May 17, 2024

U.S. Markets Edge Ahead on Greek Optimism

Stocks on Wall Street rose in early trading after encouraging signs about Europe’s debt crisis overshadowed a dismal report about spending by American consumers.

Greece’s parliament was debating an austerity package that must pass for that nation to receive a second bailout and avoid defaulting on its debt. European markets rose Monday after French banks agreed to let Greece repay some of its debt more slowly.

Earlier Monday, the Commerce Department said that American consumer spending was unchanged in May, the weakest pace in 20 months, another sign that the economic recovery slowed this spring.

The Dow Jones industrial average was up 78 points, or 0.7, percent, at 12,012. The Standard Poor’s 500-stock index was up 7 points, or 0.6 percent, at 1,276. The Nasdaq composite index rose 19, or 0.8 percent, at 2,672.

Investors are hopeful that Greece will get another financial lifeline to see it through the next couple of years even if some lawmakers from the governing Socialist Party fail to back the measures in a vote this week. The expectation was that votes from other parties will see the government home.

That has eased concerns over what impact a Greek default would have on Europe’s financial system. Many analysts say a default could trigger mass panic in the markets, akin to what happened in the aftermath of the 2008 collapse of investment bank Lehman Brothers.

Ahead of the vote, the French government on Monday said banks had agreed to roll over a significant amount of their holdings in Greek debt.

France’s president, Nicolas Sarkozy, said the plan being worked out between French government officials and bankers would involve reinvesting debt held by French banks in new securities over 30 years. The hope was that would ease the pressure on Greece to constantly find money to pay off investors.

French bondholders hold about 15 billion euros in Greek government debt.

European leaders are trying to get the private sector to take part in Continental efforts to help Greece avoid default. Finance ministers from the 17 euro zone countries are scheduled to meet Sunday and confirm Greece’s next batch of bailout funds — provided the Greek Parliament has backed the austerity measures.

Stocks in Europe were mixed to start the week, while the euro edged 0.4 percent higher to $1.4244.

The FTSE 100 index of leading British shares was up 0.2 percent at 5,709, while Germany’s DAX was 0.2 percent lower, to 7,108. The CAC 40 in France was 0.1 percent higher at 3,789.

Earlier in Asia, Japan’s Nikkei 225 fell 1 percent to close at 9,578.31, while South Korea’s Kospi lost 1 percent to 2,070.29.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell 0.6 percent to 22,041.77, but shares in mainland rose. China’s Shanghai Composite Index gained 0.4 percent to 2,758.23 while the smaller Shenzhen Composite Index added 1.1 percent to 1,148.63.

In the oil markets, prices continued to fall following last week’s surprise decision by oil-consuming countries to release 60 million barrels of crude over 30 days. Benchmark oil for August delivery was down $1.12 to $90.04 a barrel.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=5c117476dd1d757236360bf733464ce5

Deutsche Bank’s Chief Casts Long Shadow in Europe

LATE one night in September 2008, as the financial world trembled, Josef Ackermann received an urgent call from Berlin.

On the line was Angela Merkel, the German chancellor. She needed his help — now.

A big German bank was about to collapse, much the way Lehman Brothers had only days before. It was 12:45 a.m. and shaky financial markets were about to open across Asia. Fear was in the air.

Mrs. Merkel asked whether Mr. Ackermann, the head of Deutsche Bank, could help rescue the failing lender.

He could, and he did. Within minutes, he persuaded German bankers to pledge 8.5 billion euros for a bailout.

Mr. Ackermann, 63, emerged from the panic of 2008 as the most powerful banker in Europe and, depending on whom you ask, possibly the most dangerous one, too. As the chief executive of Europe’s largest bank and a symbol of German financial might, he is at the center of more concentric circles of power than any other banker on the Continent.

From this seat at the nexus of money and politics, Mr. Ackermann, for better or worse, is helping to shape Europe’s economic and financial future. He regularly advises politicians and policy makers on the most pressing economic issues of the day: the smoldering debt crises in Greece; the widening gulf between the economically strong nations of Europe, like Germany, and weaker ones like Ireland and Portugal; and the future of Europe’s economic and monetary union and that grand venture’s most manifest expression, the euro.

But it is no secret where Mr. Ackermann’s financial allegiances lie: with the banks. For instance, he has insisted that providing some sort of debt relief for Greece would be a huge mistake. Such a move — a restructuring, in banking parlance — would involve writing down Greece’s debt, which is now more than 140 percent of its gross domestic product, deferring payments and cutting interest rates.

