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- <text id=90TT2146>
- <link 93AC0257>
- <link 90TT2579>
- <title>
- Aug. 13, 1990: No End In Sight
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Aug. 13, 1990 Iraq On The March
- The American Economy
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 50
- No End in Sight
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Politicians hurl blame as the $500 billion S&L crisis races out
- of control
- </p>
- <p>By John Greenwald--Reported by Hays Gorey and Richard Hornik/
- Washington
- </p>
- <p> The dark portents came in rapid succession. First the Bush
- Administration angered friend and foe alike last week by
- admitting that it needs $100 billion much sooner than expected
- to continue its cleanup of the shattered savings and loan
- industry. Then tempers flared at a Senate probe of charges that
- the government turned over more than 200 failed thrifts to
- investors in 1988 in what amounted to sweetheart deals.
- Finally, the beleaguered Resolution Trust Corporation, which is
- managing the bailout, disclosed plans to dispose of 130 more
- thrifts and to sell $50 billion of seized assets by the end of
- the year in an effort to raise desperately needed cash.
- </p>
- <p> The ominous signs that the bailout may be in trouble pushed
- public outrage over the S&L crisis to a new level of intensity.
- Demanded Congressman Toby Roth, a Wisconsin Democrat: "Is this
- a bottomless pit for taxpayers?" Said colleague Charles
- Schumer, a Democrat from New York: "By this point it was
- supposed to have been an issue for accountants and bureaucrats
- only. Yet it remains the country's No. 1 problem and the
- public's No. 1 cause for concern."
- </p>
- <p> The cost of the S&L bailout seems to keep on rising
- uncontrollably. Since the President signed the cleanup law amid
- loud fanfare exactly one year ago, the price tag has grown from
- a White House projection of $166 billion over 10 years to what
- some experts now fear could be a $1 trillion bill spread over
- 30 years as the government shuts down nearly half the entire
- thrift industry. The White House's own current forecast
- projects a cleanup cost of at least $500 billion over the next
- 40 years. That includes $160 billion to be used mainly to pay
- insured depositors at shuttered thrifts plus some $340 billion
- of interest on the government bonds that will finance the
- bailout.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, the law that set the rescue in motion last year was
- so deeply flawed that it may have worsened some of the
- industry's woes. For example, regulators imposed strict new
- lending standards on thrifts and commercial banks; the
- restrictions helped cause a credit crunch earlier this year.
- Ironically, many thrifts may go belly-up because of the tough
- new regulation. The standards require thrifts to have more
- capital on their books than even some profitable S&Ls had
- previously carried. As a result, even some well-managed
- institutions such as Chicago's 68-year-old Talman Home Federal
- Savings and Loan (assets: $5.7 billion), which expects to earn
- $20 million this year, may have to close their doors or be
- acquired. Says Theodore Roberts, chairman of Talman, which is
- the largest thrift in Illinois: "Our market values have been
- declining because of the turmoil that's been created in the S&L
- industry, and now we're told to go out and raise more capital.
- You've caught the dolphin in the tuna net here."
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, the bailout failed to overhaul
- deposit-insurance policies that require U.S. taxpayers to pay
- virtually the full cost of a bank or S&L collapse. The
- Administration acknowledged the problem two weeks ago by
- indicating that it may propose limiting the $100,000 insurance
- coverage on bank and S&L deposits to just one account per
- person.
- </p>
- <p> The worst fear is that U.S. banks could be the next
- disaster. In congressional testimony last week, L. William
- Seidman, who chairs both the RTC and the Federal Deposit
- Insurance Corp., said the $13 billion FDIC fund that guarantees
- bank deposits was under "very substantial stress" because of
- bank failures and would probably show a loss for the third
- straight year. So far, 112 banks have closed their doors in
- 1990. That is comparable to the rate last year, when some 200
- banks were shut.
- </p>
- <p> The problems of many large banks suffering from sour real
- estate loans are closely linked to the S&L mess. Seidman noted
- that the thrift crisis "has clearly had an effect on real
- estate markets" by lowering property values and making mortgage
- loans harder to get. "Real estate markets," he added, "have an
- effect on bank results. So there is a relationship between the
- two. And the effect has not been good." Nonetheless, bank
- depositors "shouldn't withdraw their money and hide it in
- mattresses," says Eli Schwartz, a Lehigh University economist.
- "We may be having a banking crisis, but it's not going to be
- of the same magnitude as the S&L crisis."
- </p>
- <p> Yet a broad economic downturn could inflict heavy damage on
- both banks and S&Ls. The threat of a such a slump was
- aggravated last week, when oil prices rose more than 10% in
- response to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait. Ironically, rising crude
- prices would reinvigorate the economies of oil-patch states
- where thrifts have been hit hardest, but the effect would
- probably be too little, too late to reduce the cost of the
- bailout by much.
- </p>
- <p> The thrift crisis could become the heaviest domestic burden
- of Bush's presidency. In a TIME/CNN poll conducted July 24 to
- July 25 by Yankelovich Clancy Shulman, 49% of the adults in the
- survey said Bush was doing a bad job of handling the crisis,
- vs. 33% who gave him good marks. When asked which party they
- blamed most for the thrift mess, 36% said the Republicans,
- while 18% said the Democrats were mostly at fault. Only 12%
- said they have a lot of confidence in the government to correct
- the S&L mess. Another 59% indicated they were losing confidence
- in their local S&Ls.
