TALF to the Rescue?
From Tony Crescenzi at RealMoney.
The Federal Reserve is expected to announce details of its Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF) today, a facility that will fund up to $1 trillion of non-recourse loans to investors who purchase AAA-rated asset-backed securities. The program could represent a turning point for the economy and the financial markets by jump-starting lending in critical areas of the economy and by reviving the asset-backed securities market, where issuance has fallen to a crawl, from a pace of about $1.5 trillion to $2.0 trillion in 2005 to 2007. The program is designed to revive lending for automobile loans and leases, credit card loans, student loans and small business loans guaranteed by the Small Business Administration. If it works, a swath of economic data will be impacted, probably by the end of the second quarter or early in the third quarter, altering perceptions about the economy and boosting household, business and investor sentiment.
It is easy to understand how the TALF could turn the tide in the financial and economic crisis. Picture this: as a result of the TALF, car sales stabilize. In turn, the factory-laden economic calendar begins to cast off a new message and a plethora of data show signs of reaching a trough: durable goods orders, factory orders, industrial production, the Philadelphia Fed survey, the Chicago index, the New York Empire survey, the ISM index and retail sales. Indications of a bottom then begin to dominate the news flow, affecting sentiment. The process eventually feeds on itself. Confidence in this outcome increases when one considers the massive fiscal stimulus program that will begin hitting the tape in the second quarter.
It is easy to understand how the TALF could turn the tide in the financial and economic crisis. Picture this: as a result of the TALF, car sales stabilize. In turn, the factory-laden economic calendar begins to cast off a new message and a plethora of data show signs of reaching a trough: durable goods orders, factory orders, industrial production, the Philadelphia Fed survey, the Chicago index, the New York Empire survey, the ISM index and retail sales. Indications of a bottom then begin to dominate the news flow, affecting sentiment. The process eventually feeds on itself. Confidence in this outcome increases when one considers the massive fiscal stimulus program that will begin hitting the tape in the second quarter.
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