What would be so bad about that? European banks, including German ones like Deutsche Bank, hold many billions of euros in Greek government bonds, and the banks would lose big if those debts were restructured. For the moment, Europe’s solution for Greece is, essentially, Mr. Ackermann’s: more bailout money and more austerity — an approach that some economists say only buys time without offering any hope of recovery.

Mr. Ackermann, like many of his counterparts in the United States, has also argued against tighter regulation of the post-crisis financial industry. His visibility as an industry advocate stems in part from his chairmanship of the Institute of International Finance, an association of the world’s biggest banks, including American ones like Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup. The group has released studies contending, among other things, that compelling banks to reduce their use of leverage — a move that would almost certainly reduce banks’ profits — would cause a credit crunch. That’s ridiculous, some economists counter.

“Most of the arguments made by the bankers and the I.I.F. in particular are just fallacious,” says Martin Hellwig, an economist and a director of the Bonn branch of the Max Planck Institute.

Even some of Mr. Ackermann’s peers in banking are uncomfortable with his positions. One senior European banking executive said he thought Mr. Ackermann’s zealous defense of banking interests failed to take public opinion into account. Like many ordinary Americans, many Europeans say they are paying the price for the excesses of bankers.

“As an industry, we have a reputational problem and we need to be aware of it and manage it properly,” says this banker, who did not want to be quoted by name for fear of damaging his relationship with Mr. Ackermann.

THE twin towers of Deutsche Bank punctuate the skyline in this city of bankers. They stand as a monument to a bank that was founded in Berlin in 1870 to ease trade with overseas markets, and it is now among the largest banks in the world. Deutsche Bank operates in more than 70 countries and in virtually every corner of finance.

The man who runs this giant has neither the star quality of Jamie Dimon, the head of JPMorgan Chase, nor the polarizing power of Lloyd C. Blankfein, the head of Goldman Sachs. But in Germany, Josef Ackermann is a household name. And although admired by many, he has also become a lightning rod for public hostility toward banks. His name springs to mind for protesters when they look for a banker to demonize.

So it might come as a surprise that in person, Mr. Ackermann comes across as soft-spoken and almost a bit shy. That’s all the more startling because he rose to the top of Deutsche Bank in 2002 after overseeing its investment bank, which isn’t known for shrinking violets.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/12/business/12bank.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

DealBook: Live Blogging the Ira Sohn Conference

Investment professionals are once again gathering in New York for the annual Ira Sohn Conference, a sold-out show where prominent hedge fund managers and the like showcase their best ideas.

In years past, the confab has attracted high-profile names, including Stanley Druckenmiller, founder of Duquesne Capital; Seth Klarman of the Baupost Group; and Larry Robbins of Glenview Capital. David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital famously described a short against Lehman Brothers in 2008, months before the investment bank went belly up.

This year, the speakers include Erez Kalir, C.E.O. of Sabretooth Capital, Greenlight Capital’s David Einhorn, Steve Eisman of FrontPoint Financial Services Fund and investor Carl Icahn.

DealBook was on hand for the gathering. What follows is a blog of the event.

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Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=24b82bcf473e6c6581f03029a2982b21

Economix: The Problem With the F.D.I.C.’s Powers

Today's Economist

Simon Johnson, the former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, is the co-author of “13 Bankers.”

Under the Dodd-Frank financial regulation legislation (in Title II of that act), the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is granted expanded powers to intervene and manage the closure of any failing bank or other financial institution. There are two strongly held views of this legal authority: that it substantially solves the problem of how to handle failing megabanks and therefore serves as an effective constraint on their future behavior, and that it is largely irrelevant.

Both views are expressed by well-informed people at the top of regulatory structures on both sides of the Atlantic, at least in private conversations. Which view is right?

In terms of legal process, the resolution authority could make a difference. But as a matter of practical politics and actual business practices, it means very little for our biggest financial institutions.

On the face of it, the case that this power to deal with failing banks — known as resolution authority — would help seems strong. Timothy F. Geithner, the Treasury secretary, has repeatedly argued that these new powers would have made a difference in the case of Lehman Brothers.

And a recent assessment by the F.D.I.C. provides a more detailed account of how exactly this could have worked.

According to the authors of the F.D.I.C. report, if its current powers had been in effect in early 2008, the agency could have become involved much earlier in finding alternative ways –- that is, unrelated to the bankruptcy process –- to “solve” the problems that Lehman Brothers had: very little capital relative to likely losses and even less liquidity relative to what it needed as markets became turbulent.

The F.D.I.C. report describes a series of steps that the agency could have taken, particularly around brokering a deal that would have involved selling some assets to other financial companies, such as Barclays, while also committing some money to remove downside risk –- both from buyers of assets and from those who continued to own and lend money to the operation that remained.

