Tim Geithner Admits Banks
Bailed Out
Using Rigged LIBOR Interest Rate,
Costing Taxpayers Billions
http://americankabuki.blogspot.com/2012/07/tim-geithner-admits-banks-bailed-out.html
Tim Geithner
Admits Banks Bailed Out With Rigged Libor, Costing Taxpayers Huge
Amount
Posted: 07/25/2012 11:06 am
Timothy Geithner claimed on Wednesday that the
government had no choice during the financial crisis but to lend to banks and
AIG using an interest rate, Libor, that everybody knew was flawed.
Call it a back-door bailout: By using an
artificially low Libor, the government saved the banks and AIG millions, maybe
billions -- and cost the taxpayers the same amount.
The use of Libor in the bailouts also
rubber-stamped that hopelessly manipulated interest rate as a market measure,
raising still more questions about just how worried Geithner and other
regulators really were about it.
In a House Financial Services Committee hearing
on Wednesday, Treasury Secretary Geithner was asked why Treasury and the Fed
used the London Interbank Offered Rate as a basis for loans to insurance giant
American International Group and to U.S. banks under the Term Asset-Backed
Securities Loan Facility -- even though Geithner and other regulators had long
suspected that Libor was artificially low, as Geithner testified.
"We were in the position of investors around
the world," Geithner shrugged. "You have to choose a rate, and we did what
everybody did -- use the best rate available at the time."
Geithner repeated his claim that he warned
other U.S. and British regulators in the spring of 2008 about possible
manipulation of the key interest rate and recommended changes to the way the
rate was set.
But he also said that, months later, when it
came time to set bailout terms for the Too Big To Fail Set, the government just
had no other choice but to use Libor.
Sure, that's one way to look at it. Another,
less charitable way to look at it is that the Fed was fully aware that Libor was
being manipulated lower, and was fine charging an artificially low rate to lend
money to banks and to AIG, in what amounted to yet another kind of bailout. Why
make life harder for them, right? They had enough problems dealing with the
crisis they had created. Raising red flags about Libor might have only made the
crisis worse, making it harder for banks to borrow money.
But in the process, the government left untold
mountains of cash on the table for U.S. taxpayers. Even if Libor was only
manipulated a tiny bit lower, these small breaks add up.
In fact, if you wanted to be cynical about it,
you could say this is yet another example of the Treasury Department and the Fed
once again putting the needs of banks ahead of all else, including such niceties
as "faith in the market" and "taxpayers."
I wrote a story for the Wall Street Journal
back in 2009 estimating that banks may have saved $24 billion by borrowing at
unusually low rates in another crisis-era government lending program, the Term
Liquidity Guarantee Program -- loans that were frequently based on Libor.
There's still a lot of number crunching to be
done in the weeks ahead, but it would not be surprising if TALF banks and AIG
saved similar amounts by borrowing from the government at an artificially low
Libor rate.
As Neil Barofsky, former inspector general for
TARP, and others have noted, by using Libor, the Fed and Treasury rubber-stamped
that rate as a lending benchmark, despite widespread doubts about its
accuracy.
Despite Geithner's claim that there was just no
choice but to use Libor when setting bailout terms, Treasury and the Fed easily
could have used other rates -- the federal runds rate targeted by the Fed, for
example, or a market-based rate such as the "eurodollar" rate, which is
typically very similar to, but has in recent years been a little bit higher
than, Libor.
Geithner argued on Wednesday that his quiet
warnings to other regulators led to the investigations that are only now
starting to bear fruit, with Barclays paying big fines and other banks bracing
for fines of their own.
But those warnings were very quiet, letting
banks continue to reap the benefits of low Libor -- benefits that probably far
outweighed any fines they will pay.
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