Category Archives: Banking industry

So $400 Billion of QE Buys 17 Basis Points of Rate Reduction?

A key paragraph in a post on a new paper by Jim Hamilton: We can summarize the implications of that forecast in terms of the following scenario. Suppose that the Federal Reserve were to sell off all its Treasury securities of less than one-year maturity, and use the proceeds to buy up all the longer […]

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William Black: Theoclassical Law and Economics Makes the Law an Ass

By William K. Black, Associate Professor of Economics and Law at the University of Missouri-Kansas City and author of The Best Way to Rob a Bank is to Own One One of the great advantages of blogs is spurring informative debate. The debates also tend to morph as commentators develop their arguments. I want to […]

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What to Make of Banks’ Hesitance to Lend to Environmentally Dubious Projects

The New York Times reports on a welcome development: some banks are getting cold feet about lending to projects that are legal but still produce environmental damage: After years of legal entanglements arising from environmental messes and increased scrutiny of banks that finance the dirtiest industries, several large commercial lenders are taking a stand on […]

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NYT Story on Wall Street’s Fallout with Obama Misses the Dead Bodies

Andrew Ross Sorkin has a rather curious piece up today at the New York Times in that it purports to explain why the banking industry is up in arms about Obama, yet buries and/or omits some key issues. It’s pretty well known that big financial firms have been throwing their weight around, no doubt encouraged […]

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Why Are NACA’s Innovative Mortgage Modification Marathons Below the Radar?

I’m a bit mystified, given the abject failure of various government-devised “save the mortgage borrower programs,” that the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America’s mortgage mod marathon’s aren’t getting more coverage, and that limited media attention may be contributing to falling turnouts at its events. It’s telling that a Google News search confirms that the best […]

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ProPublica Asserts “First” on CDO Manager Shenanigans When Bloomberg, Mason/Rosner, and This Blog Have Prior Reports

It’s often the travail of a blogger, and small media generally, to have its story picked up by bigger fry without acknowledgment. But it’s one thing when a writer suspects having made a contribution to another’s story (there is, after all, the possibility of parallel inquiries bearing fruit on different timetables); quite another to have […]

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Japan’s Experience Suggests Quantitative Easing Helps Financial Institutions, Not Real Economy

A few days ago, we noted: When an economy is very slack, cheaper money is not going to induce much in the way of real economy activity. Unless you are a financial firm, the level of interest rates is a secondary or tertiary consideration in your decision to borrow. You will be interested in borrowing […]

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Why Basel III is No Magic Bullet

There’s been an interesting dialogue between Streetwise Professor and Deus ex Macchiato on the matter of the practical impact of the pending Basel III rules, which will rejigger, in a pretty significant way, bank capital requirements (see here and here for details). The reason Basel III matters is that the Treasury has been touting it […]

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Summer Rerun: Rating Agencies Created Incentives to Issue Paper More Profitable for Them to Rate

This post first appeared on November 16, 2007 A colleague was so kind as to send me the text of a speech given at the Graham & Dodd breakfast a few weeks ago by David Einhorn, CEO of hedge fund Greenlight Capital. The speech has gotten play only in some personal-investment-oriented blogs like Seeking Alpha […]

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More Debate on QE

The Jackson Hole conference starting today is expected to include a talk by Ben Bernanke on the benefits and costs of further monetary easing, which in ZIRP-land means quantitative easing. Gavyn Davies put up a good short list of arguments made against QE at the Financial Times, and most do not look terribly persuasive. One […]

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Regulators (and New York Times) Discover Bank Use of “Customer” Trades to Place Bets

The very minute the Paul Volcker, who proposed the sound idea that government backstopped banks not engage in proprietary trading, said that trades done on behalf of customers were meant to be excluded from this proposal, anyone familiar with trading could see he’d just deep sixed his idea. Proprietary trading existed LONG before banks decided […]

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Corps’ Hissy Fit Works: SEC Move for Corporate Democracy Weakened (Updated and Amplified))

Frankly, now that financial markets reform has moved from the Congressional shadowboxing stage to the arm-wrestling in smoke-filled room sort-out-the-details-that-matter stage, the retreat from public scrutiny has, of course, served as a cover for further watering down of measures that were not very strong to begin with. Yesterday we noted that major companies were outraged […]

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Mirabile Dictu: Wall Street Journal Sees Parallel Between Commercial and Individual “Strategic Default”” When Solvent Commercial Property Owners Quit Paying?

I think we all know the answer to the question in the headline, courtesy F. Scott Fitzgerald, “The rich are different than you and me.” And the fact that they have more money means their defaults are couched as pure business decisions. But mere homeowners, told to view their house as an investment, are now […]

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Earth to Bill Gross: We Chickens Know You Are the Fox Minding the Henhouse

Boy, when you think you’ve seen the worst in utterly shameless, self serving tripe, someone manages to outdo it. Admittedly, it’s awfully hard to beat Steve Schwarzmann’s recent one-two punch of utter canard wrapped in tasteless hyperbole, that of Obama proposals that private equity kingpins pay taxes on what is really the fruits of their […]

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Banks Enabling Fraud Against Retail Customers

I normally relegate stories that focus on personal finance to Links, but this article by Naomi Wolf, “Banks Siding Against the Customer in Fraud Cases,” (hat tip reader Francois T) is such an appalling illustration of how predatory the banking industry has become that I felt it was worth highlighting to readers. When a customer […]

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