Showing posts with label AIG. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AIG. Show all posts

Monday, April 19, 2010

Looters in Loafers


Last October, I saw a cartoon by Mike Peters in which a teacher asks a student to create a sentence that uses the verb “sacks,” as in looting and pillaging. The student replies, “Goldman Sachs.”

Sure enough, last week the Securities and Exchange Commission accused the Gucci-loafer guys at Goldman of engaging in what amounts to white-collar looting.

I’m using the term looting in the sense defined by the economists George Akerlof and Paul Romer in a 1993 paper titled “Looting: The Economic Underworld of Bankruptcy for Profit.” That paper, written in the aftermath of the savings-and-loan crisis of the Reagan years, argued that many of the losses in that crisis were the result of deliberate fraud.

Was the same true of the current financial crisis?

Most discussion of the role of fraud in the crisis has focused on two forms of deception: predatory lending and misrepresentation of risks. Clearly, some borrowers were lured into taking out complex, expensive loans they didn’t understand — a process facilitated by Bush-era federal regulators, who both failed to curb abusive lending and prevented states from taking action on their own. And for the most part, subprime lenders didn’t hold on to the loans they made. Instead, they sold off the loans to investors, in some cases surely knowing that the potential for future losses was greater than the people buying those loans (or securities backed by the loans) realized.

What we’re now seeing are accusations of a third form of fraud.

We’ve known for some time that Goldman Sachs and other firms marketed mortgage-backed securities even as they sought to make profits by betting that such securities would plunge in value. This practice, however, while arguably reprehensible, wasn’t illegal. But now the S.E.C. is charging that Goldman created and marketed securities that were deliberately designed to fail, so that an important client could make money off that failure. That’s what I would call looting.

And Goldman isn’t the only financial firm accused of doing this. According to the Pulitzer-winning investigative journalism Web site ProPublica, several banks helped market designed-to-fail investments on behalf of the hedge fund Magnetar, which was betting on that failure.
So what role did fraud play in the financial crisis? Neither predatory lending nor the selling of mortgages on false pretenses caused the crisis. But they surely made it worse, both by helping to inflate the housing bubble and by creating a pool of assets guaranteed to turn into toxic waste once the bubble burst.

As for the alleged creation of investments designed to fail, these may have magnified losses at the banks that were on the losing side of these deals, deepening the banking crisis that turned the burst housing bubble into an economy-wide catastrophe.

The obvious question is whether financial reform of the kind now being contemplated would have prevented some or all of the fraud that now seems to have flourished over the past decade. And the answer is yes.

For one thing, an independent consumer protection bureau could have helped limit predatory lending. Another provision in the proposed Senate bill, requiring that lenders retain 5 percent of the value of loans they make, would have limited the practice of making bad loans and quickly selling them off to unwary investors.

It’s less clear whether proposals for derivatives reform — which mainly involve requiring that financial instruments like credit default swaps be traded openly and transparently, like ordinary stocks and bonds — would have prevented the alleged abuses by Goldman (although they probably would have prevented the insurer A.I.G. from running wild and requiring a federal bailout). What we can say is that the final draft of financial reform had better include language that would prevent this kind of looting — in particular, it should block the creation of “synthetic C.D.O.’s,” cocktails of credit default swaps that let investors take big bets on assets without actually owning them.

The main moral you should draw from the charges against Goldman, though, doesn’t involve the fine print of reform; it involves the urgent need to change Wall Street. Listening to financial-industry lobbyists and the Republican politicians who have been huddling with them, you’d think that everything will be fine as long as the federal government promises not to do any more bailouts. But that’s totally wrong — and not just because no such promise would be credible.

For the fact is that much of the financial industry has become a racket — a game in which a handful of people are lavishly paid to mislead and exploit consumers and investors. And if we don’t lower the boom on these practices, the racket will just go on.

Let The Sun Shine In......

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Bailouts, Huge Fraud.

