Tim Geithner's Toxic-Asset Plan: 8 Things You Need to Know

The Treasury secretary releases more details of key program designed to revive the financial system

By Luke Mullins

Posted: March 23, 2009

It's not usually a good idea to handle toxic waste without a hazmat suit. But amid the most terrifying financial crisis since the Great Depression, the Obama administration is relying on folks in jackets and ties--bankers and investors--to rid the financial system of its most radioactive sludge. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner on Monday released the much-anticipated details of his plan to mop up as much as $1 trillion of the illiquid assets that have been at the heart of the painful credit freeze that took hold back in the summer of 2007. Under the terms of the plan, Uncle Sam will use capital and attractive financing to encourage private investors to buy up these assets, putting additional risk--as well as upside potential--onto the shoulders of taxpayer. "Simply hoping for banks to work these assets off over time risks prolonging the crisis in a repeat of the Japanese experience," Geithner said Monday in a Wall Street Journal op-ed piece.

[See Obama's Loan Modification Plan: 7 Things You Need to Know.]

Here's what you need to know about the plan:

1. What are toxic assets? In the context of the financial crisis, toxic assets generally refer to loans or mortgage securities tied to the real estate boom. The value of such assets--huge quantities of which are now sitting on the balance sheets of banks everywhere--has been hammered by the housing crash. Since there are so few buyers in the market for these assets, it's been nearly impossible to tell how much they are worth. As a result, they remain stuck on banks' books, eroding capital, constricting credit and undercutting confidence. The disposal of these assets is essential to a turnaround in the financial system and the economy as a whole.

2. So how does Geithner plan to get rid of the toxic assets? Geithner's plan involves the creation of several public-private partnerships that could purchase as much as $1 trillion of toxic asset from banks. Uncle Sam would put up to $100 billion from the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) alongside private capital and then use government financing to jack up its purchasing power. Asset purchases would be made in three specific ways. First, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp and the Treasury Department would provide financing guarantees and matching equity for investors to purchase illiquid loans. Secondly, the Treasury will choose up to five asset managers with applicable experience to attract private capital, which the government will match and leverage with government financing. The asset managers would then use the funds to purchase eligible mortgage-backed securities. Finally, the government will expand a previously-announced program to include certain mortgage-backed securities.

[Check out Mortgage Rates to Fall Further: 7 Things to Know.]

3. What are benefits of this approach? The Treasury Department argues that the plan holds several advantages over other approaches. First, it enables taxpayers to share some of the risks associated with these assets with the private sector. At the same time, by using government resources and private capital, the plan offers taxpayers more bang for their buck. Finally, since the assets will be auctioned off to the highest bidder, the plan reduces the risk that the government will pay too much for the toxic assets. "With the private sector establishing pricing, there is more validity to the price," says Mark Vitner, a senior economist at Wachovia. "The market is not going to overpay."

4. Will investors participate? The plan only works if investors participate. And on account of the government's generous subsidies, Vitner expects them to jump in. "This is going to present a good opportunity to pick up some assets at attractive prices," he says. But Congressional efforts to recover $165 million in bonuses from AIG might keep some would-be investors on the sidelines, blunting the program's overall effectiveness. Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s Economy.com, argues that these concerns won't derail the plan's success. "The working logic in Washington is that if you get TARP money, you are going to get oversight," Zandi says. "If you don't get TARP money but you are in partnership with the government, you won't get the same oversight."

[See 5 Tips on Getting a Mortgage in a Credit Crisis.]

5. Will Banks participate? While calling the program a great deal for investors--since Uncle Sam in taking on most of the risk--Richard X. Bove of Rochdale Securities says the plan is "a mixed blessing" for banks holding such assets. "The banks will be able to sell assets that they might prefer not to hold, but the pricing may not be attractive enough to allow them to do so," Bove said in a report Monday. "Therefore, the new program is too one-sided. It offers significant benefits to the buyers, but limited incentive to the sellers. It may have to be revised for this reason."

Alright...here ANOTHER TAKE ON MY IDEA, and then I'll shut up, for the day.

Now let's say, that Bernanke decides that he doesn't want to impose RENTAL AGREEEMENTS on the banks...(His alleged twin brother Mark Levin 'the great one' definitely would) and decides this "One coin" idea is a good thing, and gets his lobbyists to impose this supposed tax on the Fed,m just so he can cough up the toxic asset to the US TREASURY, and write it off on his books...

now what happens when these banks come back to the Fed, and say "Hey where's my tox-* (uhhh..., I mean) 'distressed' asset, You were supposed to hold it for me, and you went and used it to pay this tax...You can't take the whole expense as a deduction...WE WANT OUR CUT OF THAT TOO!!"

Now what do you do if your Poor Ben, with all these guys wanting their cut?

Well, you're the Central Bank Chairman, right? You DO run a BANK, right? Now these guys want something YOU GOT, right? Now this supposed expense writeoff for tax purposes is AN ASSET THEY WANT...

and if you're a bank, what's the simple thing to do?

YOU LOAN IT TO THEM....AT, oh... 10% intrest?

