Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi

Home | Most-viewed Story | Most-viewed Coverage | Region | People | Time | Events | Business | Sports | Showbiz | IT | Politics | Military | Society | Education | Life | Health
  Muzi.com : Muzi (English) : News
  Lehman: The next bailout?
Last updated: 2008-09-13


Lehman: The next bailout?
2008-09-13

People
Nancy Pelosi
Event
Lehman Brothers Bankruptcy
U.S. Mortgage Giant Bailout
2008 IndyMac Collapse
Company
Bear Stearns
Fannie Mae
Freddie Mac
Lehman Brothers
Washington Mutual
JP Morgan Chase
Category
US Fed Reserve
Washington - Has the US entered a new era of government bailouts for business?

First, Uncle Sam intervened to rescue investment bank Bear Stearns. Then last week the government took over failing mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Now Lehman Brothers is tottering - raising the prospect of another US salvage operation. And the Big Three automakers are in Washington this week with hats in hand, asking for loans to finance development of more fuel-efficient vehicles.

To some economists, actions taken so far have redefined the criteria for the type of firm the government considers "too big to fail." That's particularly true, they say, because the bailouts have occurred under a supposedly pro-free-market Republican administration.

But others say the bailouts are isolated actions. After all, Washington's 1979 provision of loan guarantees to Chrysler wasn't followed by a spike of US intervention in the marketplace.

"This is not the age of bailouts," says Peter Morici, a professor of business at the University of Maryland and former chief economist at the US International Trade Commission. "We get into these situations and then we sober up."

Size not the only factorIn the case of Bear Stearns, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac, company size was just one factor in the government's calculations about whether to throw them a taxpayer-funded lifeline. The nature of their connections with the rest of the economy was far more important.

If Bear Stearns went under, it could have dragged down a web of firms with which it did financial business. Fannie and Freddie together own or guarantee half the nation's mortgages. Their failure could have caused the flow of mortgage money in the US to freeze up.

But if these firms qualify for help, so might Lehman, as well as other financial institutions battered by the housing crisis, such as Washington Mutual, the nation's largest savings and loan.

Lehman is currently bigger than Bear Stearns was before its government-arranged takeover by JP Morgan Chase, after all. Lehman chief Richard Fuld has announced plans to spin off the bank's prized investment management division and split the remainder into two banking entities, one with good loans and one saddled with bad housing-backed assets. If he has time to accomplish this paring, he might reduce the institution's size enough so that US officials might decide it's OK to let it fail, if the situation comes to that.

Lehman does have one advantage that Bear Stearns lacked - access to overnight loans from the Federal Reserve. The Fed initiated this program after the Bear Stearns debacle, so that hard-pressed institutions might be able to stay afloat while they look for cash from other sources.

But Lehman got itself into trouble by making bad bets in the market, say critics of government intervention. And Washington shouldn't be helping it out.

"I don't buy the 'too big to fail' argument," says Chris Edwards, director of tax policy at the Cato Institute. "Failure is a normal happening in the marketplace. About 10 percent of all US businesses fail every year."

Detroit comes knockingMeanwhile, the situation of the auto firms is somewhat different from that of financial institutions battered by bad housing loans.

Their argument is that they need millions of dollars to develop products that meet new fuel-economy standards imposed by Congress, and that normal debt markets aren't operating normally as the credit crisis continues to rage.

Up to $25 billion in government-supported loans for automakers were a part of the 2007 energy bill, which passed Congress and was signed into law by President Bush. But auto firms want to raise government help to $50 billion. Top Detroit officials will push for the increase in funding on Sept. 12 at an energy summit in Washington, D.C.

They have the support of many congressional Democrats. "It's very important to our country," said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

But backing from the Bush administration is far from assured, despite its recent moves to rescue financial institutions.

US officials know that their interventions in the market could well have negative consequences. One is pressure for help from more firms and other industries. If the airlines industry got aid following Sept. 11, why not the automakers now? And if Detroit gets help, what about other struggling old-line industries?

