Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › Fed claims $13B profit on lending facilities
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February 17, 2011 at 6:18 PM #668823February 17, 2011 at 6:41 PM #667697sdrealtorParticipant
But middle class grumbling is so much sexier
February 17, 2011 at 6:41 PM #667758sdrealtorParticipantBut middle class grumbling is so much sexier
February 17, 2011 at 6:41 PM #668366sdrealtorParticipantBut middle class grumbling is so much sexier
February 17, 2011 at 6:41 PM #668505sdrealtorParticipantBut middle class grumbling is so much sexier
February 17, 2011 at 6:41 PM #668848sdrealtorParticipantBut middle class grumbling is so much sexier
February 18, 2011 at 7:16 PM #668208patbParticipant[quote=briansd1]Give me $1 to $2 trillion over 2 years and I’ll pay you $13 billion.
But still the Fed took a gamble to save the world economy from depression and they succeeded. Millions around the world have been saved from poverty and upheaval.[/quote]
The people of Tunisia,Bahrain,Egypt, Libya, Jordan are so ungrateful.
February 18, 2011 at 7:16 PM #668269patbParticipant[quote=briansd1]Give me $1 to $2 trillion over 2 years and I’ll pay you $13 billion.
But still the Fed took a gamble to save the world economy from depression and they succeeded. Millions around the world have been saved from poverty and upheaval.[/quote]
The people of Tunisia,Bahrain,Egypt, Libya, Jordan are so ungrateful.
February 18, 2011 at 7:16 PM #668876patbParticipant[quote=briansd1]Give me $1 to $2 trillion over 2 years and I’ll pay you $13 billion.
But still the Fed took a gamble to save the world economy from depression and they succeeded. Millions around the world have been saved from poverty and upheaval.[/quote]
The people of Tunisia,Bahrain,Egypt, Libya, Jordan are so ungrateful.
February 18, 2011 at 7:16 PM #669015patbParticipant[quote=briansd1]Give me $1 to $2 trillion over 2 years and I’ll pay you $13 billion.
But still the Fed took a gamble to save the world economy from depression and they succeeded. Millions around the world have been saved from poverty and upheaval.[/quote]
The people of Tunisia,Bahrain,Egypt, Libya, Jordan are so ungrateful.
February 18, 2011 at 7:16 PM #669358patbParticipant[quote=briansd1]Give me $1 to $2 trillion over 2 years and I’ll pay you $13 billion.
But still the Fed took a gamble to save the world economy from depression and they succeeded. Millions around the world have been saved from poverty and upheaval.[/quote]
The people of Tunisia,Bahrain,Egypt, Libya, Jordan are so ungrateful.
February 20, 2011 at 12:38 AM #668572CA renterParticipant[quote=davelj][quote=briansd1][quote=Diego Mamani]Yeah dude, cut back!
Anyways, the $13B pales in comparison to the money that we (taxpayers) will lose with Fannie and Freddie. We’ve already lost close to $150 BILLION, and we stand to lose another $160 billion to $1 trillion, according to conservative estimates:
True enough.
FHA will also likely cost taxpayers $100 billion.
Funny thing is that Fan/Fred and FHA sprang into action after the financial crisis to save the market.
But certain uninformed people who just don’t understand the chain of events accuse the GSEs of CAUSING the crisis.[/quote]
How many times I have to explain this I just don’t know (this is may be the fifth time). As I wrote back in December 2009:
[quote=davelj]
I think the Fannie/Freddie (F&F) TARP [in addition to accumulated losses] will also get paid back, but over a much longer time horizon. Spread lenders, almost no matter how bad off they are, can always fill a hole, the only issue being how long it takes. And it’s going to take F&F a long time. To use an example, lets say that F&F charge off 10% of their portfolio (which would be a big number). Further, let’s say the average yield on the remaining 90% of their book is 5.5% and their funding costs (now borrowing at govt rates) are 2.5%. Add in 100 bps of operating expenses and you have a 200 bp spread. Here, it takes F&F 5.5 years to fill its hole (from losses) with spread income from the performing portfolio. If you assume that F&F’s losses are going to be 20% of its book, it takes them 11 years to fill the hole, and so on. So, while we’re hearing about the big “losses” coming out of F&F – which are real losses – we will get that money back… eventually… but it could be many years. We will lose in real (that is, inflation-adjusted) terms for sure.[/quote]The point here is that F&F’s “losses” are an income statement item and are meaningless absent a discussion of the balance sheet. We, the US Taxpayers, now own a huge pile of mortgage assets (along with corresponding debt that funds them). The losses will stop eventually – likely in a few years – and the spread income will fill the hole (think of it as accumulated negative retained earnings in accounting terms) and eventually yield a net profit. But… this is in nominal dollars and down the road many years. So, again, there will be a loss in real dollars, but that loss will be a small fraction of the “current losses” that are reported in the MSM. To be clear, I don’t give a rat’s ass about F&F – I just want folks to understand the difference between (1) temporary losses and permanent losses of capital, and (2) income statements and balance sheets.[/quote]
Dave,
Please bear with my ignorance here, but doesn’t that assume that losses going forward will be much smaller than past losses (on the existing, “toxic” loans)?
