http://www.cnbc.com/id/27293172
The banks aren’t lending. And despite what you have heard, they probably won’t start just yet.
The
stock market may be way up on expectations of a credit thaw on Wall
Street — and there has already been a minor one — but don’t hold your
breath on Main Street. The dirty little secret of the government’s $250
billion handout to nine banks to get them lending again is this: So
far, they have stuffed it under their mattress like the rest of us.
Need a mortgage? An auto loan? If you are a business or consumer, it’s almost as hard to get a loan this week as it was last.
Sure,
there are some positive signs that the credit market is opening up a
bit: Libor rates, the price at which banks lend to each other, have
crept down in recent days, greasing the wheels of capitalism, or at
least what’s left of it. Some banks, like JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup,
actually made loans to banks in Europe on Friday. These are all
important steps on the way to a recovery.
But
make no mistake, the banks are doing the opposite of what Henry M.
Paulson Jr., the Treasury secretary, sought when he virtually demanded
that they accept the taxpayers’ money: They are hoarding it. It’s a bit
like the government’s sending out tax rebate checks and the consumers’
not immediately running out and spending them.
“Our
purpose is to increase confidence in our banks and increase the
confidence of our banks, so that they will deploy, not hoard, their
capital,” Mr. Paulson said in a statement Monday. “And we expect them
to do so, as increased confidence will lead to increased lending. This
increased lending will benefit the U.S. economy and the American
people.”
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