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Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Geithner Testifies

by Calculated Risk on 4/21/2009 10:25:00 AM

From the WaPo: Geithner Faces Oversight Grilling

Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner is testifying before a congressional oversight committee headed by Elizabeth Warren, the overseer of the bailout, underway right now.

Warren is setting the tone of the hearing, telling Geithner that Americans are "angry" at how the bailout has been administered so far, by both Geithner and his predecessor, Hank Paulson.

"People want to see action in terms that make sense to them," Warren said, is Geithner nodded solemnly.
Here is the text of the letter describing the bailout.

Here is the CNBC feed.

And a live feed from C-SPAN.

IMF: Global Losses may hit $4.1 Trillion

by Calculated Risk on 4/21/2009 09:12:00 AM

From Bloomberg: IMF Says Global Losses From Credit Crisis May Hit $4.1

Worldwide losses tied to rotten loans and securitized assets may reach $4.1 trillion by the end of 2010 as the recession and credit crisis exact a higher toll on financial institutions, the International Monetary Fund said.

Banks will shoulder about 61 percent of the writedowns, with insurers, pension funds and other nonbanks assuming the rest ... The fund projected losses of $2.7 trillion at U.S. financial institutions, an increase from its estimates of $2.2 trillion in
January and $1.4 trillion in October.

The $4.1 trillion estimate is the first by the IMF to include loans and securities originating in Europe and Japan. ...

The report said U.S. bank losses at the end last year totaled $510 billion. Additional writedowns of $550 billion are expected through 2010. The projections exclude government-sponsored enterprises.
Here is the Reuters report.

And from the WSJ: IMF: Banks Need $875 Billion in Equity

Inspector General Barofsky on TARP

by Calculated Risk on 4/21/2009 12:02:00 AM

From the WSJ: TARP Watchdog Urges Better Oversight

A report by the TARP watchdog said the Treasury should take steps to better manage its financial-rescue effort so that taxpayer dollars are safeguarded and programs are more fraud-resistant, accountable and transparent.
And on the potential for gaming the PPIP:
"The significant Government-financed leverage presents a great incentive for collusion between the buyer and seller of the asset, or the buyer and other buyers, whereby, once again, the taxpayer takes a significant loss while others profit," [the report said]
This is the second quarterly report to Congress on the $700 billion TARP.

From the LA Times: Inspector general cites potential flaws in bank bailout, urges Treasury to adopt safeguards. An excerpt on the PPIP:
"The sheer size of the program ... is so large and the leverage being provided to the private equity participants so beneficial, that the taxpayer risk is many times that of the private parties, thereby potentially skewing the economic incentives," the report states.
This is harsh criticism of the PPIP (well deserved in my view). And a pretty critical report of the overall handling of the TARP.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Texas Instruments: Conference Call Comments

by Calculated Risk on 4/20/2009 07:35:00 PM

Here are some excerpts from the Texas Instruments conference call (ht Brian)

You'll recall at the midquarter update we raised the middle of our guidance range and referenced that 3G communications infrastructure in China was the most notable area of better than expected strength. In the last few weeks of the quarter, in addition to base stations, we also saw better than expected demand from notebook computers, some other sectors of the handset market, as well as from LCD-based HDTVs.

Regionally, most of the strength is coming from Asia, while the other regions remain subdued. Therefore, we wouldn't characterize the stronger demand as broad based, as it was concentrated in a few high volume end markets and the Asian region. Nonetheless, it is encouraging to see our revenues stabilizing, albeit at what remains a low level.

