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Obama Proposes Tough New Bank Rules (Finally!)

By Elison Elliott
Friday, January 22nd 2010
     

Finally capitulating to voter outrage, and the very kind of “Change” he campaigned on last year, President Obama proposed tough new financial industry restrictions under what he called “the Volcker Rule” – named after Paul Volcker, the former Fed Chair.  Volcker, along with Austin Goolsbee, a member of the President’s Council of Economic Advisers, have been for the last year the Administration’s fiercest advocate for stronger financial regulatory reforms.  Volcker has been particularly aggressive on the issue of “too big to fail” financial institutions, as well as the high-risk, casino-like proprietary trading operations at the big banks that nearly destroyed the financial system.  In adopting this new tougher stand, Mr. Obama appears to have set aside a ‘soft touch’ approach to financial regulatory reform that had been championed by his economic team, led by Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner and White House National Economic Council Director, Lawrence Summers.  The Geithner-Summers axis appears to have been benched in exchange for the emergent Volker-Goolsbee axis.

 In rolling out his new, more aggressive, tough talk approach to Wall Street, the president added,  “We have to get this done,” and “If these folks want a fight, it’s a fight I’m ready to have.”  It was a stern, populist lecture from the president to Wall Street for what he perceives as its abandonment of Main Street. Obama said the government should have the power to limit the size and complexity of large financial institutions as well as their ability to make high-risk trades.  He said it wasn’t appropriate that banks have been able to run these trading operations with the protections afforded to regular banking services.  Among other strong language, the president branded bank executives as “fat cats” and proposed a fee on large banks to cover shortfalls in the government’s $700 billion taxpayer bailout fund.  Expanding on earlier measures, Obama endorsed Volcker’s proposal to restrict risky proprietary trading by commercial banks that is often in direct conflict with customer interests to the bank’s benefit.  The new measures would also separate commercial banks from investment banks, a line blurred a decade ago by the Republican-led Congress’ repeal of the Depression-era Glass-Steagall Act.

Obama also proposed addressing one of the clearest issues leading to the financial crisis of the past years, namely banks that stray wildly from their core mission of serving the interests of their customers.  Having met with Paul Volcker this morning, and having last week proposed new fees on Wall Street to ensure the taxpayers get their money back, the President came with a direct message for banks that might object to these changes strongly criticizing the powerful financial industry lobby, saying “But what we’ve seen so far, in recent weeks, is an army of industry lobbyists from Wall Street descending on Capitol Hill to try and block basic and common-sense rules of the road that would protect our economy and the American people. So if these folks want a fight, it’s a fight I’m ready to have.  And my resolve is only strengthened when I see a return to old practices at some of the very firms fighting reform; and when I see soaring profits and obscene bonuses at some of the very firms claiming that they can’t lend more to small business, they can’t keep credit card rates low, they can’t pay a fee to refund taxpayers for the bailout without passing on the cost to shareholders or customers — that’s the claims they’re making.  It’s exactly this kind of irresponsibility that makes clear reform is necessary.

The President went on to explain the reforms he was proposing in more detail saying, among other things:

First, we should no longer allow banks to stray too far from their central mission of serving their customers.  In recent years, too many financial firms have put taxpayer money at risk by operating hedge funds and private equity funds and making riskier investments to reap a quick reward.  And these firms have taken these risks while benefiting from special financial privileges that are reserved only for banks.

Our government provides deposit insurance and other safeguards and guarantees to firms that operate banks.  We do so because a stable and reliable banking system promotes sustained growth, and because we learned how dangerous the failure of that system can be during the Great Depression. 

But these privileges were not created to bestow banks operating hedge funds or private equity funds with an unfair advantage.  When banks benefit from the safety net that taxpayers provide –- which includes lower-cost capital –- it is not appropriate for them to turn around and use that cheap money to trade for profit.  And that is especially true when this kind of trading often puts banks in direct conflict with their customers’ interests.

The fact is, these kinds of trading operations can create enormous and costly risks, endangering the entire bank if things go wrong.  We simply cannot accept a system in which hedge funds or private equity firms inside banks can place huge, risky bets that are subsidized by taxpayers and that could pose a conflict of interest.  And we cannot accept a system in which shareholders make money on these operations if the bank wins but taxpayers foot the bill if the bank loses.  Read more from the White House fact sheet.

Source:   www.WhiteHouse.gov

Categorized in Blogroll, Financial Crisis, Global Economy, Markets & Trade
Tags: Council of Economic Advisors, Financial Crisis, financial regulatory reform, financial restrictions, Glass-Steagall, National Economic Council, Obamanomics, Paul Volcker, too big to fail, Volcker Rule, wall street oligarchs
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Video: ‘Too Big to Fail’ is ‘Too Big to Exist’

By Elison Elliott
Saturday, October 31st 2009
     
'Too Big to Fail' is simply TOO BIG to exist!

'Too Big to Fail' is simply TOO BIG to exist!

As I have been advocating for months now on my blog and in phones calls and letters to Congressional contacts, some of the Obama administration’s most resistant regulators and economists – such as Tim Geithner and Larry Summers – in recent weeks have finally conceded that the administration’s financial and regulatory reforms do not go far enough to prevent future financial catastrophe, and have been needlessly “industry-friendly.”  Consequently, in Congressional testimony this week, Geithener, following the lead of courageous reformers on ‘too big to fail’ (TBTF) policy such as former Fed Chair, Paul Volcker – an advisor to President Obama and a vocal proponent of de-coupling banks from investment firms; along with others whom I have also written about like Sheila Bair, Elizabeth Warren and the resurgent former New York Governor, Eliot Spitzer – the Obama administration economic policymakers now say that the government should consider breaking up the biggest banks and investment firms long before they fail, or at least impose stricter limits on their risky trading activities — steps that Mr. Obama himself continues to resist.


