Originally posted by: Thump553
I haven't seen any explanation for the link between tight credit and the stock market crash before, except the oft-repeated "investor uncertainty." Here is a very interesting article from Investors Business Daily (like the Wall Street Journal, only politically closer to Genghis Khan) that explains an obvious point I have overlooked. Big hedge funds, etc. that must raise cash can't sell off their mortgage backed assets, so they must dump stocks no matter how irrational that is. If true, then when the G7/USA finally gets the credit markets unstuck, then the stock slide should stop immediately.
A quick and (hopefully inexpensive) fix to me is the proposed joint guarantee of all inter-bank debt for US and G7 banks. That should make the TED spread plunge overnight and get cash flowing.
Link to article:
Levered Investors Sell Anything Easy
They've been trying since August, 2007.
There is no easily defined way out. The problem is one of valuation. I tend to turn into a free-marketeer (it's the Libertarian in me) and think
the financial institutions should work it out. Central Banks (primarily the Fed) need to slowly increase their discount rates while institutions level accounts at their own self-determined rates.
The spread will be gi-normous. Commercial lending rates will soar. The world-wide recession will be deep. Inflation will leap.
The smartest guys in the rooms need to develop an insurance plan (or guarantee as you noted) with weighted ratios that back a
percentage of the interbank lending. Some 'thing' like a long-term FDIC insurance that is capitalized initially by the public sector and reimbursed by fees overtime from the institutions themselves.
Not-for-profit - but any institution who underperforms should be held accountable and the institutions who overperform should be rewarded.
Manipulators and speculators who profit at the margins must be chastised and punished.
As LK noted folks who need credit are going to get reamed. Someone needs to come up with a way to incentivise (did I just make up a word?) the extension of credit in the private sector. If this cash comes in the way of gov't 'freedom loans' to banks in exchange for an equity position, I just don't know ....
And anyone who complains of public assistance to individuals or market regulations should be tried for sedition.
Leverage has to be reduced slowly over time and 'equitable' reserve requirements need to be set. Nobody wants to over-regulate but maybe some type of a ""sliding scale"" based upon risk would be appropriate.
If it's set up in a way that everybodys' pissed (but not
too bad ) it's probably about right ...