Money | toxic assets Citing Too-Low Prices, Banks Won't Sell Toxic Assets Stress test an Obama weapon By Kevin Spak Posted Apr 16, 2009 11:37 AM CDT Copied JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, left, and Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein leave the White House, March 27, 2009, following a meeting with President Barack Obama. (AP Photo) Banks are proving so reluctant to part with their so-called “toxic assets” that the Obama administration may have to strong-arm them into doing so, Time reports. Banks are protesting that the prices being offered—about $70 per $100 bond by the magazine’s calculations—are too low. That’s part of the reason Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner decided to make the “stress tests” public, officials say. Goldman Sachs, meanwhile, recently estimated that the industry’s best toxic assets are worth $91 per $100 bond. “The government dollars may not be enough to reduce the spread between the bid and the ask,” said one lobbyist. But regulators have long had the power to force balance-sheet clean-ups. “With the results of the stress tests in hand, it just gives you more leverage,” said a senior official. Read These Next New Year's Day dog walk ended with kidnapping attempt, shot fired. This is no ordinary winter storm on the way. Authorities have finally caught up with former Olympian Ryan Wedding. Trump threatens to sue pollsters after bad results. Report an error