Monday March 10, 10:52 am ET Billionaire investor Wilbur Ross says the
current market downturn differs from previous slumps in that no
American banks have yet failed this time, but he suggests that's about
to change.
"I think that's going to be the next wave, and coupled with problems in
the commercial real estate market; I think they'll be the next bubbles
that burst," the chairman and CEO of W. L. Ross and Company told CNBC's
"Squawk Box" in an exclusive interview.
He was asked about the risks to big banks.
"I think that the big banks won't fail in the sense that they will go
to zero and depositors would lose money," Ross replied. "I think the
Fed and other regulators will make things happen.| I think it's the
medium-sized banks, and particularly some of those that got
overextended with the subprime and other kind of mortgage debt.| I
think those are the ones that had the serious mismatch, making 20- and
30-year loans based on 90-day deposits."
Ross's comments echo those made by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben
Bernanke, who told a Senate committee on Feb. 28 that some smaller
regional banks that heavily invested in real estate could go under.
Ross and other high-profile investors have made recent moves in the
credit markets, explaining that they have done so to snap up bargains.
Last week it was reported that Ross had invested $1 billion into
municipal bonds.
In the meantime, Ross said he didn't think the U.S. economy would
recover any time soon.
"I think at best we're in for stagflation," Ross said, referring to the
combination of higher inflation and weak economic growth. "I think the
consumer has been tapped out for quite a while and is frightened by the
poverty effect of seeing the house go down."
Straightening out the problems in the bond industry, particularly the
situation of the insurers who backstop bond offerings, would go a long
way toward fixing the current paralysis in the credit markets, Ross
intimated. That process is underway, he suggested, with the current
reassessment by ratings agencies of the bond insurers.
"Making real triple-As will solve a lot of the problem," he said. "The
problem is we've had a lot fake triple-As before."|
That effort is far from over, indicated New York State Insurance
Commissioner Eric Dinallo, who has been at the center of efforts to
stabilize the sector. Troubled bond insurers MBIA (NYSE:MBI - News) and
Ambac (NYSE:ABK - News) successfully raised fresh capital last week, he
noted. Now attention now turns to FGIC, he said, also during an
appearance on "Squawk Box."(Read more here).
Original
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Billionaire Investor Sees Bank Failures Ahead
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