Showing posts with label American Banks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label American Banks. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Nobody should be too big to fail, so......

Robert Reich

Break Up The Banks


Monday, April 5, 2010
A fight is brewing in Washington – or, at the least, it ought to be brewing – over whether to put limits on the size of financial entities in order that none becomes “too big to fail” in a future financial crisis.

Some background: The big banks that got federal bailouts, as well as their supporters in the Administration and on the Hill, repeatedly say much of the cost of the giant taxpayer-funded bailout has already been repaid to the federal government by the banks that were bailed out. Hence, the actual cost of the bailout, they argue, is a small fraction of the $700 billion Congress appropriated.

True, but the apologists for the bailout leave out one gargantuan cost — the damage to the economy, which we’re still living with (witness the latest unemployment figures). Leave it to the Brits to calculate this. Andrew Haldane, Bank of England’s Financial Stability Director, figures the financial crisis brought on by irresponsible bankers and regulators has cost the world economy about $4 trillion so far.

So while the bailout itself is gradually being repaid (don’t hold your breath until AIG and GM repay, by the way), the cost of the failures that made the bailout necessary totals vast multiples of that.

Needless to say, the danger of an even bigger cost in coming years continues to grow because we still don’t have a new law to prevent what happened from happening again. In fact, now that they know for sure they’ll be bailed out, Wall Street banks – and those who lend to them or invest in them – have every incentive to take even bigger risks. In effect, taxpayers are implicitly subsidizing them to do so. (Haldane figures the value of that implicit subsidy to be about $60 billion a year for each big bank.)
Congress and the White House tell us not to worry because financial reform legislation will contain what’s called a “resolution” mechanism allowing regulators to wind down any big bank that gets into trouble. (Think bankruptcy with more safeguards against runs by bank by creditors wanting to get their money out right away.) By virtue of this resolution authority, they say, future bank creditors will have to price in the possibility of the bank being allowed to fail. Hence, the implicit subsidy for risk-taking will disappear. At least that’s the theory.
But the theory isn’t likely to work in practice. Do you really believe bank regulators will use the resolution authority — especially if two or more giant banks are endangered at the same time? Multiple threats are almost certain because each big bank races to copy any gambling technique that pays off big for any other. The reality is, they’ll get bailed out.
Even if the resolution authority were combined with an array of new regulations designed to cover all the “shadow banking” operations of the giant banks — requiring that they put up more capital and thereby limit their leverage – there’s no way such regulations can succeed. The giant banks already hire fleets of lawyers, accountants, and financial entrepreneurs to find loopholes in every existing regulation.
Finally, consider the political power of the big Wall Street banks. They and their executives and employees are now among the biggest contributors to both parties. Wall Street lobbyists are crawling over Capitol Hill. The banks and their lobbyists will ensure that regulatory loopholes are built into regulations from the start. Remember: They dismembered Glass-Steagall (with the help of their friends in the Fed, on the Hill, and in the Clinton White House), and fought off derivative regulation (ditto).
As long as the big banks are allowed to remain big, their political leverage over Washington will remain big.  And as long as their political leverage remains big, the taxpayer and economic tab for the next mess they create will be big.
By all means, give regulators resolution authority and also impose the tightest regulations possible. But Congress and the White House shouldn’t stop there. Limits should be placed on how big big banks can become.
How big? No one has been able to show significiant efficiencies over $100 billion in assets. Make that the outside limit.
To be sure, smaller banks might still be subject to runs. That’s why the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation was created in the 1930s – to ensure depositors in the event a bank gets into trouble, so they won’t have to run to protect their savings. And why the Glass-Steagall Act was passed – to separate commercial banking (where depositors put their money) from investment banking (where betting is done). We could expand insurance to certain categories of bank creditor, and we should resurrect Glass-Stagall.
But the only way to make sure no bank it too big to fail is to make sure no bank is too big. If Congress and the White House fail to do this, you have every reason to believe it’s because Wall Street has paid them not to.


Let The Sun Shine In......

