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Stress Test: Obama's Rosy Scenario
Now it's official. Prosperity is right around the corner. We have heard the good news from both Wall Street and Washington. President Obama is careful not to use those very words, since this is what Herbert Hoover kept telling Americans during the country's ugly, post-1929 slide into the Great Depression. But the Obama administration sees "green shoots" sprouting all around and it offers hard evidence in the long-anticipated results of its "stress tests" for major banks. Good news! Nobody is insolvent. Some major names need to raise more capital--a not exactly trivial $75 billion more--but not to worry. They can all weather the storm, with a little more aid from Uncle Sam.
he stock market turned bullish in anticipation, and so has Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke. With few qualifiers, the Fed chairman announced a recovery is likely in the second half of the year. Well, maybe not for employment, but that's a lagging indicator and financial markets always lead the way. If these forecasts are true, the celebrated "stress tests" are an anticlimax. Things already are on the mend in the banking system. When the $800 billion economic stimulus spending fully kicks in, the animal spirits will also return to the real economy of producers and consumers. There will be "a chicken in every pot," as Herbert Hoover used to say.Barack Obama's wholesome optimism is doubtless sincere, and so was Herbert Hoover's. But in Hoover's day, people did not believe him. They could see for themselves it wasn't true. In time, Americans came to revile Hoover for his repetitious happy talk.
President Obama is now flirting with the same fate. He and his lieutenants, much like the Bush administration before them, are convinced that the nation's crisis can essentially be reversed by restoring "confidence" among investors, producers and buyers. So they talk up every budding blossom as proof. So did Hoover.
Reality is unlikely to cooperate, because the core of this crisis is not psychological. It is about real breakdown and real loss--trillions of dollars lost to the collapsing financial values, thousands of businesses and banks deeply damaged by collapsing balance sheets and markets. Wishing does not necessarily make it so. Talking up the economy prematurely may actually yield an opposite result--deepening cynicism and mistrust, a sense that the authorities do not know what they are talking about or, even worse, are concealing the truth.
More bearish analysts look beyond the good talk and they see deepening troubles for the banking system. While Obama's technocrats captured the big headlines with their encouraging "stress test" results, a private firm produced its own "stress test" on the very same day and it told an opposite story. The Institutional Risk Analytics Bank Monitor produces quarterly reports for investors on the health of individual banks and the system as a whole. IRA has gained enormous prestige in financial markets during the last few years because it has consistently been far ahead of government regulators and economists in warning about big trouble ahead.
Contrary to the government's claims, IRA's analysis is not brightening. IRA crunches the internal numbers that all banks report to the FDIC. It finds "a dramatic climb in the stress in the US banking industry." More and more financial institutions, large and small, are losing stability or capital cushions as net incomes turned turned negative for 1,575 of them. IRA's Bank Stress Index jumped from 1.8 at the end of 2008 to 5.57 in the first quarter of 2009.
"Our overall observation is that US policy makers may very well have been distracted by focusing on 19 large stress test banks designed to save Wall Street and the world's central bank bondholders, this while a trend is emerging of going concern viability crash taking shape under the radar," IRA explained. That is a polite way of saying Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and Obama's economic guru, Larry Summers, are so fixated on trying to save their old Wall Street colleagues they do not seem to recognize the deterioration underway broadly in banking. The trend, as IRA has noted in the past, is that "US banks have been migrating down the quality slope taking an average of nine months to complete the journey from A to F on the stress scale." That trend accelerated in the first quarter, the Bank Monitor said.
What happens typically to some healthy banks, IRA explained, is they encounter business failures and loan losses, then move to curtain their lending and reduce risks. But that step perforce reduces their incomes too. "This is a rare diet to try to live on in these times," IRA observed. "The bank, which makes its living wage from interest it collects from its lending engine, slowly starves." When operating costs exceed declining earnings, banks typically try to pump up their income from service fees--"a move that only serves to increase customer reluctance and mistrust." This retracting credit system is the classic pattern in recession and has now reached a more threatening stage. Sick banks stop lending. Where is the government intervention to reverse that? This president rejected the activist approach.
"We may have wasted valuable time trying to save Wall Street at the cost of Main Street," IRA's Christopher Whalen warns. "...Has the time come to shift the policy focus away from the things that we love, namely big zombie banks, to tackle those things that are truly hurting us?"
I am not a banking expert. I cannot say if IRA is right or not. What I do know is that, up until now, this private firm of bank analysts has been way more right than the government in Washington.
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27 Comments so far
Show Alland mister we could use a man like Herbert Hoover again - oh, we just had one.
Looks like we got another one too.
Talking up the economy prematurely may actually yield an opposite result--deepening cynicism and mistrust, a sense that the authorities do not know what they are talking about or, even worse, are concealing the truth.