If needed, the F.D.I.C. asserts, it could have handled any ultimate liquidation in a way that would have been less costly to the system and better for creditors, who will end up getting very little through the actual court-run process.

But there are two major problems with this analysis: it assumes away the political constraint, and it ignores the most basic reality of how this kind of business operates.

At the political level, if you wish to engage in alternative or hypothetical history, you cannot ignore the presence of Henry M. Paulson Jr., then secretary of the Treasury.

Mr. Paulson steadfastly refused, even in the aftermath of the near-collapse of Bear Stearns, to take any active or pre-emptive role with regard to strengthening the financial system –- let alone intervening to break up or otherwise deal firmly with a potentially vulnerable large firm.

For example, in spring 2008, the International Monetary Fund — where I was chief economist at the time — suggested ways to take advantage of the lull after the collapse of Bear Stearns to reduce downside risks for the financial system.

Compared with the hypothetical variants discussed by the F.D.I.C., our proposals were modest and did not involve winding down particular firms. Perhaps in retrospect we should have been bolder, but in any case our ideas were dismissed out of hand by the Treasury.

Senior Treasury officials took the view that there was no serious systemic issue and that they knew what to do if another Bear Stearns-type situation developed –- it would be rescued by another ad-hoc deal, presumably involving some sort of merger. (Bear Stearns, you may recall, was taken over by JPMorgan Chase at the 11th hour, with considerable downside protection provided by the Federal Reserve.)

Mr. Paulson was very influential, given the way the previous system operates, and his memoir, “On The Brink,” is candid about why: he had a direct channel to the president, he was the most senior financial sector “expert” in the administration, and he was chairman of the President’s Working Group on Financial Markets.

Under the Dodd-Frank Act, however, he would have been even more powerful — as head of the Financial Stability Oversight Council and as the person who decides whether to appoint the F.D.I.C. as receiver.

It is inconceivable that the F.D.I.C. could have taken any intrusive action in early 2008 without his concurrence. Yet it is equally inconceivable that he would have agreed.

In this respect Mr. Paulson was not an outlier relative to Mr. Geithner or other people who are likely to become Treasury secretary. The operating philosophy of the United States government with regard to the financial sector remains: hands off and in favor of intervention only when absolutely necessary.

In addition, as a senior European regulator pointed out to me recently, the idea that any agency from any one country can handle a resolution of a global megabank in an orderly fashion is an illusion. Even if we had agreement among countries on how to handle resolution when cross-border assets and liabilities are involved — which we don’t — it would be a major mistake to assume that such a resolution would have no systemic consequences, that same person said.

These financial services companies are very large — more than 250,000 employees work for Citigroup, which operates in 171 countries and with more than 200 million clients, according to its Web site. The organizational structures involved are complex; it is not uncommon to have several thousand legal entities with various kinds of interlocking relationships.

Sheila Bair, the head of the F.D.I.C., has pointed out that “living wills” for such complicated operations are very unlikely to be helpful. Perhaps if the financial megafirms could be simplified, resolution would become more realistic (and the F.D.I.C. report, mentioned above, alludes to this possibility in its conclusions).

But any attempt at simplification from the government would need to go through the Financial Stability Oversight Council, where the Treasury’s influence is decisive.

And the market has no interest in pushing for simplification — anything that makes it harder to rescue a big bank, for example, will increase the probability that, in the downside situation, it will receive a too-big-to-fail subsidy of some form.

Many equity investors like this kind of protective “put” option.

F.D.I.C.-type resolution works well for small and medium-sized banks, and expanding these powers could help with some situations in the future. But it would be an illusion to think that this solves the problems posed by the impending collapse of one or more global megabanks.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=9e81bd0ddbfac9dc700508d73af30738

Economix: The Problem With the F.D.I.C.’s Powers

Today's Economist

Simon Johnson, the former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, is the co-author of “13 Bankers.”

Under the Dodd-Frank financial regulation legislation (in Title II of that act), the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is granted expanded powers to intervene and manage the closure of any failing bank or other financial institution. There are two strongly held views of this legal authority: that it substantially solves the problem of how to handle failing megabanks and therefore serves as an effective constraint on their future behavior, and that it is largely irrelevant.

Both views are expressed by well-informed people at the top of regulatory structures on both sides of the Atlantic, at least in private conversations. Which view is right?

In terms of legal process, the resolution authority could make a difference. But as a matter of practical politics and actual business practices, it means very little for our biggest financial institutions.