Saturday, April 11, 2009

THE BATTLE WITH THE BANKS IS ON: PROTESTS AND PITCHFORKS

Hang 'Em High!

capitalist world and then change it

 By Danny Schechter

As New Bank Bailouts Seem Likely, There Is More to Speak Out Against

There’s phrase that’s worked its way into the Japanese language: “Lehman Shokku”—translated as Lehman Shock. It refers to what happened to 460,000 people after Hank Paulson and Tim Geithner let the global Lehman Investment Bank collapse. A former Lehman executive told me over Matzoh at a Passover seder that she believes the decision reflected a competitive conflict and ego battle between the former Goldman Sachs chief turned Treasury Secretary and the bullheaded CEO of Lehman.

The clash of two power-crats in New York triggered a hard rain across the world.

Bloomberg reports on a forty year old former bank employee, Miki, who “now sleeps in cardboard boxes under the elevated Hanshin expressway in Umeda, Osaka’s central business district…as the global recession triggered by the implosion of Wall Street banks batters Japan. … Miki’s loss of housing shows how Japan’s 2.95 million unemployed people threaten to fuel a rise in homelessness.”


Bloomberg is doing more than reporting bad news; it is also suing the Federal Reserve Bank for information that the privately run “public institution” wants to hide. Bloomberg wants the FED to disclose securities the central bank is accepting on behalf of American taxpayers as collateral for $1.5 trillion of loans to banks.

As the sun creeps through and the weather warms, there’s an expectation that the new season will wipe out the winter’s bad karma and lead to a desperately needed economic recovery. Obama Advisor Larry Summers, like an evangelist from the Elmer Granty era, sees the signs in small upticks of business activity. Now, according to the News n Economic blog comes an analyst, Roger Shealy, who has examined the footnotes and available data concluding “The Fed is holding a larger share of risky assets as collateral for its riskless currency and Treasuries lent on the open market.”

Translation: We are living on Quicksand.

The Fed also admits that its consumer credit plan is faltering. Reports TIME: “The second round of the Federal Reserve’s attempt to restart the nonbank consumer-lending market, the so-called TALF program, went even worse than the faltering first round did last month. The poor performance is causing some Fed officials to doubt the entire premise of the effort to restart nonbank credit markets.”

On top of that, as the Treasury Department runs so-called “stress tests on the soundness of the banks,” the Fed wants the banks to stay silent on the results. Again, Fed watcher Bloomberg is on the case: “The U.S. Federal Reserve has told Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Citigroup Inc. and other banks to keep mum on the results of “stress tests” that will gauge their ability to weather the recession, people familiar with the matter said.”

On this Easter weekend of “He Has Risen,” a lot seems to be still falling.

For the most cogent explanation of what’s going on, visit the Baseline Scenario website run by former IMF exec and MIT Professor Simon Jenkins:
“Just as global financial liberalization created the potential for capital to move violently across countries and greatly facilitated speculative attacks on currencies, so financial deregulation within the United States has made it possible for capital markets to attack - or, in less colorful terms, go short or place massive negative bets on - the credit of big banks and, in the latest developments, the ability of the government to bailout/rescue banks.

“The latest credit default spreads data for the largest banks show a speculative run underway. As the system stabilizes, it becomes more plausible that a single big bank will fail or be rescued in a way that involves large losses for creditors. This would like trigger further speculative attacks on other banks, much as the shorting of countries’ obligations spread from Thailand to Indonesia/Malaysia and then to Korea in fall 1997.
In other words, them chickens will soon be coming home to roost.

The banks seem confident that having learned the disasterous lessons on Lehman Shokku the government will keep bailing them out. Quiet as its kept, Insolvency in many banks suggests another wave of bailouts is coming.