The cover-up, they say, is worse than the actual crime. Obysmal is about to find this out the hardest way possible. Apparently, he learned nothing from Nixon and Clinton. If you want to restore confidence, just tell the truth.
The O'Bamba construct is talking up the economy because one of his assigned roles is to talk up whatever the elites need to be talked up, be it the economy, or imperial expansion, or red herrings to mask elite rackets. Like the predecessor construct saying "go shopping" after 9/11.
For the moment Obama's health care plan is the best we will get. It's the first step to single payer.
When people find out how much better it is than for profit health care they will put the private insurance companies out of business.
The insurance industry knows this. Don't listen to the neocons. Obama's plan will be the beginning of the end for private health insurance.
It will take some time for single payer only to happen, but the results of having Medicare as an alternative will be noticed immediately.
Everybody who is tired of getting crumbs should take this one. This one we can build on and when we begin to take back what is ours, and the ruling class sees this, they will fold.
They have never been anything but cowards who could stand up only when their iron grip had no resistance at all. Stand up. They will curse and scream and threaten but don't back down.
The next fight will be easier, and the one after that easier still. If we can get health care for everybody, it will frighten the union busters. They will begin to cry. Pay no attention. Do it.
Our government is the most cowardly of all. They know we have the power. A prosecutor for war crimes will follow.
We have an opportunity to begin. Little by little we can take our country back. It was lost piecemeal and will have to be regained piecemeal, but we have to start.
Eventually, soon, billions will flow to the people instead of the banks and big business. Ignore Hooverville. Real substantive change, public works programs that pay a living wage, health care, good jobs for the poor and middle class are ours for the taking.
It's all one seamless piece. Health care is the best place to start. The old ways are dead. The US can go broke trying to revive them. What's next after capitalism? I can't wait to find out.
Yo! 'N'; "For the moment Obama's health care plan is the best we will get. It's the first step to single payer." With all due respect, it's the first step to NO health care for the plebs at all. Ask Larry Summers. He's here to implement "Nasty brutish mean and short" as government policy, same as he did in Russia.
No, we have to get it right the first time. Once you go down the path of wrong, there's no turning back.
When, since 1980 have we been on the path of right?
Nietzsche wrote:
"When people find out how much better it is than for profit health care they will put the private insurance companies out of business."
___________________________________________________________________________________
What are you talking about??!! Am I living in different planet.??!!
Obama's plan is same ole same ole. Insurance companies will still have a pivotal
role in the new system. The only difference is that the government will subsidize
insurance for some people, that is all. The new plan is a give away for the insurance comapnies.
The culture of illusion did not leave Washington on Jan 20,2009. It is alive and thriving. WAKE UP Americab!
mr. greider, barackstar is far beyond the "flirting" stage - that was over sometime during the campaign. we are now in the married stage of reality, the passing of which occurred on that oh-so-glorious day in january, the day he said "i do...". remember?
the barackstar better see "green shoots." it is, after all, springtime in most places of the country, headed well into summer in some places. you know summer, right, barackstar, the time when "green shoots" turn brown and ugly.
there is already discussion about bank of america needing even more billions of welfare dollars, AFTER they receive the 34 billion currently headed their way.
this fucking country is insane, it is a disgrace to the human race. it is way past time to stop giving crumbs to the american people while the financial wizards stroll away with the entire bakery. and they are strolling, right before our very eyes, and no one, not one single american citizen, has done one single thing to stop this theft.
excluding race, the only difference between now and the previous eight years is the simple fact that one guy has a grasp on the english language and the other is a bungling idiot. it's just that doublespeak sounds prettier when put forth in a grammatically correct sentence.
the scent of a well-oiled rifle seems sweeter with each passing day. go ahead, homeland, add that one to my growing list.
"this fucking country is insane"
I do believe the insanity stems from the influence of elites, those who delivered unto us the O'Bamba construct. But please everyone, let's escape into our SUVs, fill up the tank, roll up the windows, lock the doors, turn up the jams, and ignore all problems!! This is what the ELITES WANT us to do, more than anything else in the world!! What's good for THEM is good for us!
"Now it's official. Prosperity is right around the corner. We have heard the good news from both Wall Street and Washington."
Good luck if you think a bear market rally is going to return your pension plan to its former value. Furthermore, the stock market is not an indicator of what's happening in the economy on Main Street. Hundreds of thousands of jobs are still being lost every month while jobs that are coming on line are paying much less than they did a couple of years ago.
If the job market and/or wages are shrinking but mortgage payments on those bubbled-up housing purchases remain the same, common sense will tell us that many more foreclosures will take place and more zombie banks will increase their balance sheets with assets that are declining in value.
"Has the time come to shift the policy focus away from the things that we love, namely big zombie banks, to tackle those things that are truly hurting us?"
YES; that time is long overdue!
Say what? "Barack Obama's wholesome optimism is doubtless sincere..."
