Category Archives: Regulations and regulators

Wall Street Firms Looking to Circumvent TARP Bonus Caps Via Salary Increases

I know one can maintain outrage for only so long, and I find it deeply disturbing to look at the inability to rein financial industry pay in despite horrific results. If these people are so valuable, let them go to boutiques and prove it, where you eat what you kill rather than feed off a […]

Read more...

Now It’s Official: Public Private Partnership to Overpay for Toxic Bank Assets

We have been saying from the first time the idea that Team Obama floated the idea of having a “public private partnership” buy toxic bank assets, that it was merely a very costly way to disguise overpayment. Henry Paulson tried twice to find a way to hoover up bad bank assets, the first time via […]

Read more...

Wiliam Black Savages Treasury’s Conduct on AIG

William Black, now a professor of economics and law at the University of Missouri (Kansas City) was a senior bank regulator during the savings loan crisis (his claim to fame was his pursuit of Charles Keating of Lincoln Savings, in which he was removed from the initiative and more management friendly investigators were assigned, and […]

Read more...

On Traders Behaving Badly and Cognitive Bias

The Jim Cramer chatter precipitated by his Daily Show appearance included some links to an infamous interview Cramer gave in 2007, where he discussed how he would, as a hedge fund manager, push the prices of stocks he was short down via the futures market. It was arguably a public admission of market manipulation. What […]

Read more...

A Token Reining in of AIG Bonuses (Banana Republic Watch)

The kabuki continues. The story from the Washington Post on AIG bonuses would appear to represent a modest win for taxpayers: American International Group is doling out tens of million of dollars in bonuses this week to senior employees. While AIG agreed to pay the bonuses months before the government’s rescue of the company began, […]

Read more...

Will Banks Start to Walk Their Talk? Don’t Hold Your Breath (Mark to Market Edition)

The new meme from big embattled banks, starting with Citigroup’s leaked Pandit memo yesterday and Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis’ declaration that the bank will be profitable in 2009, is that things will be OK and all this talk of nationalization is unwarranted. I’ll reserve judgement till the fat lady sings. The record of […]

Read more...

Cuomo Asserts That Traders Looted Merrill

I must confess I skipped past the headlines on New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo latest salvo at Bank of America and Merrill over the Merrill bonus payments in December. Recall that those bonuses were paid earlier than usual so as to occur before the closing of the Merrill sale. Merrill contends it informed the […]

Read more...

A Belated Comment on Citi’s Lehman-esque Leak

Readers may recall that during Lehman’s demise, a pitched battle was underway between some short sellers, epitomized by David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital. Einhorn raised questions about Lehman’s financial statements, specifically, inconsistencies and rosy looking valuations. The struggle became weirdly peronalized, as Lehman sought to burnish the image of charmismatic CFO Erin Callen, as contrasted […]

Read more...

Willem Buiter Strikes Again, Calls for Over-Regulation of Banks

In case readers haven’t figured it out, I am a big Willem Buiter fan. Even when he is wrong, he is at least forthright and colorful. He does have an appetite for showing off his formidable intellect. Nevertheless, his best qualities are his willingness to take on orthodoxies and authorities, and his vivid, trenchant style. […]

Read more...

An Amazingly Disingenuous Piece by Alan Blinder on Bank Nationalization

Before I start shredding “Nationalize? Hey, Not So Fast,” by Alan Blinder in the New York Times, let us first go back to the basic problem,, nomenclature. Blinder does not specifically do so in this article, but opponents to nationalization often raise the image of enterprises being expropriated by the state, in other words, healthy […]

Read more...

Quelle Surprise! Who Gained From AIG Rescues? Goldman (and Deutsche) Tops the List (and Willer Buiter is REALLY Angry!)

Even though I often take on the Wall Street Journal’s depiction of new stories, the flip side is that it does break significant news stories. Today is one of those days, although I wonder about an item this juicy hitting the wires on a Friday evening. Remember that the reason for shoring up AIG was […]

Read more...

Former Australian Prime Minister Savages Geithner’s Performance in the Asian Crisis

Paul Keating, former Austrailian Prime Minister, gave an assessment of Timothy Geithners’ performance in the Asian crisis that is sharply at odds with US reports. According to Keating, Geither completely misread the nature of the crisis, that it was the result of hot money flight, but reverted to the standard IMF “country facing currency crisis” […]

Read more...

Bank Rescue Programs: Setting the Stage for More Looting?

We have sometimes pointed to a paper by Nobel prize winner George Akerlof (of “markets for lemons” fame) and Paul Romer on the phenomenon of looting. Forgive us for repeating ourselves, but this paper was written in the wake of the savings and loan crisis, and was clearly ignored, because if anyone had heeded their […]

Read more...