Looks Like Rain

Most people don’t carry around an umbrella unless they think there’s a good chance of rain.

That being said:

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. board approved interim guidelines to help clarify its procedures for liquidating complex financial firms [edit: that is, “too big to fail” firms] when they collapse, including permitting better treatment for some creditors when it benefits the estate or broader economy.

More:

However, in the event of an impending implosion, the statute authorizes the FDIC to use U.S. taxpayer dollars to make partial payments to “healthy” counter-parties of the failing firm so that they wouldn’t go down with it. Once economic disaster is averted, the law requires the government to recoup the costs of the bailout by selling the bank’s assets and by collecting fees from big financial institutions with $50 billion or more in assets.

So then, the question as I see it is simple: which big bank does the FDIC expect to collapse? My money is on the one that declared last week that they were halting all foreclosures in all 50 states.

In closing: Mankiw is an idiot; what made them think that was a good idea??; I would rather take my chances with the slot machines; in denial; she can raise money but can she stop being crazy?; epilogue to cholesterol story; “I don’t know if he’s qualified to be on the Federal Reserve Board. He’s only got a Nobel Prize in Economics“; This Angry Season; and recovery.

8 thoughts on “Looks Like Rain”

  1. Where are you getting your information from? I am a real estate agent and this is something I am very concerned over. I have clients facing foreclosure and are trying loan mods with BoA, so the source of your information would be nice to pass on to my clients.

    Thanks!
    Lisa

    1. Hi Lisa!

      I follow the news very closely. It was reported everywhere that B of A halted foreclosures, and considering that the former CEO of Countrywide just made a HUGE settlement with the SEC, it’s not a very big logical leap that some the people below him might not have been doing as good a job as would be desirable. You know as well as I do how difficult it can be to get a short sale going with B of A, and I can’t imagine working a loan mod with them is easier. The bond market pretty much came to the same conclusion I did, as you can see by the link in Saturday’s follow-up.

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