What if the future loans also suffer heavy losses that are greater than the 200 bp spread? What if interest rates go up (their cost of funds) so that they are no longer earning that spread on their existing loans?
February 20, 2011 at 12:38 AM #668634CA renterParticipant[quote=davelj][quote=briansd1][quote=Diego Mamani]Yeah dude, cut back!
Anyways, the $13B pales in comparison to the money that we (taxpayers) will lose with Fannie and Freddie. We’ve already lost close to $150 BILLION, and we stand to lose another $160 billion to $1 trillion, according to conservative estimates:
True enough.
FHA will also likely cost taxpayers $100 billion.
Funny thing is that Fan/Fred and FHA sprang into action after the financial crisis to save the market.
But certain uninformed people who just don’t understand the chain of events accuse the GSEs of CAUSING the crisis.[/quote]
How many times I have to explain this I just don’t know (this is may be the fifth time). As I wrote back in December 2009:
[quote=davelj]
I think the Fannie/Freddie (F&F) TARP [in addition to accumulated losses] will also get paid back, but over a much longer time horizon. Spread lenders, almost no matter how bad off they are, can always fill a hole, the only issue being how long it takes. And it’s going to take F&F a long time. To use an example, lets say that F&F charge off 10% of their portfolio (which would be a big number). Further, let’s say the average yield on the remaining 90% of their book is 5.5% and their funding costs (now borrowing at govt rates) are 2.5%. Add in 100 bps of operating expenses and you have a 200 bp spread. Here, it takes F&F 5.5 years to fill its hole (from losses) with spread income from the performing portfolio. If you assume that F&F’s losses are going to be 20% of its book, it takes them 11 years to fill the hole, and so on. So, while we’re hearing about the big “losses” coming out of F&F – which are real losses – we will get that money back… eventually… but it could be many years. We will lose in real (that is, inflation-adjusted) terms for sure.[/quote]The point here is that F&F’s “losses” are an income statement item and are meaningless absent a discussion of the balance sheet. We, the US Taxpayers, now own a huge pile of mortgage assets (along with corresponding debt that funds them). The losses will stop eventually – likely in a few years – and the spread income will fill the hole (think of it as accumulated negative retained earnings in accounting terms) and eventually yield a net profit. But… this is in nominal dollars and down the road many years. So, again, there will be a loss in real dollars, but that loss will be a small fraction of the “current losses” that are reported in the MSM. To be clear, I don’t give a rat’s ass about F&F – I just want folks to understand the difference between (1) temporary losses and permanent losses of capital, and (2) income statements and balance sheets.[/quote]
Dave,
Please bear with my ignorance here, but doesn’t that assume that losses going forward will be much smaller than past losses (on the existing, “toxic” loans)?
What if the future loans also suffer heavy losses that are greater than the 200 bp spread? What if interest rates go up (their cost of funds) so that they are no longer earning that spread on their existing loans?
February 20, 2011 at 12:38 AM #669241CA renterParticipant[quote=davelj][quote=briansd1][quote=Diego Mamani]Yeah dude, cut back!
Anyways, the $13B pales in comparison to the money that we (taxpayers) will lose with Fannie and Freddie. We’ve already lost close to $150 BILLION, and we stand to lose another $160 billion to $1 trillion, according to conservative estimates:
True enough.
FHA will also likely cost taxpayers $100 billion.
Funny thing is that Fan/Fred and FHA sprang into action after the financial crisis to save the market.
