Friday, February 13, 2009

Plan N Goes Mainstream

The NY Times' Steve Lohr provides a solid primer for movement towards Plan N. Seeing the Times take this seriously is somewhat sobering, they even quote Roubini.
Some of the nation’s large banks, according to economists and other finance experts, are like dead men walking.

A sober assessment of the growing mountain of losses from bad bets, measured in today’s marketplace, would overwhelm the value of the banks’ assets, they say. The banks, in their view, are insolvent.

None of the experts’ research focuses on individual banks, and there are certainly exceptions among the 50 largest banks in the country. Nor do consumers and businesses need to fret about their deposits, which are federally insured. And even banks that might technically be insolvent can continue operating for a long time, and could recover their financial health when the economy improves.

But without a cure for the problem of bad assets, the credit crisis that is dragging down the economy will linger, as banks cannot resume the ample lending needed to restart the wheels of commerce. The answer, say the economists and experts, is a larger, more direct government role than in the Treasury Department’s plan outlined this week.
It's worth reading the whole thing if you're still doubting Plan N. Nationalization of many of the mega-banks and regional banks in America is where we will eventually end up. Obama will have no other choice.

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