Category Archives: Banking industry

Warning: Capital Controls Are in Your Future

When Jim Rogers taught classes at Columbia, he liked to tell students that the US had a proud history of implementing capital controls, and warned them against going on the merry assumption that it would ever and always be easy to make cross-border investments. For instance, taxes on foreign securities transactins are a soft form […]

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Latvia in Crisis; Threatens to Stiff Swedish Banks With Mini-Jubilee

When markets were more agitated than they are today, one source of background worry was the Baltics. The countries went on a debt binge, borrowing heavily from Swedish banks. And while the amounts at issue are hardly earth-shaking by credit crisis standards, there is always the possibility that unexpected knock-on effects could lead to more […]

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Wells To Increase Credit Card Interest Rates To Beat Change in Law

Wells Fargo is hardly alone in treating credit card customers badly. Whenever I run a post on credit cards, I get a raft of comments and e-mails about various bank misdeeds, which generally involve rate increases when the borrower is current and has not suffered a fall in his credit score. The other common complaint […]

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Securitization Drought Exposes Policy Bind, Threatens Recovery

The New York Times has a good update on the progress, or more accurately, lack thereof, in the efforts to return to normalcy in the credit markets. The story highlights the fact that the securitization markets, to the extent they are operating, are heavily dependent on government intervention and it does not appear likely that […]

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Banks Under-reserving for Commercial Real Estate Losses

There has been a peculiar disconnect between the “the crisis is over, on with the recovery” drumbeat of news, and the sobering reality that a good deal of credit bubble overhang still remains to be dealt with. One of the biggest areas is commercial real estate. Various experts, including Apollo Management’s Leon Black warned of […]

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Sweden prepares for financial collapse in Latvia and major bank losses at home

Submitted by Edward Harrison of Credit Writedowns The following is my translation of a much-discussed article that appeared in Swedish daily Svenska Dagbladet at the weekend.  This information was being withheld from the public and leaked at an inopportune moment. Note that the Swedish government has secretly been preparing the banks for financial Armageddon, encouraging […]

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Why is Goldman allowed to game the system?

Submitted by Edward Harrison of Credit Writedowns. Marshall Auerback sent me a link to a recent Simon Johnson missive about Goldman Sachs. I had already seen and liked this article, but his e-mail prompted me to write this post. My question is: Why is Goldman a bank holding company? Goldman becomes a bank The reason […]

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Quelle Surprise! New York Times Fails to Call Private Equity Looting by Its Proper Name

The New York Times tonight features a generally very good piece, “Buyout Firms Profited as a Company’s Debt Soared,” by Julie Creswell that falls short in one important respect: it fails to call a prevalent and destructive practice of private equity firms by its proper name. PE firms in the risk-blind environment preceding the credit […]

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On the Inequity of Handing Mortgage Servicers $27,065,760,000

The media seems curiously indifferent to the continued and deserved anger of the public regarding bank bailouts. Of course, the fundamental problem is that we were sold a bill of goods. The money was clearly going to fill existing black holes in financial firms’ balance sheets. That would have been a legitimate use of taxpayer […]

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Chris Whalen: Bank Losses To Continue At High Levels Well Into 2010

More and more real-world data and forecasts are conflicting with the “green shoots-surely things are getting better” story. One view comes from Institutional Risk Analytics’ Chris Whalen. In his monthly Special Feature (pdf only, no online source), Whalen suggests that banks are far from out of the woods. Although he believes that damage will not […]

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Guest Post: Still The Masters of the Universe

By Satyajit Das, derivatives expert and author of Traders, Guns, and Money. Tom Wolfe writing in Bonfire of the Vanities created the term – ‘Masters of the Universe’: “He considered himself part of the new era and the new breed, a Wall Street egalitarian, a Master of the Universe, who was only a respecter of […]

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Janet Tavakoli: On the Edge with Max Keiser

Submitted by Edward Harrison of Credit Writedowns. Janet Tavakoli was a recent guest on “On the Edge with Max Keiser” and had some troubling things to say about the state of the present U.S. financial system. She believes the liquidity pumped into the system will not be sufficient to reflate the economy because of over-leveraged […]

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Guest Post: The Real Reason the Giant, Insolvent Banks Aren’t Being Broken Up

By George Washington of Washington’s Blog. Why isn’t the government breaking up the giant, insolvent banks? We Need Them To Help the Economy Recover? Do we need the Too Big to Fails to help the economy recover? No. The following top economists and financial experts believe that the economy cannot recover unless the big, insolvent […]

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Quelle Surprise! Bankers Claim Regulating Them Will Be Bad for Us

You have to hand it to those bankers. They are very creative in finding ways to argue that life for them should continue more or less as it did before, despite the spectacular damage that they have exacted on the global economy. Had the industry put together a reform program, or even fessed up to […]

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“Searching for international contagion in the 2008 financial crisis”

An interesting post at VoxEU by Andrew K. Rose and Mark M. Spiegel does a series of analyses looking to explain how the crisis evolved internationally, but the obvious connections don’t provide an answer: The 2008 financial crisis is sometimes characterised as one where financial difficulties in the US spread to the rest of the […]

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