says he wants to "create jobs and wealth" but how, if the purchasing power of the people is steadily declining and they are going deeper into debt to pay their medical bills or their kids education? (household savings are practically down to zero.... as a result of upward distribution of US wealth....)
Greenspan pumped billions of cheap money into the speculative banking industry because the "real economy" can no longer produce enough profits for those "investors" who are obscenely rich, yet need to make double-digit profits with betting on derivatives.....
He wanted to show the world, that the US (at least Wall Street) is still the best place to reap huge profits (with no real value behind it) and Wall Street Gambling has now become the "engine" of the US economy (together with war spending)....
This insane system must be changed and if we do not start now (using the crisis for a real paradigm change) the future is very dark... (as Chris explains with his awe-inspiring statistics)
The Dems. and Republicans both knew this was a financial 'war on terrorism'. They voted for it, knowing full well that there would be ZERO mandate for giving loans and for limiting CEO bonuses. Just as they knew full well that Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11. They ignored the opinion of the peons in both cases, for one and the same reason: they are beholden to one master only, and that is the lobby-god that fills their pockets. Nine out of 10 Americans were against the bailout. And THAT is impressive, given that they knew it could mean hard times for them. They were more concerned about their children and grandchildren. Congress snubbed their noses at the peons. And that includes McCain and Obama! I would like to think that Obama voted for it in order to not appear too radical, and that if/when he becomes president, he will totally revamp that bailout for the rich. But I won't hold my breath. There are tent cities sprouting up across America, and they are composed of the new middle class homeless. Welcome to the club, folks. Perhaps when they swell enough, then Americans will begin to pull themselves out of resignation, and begin to aggressively demand a new Congress, and that those currently at the wheel be brought to justice. Again, I won't hold my breath.
The real test will be how much the American people hold the next president and Congress accountable. If Obama's supporters put even half as much energy into demanding that he lay aside his campaign rhetoric, and get to the business of real change, then there may be hope for the peons- you and me. Again, I won't hold my breath. This country has finally reached its full capitalist potential. Socialism- that dirty cold war label- is for the masses. Fascism is for the rich. We now have the most fascist collection of power brokers in this country's history at the helm. And they will gladly let the ship fall off the edge of the world if they can gain from it. As I've said before: when a country is born out of genocide, it's off to a bad start. America has decimated so many countries around the world in its quest for wealth. Is it any wonder that now, in this global setting, the peons at home are viewed any differently than those abroad? We are a sick, sick country. But if you leave things up to chance, just remember:
There is no randomness. It is only our ignorance
Obama's supporters could put twice as much energy into it, and it wouldn't matter. I'm sure you noticed the ?NYT piece that pointed out the much vaunted "small contributors" to his campaign actually only accounted for about 1/4 of his funding. The supporters he will listen to are the guys who write the big checks. I read somewhere that Dimon was on Obama's short list for Sec. of the Treas. Rubin might wish to keep a low profile.
Sorry, but Obama supporters, are being had BIG time. There has never been a better time for Nader.
What else was there to expect? A few pages turned into a few hundred pages or was that thousands? Yep, we're screwed !
"Our enemies are innovative and resourceful, and so are we. They never stop thinking about new ways to harm our country and our people, and neither do we." George Bush—Washington, D.C., Aug. 5, 2004
George W. and his bunch a perverts are robbing the American people before he leaves office. This IS about the elections. Remember when these same ass holes wanted all of us invest our Social Securities. Our stomachs would would be growling about now.
Excuse me? Not Bush, but Barney Frank, Nancy Pelosi and Rahm Emanuel busted knuckles of those Dems who were a bit squeamish about voting against the overwhelming view of their constituents.
In addition, Barack Obama and dozens of Dems rely on the campaign contributions from Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, the Amer Bankers Assn, and the insurance and real estate industries who have contributed hundreds of millions of dollars in the past 20 years. Where do you think these monthly traunches of $100 million to Obama are coming from, for God's sake?
When Barney Frank was asked on the eve of the first vote to create $700 billion out of thin air to buy "lord notes what" whether he had the votes to pass it, he said without irony, "We probably have the votes because we have enough members who don't have contested races." (Think Soviet Russia.)
Wall Street controls this country, as Ralph Nader recently said. Barring an epiphany, Barack Obama will not "change" this fundamental, but disastrous, equation.
Not only will Obama not change it, he helped bring it about. He personally "convinced" enough members of the Black Cong. Caucus to switch their votes from NO on Mon, to YES on Fri. to ensure passage of the plan. I'm sure Goldman Sachs and Citi, as well as JPM approved. Obama is Wall Street's man.
Nietzsche
I'm already mad as hell because I am convinced that nothing will be done to help us as a matter of policy.
So When Will Banks Give Loans? . . Loans? . . What stinking loans?
The purpose of Bush's trillion dollar 'bailout' is dictatorial control of the economy.
Main Entry: fas·cism
Function: noun
Etymology: Italian fascismo, from fascio bundle, fasces, group, from Latin fascis bundle & fasces fasces
Date: 1921
1) often capitalized : a political philosophy, movement, or regime (as that of the Fascisti) that exalts nation and often race above the individual and that stands for a centralized autocratic government headed by a dictatorial leader, severe economic and social regimentation, and forcible suppression of opposition.
Sounds accurate to me.
Bring 'em on.
This is US taxpayer funded financial terrorism. Banks holding the world economy hostage by running it into the ground. This is creating a revolutionary situation like Sen. Christopher Dodd says. Haven't you had enough America?
We have backed away from the term, but it is clear that we are moving in the direction of the socialization of loss and the privatization of profiet. I believe that this is a system that cannot be labeled as socialism, (which is the new cry against Obama) but rather more closely resembles what the world knows as Fascism. With the military being brought home, for use in America, the national guard shipped overseas, and the constitution being ignored, these are very dangerous days for America. It's almost like it is all sound and fury, signifying nothing. Obama, McCain, the pundits and the media all acting out, but the significant activities taking place in the Bush administration, with nobody looking. 85% are looking for change, convinced we are going the wrong direction and arguing wildly as to whom,, Obama or McCain will be that agent of change, while we have silently allowed Bush to bring our nation and indeed the world as we know it to it's knees. Imagine him taking emergency powers, and remaining in control for another 20 years? Now don't we wish impeachment hadn't been off the table?
There will be hell to pay? As in they will be paying the devil?
It seems to me the American taxpayer is already DOING that.
PK
And the bailout's were because "they're too big to fail"? Well, fuck - let's give them the money to get even bigger!
The stupidity goes on and on.
Read this AP report: http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5gdxImPfgsyFSMH5OMxs6D-Bg4rGQD941J5780
Senator Dodd, "All I can tell you is that we are going to have the bankers up here, probably in another couple of weeks and we are going to have a very blunt conversation,"
I'll bet they are shaking in their boots to go in front of Dodd and his dancing partners.
"He continued: "If it turns out that they are hoarding, People will be so livid and furious that their tax money is going to line their pockets instead of doing the right thing. There will be hell to pay."
He got this right!
Notice, the hearings would be AFTER the election, when it's too late to hold both "major" candidates to account for the role they have played in this mother of all scams.