Category Archives: Banking industry

Dodd Wimping Out on Consumer Financial Protection Agency

Well, as much as Dodd was not as tough on banks as many would like, his lame duck status is turning Potemkin reforms into an utter joke. The element of the proposed consumer financial protection agency that would have had a real impact on the predatory practices was the requirement to offer plain vanilla products. […]

Read more...

Is the Angelides Commission Structurally Flawed?

The opening hearings of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission was somewhat upstaged by the tragedy in Haiti, but nevertheless compelled Wall Street chieftans to put in an appearance, which is more than President Obama has been able to d. And while Angelides himself was combative and slapped Lloyd Blankfein around a bit (pretty much every […]

Read more...

WSJ Runs Dubious Argument for Keeping Citi Intact

Normally, I would not have paid much attention to the Wall Street Journal article today on Citigroup’s GTS, or Global Transactions Services, unit. But what was disturbing was that the normally-astute Columbia Journalism Review’s blog was taken in by a pretty questionable argument that was presented as fact in the piece. GTS is a big […]

Read more...

Obama to Announce $120 Billion TARP Fee

Ah, the machinations that Faustian bargains produce! The Obama Administration is now caught in its own machinations and is having to backpedal fast and hard from its bankster friendly posture, or at least have the public believe it is executing that maneuver. While I cannot fathom the logic, Team Obama clearly decided to throw in […]

Read more...

Bair offers her own solution on bank compensation

By Edward Harrison of Credit Writedowns. Following up on Yves’ earlier piece on the Obama Administration’s banker windfall compensation tax scheme, I want to talk about a competing plan by Sheila Bair. While the first plan seems designed for political purposes in an election year, this plan is geared more toward the longer-term and systemic […]

Read more...

Administration Bank Tax Plan: An Empty Populist Gesture by Design?

With its talk of new taxes on banks, is Team Obama reverting to its now well established pattern of crony capitalist giveaways with the occasional phony populist reform as an increasingly ineffective disguise? The extraordinarily unenthusiastic, perhaps inept by design, discussion of its plans to tax banks in some yet undetermined manner certainly says so. […]

Read more...

Tom Adams: “TCW and Gundlach – Missing the Real Dirty Laundry”

By Thomas Adams, at Paykin Krieg and Adams, LLP, and a former managing director at Ambac and FGIC. The ugly mess at TCW over chief investment officer Jeff Gundlach’s recent departure, has prompted a number of headlines lately. I was surprised to learn that Gundlach had a number of dirty secrets, and not just the […]

Read more...

William Black” “Anti-Regulators: The Federal Reserve’s War Against Effective Regulation”

William Black is a former senior bank regulator, now associate professor of economics and law at the University of Missouri – Kansas City (UMKC), who writes for New Deal 2.0. The first decade of this century proved how essential effective regulators are to prevent economic catastrophe and epidemics of fraud. The most severe failure was […]

Read more...

UK Not Backing Down in Row Over Banker Pay

Bankers ’round the world howled when the UK imposed a one-time 50% bonus supertax. The levy was meant as a shot across the bow, to warn the firms that were posting generous earnings in large measure thanks to government assistance (particularly super low interest rates) to act sensibly. The officialdom’s message was that financial firms […]

Read more...

Hank Greenberg’s Self-Serving, Largely Off-Base Salvo at Goldman

Wow, has someone declared “Forced Out CEO Tries to Salvage His Reputation Month” when I wasn’t paying attention? Or was I just not on the distribution list? Last week, we had Sandy Weill telling us how the Frankenstein of the Citigroup he created was really a fine business; the only mistake he made was pushing […]

Read more...

“Fire Geithner Now!”

By L. Randall Wray, Professor of Economics at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, Research Director with the Center for Full Employment and Price Stability and Senior Research Scholar at The Levy Economics Institute, who writes for New Deal 2.0. There is a growing consensus that it is time for President Obama to fire Treasury Secretary […]

Read more...

“Tim Out – Sheila and Debt Relief In?”

By Bruce Krasting, a foreign exchange and derivatives veteran who comments regularly on the financial scene. In my piece “What’s in Store for 2010” my number one prediction was: -Tim Geithner will resign as Treasury Secretary. Sheila Bair will replace him. The odds of getting any of these types of predictions correct are probably 20 […]

Read more...

Fed Used Lawyer that Advised Goldman on AIG (Non) Disclosures

Dear readers, as much as the fact set in the headline sounds bad, we need to parse things a bit to calibrate properly. IMHO, the fact that the Fed used an attorney that also served Goldman is symptomatic of how concentrated the high end of finance has become and how incestuous all the relationships are […]

Read more...

Hawks at the Fed Warn Re Inflation, Bubbles

Although investors have been worried about the Fed’s exit strategy for some time, you wouldn’t see much evidence if you looked at the markets. While gold prices are an exception, the stock market appears to reflect optimism about recovery (although cynics would say it really is a function of liquidity, not fundamental views). Either premature […]

Read more...