Quote from IluvVol:
But please answer one question: Whats the difference from what we all discussed when you let the government borrow as you suggest (you want the govt to increase spending which implies the former). Then you want to cut taxes? Why? This sounds pretty self-serving to me besides the fact that those two things can hardly go together.
Paulson's plan is injecting credit from :
government -> banks that hold toxic waste -> general consumers and regular business.
Tax cut :
government -> general consumers and regular business.
The net effect of injecting credit is the same. The magnitude of the credit injection is different though. Paulson's one is ~10:1 and tax cut is 1:1.
The effect is the same as if you allow the government to buy assets at rock bottom valuations with upside potential. Thats the govt side. The main effect will be that there are at least valuations out ont he street on which banks can mark their books and start transacting again.
What I suggest bypass valuing these asset by government. Why? No market price means someone is getting a bad deal and Paulson made a point that taxpayers will get the bad deal. If it is such a good deal, Warren Buffet will be on it already. Why we need this bail out bill then?
I really think the general public does not understand where we were last week. We were at the brink of a total melt down and break down of the total capitalist free market system. This has NOTHING to do with bonuses, corporate leaders, golden parachutes and the like. This is to avoid a lot worse when facing the alternatives.
Yes, credit frozen and no banks that hold toxic waste can lend, but banks like BB&T can lend.
There is a reason Buffet started to buy and its very simple. Valuations are low and others are in distress.
I wish him the best.
When other panik thats the perfect time to step in and start loading up on positions, not all at once but you dont want to be of the other side of some powerful players such as the government.
Sure, I agree that you don't want to fight the fed or government, but we are not debating about that. We are debating what government's action should be.
Ultimately, this bail out bill still has a higher chance to pass than not, but doesn't mean it is the correct thing to do or I agree with it.
I sold premium on 1200 near expiration spx puts and bought upside calls. Feel free to laugh at me next week. I may be wrong and then lost my bet on a bailout (note: lost a bet not the farm) but the risk to the upside by far exceeds the risk to the downside with something like this getting hammered out. Should the proposal not get completely watered down because some senators think its time to grind their axes with corporate pay and once this package hits the street we will see a huge swing to the upside. I am not even talking my book because much deeper pockets would hit the street and squeezed out of shorts than some of us smaller traders.
If you make money, great. I am more concern about the future of this country.
As of today, based on intrade, you made a high probability bet.
Having gone through the week before I think something has gotta happen otherwise we will not just stare into the abbys but fall right into it and its gonna lock very dirty then. Again, I am not proposing tax money used for Wall Street bonuses and thats clearly not the intention and would not be the effect of this package. But I strongly believe that doing something on this level far outweighs the alternatives in terms of benefits to the broad public. It similar to when someone wines about capital gains taxes and whether they should realize losses before year end while completely disregarding their actual position and when they should have gotten out of a losing position LONG time ago. In the same way I dont get when people start wining about tax payers money when the government has the opportunity to buy assets at levels that everyone else would die to get in at if they had the funds at their disposal. The crisis is a liquidity crisis.
I will say, if this is such a good deal.
1) De-securitized these CDO and sold them as individual mortgage. It is tedious. It is messy, but it is the best way to value these junk.
2) Taxpayer never gets a good deal because otherwise, you, me, hedgefund or Warren buffet will be on it already. I don't buy this argument at all. Gains are always welcomed to be privatized. They are trying to socialized losses right now.
Plus for the sweet deal he got, I want to be in too!!!!!!!!