Buying toxic assets: A tricky question
Posted on: Monday, 2 February 2009, 07:41 CST
President Barack Obama's financial team is facing a critical, but tough question of how to value toxic assets it plans to buy from U.S. banks.
Hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars are at stake, The New York Times reported Monday.
Purchasing debt securities at too low a price would not push banks to resume lending -- the ultimate goal of the program. Paying too much for the assets would put taxpayer funds at a higher risk or mean the government (and the taxpayer) would incur losses or wait longer to recoup the funds.
But, what is the actual value of the securities?
One financial firm valued a mortgage-backed bond at 97 cents on the dollar. Ratings agency Standard & Poor's valued it 10 cents lower. An increased default rate would push the value lower. And, the bond recently traded at 38 cents on the dollar.
Should the government pay 38 cents, 97 cents, or something in between?
To date, the banks have stuck their heads in the sand and demanded they be paid the price of good apples for bad apples,
said Lynn Turner, a former chief accountant for the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Source: United Press International
Related Articles
- CellTrust SecureSMS to Meet the Stringent Secure Mobile Banking and Remittance Requirements for Central Bank of Nigeria
- LearnKey and mile2 Partner to Provide High Value Security Training
- Security Savings Bank Supports President's Advisory Council on Financial Literacy
- Mutual of Omaha Subsidiary Completes Purchase of Security Federal Bank
- Mutual of Omaha Subsidiary To Acquire Lincoln's Security Federal Bank
- Security Savings Bank Selects AT&T to Speed Up Network
- Digital Insight to Provide Multifactor Authentication Kit, Insights on Secure Online Banking at National Conference
- German LBBW (Landesbank Baden-Wuerttemberg) Offers Secure Retail E-Banking to Its Customers With VASCO's Digipass 250
- Orascom Telecom Secures Committed Bank Facility, Launches Algeria Project
- ActivIdentity Introduces Personal Smart Card Reader for Secure Online Banking
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds