Posted on 09/24/2008 8:20:41 PM PDT by Erskine Childers
Why Paulson is wrong Luigi Zingales 21 September 2008
This weekends decisions will shape the type of capitalism we live with for the next fifty years. Here one of the worlds leading financial scholars, Chicago Business School Professor Luigi Zingales, argues that bailing out the financial system with taxpayers money is wrong. He discusses an alternative forced debt-for-equity swap or debt-forgiveness.
When a profitable company is hit by a very large liability, as was the case in 1985 when Texaco lost a $12 billion court case against Pennzoil, the solution is not to have the government buy its assets at inflated prices the solution is Chapter 11. In Chapter 11, companies with a solid underlying business generally swap debt for equity. The old equity holders are wiped out and the old debt claims are transformed into equity claims in the new entity which continues operating with a new capital structure. Alternatively, the debt holders can agree to trim the face value of debt in exchange for some warrants.
Even before Chapter 11, these procedures were the solutions adopted to deal with the large railroad bankruptcies at the turn of the twentieth century. So why is this well-established approach not used to solve the financial sectors current problems?
No time for bankruptcy procedures
The obvious answer is that we do not have time.
Chapter 11 procedures are generally long and complex, and the crisis has reached a point where time is of the essence. The negotiations would take months, and we do not have this luxury. However, we are in extraordinary times, and the government has taken and is prepared to take unprecedented measures. As if rescuing AIG and prohibiting all short-selling of financial stocks was not enough, now Treasury Secretary Paulson proposes a sort of Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) that will buy out (with taxpayers money) the distressed assets of the financial sector.
But at what price?
If banks and financial institutions find it difficult to recapitalise (i.e., issue new equity), it is because the private sector is uncertain about the value of the assets they have in their portfolio and does not want to overpay.
Would the government be better in valuing those assets? No. In a negotiation between a government official and banker with a bonus at risk, who will have more clout in determining the price?
The Paulson RTC will buy toxic assets at inflated prices thereby creating a charitable institution that provides welfare to the rich at the taxpayers expense. If this subsidy is large enough, it will succeed in stopping the crisis.
But, again, at what price?
The answer: billions of dollars in taxpayer money and, even worse, the violation of the fundamental capitalist principle that she who reaps the gains also bears the losses. Remember that in the Savings and Loan crisis, the government had to bail out those institutions because the deposits were federally insured. But in this case the government does not have do bail out the debtholders of Bear Sterns, AIG, or any of the other financial institutions that will benefit from the Paulson RTC.
An Alternative to Paulsons RTC Since we do not have time for a Chapter 11 and we do not want to bail out all the creditors, the lesser evil is to do what judges do in contentious and overextended bankruptcy processes. They force a restructuring plan on creditors, where part of the debt is forgiven in exchange for some equity or some warrants. And there is a precedent for such a bold move.
During the Great Depression, many debt contracts were indexed to gold. So when the dollar convertibility into gold was suspended, the value of that debt soared, threatening the survival of many institutions. The Roosevelt Administration declared the clause invalid, de facto forcing debt forgiveness. Furthermore, the Supreme Court maintained this decision.
My colleague and current Fed Governor Randall Koszner studied this episode and showed that not only stock prices but bond prices as well soared after the Supreme Court upheld the decision. How is that possible? As corporate finance experts have been saying for the last thirty years, there are real costs from having too much debt and too little equity in the capital structure, and a reduction in the face value of debt can benefit not only the equity holders, but also the debt holders.
If debt forgiveness benefits both equity and debt holders, why do debt holders not voluntarily agree to it?
· First of all, there is a coordination problem.
Even if each individual debtholder benefits from a reduction in the face value of debt, she will benefit even more if everybody else cuts the face value of their debt and she does not. Hence, everybody waits for the other to move first, creating obvious delay.
· Second, from a debt holder point of view, a government bail-out is better.
Thus, any talk of a government bail-out reduces the debt-holders incentives to act, making the government bail-out more necessary.
As during the Great Depression and in many debt restructurings, it makes sense in the current contingency to mandate a partial debt forgiveness or a debt-for-equity swap in the financial sector. It has the benefit of being a well-tested strategy in the private sector and it leaves the taxpayers out of the picture.
But if it is so simple, why has no expert mentioned it?
Taxing the many to benefits the few The major players in the financial sector do not like it. It is much more appealing for the financial industry to be bailed out at taxpayers expense than to bear their share of pain. Forcing a debt-for-equity swap or a debt-forgiveness would be no greater a violation of private property rights than a massive bailout, but it faces much stronger political opposition. The appeal of the Paulson solution is that it taxes the many and benefits the few. Since the many (we, the taxpayers) are dispersed, we cannot put up a good fight in Capitol Hill. The financial industry is well represented at all the levels. It is enough to say that for 6 of the last 13 years, the Secretary of Treasury was a Goldman Sachs alumnus. But, as financial experts, this silence is also our responsibility. Just as it is difficult to find a doctor willing to testify against another doctor in a malpractice suit, no matter how egregious the case, finance experts in both political parties are too friendly to the industry they study and work in.
Profits are private but losses are socialised? The decisions that will be made this weekend matter not just to the prospects of the US economy in the year to come. They will shape the type of capitalism we will live in for the next fifty years. Do we want to live in a system where profits are private, but losses are socialised? Where taxpayer money is used to prop up failed firms? Or do we want to live in a system where people are held responsible for their decisions, where imprudent behavior is penalised and prudent behavior rewarded?