- </p>
- <p> The bailout's woes were glaringly evident last week, when
- the Administration notified Congress that $100 billion will be
- needed by October to keep the program from running out of cash.
- The news angered Administration critics who were stunned by the
- size of the request. The $100 billion installment includes $60
- billion in bonds the RTC plans to repay from the sale of assets
- of seized thrifts. The remaining $40 billion will become part
- of the bailout's long-term cost.
- </p>
- <p> Under attack for liquidating its holdings too slowly, which
- increases the need for cash infusions, the RTC has begun to
- speed up the pace. Last week Seidman announced the details of
- a "fall inventory-reduction sale," in which the agency will
- unload shuttered thrifts and seized assets by the end of the
- year. Up for grabs will be everything from junk bonds to golf
- courses to shopping malls. The $50 billion asset sell-off will
- refuel the bailout process, but it will take its toll on the
- U.S. by depressing, to some extent, an already weak real estate
- market in many parts of the country. And taxpayers will be
- stuck for any losses on properties sold for less than the
- frequently overstated book values that Washington inherits when
- it shuts insolvent S&Ls.
- </p>
- <p> In Congress, lawmakers adopted a get-tough posture, hastily
- passing several S&L measures last week before returning home
- for the summer recess. The House voted 424 to 4 for a bill that
- would mandate life sentences for persons convicted of major S&L
- swindles. The measure was similar to one overwhelmingly
- approved by the Senate last month. But while such penalties
- might deter future S&L looters, neither measure would
- retroactively apply to the fast-buck operators who are
- responsible for billions of dollars of S&L losses that taxpayers
- will have to meet. Government officials estimate that
- incidents of fraud played a role in about 50% of the S&L
- failures, yet very little of the purloined money is expected
- to be recovered.
- </p>
- <p> The shame of the thrift crisis hung especially heavy over
- the Senate, where big donations from S&L operators had
- encouraged lawmakers to deal leniently with the thrifts in the
- 1980s. In response, the Senate last week approved the most
- sweeping reform of campaign financing since the Watergate era.
- By a 59-to-40 vote, Democrats pushed through a measure that
- would limit campaign spending and bar Senate members from
- accepting outside speaking fees and other honorariums from
- special interests like S&Ls. But the reforms, which were
- similar to those later passed by the House, will probably face
- a presidential veto because Republicans fear that limits on
- campaign spending will make it harder to challenge the
- Democrats' control of Congress.
- </p>
- <p> A particular point of political acrimony is the bailout of
- Texas thrifts in 1988, when regulators handed out lucrative
- packages in their hurry to put ailing thrifts in the hands of
- healthy investors. A panel of the Senate Judiciary Committee
- burrowed deeper in its probe of a 1988 deal that permitted
- businessman James Fail to acquire 15 insolvent Texas S&Ls for
- $1,000 in cash and $70 million of borrowed funds. Critics have
- charged that the deal, in which the government has pledged to
- put up $1.85 billion to protect depositors, was far too
- generous to Fail. In testimony last week, George Barclay, former
- president of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board of Dallas,
- acknowledged he would not have recommended approval of the
- transaction had he known that Fail's company had pleaded guilty
- to fraud in the mid-1970s.
- </p>
- <p> The rancor over the thrift mess last week extended all the
- way to a meeting of U.S. Governors in Mobile. Partisan
- bickering broke out after the Republican National Committee
- placed an ad in a local newspaper calling Democrats "the guys
- who let the S&L problem explode" into a crisis. Declared
- Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis: "I hope this is the
- last time we see this kind of garbage. We had enough of it in
- 1988."
- </p>
- <p> When George Bush unveiled the S&L cleanup last year, he
- promised it would end the thrift crisis. But while the bailout
- has protected depositors at hundreds of failed thrifts, it has
- also hobbled surviving institutions, hurt real estate values,
- infuriated taxpayers and stirred doubts that the government can
- really bring the S&L mess under control. That record raises a
- tough question for the White House and Congress on the first
- anniversary of the rescue program: If the bailout cannot cure
- the current crisis, how can it prevent the next one from taking
- place?
- </p>
- <p>Have you become more concerned about the country's savings and
- loan problems?
- <table>
- <row><cell type=a>More concerned<cell type=i>53%
- <row><cell>Less concerned<cell>7%
- <row><cell>Haven't changed<cell>36%
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>How much confidence do you have in the Federal Government
- to correct our S&L problems?
- <table>
- <row><cell type=a>A lot of confidence<cell type=i>12%
- <row><cell>Some confidence<cell>48%
- <row><cell>Not very much<cell>38%
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>Do you think President Bush is doing a good job handling the
- S&L scandal?
- <table>
- <row><cell type=a>Good job<cell type=i>33%
- <row><cell>Bad job<cell>49%
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>Who do you think is more responsible for the S&L scandal?
- <table>
- <row><cell type=a>Owners<cell type=i>59%
- <row><cell>Government<cell>28%
- <row><cell>Equally responsible<cell>8%
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>Which party do you think is most responsible for the S&L
- scandal?
- <table>
- <row><cell type=a>Republican<cell type=i>36%
- <row><cell>Democrat<cell>18%
- <row><cell>Equally responsible<cell>14%
- </table>
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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