By Brady Willett | 17 October 2007
Imagine walking into a hospital with chest pains and the doctor telling you that he will do his best to treat you in a few months. Such is the latest development on the U.S. bailout/bust front.
Having already worked with the U.S. Treasury for more than a month, Citigroup, Bank of America, JP Morgan, and others are reportedly ironing out the final details for $75 billion to $100 billion ‘master liquidity enhancement conduit (MLEC)’. According to the New York Times, "the effort is intended to help SIVs [structured investment vehicles] that need to sell securities do so in an orderly manner."
All this sounds well and good. However, the MLEC in question is not expected to be up and running for at least 90-days. Moreover, the assets that the MLEC will be permitted to purchase are not of the subprime variety:
NY Times |
While the structure, investment scope, and overall purpose of the proposed MLEC could change, as it stands it looks like another desperate attempt by Wall Street institutions to share some of their pain with others. As the evidence continues to mount that the consolidation standards put in place following Enron have failed to end off balance sheet shenanigans, market participants await a real bailout from Paulson and/or Bernanke.
Question is, will they will have to wait 90-days? [[or, maybe, longer?: normxxx]]
Normxxx
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