We also caution that the stabilization is likely being driven by customers that are slowing their inventory reduction and not by broad-based increases in end consumption or by customers rebuilding inventory. Let me explain. Over the last few quarters, we saw dramatic drop in demand for our chips because customers slowed their production and began to reduce the chip inventory they had in stock. Now that they have realigned their own production with the lower level of consumer end demand and reduced their existing chip inventory, order trends for our chips have started to improve. This leads us to believe that the worst of the inventory drain is now finished and our shipments will more closely reflect our customers' production levels. However, the most important determinant of our business levels in the second half of this year will be the real end consumption trends. From our perspective, there remains significant uncertainty about the direction of end consumption. As a result, we are careful not to misread the completion of inventory reduction as a return to higher end demand. Our approach is that we will keep our operations highly flexible to respond to whatever direction demand will track, while remaining highly diligent to inventory and costs.
emphasis added
More on inventory correction:
The reduction in inventory that we achieved resulted in inventory days declining to 77 at the end of the quarter, compared with 94 days at the end of the year-ago quarter, and 89 days at the end of the fourth quarter. TI orders in the quarter were 2.19 billion, up 18% sequentially. After a five-month slide, product orders bottomed in the month of December and increased each month through the first quarter. TI book to bill increased to 1.05 in the quarter from 0.75 in the prior quarter.
But they have drastically reduced capital expenditures:
Going forward, we anticipate for this year that we would spend upwards of $300 million on capital for the year. ['08 was $763 million, '06 was $1.27B]
And from the Q&A:
Analyst: Could you go into a little bit more detail on what you guys are looking for that would enable you to think that we are at the beginning of a new semiconductor cycle?

TXN: What we saw was just one region, primarily Asia, and just a couple of large verticals, primarily the -- infrastructure, notebooks, and some handsets and LCD TVs as picking up a little bit late in the quarter. We did not see it importantly in other regions around the world and we did not see it in the industrial or consumer sectors. So until we see demand pick up in other regions, as well as in other sectors, we don't believe that we're looking at something that suggests that there's an overall increase in demand to be anticipated. Right now, it feels more to us like our demand [from] our customers are lining up their orders to end demand – at an overall level lower than it has been for quite sometime.

CNBC: Ken Lewis Interview

by Calculated Risk on 4/20/2009 05:11:00 PM

Excerpt (any errors by CR):

Q: What about capital adequacy. Are you expecting to raise new capital?

Lewis: We are not expecting to need more capital. The issue of course - which was brought up today which is hurting all bank stocks - will some be required convert some of their preferred to common. We don't think we have an issue there. But that is now in the hands of the regulators, and we have not heard back from them at this point in time.

Q: What should we look for as far as the most important things to come out of the stress tests?

Lewis: I think it will be what requirements are there on what banks in terms of conversion of TARP preferred into TARP equity.

Q: You said you want to pay back the TARP money in 2009. Is that still on the table? Are you expecting to pay back that TARP that soon?

Lewis: Well, we would like to, and we would prefer to. But again that is now in the hands of the regulators and we will be in consultation with them as to what the best avenue will be in that regard.


What does converting preferred shares to common accomplish? Krugman comments on this today: Preferred shares to common equity: an analogy

Another Fun Day in the Markets

by Calculated Risk on 4/20/2009 03:54:00 PM

I'm looking forward to the housing news later this week!

And on the false Stress Test rumor this morning, from Bloomberg: Treasury Says ‘No Basis’ to Report on Bank Testing

A U.S. Treasury spokesman said there’s no basis to a blog posting that buffeted financial stocks by saying that most of the nation’s largest banks are insolvent.
Why are they even responding?

DOW down 3.6%

S&P 500 down 4.3%

NASDAQ down 3.9%

Stock Market Crashes Click on graph for larger image in new window.

The first graph is from Doug Short of dshort.com (financial planner): "Four Bad Bears".

This is the 2nd worst S&P 500 / DOW bear market in the U.S. in 100 years.

Note that the Great Depression crash is based on the DOW; the three others are for the S&P 500.

Stock Market Crashes Dow S&P500 NASDAQ Nikkei The second graph compares four significant bear markets: the Dow during the Great Depression, the NASDAQ, the Nikkei, and the current S&P 500.

See Doug's: "The Mega-Bear Quartet and L-Shaped Recoveries".

Foreclosures: Movin' on up!

by Calculated Risk on 4/20/2009 01:31:00 PM

Zach Fox at the North County Times brings us another half off sale ... this time in a little higher price range. This is a 5,500 sq foot home in Escondido. Zach says the bank ate $815,000.

Escondido Foreclosure Photo by Zach Fox

Click on photo for larger image in new window.

November 2006: $1,650,000

February 2009: $805,000*

*Zach Fox notes this was the price the bank bid at the foreclosure auction. For some time it wasn't worth going to foreclosure auctions because the banks would bid what they were owed - and that would be more than the property was worth. I'll see if I can more details on this house.

