Urgent Appeal:
Recapitalize Financial Institutions Rather than Bail Out Debt
Axel Merk
Merk Hard Currency
Fund
Sep 25, 2008
In the coming days, Congress
may authorize $700 billion to buy bad debt from financial institutions.
Even if all challenges of the plan were to be overcome, the plan
does not address one of the fundamental reasons why credit markets
don't function properly: the under-capitalization of financial
institutions. Under-capitalized financial institutions may seek
to repair their balance sheet rather than engage in lending activities.
If securities are purchased at market value, all the Treasury
Department's plan achieves is to provide liquidity to the markets.
This is a worthy goal to allow the rolling of debt, but does
not guarantee that banks will start to lend again, nor does it
provide a floor under the housing market. The plan is fraught
with risks that include lower economic activity and a lowered
standard of living for all Americans should creditors demand
higher interest rates for the sharply growing appetite for debt
of the country.
Instead, a capital infusion
on the equity side of financial institutions would strike at
the core of the problem. Financial institutions employ leverage;
any dollar added in equity may be worth ten dollars in lending
power or more. Stronger financial institutions would be able
to find a market based solution for their bad debt and, simultaneously,
start lending again. $700 billion would be more than adequate
to recapitalize financial institutions; however, $700 billion
spent on buying bad assets may or may not be enough to find a
cure for the system.
By providing capital, the government
must avoid a critical mistake the Treasury has made in recent
months. In recent months, whenever the Treasury intervened
be that in the case of Bear Stearns, Fannie & Freddie (the
"GSEs") or AIG, common stock holders were pretty much
wiped out. This serves the political purpose of punishing equity
holders, but has the disastrous side effect of signaling to the
market that anyone providing equity to financial institutions
is likely to be severely punished. After all, the Treasury successfully
lobbied the GSEs to raise capital this summer, only to wipe out
existing common and preferred stock holders a few weeks later.
Other side effects of ad-hoc interventions included that commercial
banks now have money market funds competing with FDIC insured
deposits because of the emergency guarantees under consideration
for money market funds. Aiding on the debt side may also be a
lose-lose proposition for the dollar: if U.S. subsidiaries of
foreign financial institutions receive inferior terms, a capital
flight out of the U.S. may ensue; however, if they do receive
the same terms, foreign financial institutions have a major incentive
to move bad assets to their U.S. subsidiaries. Also importantly,
providing capital infusions make the bailout plan less dependent
on international cooperation than a bailout of bad debt would
require; given that central banks and governments around the
world have rather differing views on how to proceed in the current
crisis, international cooperation cannot be counted on.
Understandably, the government
does not want to reward shareholders whose firms have made bad
decisions. At the same time, it is crucial for financial institutions
to raise more capital, but capital is scarce. An auction model
may be the most suitable compromise: firms that seek capital
receive bids on the terms others are willing to inject capital.
The government then offers to inject capital (possibly a multiple)
using corresponding terms. The private sector bids are likely
to be substantially higher if they know that the total capital
raised by the firm will be sufficient to bring the firm on a
sound footing. The punishment for existing shareholders comes
through the dilution created by the market forces of the offering.
Whether the government wants to achieve restrictions on executive
pay is a political question, but a question the government should
then ask as a shareholder, not as a legislator.
This proposal is not without
risks, notably we could create a dozen Fannie and Freddie style
entities if the government were to seize control of financial
institutions. The government should receive restricted stock
whose powers and influence are clearly defined; there should
also be guidelines established to sell government shares over
time by selling them to the public (at which point restricted
stocks could be converted to common stock). The Treasury Department
would be required to design and publish rules as to when the
government would participate in an auction; note that to date,
neither the Treasury, nor the Federal Reserve have provided guidelines
on when they would interfere in the markets. While this may provide
tactical advantages, the lack of a clearly communicated long-term
plan may increase inflationary pressures as policy makers throw
money at every new crisis that erupts. Any firm that desires
to participate in the program should be required to have its
books sufficiently transparent to allow for private investors
to make bids and make a case as to why a failure of their firm
would cause systemic risk. We understand that this solution is
also far from perfect as it also raises many questions.