Wholesome optimism? Beyond doubt, sincere? Really? This is the guy who wrote an international finance letter when he graduated from Columbia's international finishing school before going to Haaarvard. This is the guy that everyone brags about how intelligent he is. But he's just a poor dupe, a rube when it comes to trusting the banksters running and ruining the country. Just a coincidence that he got the job just in time to be there when they needed him.
In totally unrelated news, after the sentencing of four people in a fraud that apparently involved stealing money from the Bank of China and at least partially laundering it though casinos in Vegas and Macau, we get this description of international criminal activity from the US Consulate:
**International organized crime is defined as those self-perpetuating associations of individuals who operate internationally for the purpose of obtaining power, influence, monetary and commercial gains, wholly or in part by illegal means, while protecting their activities through a pattern of corruption and violence. International organized criminals operate in hierarchies, clans, networks and cells. The crimes they commit vary as widely as the organizational structures they employ.**
In other unrelated news, Stephen Freidman stepped down from the NY Fed yesterday after a dust-up over his having been buying Goldman Sachs stock at the same time he was helping out with the Fed plans to save banks. There was no mention about the problem of buying stock in Obama.
Sorry, Mr. Greider. I love you, but I am so beyond the loss of confidence stage. Obama's administration will already be remembered as the one that watched us sink while saving the fat cats. Which side are you on, boys, and all that.
"Barack Obama's wholesome optimism is doubtless sincere, and so was Herbert Hoover's."
Why ruin a perfectly good article with nonsense like this?
It's far more likely that Obama knows his strategy is unlikely to succeed, but what other choice does he have? Take on the rich and big business? Hoover probably knew the same thing. But the President -- whoever he is -- can't annoy the wrong people.
No politician willingly risks antagonizing the wealthy and powerful. Look at Nancy Pelosi's blunt refusal to consider single payer, or John Conyers' refusal to initiate impeachment proceedings against Bush in 2007. They all know which side their bread is buttered on -- and that includes Obama and Hoover.
Only Miss Cleo or Dionne Warwick are qualified to speak to Obama's "optimism."
--
Eric Patton
Cincinnati, OH
ebpatton@yahoo.com
I agree that Obama still has not made Wall Street pay the costs for their
gambling and excessive profit taking. On the other hand, he has made small steps
which annoy them which would never have happened under Republicans:
1)Set caps on executive compensation for bailed out banks
2)Proposed eliminating private bank skims off Fed insured college loans and
replacing them by just having
the Gov't make these loans directly as they did years ago when I went to college
3)Proposed eliminating off-shore Corporate tax breaks and tax havens
which have only served to actually subsidize offshoring US jobs while reducing
Corporate taxes
4)Proposed eliminating completely oil and gas Corporate tax breaks
The Stimulus Bill, almost completely opposed but for 3 Republican Senators,
provides money for real productive investments towards a Greener Economy.
For example, the $1500 tax rebate for energy efficient windows which I am planning on
using myself to cut my natural gas use hopefully by 30%.
Is it enough?
No.
As soon as the economy begins an uptick from Stimulus Spending, it will get dragged
down again by peak oil price increases.
To prevent that we need increased gas taxes going to mass transit OPERATIONS which
could easily cut our oil consumption by 20-30% in a matter of months or a year.
But it IS at least small steps in the right direction.
Bigger steps have to come or the economy and Earth will be cooked and so will Obama...
Scarcely anything Obama has done so far seriously distinguishes him from his most recent predecessors. This is just one more example. He surrounds himself with all the main perps of the economic debacle, so why would we expect them to tell the truth about it or formulate policy that helps Main Street when Wall Street is the only street they ever frequent? Maybe Obama can ask Americans to pray, once again, this time for full economic recovery under his bankster-enabling plan. Yesterday was supposedly a "national day of prayer", a la Bush hankerings for elimination of separation of church and state. Let's have a national day of prayer for the return to happiness and sunny optimism on Wall St. while Main St. crumbles to ruins, unemployment rises, homelessness surges, and drone missiles fall on unsuspecting Afghan and Pakistani civilians. It can STILL be morning in America, if only we believe!
"wholesome optimism is doubtless sincere"
Mr. Greider, am I optimistic to hope that you use "doubtless" to indicate doubt? If you do, mightn't some of us think you mean that no doubt or little doubt exists?
Come on, I doubt his sincerity. He's trying to get Americans to invest, and he says "Ooh, the investments good."
We had better at least kick the tires.
The worst is over, banks are again capitalized--uh, but have not yet loosened lending requirements--and now things will pick up. For whom? Well, Wall Street investors, for sure. Unemployment, we predict will hit 10%, but not likely 12, and homes lose less value than we anticipated--so rejoice!--it could have been worse, much worse in fact.