Office Space for Rent: One Year Free!

by Calculated Risk on 4/20/2009 11:25:00 AM

From the LA Times: Southern California office market is hammered by recession

Vacancy in Los Angeles County reached 14.3% in the first quarter, up from 11.2% a year earlier, according to a report released last week by Cushman & Wakefield. In Orange County, where demand has been dwindling for more than a year, vacancy ticked up to nearly 18% from 15%.

Among the hardest-hit markets are the Inland Empire, Irvine and north Los Angeles County, all of which have been wracked by the losses of tenants in the troubled industries of mortgage and finance. Vacancies in all three areas have surpassed 20%, a sign of a very weak market. In Ontario and the area around Los Angeles International Airport, vacancy tops 30%.
And the following is ... amusing:
In West Los Angeles, owners are steeply discounting the monthly cost of an office -- cutting rates that, ironically, grew so high during the boom years that many companies were forced to move out and find cheaper digs.
I saw this in my community too. Leases expired. Landlords raised the rents sharply. The long term tenants moved out. Real estate related businesses moved in. And now the buildings are vacant!

BofA CEO: "Credit is bad, going to get worse"

by Calculated Risk on 4/20/2009 10:35:00 AM

BofA CEO Ken Lewis on conference call:
[L]et me make a couple comments about our given environment. Credit is bad and we believe credit is going to get worse before it will eventually stabilize and improve. Whether that turn is later this year or in the first half of 2010, I'm not going to hazard a guess ... For the rest of the year we look for charge-offs to continue to trend upward. I think it will be at a slower pace than we've experienced. Reserve build will also continue for the next couple quarters though not at the level we experienced this quarter. From an economic standpoint we believe we can see weak but positive GDP growth by the fourth quarter this year. I have to say that even our internal economists are a little at odds as to the timing, with some seeing recovery earlier. However, we think it prudent to run the company under an expectation it will be later in the year or early next year. We believe unemployment levels won't peak until next year at somewhere in the high single digits. At this point we don't see unemployment meeting or exceeding 10% but that will of course be impact by how long the economy stays in recession.
emphasis added

BofA: $13.4 billion in Credit-loss provisions

by Calculated Risk on 4/20/2009 08:55:00 AM

From CNBC: BofA Tops Forecasts with Help from Merrill

While results topped analysts' forecasts, they were bolstered by one-time events, including a $1.9 billion gain from selling shares of China Construction Bank and $2.2 billion of gains tied to widening credit spreads.
...
Bank of America set aside $13.38 billion for credit losses in the quarter, up from the fourth quarter's $8.54 billion.
...
Credit quality deteriorated broadly as the economy weakened, housing prices fell and unemployment rose.

Net charge-offs rose to $6.94 billion from $2.72 billion a year earlier. Nonperforming assets more than tripled to $25.74 billion, and rose $7.51 from year-end.

Bank of America's credit card business lost $1.77 billion in the quarter.

"We continue to face extremely difficult challenges, primarily from deteriorating credit quality driven by weakness in the economy and growing unemployment," Lewis said.
The confessional is still open.

Sunday Night Futures

by Calculated Risk on 4/20/2009 01:38:00 AM

I had a great time at the NPR event.

Here is an open thread for discussion. The futures are off slightly ...

Bloomberg Futures.

CBOT mini-sized Dow

CME Globex Flash Quotes

Futures from barchart.com

And the Asian markets. The Asian markets are mixed, but mostly up.

And a graph of the Asian markets.

Best to all.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Planet Money Webcast

by Calculated Risk on 4/19/2009 08:30:00 PM

The Planet Money webcast starts at 6PM PT with This American Life’s Alex Blumberg and NPR’s Adam Davidson. (I'm just in the audience)

Here is the site.

Best to all

Larry Summers: "Substantial risks; issues in the global economy, commercial real estate"

by Calculated Risk on 4/19/2009 06:21:00 PM

Here is the transcript of Larry Summers on NBC’s ‘Meet the Press’

A few excerpts:

GREGORY: Let me ask -- the president has talked about glimmers of hope in the economy. And obviously, what the government has done, through a stimulus package; what the Fed has done through buying up debt is try to create demand in the economy.

