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What Does the Market Focus on After the Stress Tests?

Wall Street Journal Original article ›

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Simon Johnson, is Professor at MIT's Sloan School, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute of International Economics, co-founder of BaselineScenario.com a widely cited site on the global economy, and is a member of the Congressional Budget Office's Panel of Economic Advisors. Here he talks to the WSJ's Deal Journal reporters. He says the stress test don't mean much because the government using a milder scenario, made the banks look better than they really are. He suggests a wait-and-see strategy, as banks have 1 month to file plans on how they will raise needed capital and 6 months to do it. He sees a steeper yield curve on Treasury debt as a result, with long term Treasury securities like 20 year Treasury notes yielding higher than short duration securities, which should stimulate long term lending. Expect banks to issue more bonds than stocks which dilute shareholders value, and as bond prices are low. Johnson sees real risks of inflation in 1-2 years, becaue of the way the government has inflated the economy, in a manner he says like the private sector bubble. Expect the government to cut back to prevent this from happening. He also sees pretty good earnings in the financial sector in the second quarter which should help stocks. The question remains about how sustainable all this will be, because he says " the government by oversubsidizing the financial sector will get us stuck in the same kind of financial bubble that got us into the mess in the first place."

Stress tests of U.S. banks by the Obama administration.

05/06/2009

What the stress tests of the banks by the Federal Reserve did and what they failed to do. By coming up with amilder stress test after intense bargaining with the banks have the stress test adequately protected transparency? Have they muddied up the problem of putting banks on their feet by not taking the strong action to clean up balance sheets that is needed, and making it appear that banks are healthier than they actually are.

Grouped Articles

Fed Publishes 'Stress Test' Procedures

Wall Street Journal 11/10/2013

Stressing the Bank 'Stress Tests'

Wall Street Journal 03/14/2012

Stress Tests Won't Prevent the Next Financial Crisis

Wall Street Journal 03/19/2014

We Can't Subsidize the Banks Forever

Wall Street Journal 05/06/2009

Banks Need Fewer Carrots and More Sticks

Wall Street Journal 05/07/2009

Banks Need Funds, but Taxpayers May Not Have to Pay

New York Times 05/07/2009


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