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Bernanke and Geithner the Door
HuffingtonPost – January
22, 2010
By Janet Tavakoli
Both the United States and the United
Kingdom have had a coordinated non-response
to financial reform. If a drunk driver
killed your neighbors and crashed the car
into your house, you wouldn’t expect
a police officer to hand the offender a
bottle of whiskey and the keys to a bigger,
faster, and more powerful car. You would
be outraged if the officer said he would
only impose a fine, and then made you lend
the drunk the money to pay the fine. Yet
this is the modus operandi of our financial
system, and now financial drunk drivers
refuse blood tests and huff that their
seat belts were fastened.
Both
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and
Treasury Secretary Timothy
Geithner
missed the critical warning signs of our recent
financial crisis. In April of 2009, Steve
Forbes called Geithner “the
most formidable impediment to an economic recovery.” Ben
Bernanke repeats past mistakes and hands out cheap money with
insufficient conditions or regulation. Both economists have been
economical with the truth. There were alternatives to their actions
during the crisis that are based
on sound financial principles and do not violate the spirit of
democracy.
President
Obama has proposed
a baby step towards financial reform. He
proposes
to limit ill-defined proprietary trading, limit banks’ borrowings,
and prevent banks from investing in hedge funds and private equity
funds. Banks’ lobbyists and PR spin-doctors are already
working overtime to thwart him.
Mainstream
financial media got it badly wrong when it said that the proposal
was
based on populist anger. It may have motivated
President Obama to (only partly take) Paul
Volcker’s advice,
but sound financial principles back that advice.
Some
bank stocks fell in price after the President’s remarks
yesterday. That was because savvy investors knew that speculators
might no longer be able to report high risk-based earnings subsidized
with taxpayer dollars. In this case, a fall in stock prices for
banks driving down Wall Street should be viewed as a healthy
sign. A few bank stocks rose, because they rely on traditional
banking backed by sound financial principles.
Goldman
Sachs’s stock went down a few percentage points.
It became a newly created “bank,” to get on the taxpayer
give-away gravy train. JPMorgan Chase claims only 1% of its revenue
comes from proprietary trading, yet even before its merger with
Bear Stearns, JPMorgan’s market share of credit derivatives
was greater than 50% for U.S. banks. That meant you could combine
the credit derivatives of all other domestic banks, and JPMorgan’s
positions were greater. Those are just two examples. Banks’ “non-proprietary” trading
desks are often invisible hedge funds.
Taxpayers currently subsidize banks with cheap money supplied
by the Federal Reserve. Even banks that nearly crashed our
economy borrow at nearly zero interest rates, while some consumers
pay nearly 30% on credit card debt.
Banks enjoy a Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TASLF)
that allows them to borrow against problem assets. New banks
have each issued tens of billions in FDIC guaranteed debt through
the Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program (TLGP). Banks get interest
payments on the excess reserves they keep with the Fed. Accounting
rules were changed in March 2009, so banks make up their own
prices for assets and more easily hide losses. These are only
a few of many newly-created hidden subsidies.
Taxpayers
are paid only peanuts in fees for these massive subsidies while
being
squeezed with high interest rates and mortgage foreclosures—after
our economy was devastated chiefly by several banks’ malicious
mischief.
What
has the financial crisis taught us? Among other things, we should
show Bernanke
and Geithner, enablers from the previous
administration, the door. Paul Volcker is right to ask for a
return to Glass-Steagall. It worked until it was eroded over
several decades by bank lobbying. Banking and speculative trading
activities—even when done for “customers”—don’t
mix.
“Financial innovation” must
be limited, since much of it in recent years was the financial
equivalent of card cheating.
Banks should not be allowed to sponsor hedge funds and private
equity funds, and furthermore, they should not be allowed to
lend to them through prime brokerage units or other means. Financial
institutions must be allowed to fail. Hedge funds require regulation.
Malfeasance should be investigated and prosecuted. Credit derivatives
should be traded and cleared through exchanges and made transparent.
Compensation and financial incentives at banks must change. Bank
employees cannot continue to reap huge rewards at no personal
risk while shoving risk into the global financial system.
President Obama promised us change, and he should seize this
opportunity to demand sweeping financial reform.
Janet
Tavakoli is the president of Tavakoli
Structured Finance, a Chicago-based firm
that provides consulting to financial institutions
and institutional investors. Ms. Tavakoli
has more than 20 years
of experience in senior investment banking
positions, trading, structuring and marketing
structured financial products. She
is a former adjunct professor of derivatives
at the University of Chicago's Graduate
School of Business. She is the author of: Credit
Derivatives & Synthetic Structures (John
Wiley & Sons,
1998, 2001), Structured
Finance & Collateralized Debt Obligations (John
Wiley & Sons, 2008).
Janet
Tavakoli's book on the global financial meltdown is Dear
Mr. Buffett: What An Investor
Learns 1,269 Miles From
Wall Street (Wiley 2009)
Clients
of Tavakoli Structured Finance
have the benefit of proprietary consultation, which is
not available in any other paid or public forum. Clients
also commission proprietary research and analysis.
TSF
makes some information available to the general public. Please
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