My question is, if you’re seeing any easing in the economy or an easing of the recession, is that because the government is propping the economy up?

Or do you see elements of recovery that are self-sustaining?

SUMMERS: Well, I think you’ve got to give the government credit, some credit for what’s happened, but these have the potential to build into something that’s self-sustaining. That’s certainly not something that’s been established to this point, and that’s why we’re going to need to maintain strong policies for quite some time to come.

But I think we can take some satisfaction that, after a period when there was literally no positive indicator to be found, when it seemed like our economy was in a -- a vertical, it’s a more mixed picture today. And you’ve got to give public policies a significant part of the credit for that.

But as the engine turns over, you know, at some point, it will become something that’s much more -- much more self-sustaining. But right now, we’ve got a long way to go in terms of supporting this economy.

GREGORY: Let me have you respond to some criticism. New York Times columnist and economist, and opponent on these matters of the administration, Paul Krugman wrote this week that the administration should be careful not to -- to count a recovery a before it’s hatched.

He wrote this, specifically, about whether a full-blown depression is still possible. This is what he said: “Can a depression happen again? Well, commercial real estate is coming apart at the seams. Credit card losses are surging. And nobody knows just how bad things will get in Japan or Eastern Europe. We probably won’t repeat the disaster of 1931, but it’s far from certain that the worst is over.”

What do you say?

SUMMERS: You know, I disagree with Paul about a lot of things, but he is right to be raising cautions. That’s why, when I just spoke about the economy, I said that, after a period when it -- when everything was negative, there were now some mixture in the indicators. We don’t know what -- we don’t know; we can’t know with certainty what’s going to happen next, and there certainly are real risks ahead.

That’s why the president’s approach to the banking system involves looking at a stress test that contemplates an adverse outcome and thinks about how the financial system will function in an adverse scenario. That’s why we’re very focused on maintaining the pressure.

No one is in any position to declare any kind of victory here. But the fact that no one can declare victory doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t take note of developments as they unfold. And the developments, as I say, are more -- are more mixed now.

But cautions that we’ve got a long way to go; that there are still substantial risks; that there are downside contingencies that we’ve got to prepare for; that there are issues in the global economy; that there are issues in commercial real estate, that’s right.
...
GREGORY: Let me turn to the issue of the banks. You have referenced these stress tests that the administration is administering to banks, and the idea here is to try to find out how much more financial shock the banks would be able to absorb.

The president has made it very clear that he would provide additional money to the banks if it were necessary for them to shore up their financial position. According to the Treasury secretary, you have roughly $100 billion left in the bailout fund. What if the banks need a lot more than that, in terms of capital reserves?

Where would the money come from?

SUMMERS: Well, David, what the president and the Treasury secretary have actually been clear on is that the first choice, the first resort for more capital is going to the private markets, going to the private markets directly to raise equity, going and working with the private markets in a variety of, kind of, so-called asset liability swaps that would have the effect of perhaps diluting some shareholders but also fortifying the level of capital that those banks had.

And so there’s the capacity to turn to the private market. There’s also the -- there’s also the possibility that, over time, some of the banks that are in the strongest position will find themselves in a position where they can repay a portion of those -- a portion of the resources, which would then enable the government to make further -- further contributions, if necessary.

GREGORY: That’s become a controversial point. You have some banks who are saying, “Look, we’re in pretty healthy shape here. We want to give back this bailout money. We don’t want the taxpayers’ money.”

And the administration has appeared to say, “Hey, not so fast.” Wouldn’t that be a good thing?

SUMMERS: Well, the administration’s been, I think, consistent and clear in taking what I would guess almost everybody would agree is the right position. We want -- we want to be out of the financial system. We want people to be paying back the government. But we don’t want people to be paying back the government in ways that will put themselves right back in trouble and leaving themselves with inadequate capital.

And we certainly don’t want people starving automobile loans or starving the mortgage market or starving the small business market in order to pay back the government.

So what Secretary Geithner has made clear is that he’s very open, and regulatory authorities are very open to being paid back, but it has to be done in a way that’s consistent with the stability of the financial institution and has to be consistent with maintaining the -- maintaining the flow of credit.
emphasis added
There is much more ...

Housing Activity Forecast

by Calculated Risk on 4/19/2009 02:17:00 PM

Reuters is quoting Freddie Mac chief economist Frank Nothaft as saying that he believes U.S. housing sales are near a bottom. Nothaft also said about one-third of all sales were foreclosure resales.

I disagree with Nothaft's forecast.

My view is:

  • New home sales are at or near a bottom.

  • Existing home sales will fall further.

    Since there are far more existing home sales than new home sales, I expect that total sales activity will decline further.

    Note: Please do not confuse a bottom in new home sales activity with a bottom in existing home prices. Please see: Housing: Two Bottoms

    New Home Sales

    With the huge overhang of existing home inventory - especially distressed inventory - it is theoretically possible for new home sales to go to zero. However, it is more likely that some people will always buy a new home, perhaps because of local supply and demand issues, or maybe they just prefer a new home, or perhaps other reasons. Whatever the reason, I think new home sales are near a bottom.

    My 2005 call of a top for new home sales was based on objective factors, however calling the bottom is somewhat more subjective.

    New Home Sales and Recessions Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph shows new home sales since 1963. The Census Bureau reported that New Home Sales in February were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 337 thousand.

    This puts February 2009 sales more than 75% below the peak of July 2005, and near the lowest level since the Census Bureau started tracking sales in 1963 (note: only January 2009 sales at 322 thousand SAAR were lower than February).

    These sales number are not adjusted for changes in population or number of households - and adjusting for population changes would make current sales look even worse.

    As I noted above, it is possible for new home sales to fall further, however since the economy has just come through a period of very tight credit, and extremely low consumer confidence, my guess is this has pushed new home sales to - or near - the bottom for this cycle.

    Residential NAHB Housing Market Index Additional evidence comes from the NAHB builder confidence index. The index increased in April, especially for traffic of prospective buyers. And, anecdotally, the home builders I've spoken with, are all telling me activity has picked up recently.

    This graph shows the builder confidence index from the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB). The housing market index (HMI) increased to 14 in April from 9 in March. The record low was 8 set in January.

    This is fairly subjective, but I think new home sales are at or near a bottom.

    Existing Home Sales

    Perhaps we could make the same argument about existing home sales - the economy has just come through a period of very tight credit, and extremely low consumer confidence - depressing sales. But there is another factor to consider for existing home sales; foreclosure resales.

    Important note: Foreclosures (the transfer from homeowner to lender) are NOT counted in existing home sales. However when the lender sells the property to a new homeowner, it is counted.

    Distressing Gap This graph shows existing home sales (left axis) and new home sales (right axis) through February.

    Normally there about 6 times as many existing home sales as new home sales. For a number of years the ratio between new and existing home sales was pretty steady. After activity in the housing market peaked in 2005, the ratio changed. In recent months this ratio has been close to 14!

    In my opinion, the change in the ratio was caused primarily by distressed sales - in many areas home builders cannot compete with REO sales, and this has pushed down new home sales while keeping existing home sales activity elevated.

    Freddie Mac's Frank Nothaft says about one-third of all sales are foreclosure resales. Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, recently said "[D]istressed sales accounted for 40 to 45 percent of transactions in February.” Yun is including short sales in addition to foreclosure resales.

    These REO resales are real sales and should be included in the NAR statistics, but I suspect these REO buyers might hold these properties longer than recent turnover would suggest. If these are owner occupied buyers, they have probably been waiting to buy, and they have saved a down payment and qualified under the tighter lending standards. They probably won't sell until they can make a reasonable profit to buy a move up home - and it will probably be a number of years before prices recover.

    If they are investors, they are likely buying REOs for cash flow - not appreciation, unlike the speculators in recent years - and these investors will probably hold the properties for a number of years too.

    And what about all those homeowners with negative equity? If they manage to avoid foreclosure, they will be stuck in their homes for years.

    This suggests to me that the turnover rate will slow.

    Existing Home Sales Turnover This graph shows existing home turnover as a percent of owner occupied units. Sales for 2009 are estimated at the February rate of 4.7 million units.

    I've also included inventory as a percent of owner occupied units (all year-end inventory, except 2009 is for February).

