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Bank Stress Tests: Threading the Needle

For those involved in assessing the solvency of our domestic banking system, the prospects of releasing the results of the Bank Stress Tests are frightening. How do Secretary Geithner, Fed chair Bernanke, regulators, and President Obama himself maintain credibility with the markets while simultaneously growing confidence in the public?

As Bloomberg reports, Bank Regulators Clash Over U.S. Stress-Tests Endgame. Secretary Geithner clearly was trying to buy time when he proposed the Bank Stress Test model. The day of reckoning will soon be upon us. The administration will release the model used on April 24 and the results on May 4th. However, there are enormous conflicts within the administration and the regulatory community as to how to release the information and how much information to release.

As Bloomberg highlights,

The U.S. Treasury and financial regulators are clashing with each other over how to disclose results from the stress tests of 19 U.S. banks, with some officials concerned at potential damage to weaker institutions.

With a May 4 deadline approaching, there is no set plan for how much information to release, how to categorize the results or who should make the announcements, people familiar with the matter said. While the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and other regulators want few details about the assessments to be publicized, the Treasury is pushing for broader disclosure.

The disarray highlights what threatens to be a lose-lose situation for Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner: If all the banks pass, the tests’ credibility will be questioned, and if some banks get failing grades and are forced to accept more government capital and oversight, they may be punished by investors and customers.

“There are plenty of ways to go wrong here,” said Wayne Abernathy, executive vice president of the American Bankers Association in Washington. “It might have sounded good at the time, but now looking back, it has far more risk than benefit.”

What will come of this? The pressure from all corners is increasing on Geithner. Can he snatch victory from what may appear to be a lose-lose situation? Can he somehow or other get the results forestalled and maintain credibility? Can he keep the various constituencies placated? Truly, he needs to “thread the needle.”

Listen to NQR’s Sense on Cents with Larry Doyle this evening from 8-9 p.m. as I discuss how I think Secretary Geithner will try to thread the needle.

LD

  • jangles

    Who is missing an exit strategy now?
    Isn’t this the “transparency is us” POTUS team?

  • Tom Cat Jefferson

    We are trusting these tax cheat nitwits to assess our banks?? If they miraculously pass, will the govt. then take the tarp funds back?

  • fiscalliberal

    I would imagine that those who pass the stress test (whatever that means) will make noises about plans to return the money. Those who did not pass will be compelled to shut their mouths up.

    Also – the clamor will get loud to hear the results and Obama will fold just as he has done on many other issures.

  • Thomas Pain Jayne

    Tom Cat Jefferson I like it :P

  • Thomas Pain Jayne

    That was really creepy on my part

  • http://noquarter foxyladi14

    i don’t trust any of them..tax cheats.

  • oowawa

    We aren’t going to get any meaningful results from the bank “stress tests.” The government does not want to embarrass anybody in the financial sector. The government does not want to depress the stock market. Confidentiality reigns. Yawn. If anybody wants links, I’d be happy to dig them out.

  • Peggy Sue

    Threading the needle? What is that the new term for lying you face off?

    I can’t believe the arrogance of these people. Vampires in $3000 suits. So I guess they don’t worry much about sleep. Or honesty for that matter.

    The reveal of these stress tests should be a great lesson in the fine art of deception. It’s an indication of the banksters, the Treasury and the Fed’s complete dismissal of the American public. Needless to say, they have no shame. That burned off long ago, I suspect.

  • Tom Cat Jefferson

    LOL, I wanted to join you all in the Patriotic names…cool idea. (wodiej)

  • Paula Revere

    WodieJ…LMAO.

  • elise

    Can we assume the banks will be notified of the results of the tests, LD? If so, what’s to prevent a bank with positive results from leaking them to the press and if the information is leaked, will we assume the ones not leaked, failed the test? Since Wells Fargo and Goldman Sachs have reported profits in the last quarter does that let them off the hook or do they still have problems with assets? Sorry for all the questions.

  • http://www.sonicninjakitty.wordpress.com Sonic Ninja Kitty

    Yeah–they have to decide WHAT KIND of transparency they want. I didn’t know there was more than one kind.

    This is sickening.

  • http://www.sonicninjakitty.wordpress.com Sonic Ninja Kitty

    Why don’t they release the info to the banks and let them present it to their shareholders? That way, the ‘weak’ ones can explain their future plans at the same time, easing the burden.

  • elise

    Sonic Ninja Kitty, is it your belief the public shouldn’t get the information? If, for example, the broker who is investing your money doesn’t have the information, how can he make an informed choice? I’m not sure how all of this will effect the market or economy in the long run, but maybe the Stress Tests themselves were a mistake. If they release the results, but not the method they employed to reach a conclusion, the market, and eventually the public, will find out if they try to “adjust” anything. Since the tests have been done, why don’t they just publish them and the method and let the chips fall? IMO this is just another example of obfuscation.

  • Linda C.

    Financial institutions that were on the brink of the abyss are now going to show a profit. Foreclosures are still out there and we have the commercial loans and credit cards on the horizon. Have the taxpayers bought sufficient debt off of their books to show a turn around? Are we continuing with creative accounting or some combination of the two?

  • elise

    LD, my husband said he heard Turner has the results of the Stress Tests and they are bad. Is this true?

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