For somebody like me who believes strongly in the free market system, the most serious risk of the current situation is that the interest of few financiers will undermine the fundamental workings of the capitalist system. The time has come to save capitalism from the capitalists.
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Prof. Zingales ofers this very commonsensical approach to the problem. All we really have here is debtors with claims on stockholders. Congress can grant incentives to get all of these companies into receivership, and then let the judges freeze prices, cancel debt in a huge round robin (most of this debt is owed between these same companies), and then swap out debt for equity when the dust settles. Equity holders will be wiped out, as they should be. Debt holders will take their lumps, too. The companies will emerge from bankruptcy court with clean balance sheets, but they'll be owned by responsible debtors, at least over all.
This is the way to go, folks.
The way I understand it is the basic Paulson plan would have the Federal government buy up the 5% of the mortgages that are bad. That is where the $700 billion number comes from. So then the Feds would be in the mortgage business until the collect the revenue from them.
It is also quite possible that a lot of those mortgages could become good and the Feds could sell them for a profit. It is entirely possible to recover the whole $700 billion over time and maybe even a small profit could be had.
They can all ef themselves as far as I am concerned if credit dries up who the hell cares they shouldn’t be borrowing anyway.....doesn’t the Bible say neither a borrower nor a lender be? And if they lent money to people they shouldn’t have isn’t that their own frickin fault? And why the hell should I caare? Let them fail and let credit dry up. Let the thing crumble and do whatever it will do and that will teach them that every frickin body that shows up is not entitled to credit.
Parley that is a frickin pipe dream there.
However, if these banks actually file for bankruptcy, then there will be runs on the banks and the federal government will have a several trillion dollar FDIC bailout on its hands rather than a 700 billion bank bailout.
The debt needs to be restructured without calling it a bankruptcy.
Yoou are all nuts. this thing is a sham
did anyone hear rush this morning mention a u.s. congressman
that wants to eliminate corporate taxes for 2 years
in order to make the economy boom and to pay for this?
save
That is, the immediate and most pressing problem is not whether some companies are short of cash (liquidity crisis), or have more debts than assets (solvency crisis.)
The immediate crisis is a mutual lack of financial trust between the various large financial players. That trust is the very life blood of the world's greatest economy, of the world's dominant currency, the dollar, the world's biggest economic market and the world's biggest, safest, most liquid investment market ... the United States.
Anyone controlling large amounts of assets is starting to hoard that money, rather than engaging in routine business transactions, for fear the other guy won't be good for it.
Without that trust, we're all a lot poorer.
Questions of what to do with individual companies are secondary.
And then maybe not...especially with the group of douche bags that are in congress now.
Ok, lets start by having all the companies top officials pay back 80% of their salaries for the past ten years, then we check their balance sheet.
Answer: We don't. We are just given a bunch of terrible loans, already in default, without a huge discount to the amount remaining on them.
In the words of Andrew Mellon, Secretary of the Treasury in 1929: "Liquidate labor, liquidate stocks, liquidate the farmers, liquidate real estate. It will purge the rottenness out of the system. High costs of living and high living will come down. People will work harder, live a more moral life. Values will be adjusted, and enterprising people will pick up from less competent people." Unfortunately, President Hoover did not take this sound advice. Nor have George W. Bush and the leaders of both parties.
Collapse is coming. I'd rather the government not make it worse by inflating the bubble even further.
The only way to solve that problem long term (for more than maybe five years) is to deflate assets so their claimed values approach their actual worth.
But what about the immediate problem of the monetary system that nearly froze last week, and remains at risk of such?
Good point. The author (professor at University of Chicago Business School) mentioned this same point today on the radio. After all, boilerplate contract provisions would require acceleration of debts when a bankruptcy proceeding is filed. That could be handled by provisions in the law suspending those provisions for companies that avail themselves of the program. Ultimately, all we're really talking about is changing the capital structure, swapping out debt for equity. We can call it whatever we'd like and handle it perhaps under a special administrative forum.
I would say that the panic aspect stems largely from not knowing. Investors panic when they don't know what will happen. The main thing now is to let the market understand that the government is ready to take effective action. If tat action turns out to be bankruptcy under government incentives, then it will hurt but at least they'll know what's going to happen, and there will likely not be anything approaching a panic.
The beauty of this is that the current equity holders get wiped out, and the folks who punted on the related credit swaps take their lumps. It wouldn't cost the taxpayer much if anything to do.
But it's politically undesireable to revolving-door types like Paulson. He's obviously there to advance the cause of Goldman Sachs, and feather his own post-Bush nest by buying favors with that $700 billion. The bankruptcy option avoids all of that and places the reorganization in the courts or in some similar administrative setting where it belongs.
In short, it's a way to handle this mess without caving to the "moral hazard" temptation that Wall Street and their lackeys in the government want. We need to get this Luigi fellow testifying before Congress NOW.
It is not, but it will be if not addressed, and there is no way to process thousands of large bankruptcies, much less find work for the millions unemployed.
This article was posted yesterday, BTW. I ripped them and I'll rip it again.
Well you can make a case for bankruptcy. Of course some of us recognize that WE, our representative, under the threat of federal investigation pushed lenders to make unsound loans.
I personally think we should buy up the bad paper we forced out there. You may think tough luck for the owners of a business we regulated into losses. Neither way is the free market. We can not go back and have free market home loans over the past 15 years.
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