US Rep (I-VT) Bernard Sanders, Sept 2008 

By comparison, our friends across the pond seem to have their priorities in order.  The City of London’s top financial regulator, Adair Turner, Chair of the UK’s Financial Services Authority is adamant that banks and investment houses in Britain must bolster their capital ratio standards and put employee needs before addressing executive bonuses and compensation.  More on this topic here.

However, comparisons aside, Congress is leading on this issue and the Obama administration has finally endorsed aggressive ‘too big to fail’ reforms.  The House Financial Servies committee is about to take up one of the most fundamental issues that precipitated the near collapse of the global financial system last year, and seriously put at risk the financial health of our economy — namely, how to deal with ‘too big to fail’  companies such as AIG, Goldman Sachs and Bank of America.  These are banks and financial corporations that are so big, and so central to the operation of the nation’s economy and financial system that the government has no choice but to rescue them when they fail operationally or get into balance sheet trouble due to poor management or highly risky practices driven by greed and profits.  Congressman Barney Frank (D- MA),  Chair of the powerful House Financial Services Committee, has said his committee would take up more aggressive legislation on the topic, even as lawmakers and regulators continue working on other problems highlighted by the financial crisis, including overseeing executive pay, protecting consumers, pushing for stronger shareholder rights, and regulating the trading of risky derivatives.  Channeling the public mood and outrage over the huge taxpayer bailout of the financial industry, Rep. Frank’s recent observation that critics of the administration’s health care proposal had misdirected their concerns — and that Congress would now be adopting “death panels” not for infirmed people, but rather for gravely infirmed “zombie banks” and struggling major corporations.

The administration and its Congressional allies are trying, in essence, to graft the process used to resolve the troubles of smaller commercial banks onto both large banking holding companies and non-bank investment firms and financial services companies whose troubles could again threaten to undermine the markets, as well as the overall national economy.  By using this strategy, the administration has signaled its willingness to sign on to any such legislation that reaches the presidents desk.

I think someone was listening, after all. . .

Read more here. . .

 Web Resources:

Too Big to Fail, by Andrew Ross Sorkin

Too Big to Fail, in plain English Video

‘Too Big to Fail’?  Politico.com

Robert Reich on ‘Too Big To Fail’

Categorized in Blogroll, Financial Crisis, Global Economy, Markets & Trade
Tags: Bernard Sanders, Financial Crisis, Financial Reform, Moral Hazard, Paul Volcker, risk management, risky behavior, too big to fail
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Obama Economist Favors Stronger TBTF Reforms

By Elison Elliott
Wednesday, October 21st 2009
     
Obama resisting Volcker counsel for stronger financial reform

Obama resisting Volcker counsel for stronger financial reform

Listen to a top economist in the Obama administration describe Paul A. Volcker, the former Federal Reserve chairman who endorsed Mr. Obama early in his election campaign and who stood by his side during the financial crisis: “The guy’s a giant, he’s a genius, he is a great human being,” said Austan D. Goolsbee, counselor to President Obama since their Chicago days. “Whenever he has advice, the administration is very interested.”

Well, not lately. The aging Mr. Volcker, 82, has some advice, deeply felt.  He has been offering it in speeches and Congressional testimony, and repeating it to those around the president, most of them young enough to be his children.  He wants the nation’s banks to be prohibited from owning and trading risky securities, the very practice that got the biggest ones into deep trouble in 2008. And the administration is saying ‘no, it will not separate commercial banking from investment operations.’

“I am not pounding the desk all the time, but I am making my point,” Mr. Volcker said in one of his infrequent on-the-record interviews. “I have talked to some senators who asked me to talk to them, and if people want to talk to me, I talk to them. But I am not going around knocking on doors.”

Economic Guru

Economic Guru

Still, he heads the president’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board, which makes him the administration’s most prominent outside economic adviser. As Fed chairman from 1979 to 1987, he helped the country weather more than one crisis. And in the campaign last year, he appeared occasionally with Mr. Obama, including a town hall meeting in Florida last fall. His towering presence (he is 6-foot-8) offered reassurance that the candidate’s economic policies, in the midst of a crisis, were trustworthy.  More subtly, the Obama administration has in Mr. Volcker an adviser perceived as standing apart from Wall Street, and critical of its ways, some administration officials say, while Timothy F. Geithner, the Treasury secretary, and Lawrence H. Summers, chief of the National Economic Council, are seen, rightly or wrongly, as more sympathetic to the concerns of investment bankers.

 

 

‘The Obama administration has in Paul Volcker an adviser perceived as standing apart from, and independent of Wall Street, and critical of its ways, while Timothy F. Geithner, the Treasury secretary, and Lawrence H. Summers, chief of the National Economic Council, are beholden to Wall Street interests and more sympathetic to the concerns of the financial industry.’

The Obama economic team, in contrast, would let the ‘Too Big to Fail’ giants survive, but would regulate them better so they don’t get themselves and the nation into trouble again. While the administration’s proposal languishes, giants likeBank of America, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs have re-engaged in old, highly risky and over leveraged trading practices, once again earning big profits, planning big bonuses while placing the nation’s fragile economic recovery in peril. 

 

Read more here.  

Source: ‘Volcker Fails to Sell Reform Strategy’ (L. UCHITELLE

NYT, 21 Oct)

 

Categorized in Financial Crisis
Tags: economic recovery, Financial Reform, Paul Volcker, regulatory reform
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