Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Why the Countrywide guys should be allowed to get mega-rich
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11 comments:
hear hear
John, isn't it entirely possible that Treasury is intentionally maximizing the agency problem? If one wanted to transfer billions of taxpayer funds to the financial system surreptitiously, this is one way to do it. It kicks the can down the road and 99.5% of the populace can't tear themselves away from American Idol long enough to understand what's going on.
"Shaking hands with the government" indeed.
Though consider:
The rumor I've heard is that Stan Kurland (the Countrywide guy) was perfectly content to stay retired and surf the Southern California shores but was approached BY BLACKROCK and made an offer of a huge sign-on bonus which he couldn't rationally refuse.
I too read the NYT article and made note of the large personal investments of the principals. I just assumed they took their BlackRock money and put it in the firm, giving them a free option on the success of their venture.
Of course, PennyMac's birth far predates the origin of the PPIP, but after reading Waldman's (great) post and now this one, I wonder if this isn't exactly the template Geithner has in in mind. It's a certainty that BlackRock was an influential "advisor" in the process (i.e., they probably wrote it themselves, with PIMCO, et al).
I'll feel better about what's happening if all of these potential conflicts are disclosed and carefully managed. If not, you're right, this could be a bad thing.
The suggestion that the government is intentionally maximizing the agency problem is - I think - false...
When in doubt I usually choose incompetence of malevolence - being of the view and experience that incompetence is far more common in the world than malevolence.
However Iraq and WMD has given me pause. It was either incompetence or malevolence that led America into war on the basis that Hussein had WMD. The more you look the more it looks like malevolence.
So - yes - maybe it is malevolence.
Hope not.
your point seems to be that agency problems are not a matter of who you are dealing with and what they have done before but their conflicts of interest in the situation presently at hand.
imho agency problems -- especially issues like pimco being able to basically pay themselves -- ruin any rationale the program has. with legacy assets it's a zero sum game: they will pay out what they pay out and the losses will go to the banks and then the treasury (assuming a guarantee).
if you introduce a third party and give them a bet which is highly likely to make them money, that takes money away from the other two. so you had better get something valuable in return. i was thinking that you would get some information about marks -- at least a decent upper bound for a private bid -- in order to take some of the ambiguity out of the situation. but the 'auction' specified here produces marks that are so dirty that they won't accomplish that.
If you have not worked it out - I have teased Pimco because it is probably the most honest large firm on the street.
But conflicted they are. They are playing the moral hazard game in a big way - buying agencies and other areas of emerging government support. (See Bill Gross's last letter...)
But yes - if the Countrwide guys put the bulk of their wealth in then the non-recourse nature of the contract would not really matter (they would have an incentive to preserve wealth). And they clearly have the experience!
Oh well...
J
It sounds like the helicopters are starting up, either way.
John,
From the outset, there has been widespread over- and mis-identification of players in the financial system with the system itself. It may be true that if you save the players you save the system, but that is not the only available strategy. And it's far from the best because it opens up the door to having the players design the bailout. Losers should not be given the means to remain profit maximizers. Their priorities are naturally elsewhere.
I agree whole heartedly with the sentiment that we should not confuse the system with players in the system - and I would dearly like to bail out the system whilst punishing the malefactor players.
The most obvious suggestion is to appoint Bronte Capital as one of the funds of the Geithner plan.
Not going to happen though.
J
Well I think that Bronte Capital should be called in.
After all the Aussie troops stand shoulder to shoulder in Afghanistan with the US troops where the going is really tough.
Diversity of opinion / action is what is needed for Wall Street.
Then the home runs can be counted !
Bronte Capital could provide "embedded" commentary to counter the Wall Street spin.
So we are going to inflate banks that are too big to fail until they are too big to save? Not the best risk management.
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