10% is such a small price to pay for a deduction credit, isn't it? ;-P

One way or another...THIS GOVERNMENT and THIS BANK is going to RID these TOXIC ASSETS and THE NATIONAL DEBT, in spite of them selves....If we just keep holding their feet to the fire, and more importantly...START MAKING THEM THINK!

Kapt. Blasto of KY @ Aug 20, 2009 00:42:10 AM

Hold on here...someone informed me of this....

Somebody asked me outside here THIS following question: What happens if the "toxic asset" now being held at the FED, is NOT completely owned by the FED on thier books...that is to say, the BANKS are still retaining some form of control/ownership over those "toxic assets", thereby making the FED unable to pay the "special tax" that Congress could impose on FED to take the "toxic asset" away.

OK...Let's use the following analogy...Let's say Aunt Mahtilda wants to send "junior" off to live at your house, so aunt Mahtilda Can get some (ahem)...'things' done... for the summer while "Junior" isn't there with her. Both you AND aunt Mahtilda know Junior is a Lazy sonuva...and takes space on the couch and eats three times his weight in food, AND DOES NOTHING EXCEPT EAT, fouls up the bathroom while using it, and hogs your couch and plays video games...causing your household to sink, just like Aunt Mahtilda's before she palmed the little bastard off to you...Now you're stuck...Whadya do?

Well, over at my Job, a Warehouse of Parts, suppliers need their parts to move to their cusotmers while we play middleman, taking them in, storing them, and shipping them when our cusotmers need them. It's a low movement turnover there, and spaces are precious! So what we do is a little thing we like to call R-E-N-T ! Half the parts that are on our shelves, We don't own, and they're taking up space...SPACE AND TIME MEAN MONEY TO US! so..We charge our suppliers RENT for the space that part sits there....We make some good money over rental revenue.

SO that is what the FED must do...CHARGE RENT TO THE BANKS! 10% of the face value for each Toxic Asset per month (or whatever period)PLUS 10% of the apparent value NOW unitl it moves!

The whole idea is for the BANKS to relenquish total control over the "toxic asset" to the FED..so that we can get them off the Bank's books completely. And the FED's too.

Kapt. Blasto of KY @ Aug 19, 2009 11:57:10 AM

HOLD ON HERE... I HAVE A GREAT IDEA!!!!

Now, you're saying in you're article that these "TOXIC ASSETS" (at least in their physical paper component) are the "bad bets" that Banks want to get rid of off their books, and can't do it.

Basically, these are clogging the pipes, right?

Look at this in terms of a highway, THERE's NO SYSTEM TO CLEAN THE HIGHWAY UP! the Highway as a system, is OK, it's just missing a good cleanup system. And if these "toxic Assets" weren't toxic...then they would have been collected upon, and Government would have collected their taxes off it, right?

OK...Here's a GREAT SOLUTION! And basically what this solution does is to take those "toxic assets off the Private Side's Books, and for Government to get rid of its debt, without hyperinflation, without vainly cutting programs to fight "waste/fraud/abuse" bassackwardly, or shoving the cost onto future generations.

Allow all toxic assets collected on banks books to filter their way to the last point on the economic cycle for all US financial instruments...The Federal Reserve...A Necessary and proper institution as its main objective is to keep Governments, Corps, and Individuals from manipulating the Money, by treating them all the same...borrowers. One of the Fed's functions is to accept deposits, ranging in the form of Checks, money, and PROMISSORY NOTES as face value instuments, as WELL AS COINS! But just like any other CORP, they gotta pay taxes! SO....allow them toxic assets to filter to the Fed, collecting them in a special account...This is the "toxic asset" account, when it reaches a certain level (one report has it now at $27 Trill!!!) call Congress,

and Congress imposes a tax on the FEDRSV, and accepts as full payment of that tax...The toxic Asset, which were festering the books!!! Now Fed can write it off their books LEGALLY, because they write in their books they PAID a certain TAX expense to the government! The toxic assets are now GONE from the private side, and now has a POSITIVE VALUE, because "You don't know what you got 'til its gone"!!!

Now its Uncle Sam's turn! Uncle sam now takes that now "Toxic Revenue" and walks it over to the Mint...Burns it up in the Molten coin slurry, and the MASTER COIN FORGER FASHIONS ONE COIN, which the power vested in congress from ART1, Sec8, cls.5 of US constitution, allows it to value that coin at the same value of the toxic asset they just destroyed...

Then they go redeposit that coin into the Fed's bank to repurchase the bonds being held there, and to create an INTEREST-BEARING SAVINGS ACCOUNT Guaranteeing payment of all bonds outstanding held by Foeign or domestic.

Coin is now property of Federal Reserve, taking over as THE BACKING for all the Physical and Electronic Dollars our there in existence. It stops the purchasing power forever sliding down, and even REPLENISHES it back to 1913 strength (or about as far as the 'short sellers' in the currency trade market allow it to get there)

Long story short, PROBLEM SOLVED!!!!

Kapt Blasto of KY @ Aug 18, 2009 14:10:19 PM

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