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Terry Campbell

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Don't Call it a Bailout. It Wasn't.

Posted: 05/ 1/2012 1:49 pm

A report from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) says Canadians were never told the real cost of a $114-billion "secret bailout'' for the country's biggest banks during the financial crisis.

It's difficult to see why the (CCPA) continues to try to make this an issue three years later but, again, they're completely missing the point. They seem to be implying that liquidity support is the same as a bank bailout, and this is not the case. These funding measures were put in place to ensure that credit was available to lend to businesses and consumers to help the economy through the recession. These funding measures were not put in place because banks were in financial difficulty.

The federal government introduced a series of measures called the Extraordinary Financing Framework (EFF) as part of Budget 2009 and through other public announcements -- there was nothing secret about it -- and the banking industry publicly acknowledged some of these programs.

But here are the facts that the CCPA has ignored: Although the financial crisis did not begin here, Canada's financial markets were impacted. During the global financial crisis, a number of large banks in other countries became insolvent, and either failed or received taxpayer-funded bailouts where the government bought part or all of those banks. For example, since the beginning of 2008, 436 banks in the U.S. have failed. Due to the crisis of confidence in global credit markets, some funding sources that banks normally relied upon became unavailable.

Canadian banks get about two-thirds of their funding from deposits, which shows the strengths of our banking system. The other one-third come from credit markets and it was these markets that were seizing up. Funding was less available. Canadian banks continued to lend and increased their lending after some non-bank lenders pulled out of the Canadian market.

While some of the funding came from Bank of Canada programs, according to the Bank of Canada, Canadian banks needed less official central bank liquidity support than their foreign counterparts. The Bank of Canada publicly outlined how this funding would be provided to the market.

Under another program, the Insured Mortgage Purchase Program (IMPP), the government of Canada bought $69 billion of insured mortgages from the banks -- only 55 per cent of the total allocated amount. Many of the mortgages were already insured and therefore, created no additional risk for the government. In instances where the banks had to obtain insurance for existing mortgages, these were low-risk mortgages. CMHC estimates that by the time the program has ended, the IMPP will have generated an estimated $2.5 billion in net revenues for the government (and therefore taxpayers).

In their report, the CCPA also compares individual banks' market capitalization with their participation in liquidity programs designed to boost confidence in the markets. It's an apples to oranges comparison as the two factors are not at all related.

It is important to remember that Canada's banks are well-regulated and the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI) carefully monitors individual banks to ensure that they remain financially stable.

The Oxford dictionary defines bailout as "financial assistance to a failing business or economy to save it from collapse." That definitely was not the case here: not one bank in Canada was in danger of going bankrupt or required the government to buy an equity stake under taxpayer-funded bailouts.

 
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10:59 PM on 05/03/2012
I'm no fan of the big banks, God knows. But, listening to "The Current" on CBC Radio this morning, I began wondering whether the CCPA got it quite right in its recent report, "The Big Banks' Big Secret." Did Canada "bail out" the banks with massive aid,or was it something subtly but significantly different? Listen to the CBC podcast here;
http://www.cbc.ca/thecurrent/episode/2012/05/03/was-there-a-secret-canadian-banking-bailout/index.html
follow the links, then decide for yourself.
02:00 PM on 05/02/2012
So it was not a "bailout", as defined by Oxford.

The banks required $$ to be able to carry on operating due to the credit market collapse and the Feds stepped in to provide the $$. (Nice white-knight move!) So was it a gift? A loan? It was still outside assistance, which if not needed would not have been offered/accepted. So our banks are not quite as healthy, and certainly not independent of the global economic ills, as the average Canuck has been led to believe.

Nothing evil going on here - but Canadians need to understand that our banks continue to operate because of gov't (taxpayer) assistance and they are not the proud, financially stable giants of the banking world that we were led to believe. Hey, just want some honesty.
01:22 PM on 05/02/2012
It's actually more of a "bait and switch"
I would agree that government intervention was required to stabilize the banks at that particular moment in history. But this "crisis" was created entirely by the banks own actions and greed.
You then traded 69 billion DOLLARS for and IOU.
Nice for you that the "assets" were calculated at full market value at the height of a boom.
Now that the "crisis" is over as the originator of these "securities" can you please take them back?
Don't want 'em?
Neither does the Canadian taxpayer.
If we get to keep them it would be interesting to see who really benefited from these activities.
To put it into perspective it was like pulling teeth to get 25 prefab homes delivered to a band in Northern Ontario. People are paying huge rents in Northern Alberta. Why is CMHC not helping these folks?
Not enough vig on a 50 thousand dollar "home" is my feeling.
Want to gamble on an 800k 2 bedroom condo in Toronto/Vancouver, no problem. The banks will own you for life. Unbelievable.
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okgranny
Egalitarian by birth
11:43 AM on 05/02/2012
It was a bailout!
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10:25 AM on 05/02/2012
Maybe you would be more comfortable with the term 'Handout'? It will all be of little comfort to the Canadian taxpayers if your 'low-risk' MBS's don't work out, and CMHC ends up paying out on your bad bets.
10:12 AM on 05/02/2012
Terry, it sounds like you are just another 1% running interference for the rest of your corporate welfare cronies.