The banks seem confident that they have “captured” the government and can depend on taxpayer monies to pay off their crimes and mistakes. At the same time, they are worried about something else: US.
JP Morgan Chase overlord Jamie Dimon fears that the public anger will torpedo the schemes the banks are running, saying, ‘“if you let them vilify us too much, the economic recovery will be greatly delayed.”
Comments Jenkins:
“The “center vs. the pitchforks” idea fundamentally misconstrues the current debate. This is not about angry left or right against the center. It’s about centrist technocrat (close to current big finance) vs. centrist technocrat (suspicious of big finance; economists, lawyers, non-financial business, and - most interestingly - current/former finance, other than the biggest of the big, particularly people with experience in emerging markets.)”

If anything, this seems the time to get the pitchforks going, to intensify the pressure, to make noise and press for change. Paul Krugman tells us that the policy world and the bankers want to rebuild a corrupt system, writing:
“Despite everything that has happened, most people in positions of power still associate fancy finance with economic progress. Can they be persuaded otherwise? Will we find the will to pursue serious financial reform? If not, the current crisis won’t be a one-time event; it will be the shape of things to come.”
That’s why events like this weekend’s banking protests organized by a new force, A NEW WAY FORWARD, is crucial. Their three-word phrase, NATIONALIZE, REORGANIZE and DECENTRALIZE sums up the aims spelled out at ANewWay.org
They have issued a call:
  • “Pledge to Break Up the Banks: Tell Obama and Congress, “If it’s too big to fail, it’s too big to exist.
  • Dismantle the power of the financial elite and make policies that keep a new crop from springing up.
  • We want our economy and politics restored for the public.”
If the protests fail along with the banks, you can bet, the pitchforks will be back.

Mediachannel.org blogger Danny Schechter wrote PLUNDER: Investigating Our Economic Calamity (Cosimo Books at Amazon.com) and is making a film on the crisis.

Comments to dissector@mediachannel.org


 Let The Sun Shine In......

Nationalize, Reorganize, Decentralize

We/they support a Nationalize, Reorganize, Decentralize platform, pointing to Krugman on the need for temporary nationalization, Simon Johnson on the need for removing current leadership in the banking sector, and Mike Lux on the importance of creating a new, decentralized private market, with new banks run by new people. Any bank that's "too big to fail" means that it's too big to exist in a free market.
 
So, what do you think, pelican independents?

Let The Sun Shine In......

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Mysterious plans

This worries us as well. It seems to us that certain CEOs and other corporate types, especially the bank CEOs are pouting because their 8 year party is over, or they are afraid it is, so they simply won't cooperate.

I hope we all learn something from this. Allowing any company to get to big to fail puts us all in a position to be blackmailed. Whatever happened to anti-trust laws?

By Paul Krugman

I’m trying to be sympathetic to the various plans, or rumors of plans, for bank aid; but I keep not being able to understand either what the plans are, or why they’re supposed to work. And I don’t think it’s me.

So the latest is that we’re going to convert preferred stock held by the government to common stock, maybe. James Kwak has a good explanation of what that’s all about. And it’s not at all clear what is accomplished thereby.

Here’s my stylized picture of the situation:

INSERT DESCRIPTION

At the top are a bank’s assets. Below are its obligations to various parties, with decreasing seniority from left to right. I’ve drawn it to embody a pessimistic assumption about the bank’s finances, because those are the cases we’re interested in: the bank’s assets aren’t enough to cover its debts. Nonetheless, the stock, both preferred and common, has a positive market value. Why? Because of the Geithner put: the bank is protected from collapse, keeping the creditors appeased, but stockholders will get the gains if somehow things turn up.

What we want to do is clean up the bank’s balance sheet, so that it no longer has to be a ward of the state. When the FDIC confronts a bank like this, it seizes the thing, cleans out the stockholders, pays off some of the debt, and re-privatizes.

What Treasury now seems to be proposing is converting some of the green equity to blue equity — converting preferred to common. It’s true that preferred stock has some debt-like qualities — there are required dividend payments, etc.. But does anyone think that the reason banks are crippled is that they are tied down by their obligations to preferred stockholders, as opposed to having too much plain vanilla debt?

I just don’t get it. And my sinking feeling that the administration plan is to rearrange the deck chairs and hope the iceberg melts just keeps getting stronger.

Let The Sun Shine In......