No, no we will not modify NAFTA to bring back jobs (no need, they will increase of their own accord through osmosis) and we'll make sure to keep banks healthy by not letting them lend to those risky borrowers who want to purchase autos or expand their businesses; instead, we'll just keep pumping money into them for nothing. Nor will we implement single payer health care--why bother now that the economic downturn is reversing? Trust us, we have everything under control.
I wouldn't want to waste any time or words on debating whether Obama is "doubtless sincere" or a flaming charlatan. That doesn't matter, in fact the public investment in belief in his "sincerity" is a great impediment to a rational assessment of his policies, both domestic and foreign. These policies, in my opinion, are spectacularly wrong, and it matters not a whit whether they are being pursued with sincerity. I'm willing to "stipulate" (as the lawyers say) that Barack Obama is an honorable man who loves his wife, children, dog and country. but his administration is a grave threat to the health and survival of the republic, no matter his "sincerity." Mr. Greider's article is a brilliant critique of Obama's approach to the economic crisis, so let us not beat him up just because he preserves a piece of his Obama partisanship by throwing the fig leaf of "sincerity" over his disastrous actions.
Sioux Rose
I related this before: there are astrological factors that show EXTREME financial stress or lack* beginning as early as September, but certainly no later than November, and these influences last well into 2010. June 2010 has significant astrological emphasis on the sign of Aries, the realm of Mars. It portends potential acts of violence, or an escalation of war. There is something unique, unexpected or "original" about how these expressions emerge. In any case, I have published this prediction so if I am wrong, I will do my best to NOT bring up astrology again in the forum. (That's how convinced I am of the impact of the planetary factors that will come into prominence later this year.) Recovery as being sold to potential buyers is a smokescreen... probably to ward off the panic that cannot be inevitably warded off.
(*In earlier instances of similar planetary interaction, energy and fuel played a significant role in "the experience of lack." The reverberations were global.) Prior dates include: 1931-l932 & l980-l982.
'I am not a banking expert. I cannot say if IRA is right or not. What I do know is that, up until now, this private firm of bank analysts has been way more right than the government in Washington."
Who's a banking expert? A bookie and a loan shark.
If only we mandated and forced our economy back to straight capitalism where if you don't make it, you fail and there are more than a handful of 19 banks that need to be cut loose from the mothership USS MOOLA and probably at least as many insurance companies because what the country club crooks have set up for themselves only perpetuates the theft and they mean to have it all unless the game is halted.
I worked at a recognizable bank until recently and one of the requirements for retaining employment was to become 'certified' by passing different examinations on subjects such as 'money laundrying' and 'bank secrecy' to be knowledgable enough to recognize these 'illegal' activities or violations when spotted.
Now it is so obvious that I should have reported the bank itself for being the money laundrying house that it was and most probably still is while using the 'bank secrecy act' to cover that which banks don't like to be revealed.
And obama is really not making a good show of himself if for no other reason than keeping geithner, summers and bernanke around for 'expertise' and advice as how to really bring a class of people to their knees and destroy what was once a strong and vibrant country, but to be fair, this fall has been going on ever since woodrow wilson signed the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 as required for his becoming president, then he had the nerve to regret that move when he could have worked on repealing that act just as every president and congress have since.
Oh, William Greider, good article.
"Barack Obama's wholesome optimism is doubtless sincere, and so was Herbert Hoover's."
That is a lot of nonsense. Neither Obama nor Hoover were or are sincere.
Both are bull-shit artists and accomplished liars.
The world's economy is in failure mode. Any honest assessment of the banks and the mortgages still outstanding will show that people cannot pay back enough of the current loans and foreclosures will make matters worse. Banks can't sell the empty houses because there is nobody to move into them who has a job capable of paying for them.
Without solid job growth, wage growth, job security, and guaranteed single payer health care we will continue to stagnate. People will hunker down and refuse to take risks because the downside of failure is so high. Failing at a new venture when jobs are available is no problem. Failing during a period of widespread layoffs means homelessness, sickness, permanent poverty and is increaingly a death sentence.
When we quit the happy talk and deal with reality THEN you know we might start moving back up.
Prosperity is Just Around the Corner [it really doesn't pay to be a mourner].
Love is Sweeping the Country.
Who Cares? [what banks fail in Yonkers - long as you've got a kiss that conquers]
These are songs from a musical called "Of Thee I Sing (Baby)" from the depression era. It is about a feelgood presidential candidate who... never mind. Just that it is so so funny the way it applies to today, the spin over substance. There is a lot more, including songs about the laughable press coverage of events.
Please consider this Gershwin gem for your community theater or school musical next year. It works with amateurs. We did it in High School.
My favorite lines:
"Which is more important, corn muffins or justice?"
"The decision of the Supreme Court is ..... CORN MUFFINS"
Joe
Just tell me which banks to sell short. STI, BAC, WFC, Key, RF, FITB. Any others?