I mentioned in an earlier thread that the idea of bailing out firms like Bear-Stearns can be a slippery slope. It's not part of the Fed's original mandate. Whereas the Fed was created as a lender of last resort to help banks maintain minimum reserve requirements. And create liquidity for savings institutions in the event of a panic which had created 2 depressions in 50 years. The idea was to give banks a clearinghouse for the exchange of ready cash in the event of an unexpected demand. Within reason.
The system works. Every nation (to my knowledge) maintains a central bank and they all pretty much function the same way with regards to providing liquidity. The problem with this bailout is that the assistance is being provided in order to maintain an organization that flagrantly violated the principles it was founded upon. Bear-Stearns is an investment house. They portrayed themselves as a bastion of level headed, sober custodians of they're clients assets. When in reality they were nothing more than opportunists hiding behind the facade of august, responsible, and conscientious money managers. Nothing but prostitutes eager for some quick gravy and turning every trick in the book to get a taste.
They behaved like carnies, not bankers. They embarked (with our blessing) on a course of grossly irresponsible conduct fueled by the capitol entrusted to them by their clientèle. Abolishing themselves from accountability by virtue of a few paragraphs on their account applications.
And we let them do it. We stepped up to the plate and validated their conduct through our silence. Now it's hit the fan and everybody has an opinion. WTFG American consumer. We already know we can't trust people who have no incentive to behave responsibly, we already know we cannot rely on government oversight, we already know (or should) that there's no free ride but just like the willing victims of a pigeon drop, we're all mortified by what we eagerly took part in and now have to pay the price.
Bear-Stearns is not a bank, it's a brokerage. Granted they own a bank but that's not their fundamental business. They make money selling opportunity. That's it. The opportunity for whatever reason didn't pan out. That's it. The Fed is not supposed to be supporting operations that swung and missed. They are there to underwrite the normal, justifiable capitol needs of member banks that played by rules every other member has to follow.
It's nothing but cronyism, pure and simple.