Those concerns were fueled by a few things:
- The realization that BoA's 'earnings' were mostly due to accounting changes and one-time events, neither of which is sustainable
- The Goldman accounting gimmickry from last week which was so obvious to all really sunk in over the weekend. Trust in Goldman is shaken, even on Wall St, and folks wonder why the gimmick was buried on page 7 of their earnings report
- The Obama plan floated in the Times today to convert existing loans to banks to common stock is really just shuffling deck chairs, and does absolutely nothing about underlying insolvencies
- Ken Lewis being frank for the first time in a while in announcing that credit conditions will get significantly worse
- The realization that the consumer is really in bad shape, which has been obvious, but which has been overlooked. Housing is not bottoming, retail is hideous, employment will continue to weaken, home equity is gone, savings have been stripped, etc etc....
Thing is, these 'nagging' worries will continue to nag until some form of the inevitable and overdue nationalization takes place, alas.
<>
The only things holding this back are 1. fear of political repercussions (Socialist!) and 2. hope that the economy is improving, and banks will heal as consumers do. But consumers aren't healing, and once the next round of badness blows in in July, august, September, the failure to have taken dramatic action will appear to have been the bigger political (and economic) miscalculation...
No comments:
Post a Comment