Skip to main content

Little Tribute From George Soros

Paulson cannot be allowed a blank cheque
By George Soros 

Published: September 24 2008 20:28 - Last updated: September 24 2008 20:28

Hank Paulson’s $700bn rescue package has run into difficulty on Capitol Hill. Rightly so: it was ill-conceived. Congress would be abdicating its responsibility if it gave the Treasury secretary a blank cheque. The bill submitted to Congress even had language in it that would exempt the secretary’s decisions from review by any court or administrative agency – the ultimate fulfillment of the Bush administration’s dream of a unitary executive.

Mr Paulson’s record does not inspire the confidence necessary to give him discretion over $700bn. His actions last week brought on the crisis that makes rescue necessary. On Monday he allowed Lehman Brothers to fail and refused to make government funds available to save AIG. By Tuesday he had to reverse himself and provide an $85bn loan to AIG on punitive terms. The demise of Lehman disrupted the commercial paper market. A large money market fund “broke the buck” and investment banks that relied on the commercial paper market had difficulty financing their operations. By Thursday a run on money market funds was in full swing and we came as close to a meltdown as at any time since the 1930s. Mr Paulson reversed again and proposed a systemic rescue.

Mr Paulson had got a blank cheque from Congress once before. That was to deal with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. His solution landed the housing market in the worst of all worlds: their managements knew that if the blank cheques were filled out they would lose their jobs, so they retrenched and made mortgages more expensive and less available. Within a few weeks the market forced Mr Paulson’s hand and he had to take them over. 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

FreeWeek: Elliott Wave GMP

Greetings friends, Long time no see.  Once each year or so, our friends at Elliott Wave International will offer free premium elliott wave access to their reports and analysis. So this is the time again. This time, they are offering the public more than 100 pages of free analysis and forecasts on  every major world market.   EWI is giving away one month of its most popular global analysis publication, a 120-page "little black book" of investment insights called Global Market Perspective, which includes EWI's three regional publications: The U.S. Elliott Wave Financial Forecast ($19/month value) The European Elliott Wave Financial Forecast ($29/month value) The Asian-Pacific Elliott Wave Financial Forecast ($31/month value) PLUS, the 120-page book includes analysis culled straight from EWI's professional-grade Specialty Services, each of which is valued at $199/month. This means you also get analysis and forecasts for the following global markets: World stock markets (...

Effects on Banning Short Selling

If the SEC temporarily bans short selling, it will actually INCREASE the cost to banks of raising new capital, and the market's floor might be removed. - "The Securities and Exchange Commission took its most aggressive assault against bearish stock bets by stating its intention to issue a temporary ban on short-selling," writes the WSJ. "SEC Chairman Christopher Cox briefed Congress late Thursday of the agency's intention to take the extraordinary step of interfering with the market's regular functioning." - This move will affect hedge funds that use short positions to hedge investment risk during a rights issue or placing. If they're not able to provide liquidity during a rights issue, the costs to banks of raising new capital will increase.  - Shorts provide a floor, buying (i.e. covering shorts) when there is no one left to buy. If you can't short, the only way to reduce your risk is to sell, which may exaggerate downside pressure in the event...

Asian Comic: During bad times

Nice Asian styled comics