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Lawrence Kudlow
Lawrence Kudlow
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The AIG Outrage

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This whole AIG fiasco — where the entire political class is suddenly screaming over bonuses paid to derivative traders in AIG's financial-products division — is just a complete farce. What it really shows is how the government has completely bungled the AIG takeover. Blame the Bush administration and the Obama administration. It also shows, once again, why the government shouldn't run anything, because it cannot run anything.

AIG should have been placed in bankruptcy last fall under some sort of government sponsorship. While in bankruptcy, all the salary contracts (and every other AIG contract) would have been nullified and voided. At the same time, there would have been an orderly liquidation and sale of AIG's assets and separate divisions.

But as things stand now, there still is no clear roadmap for the dissolution of AIG. There are ideas, but nothing is set in concrete.

And as for the $165 million or so in AIG bonus payments, the Obama administration — including the president, Treasury man Tim Geithner and economic adviser Larry Summers — knew all about them many months ago. They were undoubtedly informed of this during the White House transition.

So there's no big surprise. Nobody should be shocked. But President Obama is doing his best play-acting ever. He knows full well that the nationwide outcry against federal bailouts and takeovers is only going to get worse on his watch. His poll numbers are already falling, and this AIG episode is going to pull them down more.

Incidentally, has anybody asked Team Obama why it is more than willing to break mortgage contracts with a bankruptcy-judge cram-down, but won't cram down compensation agreements for AIG, despite the fact that the U.S. government owns the company? Kind of odd, don't you think?

The Wall Street Journal editors get it right when they ask: Who's in charge, and what's the game plan? The whole AIG story is an outrage.

What's more, AIG is acting as a conduit for taxpayer money that is being sent to dozens of derivative counterparties, including foreign banks and American banks like Goldman Sachs. If we're going to bail out all these other firms, why not bail them out in full taxpayer view? Why is the money being laundered furtively through AIG? And where exactly is the end game for AIG? How are the taxpayers going to be repaid?

And what is Treasury man Geithner's role in all this? He appears to be the biggest bungler in what has become a massive bungling.

My CNBC friend and colleague Charlie Gasparino thinks Geithner can't survive this. I am inclined to agree.

Nevertheless, behind the furor over AIG, there is some good news to report on the banking front. This week's decision by the Federal Accounting Standards Board (FASB) to allow cash-flow accounting rather than distressed last-trade mark-to-market accounting will go a long way toward solving the banking and toxic-asset problem.

Many experts believe mortgage-backed securities and other toxic assets are being serviced in a timely cash-flow manner for at least 70 cents on the dollar. This is so important. Under mark-to-market, many of these assets were written down to 20 cents on the dollar, destroying bank profits and capital. But now banks can value these assets in economic terms based on positive cash flows, rather than in distressed markets that have virtually no meaning.

Actually, when the FASB rules are adopted in the next few weeks, it will be interesting to see if a pro forma re-estimate of the last year reveals that banks have been far more profitable and have much more capital than this crazy mark-to-market accounting would have us believe.

Sharp-eyed banking analyst Dick Bove has argued that most bank losses have been non-cash — i.e., mark-to-market write-downs. Take those fictitious write-downs away, and you are left with a much healthier banking picture. This is huge in terms of solving the credit crisis.

In a column last week, I suggested that not one more dime of government money is necessary for the banks. Instead, the marriage of the cash-flow valuation of bank assets and the upward-sloping Treasury yield curve will do the trick. Net interest margins are rising as banks purchase money for near-zero interest and loan it out at profitable rates. And the new mark-to-market reform will allow banks to hold their toxic assets for several more years and work them out — just as they did back in the 1990s.

We don't need more TARP. We don't need to take over more big banks. And we don't need to have the government run things it simply isn't capable of running.

To find out more about Lawrence Kudlow and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


Comments

2 Comments | Post Comment
Allowing any government, but most especially THIS band of thieves government, to pretend to run any business is predictibly going to fail. Get the boobs out of our business!
Comment: #1
Posted by: Juanito Verde
Thu Mar 19, 2009 6:42 AM
Sir;...You seem to be saying your baby can't be trusted with a pencil, and then you hand them a butcher knife to play with..... What is the military, and what are nuclear arms??? Certainly all your baby does with such things in defense of American business abroad should be done by business itself.... Right!!!. We can trust them....Let me tell you the true reason the government can't run anything...It cannot run anything because it is not just trying to run something, but is trying to make people rich in the process...The government can't shovel a side walk around here without some private contracter wanting a chance to double the price...If he still can't make money, then he will demand a tax break on training, and within 90 days he can fire anyone who seems union conscious, and train another...The government in its schools teaches engineering, which is military engineering.... It would not be far different from accounting except that the numbers have to add up....You can't use paper numbers to fight a battle...You can't use paper shoes or paper vehicles to get them to a battle...You cannot feed armies paper food to supply their needs in training or marching and fighting....Accounting and finance exists in a world of unreality where real people cannot live...It is easy to see that you got your nads blaming the government for not fixing a problem quickly enough that it did not make, and that it only helped to create by keeping its hands off... Trusting to the good will of strangers is hard enough, but the government does not want to do the hard work of governing, and trusts everyone with money...This is not because it does not have the power to govern... The problem is that it has too much power, and too little judgement... If the people ruled, the government could turn to them and say: WHAT do YOU want to DO, now???After spending two hundred years dividing people all the government could get now is a divided answer, so it must lead inspite of the inevitable repercussions....This AIG thing put them on the spot...It made them look like fools, and that made them mad... But on top of their madness was the outrage of a nation, that these crooks, your crooks, could continually feed themselves cash that is coming out of the pockets of people...The problems this government faces are years, and sometimes centuries in the making...They are systemic problems brought to the surface by a failed ideology...Which is what capitalism is with the chrome off: An Ideology...It is a shame that Mr. Obama and Mr. Geithner should suffer the consequences of mearly following the law... The fact is, that your nonsense ideology of capitalism, looking all very good on paper, has robbed this people blind and all quite legally, and the people are beginning to see it.... It is making them all reconsider law, and law makers, and law enforcers....They see law manipulated againt them...They see their government, gullible and corrupt...This is a lesson your economy is teaching them...And I know you like to preach, and you like to sing forth with your clarion call.... Don't... Go to the poor, the homeless, the laid off, this dispossessed people, the newly hopeless and sell your capitalism to them... Certainly those stupid poor are in some fashion the victims of their own ignorance... Give them the value of your wisdom... Show them the fools they are, and urge them to mend their ways so they too, can be millionairs...Do IT....If you got any guts to go along with your nads...Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #2
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Mon Mar 23, 2009 5:06 AM
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