Government is far too busy listening to the Corporations and acting in ways that make them and the upper 1% wealthier. Corporatists will continue in this behaviour to the detriment of Canada as a whole unless we start to vote, become involved.

Governments need to stop being led around by the corporations and ultra-rich and start championing for us the poor, working and middle class, after all it is us who vote them in, it is us who they should be listening too.

It never ceases to amaze me when people champion for the upper 1%, to their own detriment! There is NO trickle down economy!

The poor, working poor, working and middle class have lousy lobbyists, unlike the wealthy who have the best that money can buy.
08:36 AM on 05/02/2012
Call it what you want.
If a company accepts money from a government to prevent the company from experiencing negative impacts from the economy it is generally referred to as a bailout, if it is a loan there are conditions attached to return the money in a given time and payment is made for the use of the money.
So giving the Banks money to make sure that they can function is not a bailout ?
I guess that ensuring liquidity in the "markets" in Bankers terms is not a bailout, but in non BS (not bankers speak) terms it is.
georgee2
My Canada Includes Everyone
08:12 AM on 05/02/2012
Terry you can call it what you like, but I will continue to call it what it is. A bank bailout!
07:31 AM on 05/02/2012
It seems most have their minds made up, yes we all hate bank charges and the run around for loans but this should have nothing to do understanding the concept of a liquidity vs bailout.

If I take $10 and give it to you so you can buy gas to get to your job is this bailout or a loan? You give me your car ownership to hold and pay me $11 after you return from work. Is this a bailout or a loan?

Not a perfect analogy because the banks would not even lose their job by not showing up, they would just produce less (money services like loans.

It seems most comments already have decided this is political rather than truthful.
07:10 AM on 05/02/2012
Is this the equivalent of Canada "Hugging" a situation? We know that is our role in Nato, we go around and hug and say that's ok.....Bad Americans, glad we are not like them??? Gees I wonder what our Queen Mom would think of this.....I wonder if she knew, she must? Doesn't she run our country? Gees darn Americans. Why does the rest of the world think we have an identity issue? Do we Mom?
photo
TT Esty1
Failure is a temporary condition.
04:09 AM on 05/02/2012
Gosh, it sure is comforting to know that Canadian Banks have a strong altruistic proclivity. They took the money not because they were in trouble but because everyone else was and they were there to help with available loans. Nice guys.

Now, I don't really understand banking but I do get the idea that they make their money by lending out money at a higher rate than they borrow it. Suddenly, they were unable to borrow any money. This means that they had no money to lend. That means they weren't making any money. To me that smacks of a financial difficulty.

If I was holding inventory that I couldn't sell and had no money to buy inventory that I could sell, my business would be in financial difficulty. I would have loved the government to come along and buy my static inventory so that I could use this 'bailout' to earn new business.

I realize that it must be a bit galling for guys like Terry Campbell and his cohorts to be seen in a position of welfare bums but they'll get over it. It's not that they do not want to be welfare bums but rather they do not want to be seen that way,
Dinsdale Pirahna
"lookin' out the 'ole in the wall"
04:00 AM on 05/02/2012
This high school teacher explains the Canadian banking system in an easy to understand video.

"This is a great overview of Canadian banking and a clear explanation of how the international private banking cartel hijacked Canada in 1974 by taking control of the issuance of money. This private banking cartel has been robbing Canada blind ever since, and has currently put Canadians... $500 Billion dollars [in] debt.

The debt is actually the compound interest accumulated by borrowing this printed money from the private banking cartel. Canada, like the US, and like all countries does NOT need private banks to issue it's nation's currency ... countries can print their own money interest-free."

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JuP2hH0Kpro&feature=related
03:03 AM on 05/02/2012
Im sorry but Terrys gymnastics were on par of the gang from Hank Paulsons group during the crisis. "Call it anything but a bailout" was the mantra of the day. The original plan to buy toxic assets turned out to be too long to implement so they rammed liquidity funding down the investment banks throats to stabilize the banking system, and they did to all of the big ones and told them to like it or else.

I don't care that we needed to do the same, its not that surprising. What honks me off is was my tax money, and you hide the details. release the data of the program and come clean. Then let us judge the truth. No one in the banking industry gets " Trust Us" as an option.
12:02 AM on 05/02/2012
An excessive use of the word, "some". Next time I need a bank business loan I'll be sure and throw that one in to substantiate my business plan.
As for the subject, a government printing money on behalf of banks surely borders on bailout, doesn't it? I mean, watering down the $ value and all.
10:23 PM on 05/01/2012
Cut to the chase: would one of the banks have failed had the help not been supplied? Yes or NO? Never mind the sophistry about these kinds of peoples 'intentions'! Cut to the chase!
07:19 AM on 05/02/2012
NO - no bank would have failed. They simply would not have additional money to loan to businesses and for mortgages. This is why it was not a bailout.