By Theodore H. Frank on 2.16.09 @ 6:06AM
When government doesn't keep its word we have the financial
paralysis we are now seeing.
In executing TARP, the Troubled Asset Relief Program, the Bush
Treasury Department built off of the experience of costly
mistakes the government made in the 1980s bailout of the savings
and loan industry. But the lessons learned are the wrong ones,
and the consequences could be dramatic.
To induce healthy thrifts to take over troubled thrifts, the
Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation offered a
regulatory incentive: it would permit the institutions to count
intangible "supervisory goodwill" towards their reserve
requirements, and amortize that goodwill over forty years. This
and other favorable accounting treatments would permit the
acquirer to increase its leverage and thus, hypothetically, its
profits. Without this incentive, the desired mergers never would
have happened: a healthy thrift plus an insolvent thrift would
have equaled another insolvent thrift under the old accounting
regime.
Dozens of institutions made express agreements with the FSLIC and
relied upon those promises. These deals saved the government
money (at least in the short run) because the failing thrifts
could continue operating and the government did not have to make
good on deposit insurance.
Now, one can argue that the FSLIC's policy was unwise because it
distorted economic incentives and encouraged healthy banks to
make themselves less healthy. Recent events have shown the
problem of overleveraging. And some businesses were rent-seeking,
created simply to buy failing thrifts and take advantage of the
favorable regulatory treatment. But the way Congress resolved
that problem was to pull the rug out from under these deals
retroactively.
FIRREA, the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and
Enforcement Act of 1989, abolished the old regulatory regime,
including the FSLIC. More importantly for the thrifts, FIRREA
established capital requirements that made the deals' accounting
treatment impermissible.
Profitable thrifts that had relied upon the government's promises
found themselves out of compliance with the new rules, and
regulators seized and liquidated them.
Many of those thrifts sued the United States for breach of
contract. And the Supreme Court quickly ruled unanimously in
Winstar Corp. v. United States that the thrifts
had a case. Yes, Congress could change the rules; the thrifts did
not claim otherwise. But the government had the responsibility to
make whole those who had contractual agreements when the new
rules meant the government could no longer keep its
promises.
The aftermath of Winstar was disappointing,
however, for those investors. The Department of Justice litigated
the suits to the hilt through three presidential administrations,
and the thrifts received only a small fraction of the billions
they lost for trusting the government.
There are many lessons that policymakers could take from
this experience. One is to avoid addressing financial problems
with short-term solutions that only forestall and magnify the
eventual pain. (Yet TARP also involves accounting kludges.)
Another is realizing the costs to the economy when the government
reneges on a deal: aside from the fundamental unfairness of a
broken promise, capricious policy makes it more expensive for the
government to induce trust from investors in the future. The
Winstar experience is no doubt interfering with
the government's plans this time around.
But the government's conclusion from its Winstar
experience is the wrong one: lawyer up in advance. TARP's
"Securities Purchase Agreements" each contain a Trojan Horse
clause, Section 5.3, stating that Treasury may "unilaterally
amend" the agreement to comply with changes in federal statutes.
In short, Congress has the power to retroactively amend the terms
of the bailout, and stakeholders would have even less recourse
than the Winstar plaintiffs.
The provision is a blank check. Congress could raise the
dividend rate without warning; it could change the repayment
schedule. Congress can wipe out shareholders or subordinate
debt-holders overnight. Any of a raft of special interests could
use Congress to demand that TARP participants engage in various
forms of costly social engineering, ranging from meddling in
corporate governance to abstinence from foreclosures to favorable
treatment for Democratic constituencies.
This is already more than hypothetical. During December's
Republic Windows and Doors sit-in,
Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich used the fact of the bailout to
mau-mau Bank of America into paying over a million dollars to the
lawbreaking union, even though banks have no legal obligation to
their debtors' workers.
And the "stimulus" bill included strict regulation of
executive pay for bailout recipients -- essentially insuring that
the bailed out banks won't be able to compete in the marketplace
for talent to replace the people who got them into the mess they
are in.
David Baris of the American Association of Bank Directors
pointed all this out in a November 3 letter to Treasury Secretary
Paulson, but never received a response. Little wonder many banks
are refusing to participate in TARP, and equity holders should be
especially wary of the ones that do given the unbounded political
risks.
This unnecessary uncertainty is almost certainly
contributing to the financial paralysis that is preventing TARP
from working. The Obama administration should ameliorate the
damage by deleting Section 5.3 from the Securities Purchase
Agreement.