Lines will have to be drawn, according to officials. Otherwise, firms might actually start to engage in riskier behavior, knowing that Washington will come to the rescue.

"Mitigating that problem is one of the design challenges that we face as we consider the future evolution of our [financial aid ] system," said Fed Chairman Benjamin Bernanke in an Aug. 22 speech.

To some critics, such mitigation might be too little, too late. The financial bailouts have already expanded the notion of what firms might qualify for US help - not so much because of the firms themselves, but because it was a Republican administration that bailed them out.

"The supposedly more free-market party here has intervened to an enormous extent," says Chris Edwards of the Cato Institute.

But the overall extent of administration intervention might seem smaller if one counts Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as only partly private-sector firms. Investors have long considered that any US administration would rescue the pair if they got into trouble - and it turns out those investors were right.

"They've been quasi-government entities all along," says Mr. Morici of the University of Maryland.

 Lehman Brothers Bankruptcy  U.S. Mortgage Giant Bailout   2008 IndyMac Collapse 
  Profile2 News28GalleryLinks  
  Fannie, Freddie execs turned aside warnings (2008-12-09)
  Former Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac execs to testify (2008-12-09)
  Freddie seeks gov't aid after $25.3B loss (2008-11-14)
  Fannie Mae posts $29B loss, may tap gov't funding (2008-11-10)
  Fannie, Freddie disclose subpoenas, investigations (2008-09-29)
  With finance crisis, hands-off era over (2008-09-17)
  Lehman: The next bailout? (2008-09-13)
  Fannie, Freddie rescue binds taxpayers to housing market (2008-09-09)
  Congress weighs the fate of Fannie, Freddie (2008-09-09)
  Mortgage rates drop after Fannie, Freddie takeover (2008-09-08)
  Fannie and Freddie: why the takeover (2008-09-08)
  Fannie, Freddie deal helps some borrowers, not all (2008-09-08)
  World stocks surge on US mortgage rescue plan (2008-09-08)
  Wall Street soars on Fannie, Freddie bailout (2008-09-08)
  China and Japan hail U.S. mortgage rescue as doubts linger (2008-09-08)
  US government takes on big role in mortgage market (2008-09-08)
  World stocks soar after Freddie, Fannie bailouts (2008-09-08)
  US Government seizes control of mortgage giants (2008-09-07)
  Battered stocks face another tough week (2008-09-07)
  US takes over Fannie, Freddie in bid to ease finance crisis (2008-09-07)
  Obama: Recession could delay rescinding tax cuts (2008-09-07)
  Candidates weigh in on stabilizing Fannie, Freddie (2008-09-06)
  Government may soon back troubled mortgage giants (2008-09-06)
  McCain backs government takeover of mortgage giants (2008-09-06)
  Fannie, Freddie blind to the bubble (2008-09-06)


Stories Coverages

NewsGuide EventCityPeopleShowCompany 
 ENTSportsBIZEDULifeMilitaryPoliticsSocietyHealth 


[2009 NFL]: Colts win a close one, Saints roll to stay unbeaten (22:49 11/22)


[111th Congress]: Analysis: Fed under fire as public anger mounts (22:49 11/22)


[2008 U.S. Financial Rescue]: Analysis: Fed under fire as public anger mounts (22:49 11/22)

[Sept 11 Terror Attack]: Lawyer: 9/11 defendants want platform for views (22:49 11/22)

[CIA Prison Scandal]: Lawyer: 9/11 defendants want platform for views (22:49 11/22)


[2009 US Health Reform]: Senate Democrats at odds over health care bill (22:49 11/22)

[2005 Hurricane Katrina]: 59 and counting: Health care bill nears test vote (12:37 11/21)


[2009 Swine Flu]: Experts say radical measures won't stop swine flu (08:24 11/19)


[2008 EU Recession]: Europe's recovery will be 'gradual': OECD (08:24 11/19)

[China-U.S.]: Obama meets Wen as China visit winds down (22:06 11/17)



Muzi.com

Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.