Hat-tip to Crooks & Liars for content!

This Bill Moyers interview is going viral so fast, I can't even keep up with it. And for a very good reason - former S&L regulator Bill Black explains exactly why the current banking bailout is a mistake.

complete transcript

Full interview video is here

There's so much information, you simply have to read or watch the entire thing. Some snippets:

BILL MOYERS: Yeah. Are you saying that Timothy Geithner, the Secretary of the Treasury, and others in the administration, with the banks, are engaged in a cover-up to keep us from knowing what went wrong?

WILLIAM K. BLACK: Absolutely.

BILL MOYERS: You are.

WILLIAM K. BLACK: Absolutely, because they are scared to death. All right? They're scared to death of a collapse. They're afraid that if they admit the truth, that many of the large banks are insolvent. They think Americans are a bunch of cowards, and that we'll run screaming to the exits. And we won't rely on deposit insurance. And, by the way, you can rely on deposit insurance. And it's foolishness. All right? Now, it may be worse than that. You can impute more cynical motives. But I think they are sincerely just panicked about, "We just can't let the big banks fail." That's wrong.

BILL MOYERS: But what might happen, at this point, if in fact they keep from us the true health of the banks?

WILLIAM K. BLACK: Well, then the banks will, as they did in Japan, either stay enormously weak, or Treasury will be forced to increasingly absurd giveaways of taxpayer money. We've seen how horrific AIG -- and remember, they kept secrets from everyone.

BILL MOYERS: A.I.G. did?

WILLIAM K. BLACK: What we're doing with -- no, Treasury and both administrations. The Bush administration and now the Obama administration kept secret from us what was being done with AIG. AIG was being used secretly to bail out favored banks like UBS and like Goldman Sachs. Secretary Paulson's firm, that he had come from being CEO. It got the largest amount of money. $12.9 billion. And they didn't want us to know that. And it was only Congressional pressure, and not Congressional pressure, by the way, on Geithner, but Congressional pressure on AIG.

Where Congress said, "We will not give you a single penny more unless we know who received the money." And, you know, when he was Treasury Secretary, Paulson created a recommendation group to tell Treasury what they ought to do with AIG. And he put Goldman Sachs on it.

BILL MOYERS: Even though Goldman Sachs had a big vested stake.

WILLIAM K. BLACK: Massive stake. And even though he had just been CEO of Goldman Sachs before becoming Treasury Secretary. Now, in most stages in American history, that would be a scandal of such proportions that he wouldn't be allowed in civilized society.

BILL MOYERS: Yeah, like a conflict of interest, it seems.

WILLIAM K. BLACK: Massive conflict of interests.

BILL MOYERS: So, how did he get away with it?

WILLIAM K. BLACK: I don't know whether we've lost our capability of outrage. Or whether the cover up has been so successful that people just don't have the facts to react to it.
Let The Sun Shine In......

Friday, March 20, 2009

Want to Prevent Another AIG? Let the Sunshine In

The simple fact is that our elite government, all of them, suck to the high heavens as do their pals on Wall Street.

Tea Party, anyone?


BUZZFLASH NEWS ANALYSIS
by Meg White

The fact that Americans are mad as hell has not escaped the media or government. Indeed, it seems that everyone is racing to be first to tell the American people where to direct their rage.

Blame AIG! Those greedy bastards are already sucking us dry and giving our money to foreign banks, and then they take millions in bonuses for the very employees that precipitated this crisis in the first place.

Blame Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT)! He wrote in a change to the stimulus bill that allowed the AIG bonuses to be paid.

Oh wait, no. Looks like we got that one backwards, so...

Blame Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner! He's the one that asked Dodd to change the stimulus bill, fearing that Dodd's amendment to prevent all bonuses being paid out to rescued bankers might expose the government to lawsuits.

Let's just blame President Barack Obama, because he doesn't look pissed off enough! Or because he's too pissed off!

