Category Archives: Regulations and regulators

Quelle Surprise! Banks Overestimating Their Health

Remember Lake Woebegone: all the women are beautiful, and all the children are above average. And all banks in robust health. Self assessment (and undue self regard) was one of the big fallacies of the famed stress tests. The banks were asked to run scenarios on their own loan portfolios, with no independent verification of […]

Read more...

Einhorn: First, Let’s Kill All the Credit Default Swaps

David Einhorn, who enjoys his considerable reputation for hard-fought battles against firms with shaky finances and dubious accounting (Allied Capital and Lehman), has taken aim at a new and equally deserving target: credit default swaps. In an interesting bit of synchronicity, Einhorn’s comments in a letter to investors overlap to a considerable degree with a […]

Read more...

The less optimistic view of Treasury’s handling of the crisis

By Edward Harrison of Credit Writedowns The Obama Administration is captured. To understand why it has acted as it has, one doesn’t have to take the view that its efforts to save the banking industry were a deliberate attempt to line bankers’ pockets by transferring money from taxpayers to the banking industry. One need merely […]

Read more...

The Fantasy of the Clearing House Magic Bullet

As Gillian Tett points out in the Financial Times today, clearing derivatives centrally has come to be viewed in policy circles as a magical solution. As a result, it has not gotten the scrutiny it deserves. The reason for the enthusiasm is that, in theory, a clearinghouse would make sure all agreements were adequately backstopped, […]

Read more...

The wildly optimistic view of Treasury’s handling of the crisis

By Edward Harrison of Credit Writedowns I was reading Kid Dynamite’s account of the recent Treasury – Finance Blogger meeting after having read a bunch of others (see them all in Abnormal Returns’ Nov 4th links). And I was struck by his characterization of the thinking at Treasury in regards to the financial crisis. I […]

Read more...

Guest Post: Galbraith Says Administration’s Sole Goal is to Restore System of 5 or 10 Years Ago, But Confidence Won’t be Restored Unless Fraud Which Caused the Crash is Investigated

By George Washington of Washington’s Blog. As I have repeatedly written, the largest U.S. banks have repeatedly gone bankrupt due to wild speculation which was blessed by the Fed, and then the government covered up their bankruptcy. Indeed, the New York Times writes today about one of the too big to fails: Over the past […]

Read more...

Guest Post: Breaking Up The Too Big to Fails Will NOT Harm America’s Ability to Compete with Foreign Banks

By George Washington of Washington’s Blog. Preface:  Please read to the end to see the humorous quote. I have previously debunked numerous false arguments used to defend the too big to fails. See this and this. But the apologists for the TBTFs are now arguing that breaking up the beached whales … er, giant banks […]

Read more...

Bank-Favoring Censorship by Congress

Harper’s Magazine has written up the lengths to which the authorities will go in censoring views that dissent with what is the unstated official policy: that no demand of the banking industry is too unreasonable not to be catered to. The object lesson is the gutting of the falsely-branded derivatives reform bill. It arrived with […]

Read more...

Guest Post: Conservatives and Liberals Agree: Proposed Bank Oversight Bill Will Make Things Worse

By George Washington of Washington’s Blog. When a liberal labor leader and a conservative financial policy analyst unite against something, you know that something is really bad (actually, I don’t believe in the whole false left-right dichotomy; I think its Americans versus those trying to steal our wallets and our rights, but that’s another story). […]

Read more...

Guest Post: Government Is Trying to Make Bailouts for the Giant Banks PERMANENT

By George Washington of Washington’s Blog. On September 25th, I wrote: Paul Volcker and senior Harvard economist Jeffrey Miron both testified to Congress this week that the government is trying to make bailouts for the giant banks permanent. Writing Wednesday in The Hill, Congressman Brad Sherman pointed out that : In my opinion, Geithner’s proposal […]

Read more...

GMAC Joins the Black Hole Club

The numbers aren’t as impressive as AIG’s but the general premise is the same. The automaker’s financial service arm it asking for a third taxpayer-provided cash transfusion. Might help if someone stanched the bleeding first. But no, bleeding is part of the game plan. The reason for more dough to GMAC is so GM and […]

Read more...

“Happy Halloween: Pay Curbs are a Trick on the Taxpayer, Not a Treat”

By Marshall Auerback, an investment strategist and analyst who writes for New Deal 2.0. How appropriate that with Halloween just around the corner, the Fed and Treasury have announced a coordinated effort that will put the central bank at the forefront of pay regulation on the zombie firms now kept alive courtesy of US government […]

Read more...

Guest Post: Capitalism, Socialism or Fascism?

By George Washington of Washington’s Blog. What is the current American economy: capitalism, socialism or fascism? Socialism Initially, it is important to note that it is not just people on the streets who are calling the Bush and Obama administration’s approach to the economic crisis “socialism”. Economists and financial experts say the same thing. For […]

Read more...