    Currently the turnover rate for existing homes is about 6.2% of owner occupied units, still above the median of the last 40 years (6.1%).

    Although there may be some increase in existing home sales over the next few months (as foreclosure resales stay elevated), I expect the turnover rate to fall further - perhaps much further - and for existing home sales to decline over the next couple of years.

  • Summers: For New Capital, Banks Must Try Private Markets First

    by Calculated Risk on 4/19/2009 12:55:00 PM

    From Bloomberg: Summers Says Banks Must Tap Markets for New Capital (ht jb)

    Banks in the U.S. that have received billions of dollars from the government will first have to rely on private markets if they need more money, National Economic Council Director Lawrence Summers said.

    “The first resort for more capital is going to the private markets directly to raise equity,” Summers told NBC’s “Meet the Press” program ...

    His comments signal that banks deemed in need of capital at the conclusion of government-run “stress tests” may not get additional funds automatically ...

    David Axelrod, a senior White House adviser, said some banks “are going to have very serious problems, but we feel that there are tools available to address those problems.” The banks want the “market to know” the health of their balance sheets, he said today on CBS’s “Face the Nation.”
    This is one of the concerns about releasing the stress test results - since the government will require that the weaker banks try to raise private capital first, there might be a loss of investor confidence and even a run on the banks.

    Appraisal Changes: Home Valuation Code of Conduct

    by Calculated Risk on 4/19/2009 09:52:00 AM

    Starting on May 1st, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will not purchase mortgages from Sellers that do not adopt the The Home Valuation Code of Conduct (HVCC). The intention of the code is to insure the independence of the appraiser.

    From Kenneth Harney at the LA Times: Mortgage industry changes throw new hurdles in borrowers' way

    [B]eginning May 1, Fannie and Freddie are refusing to fund loans with appraisals that do not follow a set of new rules known as the Home Valuation Code of Conduct. Among the procedural changes: Mortgage brokers no longer can order appraisals directly, but instead must allow lenders or investors to use third-party "appraisal management companies" to assign the job to appraisers in their networks.
    ...
    Starting April 15, all good faith estimates provided to applicants must indicate a flat $455 charge for appraisals arranged through the appraisal management company. The broker previously charged $325. Consumers will now have to pay the appraisal fee upfront -- before any inspection or valuation is completed -- using a credit card, debit card or electronic fund transfer.

    What happens if the appraisal comes in low and the applicants can't qualify for the refi or purchase program they sought? Tough luck: They'll have just two choices: Pay another $455 for a second appraisal -- with no assurance that it will solve the problem -- or cancel the application.
    The Center for Public Integrity has a good dicussion of the appraisal process and the HVCC: The Appraisal Bubble
    Richard Frank, an appraiser in Vero Beach, Florida, started appraising homes in 1998, when values were climbing. From the beginning, Frank said he stepped into a business arrangement in which lenders forced appraisers to abandon their standards if they wanted work.

    Frank said lenders commonly gave appraisers an estimated value for a home on each appraisal order. Appraisers, who usually determine values by comparing homes to recent sales of comparable properties, often worked backwards from that estimated price to find recent real estate sales that would “make the value,” he said. Working backwards from the estimate was faster. Everyone made money. And since appraising homes is subjective — both an art and a science — it was easy to fudge numbers.

    “The [supposedly comparable] houses might be bigger and better, but who’s going to know?” Franks said. “In an increasing market, your sins are buried.”

    If an appraisal came in lower than the purchase price, the loan likely would be denied. Since loan origination staff is typically paid by commission, a failed deal meant no paycheck for them. If that happened too many times, Frank says, lenders stopped sending the appraiser work. “Put out, and you will get more dates. It’s just that simple,” he said.
    For more, here is some info from Freddie Mac:
    The Home Valuation Code of Conduct fact sheet [PDF 88K]
    The Home Valuation Code of Conduct [PDF 25K]
    Frequently Asked Questions

    Saturday, April 18, 2009

    NPR's 'Planet Money'

    by Calculated Risk on 4/18/2009 09:10:00 PM

    Note: I will be at this event tomorrow night.

