Propaganda From Neel Kashkari On The End Of TARP
Oct 5, 2010 at 5:12 AM
DailyBail in Bank Bailouts, TARP, TARP investigation, bank bailouts, banks, banks, cnbc video, neel kashkari, neel kashkari video, tarp, tarp lies

CNBC Video:  PIMCO's Neel Kashkari on Squawk Box yesterday -- Oct. 4, 2010

And make sure you hear this from last week:

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Kashkari hasn't missed a beat.  He might be pimping Treasuries for PIMCO, but his Wall Street bailout sales pitch hasn't lost any shine.  The fear-mongering is never far from the surface.  More vague allusion to super-galactic devastation and destruction that was avoided through righteous and swift Treasury action. 

Kashkari is the embodiment of Washington political capture.  Among the insights shared:

Comment: throwing trillions of borrowed money at every leaky financial faucet is an excellent fail-safe plan, unless of course you're around when the bill is due.  And just to make sure there aren't any further problems, put extreme pressure on FASB to change the accounting rules to encourage fantasy mark-ups.  Then create a taxpayer-funded program, PPIP, to buy toxic assets at inflated prices, which will allow even more mis-marking of asset values on bank balance sheets, as 'the market' is deemed to have spoken with a new, higher price.

Give me a freaking break.  There was a right way to stabilize the system in the Fall of 2008 and an irresponsible way: where incentives wouldn't change, new regulation would be forgotten, and the guilty would remain in power. 

The responsible path would also have included fair taxpayer terms for all components of a rescue given to any financial institution --this means compensation for FDIC debt guarantees, AIG back-door payments, and Federal Reserve asset dumping of unknown proportion -- collateral swaps with the Fed where toxic assets are traded for Treasuries at par. 

In the case of Goldman Sachs (GS), and it wasn't just Goldman, there were also scores of European Banks who exploited regulatory construct (they broke the law) and used AIG to insure their way out of capital requirements -- yet like Goldman they were paid at par for their contracts, (Lehman counterparties got 11 cents and Chrysler's got 29 cents for comparison), and they were not asked to surrender any shares to the government in exchange. 

No matter how you dice it, that's a lousy deal for someone, and just so happens that someone does not work on Wall Street.

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Video:  Joe Kernen interviews Kashkari -- From earlier this Summer

Read this useless garbage from former AIG CEO Greenberg (Oct. 4):

Then there's this story from this morning:

 

 

Further reading:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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