All this anger is understandable, but it isn't helping us out of this crisis. This kind of infectious anger is an emotion that fosters putrefaction and corrosion. We need a cure, not a supplement. But most cures are costly, and the American body politic is running low on cash as well as political capital. Thankfully, the best antiseptic is cheap: sunshine.

So where do we turn for help but the Sunlight Foundation? This group has been working toward greater government transparency for years now, but they've recently renewed their push to have Congress actually read the bills they vote on.


Read The Bill from Sunlight Foundation on Vimeo.

Lisa Rosenberg, a Sunlight Foundation government affairs consultant, talked to BuzzFlash about their Read the Bill initiative, which proposes that all non-emergency legislation be available and posted online 72 hours before Congressional debate begins.

The list of rushed bills according to Sunlight is massive: the stimulus, the Wall Street bailout, FISA, the Fannie/Freddie bailout and more. And that's just the most recent history. Don't forget about the past eight years of tossing accountability like a hot potato between a pushy executive branch and a negligent legislature. Um, Iraq war resolution anyone? How about the PATRIOT Act? And while we're on the subject of eliminating civil liberties, who wants seconds?

According to Rosenberg, the AIG bonus situation shows why the status quo is "really problematic right now." If the 72-hour window was already in place, things would have been different with the bonus loophole.

"Someone would have found it and the outrage would have been directed at Congress at a time when they could have changed it," Rosenberg said. "Instead they're going to write a whole new bill [to tax the bonuses]. Congress hasn't learned from their mistakes."

The initiative was introduced in the last Congress, but it didn't go anywhere. Rep. Brian Baird (D-WA) sponsored legislation that would require posting legislation on the Internet for 72 hours before vote consideration in 2007, but it died in the House Committee on Rules.

"It's on his radar," Rosenberg said of the possibility of Baird taking up the measure in the 111th Congress. She didn't have any immediate predictions for the initiative, but it's possible the infusion of fresh faces from the 2008 election cycle could break up some of the previous resistance.

"I think seniority has a lot more to do with it," she said. "Freshmen are more open to the idea."

Perhaps the most important outcome of this sort of legislation is the deflation of the moral high ground so many politicians stand on when they claim they didn't know what was in a particular bill after a controversy turns up. The argument goes that if lawmakers don't have enough time to read legislation before they are forced to vote on it, they shouldn't be held responsible for the dirty details. Plenty of lawmakers claim they want more time to read bills. But do they really want that kind of accountability?

"A lot of it is lip service," Rosenberg said, noting that "you'll see a lot of Republicans complain about not having time to read" legislation sponsored by Democrats, and vice-versa. On the other hand, there are plenty of reasons for Congress to let the bill die yet again.

"My best guess is a combination of a fear of really altering the way they've always done business," Rosenberg said, adding that there is also an "unfounded fear" that the 72-hour window would slow Congress down to a standstill.

Some lawmakers may be equating a loss of speed with a loss of force. Rosenberg offered a third reason why the initiative might encounter resistance: "Certain members think they have a lot more power when they can slip things into a bill at the last minute."

The argument can certainly be made that simply allowing enough time for a bill to be read doesn't guarantee it'll make it onto The New York Times Bestseller List. In other words, you can lead a lawmaker to legislation, but you can't make him read.

Thank goodness for that other cheap cure: the information superhighway. Turns out that if you put stuff up on the Internet, there's a good chance people will look at it. Some of those people won't have behinds to cover and donors (or, ahem... constituencies) to cater to.

Remember that it wasn't Congress or the White House or the Treasury that revealed the existence of the AIG bonuses. It was the fourth estate. If the information is there, someone will look at it.

So let us trade in our tirades for change. A frown makes a terrible umbrella, but if it weren't raining, we wouldn't need one. Let's use this anger for something more productive and let the sunshine in.

A BUZZFLASH NEWS ANALYSIS

Learn more and sign the petition at the Sunlight Foundation's ReadTheBill.org.


Let The Sun Shine In......