Category Archives: Regulations and regulators

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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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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Fed’s Preferential Treatment in Lehman BK Highlights Ambiguity of its Status

It must be nice to be like the Fed and be able to chose when you are public or private to suit your convenience. Many readers like to rail that the Fed is a private institution, but it has a weird public/private structure that has the nasty effect of putting it beyond the reach of […]

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Guest Post: “Martin Wolf, the FT’s rebel with a cause, and the future of finance

By Swedish Lex, an expert and advisor on EU regulatory and political affairs: If you belong to those who believe that the debate on how to fix finance is mightily underwhelming when compared to the latter’s monumental failure, then I suggest reading Martin Wolf’s latest column in the Financial Times. Wolf essentially trashes the financial […]

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Guest Post: How Well Has The Federal Reserve Performed for America?

By George Washington of Washington’s Blog. How well has the Federal Reserve performed for America? Mainstream pundits, of course, say that Bernanke has saved the world . . . . but they said the same thing about Greenspan.  So let’s look at the actual historical record to determine how well the Fed has done. Initially, […]

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Obama caves to pressure on consumer financial protection

Submitted by Edward Harrison of Credit Writedowns At issue here is the news that the Obama Administration dropped plans to force financial institutions to offer “plain vanilla” financial products that are simple enough for consumers to understand. My headline is editorial enough on this issue.  So, rather than editorialize this latest announcement, I’ll quote from […]

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Paul Volcker, Lord Turner & the EU’s new take on the intoxicating effects of global finance

The following is a submission from Naked Capitalism contributor Swedish Lex. While some observers of U.S. politics lament the lack of progress in reforming the country’s financial system, the European financial industry has abruptly awoken to the EU’s new resolve re-shape the continent’s financial system. How far and how fast the EU intends to go […]

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Guest Post: William K. Black’s Proposal for “Systemically Dangerous Institutions”

By George Washington of Washington’s Blog. William K. Black, Associate Professor of Economics and Law at the University of Missouri – Kansas City, and the former head S&L regulator, has written the following fantastic new proposal concerning the giant, insolvent banks. Posted/reprinted with Professor Black’s permission. William K. Black Associate Professor of Economics and Law […]

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Guest post: Blame the Regulators

Below is a guest contribution by reader Michael Dokupil. Michael points out that ratings agencies and banks are incented to support a market in so-called toxic assets rated triple-A because of a strange regulatory arbitrage. Basel II rules allow a bank to keep much less capital on hand to support AAA assets than is necessary […]

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The FDIC to get credit from banks even while banks restrict lending

Submitted by Edward Harrison of Credit Writedowns In the latest inexplicable move to extricate the U.S. banking system from crisis, the FDIC is reportedly close to asking the very banks it regulates for a loan to top up its balances. The plan is “strongly supported by bankers and their lobbyists” according to the New York […]

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Guest Post: Satyajit Das on Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Finance

By Satyajit Das, a risk consultant and author of Traders, Guns & Money: Knowns and Unknowns in the Dazzling World of Derivatives: One year ago, AIG was brought to the brink of bankruptcy as a result its exposure under credit default swaps (“CDS”) (a form of credit insurance). Asset backed securities and Collateralised Debt Obligations […]

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New York State Insurance Dept. Calls Moody’s Bluff on Defiance

Given how beleagured ratings agencies are, you would expect them to adopt the usual best policy when in trouble with authority figures: act terribly contrite and use all sorts of apologetic language without admitting to much and/or admit profusely to stuff you cannot deny, and make extremely vague but very earnest promises to do better. […]

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Wells’ Commercial Real Estate “Ticking Time Bomb” And Coming CRE Woes

Reader Scott pointed out this BankImplode story, “Exclusive – Wells Fargo’s Commercial Portfolio is a ticking time bomb.” I can’t verify it, but it sounded plausible and contained some juicy details: Wachovia, which Wells purchased last fall as it teetered on the brink of collapse, was so desperate to increase revenue in the last few […]

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