    From Tom Petruno at the LA Times: NPR's 'Planet Money,' live from Santa Monica

    Fans of NPR's Alex Blumberg and Adam Davidson, who produced the award-winning housing-crisis explainer "The Giant Pool of Money," will want to tune in to KCRW on Sunday from 6 to 7 p.m. PDT: The two will be broadcasting their "Planet Money" show live from the Broad Stage in Santa Monica.

    Following on the success of "The Giant Pool of Money" in May 2008, Blumberg and Davidson launched Planet Money in early September to blog on the nation’s economic crisis. Their timing was perfect: Planet Money began on Sept. 7 -- the day the government seized Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the first dominoes to fall in the financial-system collapse.

    Volcker vs. Kohn on Inflaton

    by Calculated Risk on 4/18/2009 03:04:00 PM

    From Dow Jones: Heavyweights Kohn,Volcker Spar Over Inflation Goal

    Paul Volcker grilled [Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Donald Kohn] over the Fed's apparent effort to convey that it considers a roughly 2% inflation rate to be appropriate for the economy in the long term.

    Former Fed Chairman Volcker ... questioned how the Fed can talk about both 2% inflation and price stability. ...

    In the minutes of its January policy meeting, the Fed said ... 2% inflation would be ... price stability.

    "I don't get it," Volcker said ... By setting 2% as an inflation objective, the Fed is "telling people in a generation they're going to be losing half their purchasing power," Volcker said. ...

    Kohn responded that by aiming at 2%, "you have a little more room in nominal interest rates ... to react to an adverse shock to the economy."

    "Your problem is 2[%] becomes 3 becomes 4," Kohn told Volcker. But other central banks with a roughly 2% target haven't had that problem, Kohn said.

    Fed officials, he added, "need to be clear about why we're choosing the number we're choosing."
    And Volcker on Congressional oversight of the Federal Reserve, from Bloomberg: Volcker Says Fed’s Authority Probably to Be Reviewed
    “I don’t think the political system will tolerate the degree of activity that the Federal Reserve, in conjunction with the Treasury, has taken,” Volcker [said] ...

    U.S. lawmakers from both political parties have expressed concern in recent months that the central bank has overstepped its authority by creating several emergency credit programs aimed at reviving lending and ending the recession.

    “I think for better or for worse we are at a point where the Federal Reserve Act, after all that has been happening in the last year or more, is going to be reviewed,” Volcker said.

    Stress Test: Debating How and What to Release

    by Calculated Risk on 4/18/2009 08:51:00 AM

    At least we know when: May 4th.

    From Bloomberg: Bank Regulators Clash Over Endgame of U.S. Bank Stress Tests

    The U.S. Treasury and financial regulators are clashing with each other over how to disclose results from the stress tests ... with some officials concerned at potential damage to weaker institutions.

    With a May 4 deadline approaching, there is no set plan for how much information to release, how to categorize the results or who should make the announcements ... If all the banks pass, the tests’ credibility will be questioned, and if some banks get failing grades and are forced to accept more government capital and oversight, they may be punished by investors and customers.
    ...
    A statement on the methods is scheduled for release April 24. ...

    While weaker banks deemed to need additional capital will be given six months to raise it, financial markets may have little more than six minutes of patience before punishing them if the information is publicly released, one official said.
    Maybe we can help Geithner and put together a list of what we think should be released ...

    GM Update

    by Calculated Risk on 4/18/2009 12:08:00 AM

    On March 30th, GM was given 60 days, and Chrysler 30 days, to avoid bankruptcy. That means an April 29th deadline for Chrysler to reach a deal with Fiat, and a May 29th for GM to present an acceptable restructuring plan agreed to by all parties.

    Here is an update from Reuters: GM readies all-equity offer for debt-sources

    The Obama administration has directed General Motors Corp to prepare a new restructuring plan that would pay off bondholders and the automaker's major union in stock in exchange for $48 billion in debt ... The U.S. Treasury ... has indicated that it could also convert ... taxpayer-backed loans into GM stock ...

    [GM Chief Executive Fritz] Henderson said it was still feasible for GM to avoid bankruptcy, but said the automaker was also working on detailed plans for a filing if it is forced to take that route.
    This might seem like a never ending story, but Chrysler only has 12 more days, and just 42 days left for GM.

    Best to all.