The Disappearing Telegraph Story

Wolfie — May 16, 2009, 12:22 pm

Those guys down at the Telegraph are starting to get themselves quite a reputation, not only for rocking the political boat with their whistle-blowing exposure of MP’s expenses but also for their dire and bearish financial predictions. To their credit they are often correct.

Then there was this 14th May Evans-Pritchard story about an incendiary interview with Mark Patterson, which mysteriously vanished from the Telegraph website the next day. The story is that it was removed because it contained “factual errors”, which I’m quite happy to believe because I have observed Evans-Pritchard to exaggerate somewhat from time to time.

Here’s the letter from Mark Patterson denying the story

There’s just one thing though. The original article was actually spot-on.

Here’s the story below so you can decide what you think for yourself. Highlighting is mine.

US ’sham’ bank bail-outs enrich speculators, says buy-out chief Mark Patterson

The US Treasury’s effort to stabilise the banking system through the TARP programme is a hopelessly ill-conceived policy that enriches speculators at public expense, according to the buy-out firm supposed to be pioneering the joint public-private bank rescues.

“The taxpayers ought to know that we are in effect receiving a subsidy. They put in 40pc of the money but get little of the equity upside,” said Mark Patterson, chairman of Matlin Patterson Advisers.

The comments are likely to infuriate Tim Geithner, the US Treasury Secretary, because MatlinPatterson took advantage of the TARP’s matching funds to buy Flagstar Bancorp in Michigan. His confession appears to validate concerns that the bail-out strategy is geared towards Wall Street.
Under the convoluted deal agreed earlier this year, Matlin Patterson has come to own 80pc of the shares while the US government has ended up with under 10pc.

Mr Patterson said the US Treasury is out of its depth and seems to be trying to put off drastic action by pretending that the banking system is still viable.

“It’s a sham. The banks are insolvent. The US government is trying to sedate the public because they are down to the last $100bn (£66bn) of the $700bn TARP funds. They think they’re doing this for the greater good of society,” he said, speaking at the Qatar Global Investment Forum.

Mr Patterson said it would be better for the US to bite the bullet as Britain has done, accepting that crippled lenders must be nationalised. “At least the British are not hiding the bail-out,” he said.

Matlin Patterson said private equity and hedge funds were deluding themselves in hoping to go back to business as usual after the trauma of the last 18 months.

“This is not a normal recession and there will be no V-shaped recovery. The crisis has destroyed leveraged companies. We’re going to see a catastrophic increase in the number of LBO’s (leveraged buyouts) going into default because they’re knee-deep in debt and no solution exists since they can’t refinance,” he said.

“Alfa hedge funds have been making their money by gambling with excessive leverage, so the knife that cuts off leverage is going to cut off their heads as well,” he said.

Like many bears, Mr Patterson expects the great crunch to end in deliberate inflation, deemed a lesser evil than outright depression.

“The US government has thrown 29pc of GDP at this crisis compared to 8pc in the early 1930s. The Fed’s balance sheet has risen from $900bn to $2.7 trillion to bail out the system. America has to do it because the only way out is to debase the currency, but that is going to lead to some very high inflation three years down the road,” he said.

Matlin Patterson, however, has missed the Spring rebound, the most powerful rise in equities in over 70 years. “We shorted the equity rally because we thought it was lunatic. We’ve kept adding positions seven times, and we’re still holding,” he said. Ouch!

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  1. Pingback by First Class posts on Saturday | Letters From A Tory @ May 16, 2009, 8:36 pm

    [...] and don’t forget that you can CLICK HERE to get my letters sent to you by RSS every morning.1. The Two Wolves reports on how the Telegraph ‘lost’ a major financial news [...]

  2. Comment by xoggoth @ May 18, 2009, 9:26 am

    Yet all those virtuous countries like Ireland, which cut taxes to encourage entrepreneurs, and Germany/Japan who had \’real\’ economies based on manufacturing and export seem to be faring much worse than ourselves.

    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/anatole_kaletsky/article6308164.ece

    I get more confused by economics every day, will we find that paying people to sift forms about how to fill in forms or letting them stay at home on welfare was really the ideal economic model?

  3. Pingback by Pages tagged "sedate" @ May 18, 2009, 6:46 pm

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  4. Comment by Wolfie @ May 19, 2009, 10:08 am

    Yes, on the face of it it would seem that but there is a lot which is not discussed here as openly as you find in other countries. First of all Ireland was engaged in a debt/property bubble every bit as daft as the UK and the entrepreneurs were milking the grant and leverage system.

    The fate of Germany and Japan are good examples of why globalization doesn’t work, you can find frank discussions of this in Europe but not here. Both these countries manufactured high-value/high-tech goods for wealthy markets and it seems those customers were paying for the goods mostly with worthless debt. Under past economic conditions there would always be other trading zones and internal markets to turn to when things went bad but now everyone is affected and the factories are suddenly forced to close in a rapidly deteriorating environment. Also under normal conditions developing markets such as China would take up some of the slack but for over a decade China has been cheating by keeping its currency unnaturally low, thus making it impossible for relatively expensive German manufacturing to break into their market. We’ve all been conned and this is the blow-back.

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