Our preferred scenario would
be to allow free market forces play out. We should not throw
200 years of bankruptcy law history out of the window and replace
it with a patchwork of new rules and regulation. The unintended
consequences of ad-hoc regulations risk destroying New York as
the financial capital of the world. The reason the U.S. enjoys
this status is because it has traditionally had the fairest rules
for all market participants, including allowing for the possibility
of failure. Singapore, Dubai and other cities are eager to fill
in any void created should policy makers create more harm than
good.
However, if indeed a bailout
is going to be taken and imminent, we urge policy makers to strongly
consider injecting money on the equity side rather than buying
bad fixed income securities. It is a political nightmare to manage
such the 'bailout portfolio'; and who would be willing to do
so? A Warren Buffett wisely declines saying he may have too many
conflicts of interests; that comment comes from a man who likely
has less involvement in the bad debt under discussion than most
in the industry. However, PIMCO is already pitching its services,
even pro bono. Of course PIMCO would offer its services for free,
as they could lift the prices of all their own debt securities
by buying up comparable securities in the market, in the process
possibly earning billions.
Of course, the above discussion
does not address the second fundamental problem: the fact that
home prices remain too high. In our humble opinion, the bailout
as currently under consideration in Congress does little to address
this. A capital infusion, however, at least provides banks with
greater flexibility of finding a market-based solution, reducing,
although not eliminating, pressure on policy makers to agree
on how to address this.
Sep 25, 2008
Axel Merk
Contact
Merk
©2005-2012 Merk Investments
LLC. All Rights Reserved.
The views in
this article were those of Axel Merk as of the article's publication
date and may not reflect his views at any time thereafter. These
views and opinions should not be construed as investment advice
nor considered as an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer
to buy shares of any securities mentioned herein. Mr. Merk is
the founder and president of Merk Investments LLC and is
the portfolio manager for the Merk Hard and Asian Currency Funds.
Foreside Fund Services, LLC, distributor.
The Merk
Asian Currency Fund invests in a basket of Asian currencies.
Asian currencies the Fund may invest in include, but are not limited
to, the currencies of China, Hong Kong, Japan, India, Indonesia,
Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan and
Thailand.
The Merk
Hard Currency Fund invests in a basket of hard currencies.
Hard currencies are currencies backed by sound monetary policy;
sound monetary policy focuses on price stability.
The Funds may
be appropriate for you if you are pursuing a long-term goal with
a hard or Asian currency component to your portfolio; are willing
to tolerate the risks associated with investments in foreign currencies;
or are looking for a way to potentially mitigate downside risk
in or profit from a secular bear market. For more information
on the Funds and to download a prospectus, please visit www.merkfund.com.
Investors should
consider the investment objectives, risks and charges and expenses
of the Merk Funds carefully before investing. This and other information
is in the prospectus, a copy of which may be obtained by visiting
the Funds' website at www.merkfund.com or calling 866-MERK FUND.
Please read the prospectus carefully before you invest.
The Funds primarily
invest in foreign currencies and as such, changes in currency
exchange rates will affect the value of what the Funds own and
the price of the Funds' shares. Investing in foreign instruments
bears a greater risk than investing in domestic instruments for
reasons such as volatility of currency exchange rates and, in
some cases, limited geographic focus, political and economic instability,
and relatively illiquid markets. The Funds are subject to interest
rate risk which is the risk that debt securities in the Funds'
portfolio will decline in value because of increases in market
interest rates. The Funds may also invest in derivative securities
which can be volatile and involve various types and degrees of
risk. As a non-diversified fund, the Merk Hard Currency Fund will
be subject to more investment risk and potential for volatility
than a diversified fund because its portfolio may, at times, focus
on a limited number of issuers. For a more complete discussion
of these and other Fund risks please refer to the Funds' prospectuses.
321gold Ltd
|