On the face of it, the case that this power to deal with failing banks — known as resolution authority — would help seems strong. Timothy F. Geithner, the Treasury secretary, has repeatedly argued that these new powers would have made a difference in the case of Lehman Brothers.

And a recent assessment by the F.D.I.C. provides a more detailed account of how exactly this could have worked.

According to the authors of the F.D.I.C. report, if its current powers had been in effect in early 2008, the agency could have become involved much earlier in finding alternative ways –- that is, unrelated to the bankruptcy process –- to “solve” the problems that Lehman Brothers had: very little capital relative to likely losses and even less liquidity relative to what it needed as markets became turbulent.

The F.D.I.C. report describes a series of steps that the agency could have taken, particularly around brokering a deal that would have involved selling some assets to other financial companies, such as Barclays, while also committing some money to remove downside risk –- both from buyers of assets and from those who continued to own and lend money to the operation that remained.

If needed, the F.D.I.C. asserts, it could have handled any ultimate liquidation in a way that would have been less costly to the system and better for creditors, who will end up getting very little through the actual court-run process.

But there are two major problems with this analysis: it assumes away the political constraint, and it ignores the most basic reality of how this kind of business operates.

At the political level, if you wish to engage in alternative or hypothetical history, you cannot ignore the presence of Henry M. Paulson Jr., then secretary of the Treasury.

Mr. Paulson steadfastly refused, even in the aftermath of the near-collapse of Bear Stearns, to take any active or pre-emptive role with regard to strengthening the financial system –- let alone intervening to break up or otherwise deal firmly with a potentially vulnerable large firm.

For example, in spring 2008, the International Monetary Fund — where I was chief economist at the time — suggested ways to take advantage of the lull after the collapse of Bear Stearns to reduce downside risks for the financial system.

Compared with the hypothetical variants discussed by the F.D.I.C., our proposals were modest and did not involve winding down particular firms. Perhaps in retrospect we should have been bolder, but in any case our ideas were dismissed out of hand by the Treasury.

Senior Treasury officials took the view that there was no serious systemic issue and that they knew what to do if another Bear Stearns-type situation developed –- it would be rescued by another ad-hoc deal, presumably involving some sort of merger. (Bear Stearns, you may recall, was taken over by JPMorgan Chase at the 11th hour, with considerable downside protection provided by the Federal Reserve.)

Mr. Paulson was very influential, given the way the previous system operates, and his memoir, “On The Brink,” is candid about why: he had a direct channel to the president, he was the most senior financial sector “expert” in the administration, and he was chairman of the President’s Working Group on Financial Markets.

Under the Dodd-Frank Act, however, he would have been even more powerful — as head of the Financial Stability Oversight Council and as the person who decides whether to appoint the F.D.I.C. as receiver.

It is inconceivable that the F.D.I.C. could have taken any intrusive action in early 2008 without his concurrence. Yet it is equally inconceivable that he would have agreed.

In this respect Mr. Paulson was not an outlier relative to Mr. Geithner or other people who are likely to become Treasury secretary. The operating philosophy of the United States government with regard to the financial sector remains: hands off and in favor of intervention only when absolutely necessary.

In addition, as a senior European regulator pointed out to me recently, the idea that any agency from any one country can handle a resolution of a global megabank in an orderly fashion is an illusion. Even if we had agreement among countries on how to handle resolution when cross-border assets and liabilities are involved — which we don’t — it would be a major mistake to assume that such a resolution would have no systemic consequences, that same person said.

These financial services companies are very large — more than 250,000 employees work for Citigroup, which operates in 171 countries and with more than 200 million clients, according to its Web site. The organizational structures involved are complex; it is not uncommon to have several thousand legal entities with various kinds of interlocking relationships.

Sheila Bair, the head of the F.D.I.C., has pointed out that “living wills” for such complicated operations are very unlikely to be helpful. Perhaps if the financial megafirms could be simplified, resolution would become more realistic (and the F.D.I.C. report, mentioned above, alludes to this possibility in its conclusions).

But any attempt at simplification from the government would need to go through the Financial Stability Oversight Council, where the Treasury’s influence is decisive.

And the market has no interest in pushing for simplification — anything that makes it harder to rescue a big bank, for example, will increase the probability that, in the downside situation, it will receive a too-big-to-fail subsidy of some form.

Many equity investors like this kind of protective “put” option.

F.D.I.C.-type resolution works well for small and medium-sized banks, and expanding these powers could help with some situations in the future. But it would be an illusion to think that this solves the problems posed by the impending collapse of one or more global megabanks.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=9e81bd0ddbfac9dc700508d73af30738