But certain uninformed people who just don’t understand the chain of events accuse the GSEs of CAUSING the crisis.[/quote]
How many times I have to explain this I just don’t know (this is may be the fifth time). As I wrote back in December 2009:
[quote=davelj]
I think the Fannie/Freddie (F&F) TARP [in addition to accumulated losses] will also get paid back, but over a much longer time horizon. Spread lenders, almost no matter how bad off they are, can always fill a hole, the only issue being how long it takes. And it’s going to take F&F a long time. To use an example, lets say that F&F charge off 10% of their portfolio (which would be a big number). Further, let’s say the average yield on the remaining 90% of their book is 5.5% and their funding costs (now borrowing at govt rates) are 2.5%. Add in 100 bps of operating expenses and you have a 200 bp spread. Here, it takes F&F 5.5 years to fill its hole (from losses) with spread income from the performing portfolio. If you assume that F&F’s losses are going to be 20% of its book, it takes them 11 years to fill the hole, and so on. So, while we’re hearing about the big “losses” coming out of F&F – which are real losses – we will get that money back… eventually… but it could be many years. We will lose in real (that is, inflation-adjusted) terms for sure.[/quote]The point here is that F&F’s “losses” are an income statement item and are meaningless absent a discussion of the balance sheet. We, the US Taxpayers, now own a huge pile of mortgage assets (along with corresponding debt that funds them). The losses will stop eventually – likely in a few years – and the spread income will fill the hole (think of it as accumulated negative retained earnings in accounting terms) and eventually yield a net profit. But… this is in nominal dollars and down the road many years. So, again, there will be a loss in real dollars, but that loss will be a small fraction of the “current losses” that are reported in the MSM. To be clear, I don’t give a rat’s ass about F&F – I just want folks to understand the difference between (1) temporary losses and permanent losses of capital, and (2) income statements and balance sheets.[/quote]
Dave,
Please bear with my ignorance here, but doesn’t that assume that losses going forward will be much smaller than past losses (on the existing, “toxic” loans)?
What if the future loans also suffer heavy losses that are greater than the 200 bp spread? What if interest rates go up (their cost of funds) so that they are no longer earning that spread on their existing loans?
February 20, 2011 at 12:38 AM #669380CA renterParticipant[quote=davelj][quote=briansd1][quote=Diego Mamani]Yeah dude, cut back!
Anyways, the $13B pales in comparison to the money that we (taxpayers) will lose with Fannie and Freddie. We’ve already lost close to $150 BILLION, and we stand to lose another $160 billion to $1 trillion, according to conservative estimates:
True enough.
FHA will also likely cost taxpayers $100 billion.
Funny thing is that Fan/Fred and FHA sprang into action after the financial crisis to save the market.
But certain uninformed people who just don’t understand the chain of events accuse the GSEs of CAUSING the crisis.[/quote]
How many times I have to explain this I just don’t know (this is may be the fifth time). As I wrote back in December 2009:
[quote=davelj]
I think the Fannie/Freddie (F&F) TARP [in addition to accumulated losses] will also get paid back, but over a much longer time horizon. Spread lenders, almost no matter how bad off they are, can always fill a hole, the only issue being how long it takes. And it’s going to take F&F a long time. To use an example, lets say that F&F charge off 10% of their portfolio (which would be a big number). Further, let’s say the average yield on the remaining 90% of their book is 5.5% and their funding costs (now borrowing at govt rates) are 2.5%. Add in 100 bps of operating expenses and you have a 200 bp spread. Here, it takes F&F 5.5 years to fill its hole (from losses) with spread income from the performing portfolio. If you assume that F&F’s losses are going to be 20% of its book, it takes them 11 years to fill the hole, and so on. So, while we’re hearing about the big “losses” coming out of F&F – which are real losses – we will get that money back… eventually… but it could be many years. We will lose in real (that is, inflation-adjusted) terms for sure.[/quote]The point here is that F&F’s “losses” are an income statement item and are meaningless absent a discussion of the balance sheet. We, the US Taxpayers, now own a huge pile of mortgage assets (along with corresponding debt that funds them). The losses will stop eventually – likely in a few years – and the spread income will fill the hole (think of it as accumulated negative retained earnings in accounting terms) and eventually yield a net profit. But… this is in nominal dollars and down the road many years. So, again, there will be a loss in real dollars, but that loss will be a small fraction of the “current losses” that are reported in the MSM. To be clear, I don’t give a rat’s ass about F&F – I just want folks to understand the difference between (1) temporary losses and permanent losses of capital, and (2) income statements and balance sheets.[/quote]
Dave,
Please bear with my ignorance here, but doesn’t that assume that losses going forward will be much smaller than past losses (on the existing, “toxic” loans)?
What if the future loans also suffer heavy losses that are greater than the 200 bp spread? What if interest rates go up (their cost of funds) so that they are no longer earning that spread on their existing loans?
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