Further
in Alan Blinder's When the Music Stopped I am at the Fed's
balance sheet where it occurs to me how the administration can
finally shoot the weak stragglers heading off into the sunset. So
okay Tim Geithner was right in not upsetting the system in the middle
of the crisis, but now the kid gloves can be taken off to rein in the
moral hazard that the crisis engendered. The weaklings are Citigroup
and Bank of America and the Fed could act in a manner similar to the
FDIC where it arbitrarily determines it does not like the collateral
it is holding from these two banks and tells them to sell themselves
off in whole or parts with the threat that the Fed is demanding it's
cash back.
Why
do this? First and foremost it will do much to reverse the moral
hazard of the bailouts where financial institutions realize that
eventually bad decisions can put a bank out of business. I resent
Citi Group's recent “we were there through out American History”
advertisements. Both Citi and BofA do not deserve to be part of our
history after their sloppy inattention to good banking and determined
empire building, especially Ken Lewis's disastrous rescue of Angelo
Mozzillo's Countrywide. I think the TBTF problem would be
ameliorated if the Fed could make this move in the name of good
banking and thereby leave Congress and lobbyist completely out of it.
It would be something for Bank Director's to consider when they go
off on a bender, such as Robert Rubin when calculating the
existential odds of actions of the bank he is nominally overseeing.