Fed should start to charge the bank reserves to push serious lending.
By Daniel at 27 January, 2010, 9:54 pm
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Real Reason Banks Aren’t Lending Will Shock You
“A California Banker” writes to Mish, giving yet another reason why banks aren’t lending:
If you’re a bank with a relatively healthy balance sheet with adequate capital, (like us)you want to maintain surplus capital in order to stay on the FDIC’s list of banks they can transfer the loans and deposits from a failed institution into.
This is a home run for the acquiring bank and far more of an instant benefit than any new lending.
The problem here is that healthy banks end up competing with each other to have the largest capital surplus and therefore the greatest chance of being anointed in this manner by the FDIC. If everybody was lending, the FDIC would still have to place failed banks’ assets and deposits with someone. But instead we get the opposite corner solution, where nobody is lending — except, presumably, for banks which are close to failure and need all the interest income they can get. I wonder whether the FDIC has anybody thinking about how to counteract this syndrome.
The FDIC system of liquidating banks by selling their assets to other banks seems to be fostering credit contraction. On the other hand, so does letting a bunch of banks fail.
http://www.businessinsider.com/the-real-reason-banks-arent-lending-will-shock-you-2010-1
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------











No comments yet.