Geithner’s Suggestion that Europe Conduct a Bank Stress Test is Delusional
Posted by Michael A. Kamperman on May 26, 2010
Unfortunately our Treasury Secretary has misread our recent financial history’s cause and effect. He believes his bank stress test is the reason confidence was restored to the financial markets. Nothing could be further from the truth. Most people now know, and knew at the time, that the assumptions in the stress test were too weak. Yet few care, or cared at the time. For example, the unemployment rate and the decline in home prices have well exceeded the worst case scenario of the tests. The reason confidence returned to financial institutions is that it was made clear that there would not be either the nationalization of a bank or a chaotic ’Lehman’ style shutdown. It was the policy of TOO-BIG-TO-FAIL that restored confidence in conducting business with and investing in large financial institutions. These companies were endowed with a defacto full faith and credit of the U.S. government. The markets fully accepted the capacity of the U.S. government to backstop all of these institutions. It also helped tremendously that the Federal Reserve stepped up to the plate and purchased over $1 trillion of mortgage paper. The European banks are probably in worse shape than the U.S. banks were. The markets will not accept another smoke and mirrors sleight of hand trick. And there is not a person I know on the planet that believes Greece can backstop its banks no matter how high the losses may be. Hence, if a sham stress test is conducted ala the U.S. version the markets will ignore it. If a real stress test is applied the markets will cough up blood over the inability of most European governments to stand behind these institutions. President Obama needs to fire Geithner, and once again for the record he needs to quit listening to Volcker.
In an austerity mania Geithner is also taking a message to European governments (Germany) that their governments need to spend more to bolster economic growth. While he is right on the priciple of the issue, his proposal will be dead on arrival. Apparently he is tone death and lacks the powers of persuasion. There is a solution to the crisis. The European Central Bank needs to expand its balance sheet and conduct massive purchases of Greek, Italian, Irish, Spanish, and Portuguese debt. Importantly, it needs to not sell any assets to offset the purchases. The ECB has the power to drive down the interest rates all of these governments are paying and it needs to get on with it. What Geithner should tell Europe is if the ECB conducts quantitative easing, then the U.S. will correspondingly purchase in the open market as many German and French government bonds as necessary to push the Euro back above 1.25 to the dollar. This will alleveiate misplaced German fears of a collapsing currency leading potentially to hyper-inflation.
Ultimately the buck stops with President Obama. He now owns the double-dip we are entering. He needs to surround himself with advisers who have the vision to lead us out of the crisis. Instead he clings to the same advisers that assured him the unemployment rate would not rise as high as it has. There is no doubt there is an environmental disaster unfolding in the Gulf of Mexico that demands the President’s immediate attention. Ditto the shenanigans of Iran and the crisis unfolding on the Korean Peninsula. Beyond that there is no reason the economic crisis is not job number one for the President. But he continues to treat it as a nuisance. Our states are being forced into the same austerity mania sweeping European governments. Yet the President remains silent. At this rate it is almost a certainty the historians will talk about the economically failed Hoover/Obama Presidencies.