Category Archives: Regulations and regulators

Rating Agency Conflicts in Munis Coming Under Fire

In “States and Cities Start Rebelling on Bond Ratings,” the New York Times attempts to make the case that municipalities can lead a revolt against Wall Street: Does Wall Street underrate Main Street? A growing number of states and cities say yes. If they are right, billions of taxpayers’ dollars — money that could be […]

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Did Mark-to-Market Accounting Create the Credit Bubble?

Paul Davies, in “True impact of mark-to-market accounting in the credit crisis,” discusses a paper by Tobias Adrian of the New York Fed and Hyun Song Shin of Princeton University that claim that mark-to-market accounting play a direct, perhaps central role in the credit bubble, and that it works just as dramatically in reverse. Once […]

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Did the Rating Agencies Push the Monolines Into the Structured Finance Business?

A dirty little secret of the bond insurer mess is that the rating agencies not only aided and abetted their ill-fated entry into the structured finance business but apparently prodded them in that direction. Although I had been given this tidbit before, I hadn’t gotten independent verification, but it now comes via a report in […]

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"Turmoil reveals the inadequacy of Basel II"

This comment in the Financial Times by Harald Benink and George Kaufman, discusses a major shortcoming in Basel II, the new bank capital standards promulgated by the Bank of International Settlements, namely, that banks can use their own risk models to set minimum capital levels. That procedure allows them to tell the regulators how much […]

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Paulson Says No Go on Housing Bailouts

Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson has thrown a bucket of cold water on a number of proposals being floated in Washington to rescue troubled borrowers via the explicit use of public funds, such as the idea of reviving the 1933 Home Owner’s Loan Corporation to buy underwater mortgages and renegotiate them. In some respects, Paulson’s tough […]

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Auction Rate Securities: Manipulated From the Get-Go?

DealBreaker does some serious reporting today, informing us that some traders have told them that the failed auction rate securities market was always dependent on stabilization by dealers. For anyone who has worked in the securities industry, the term “stabilization” pregnant with regulatory significance. Stabilization, as defined by the SEC, is …transactions for the purpose […]

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Martin Wolf: "The government can rescue the economy"

Martin Wolf, in “Why Washington’s rescue cannot end crisis story,” tells us, push come to shove, the government can bail us out of our economic mess, but it would be unwise to stop there. Wolf argues that substantial steps need to be taken to rein in a financial sector that is beyond the understanding of […]

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Governors to Lobby Congress for Muni Debt Assistance

To paraphrase the late Senator Everett Dirksen, a handout here, a handout there, and pretty soon it adds up to real money. The latest supplicants looking for alms from the Federal purse are state governors on behalf of local governments hit by the auction rate securities debacle. So far, they have not developed a proposal. […]

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"Antidepressant drugs don’t work"

The headline above comes from the UK’s Independent. I could have picked number of variants (BBC, “Anti-depressants ‘of little use‘,” Financial Times, “Antidepressants ‘have no impact‘”), but what is interesting is that as of this hour, this study, published by the University of Hull, is getting MSM coverage solely in the UK and Commonwealth countries. […]

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Sachs: Government Push Needed to Spur Environmental, Anti-Poverty Technologies

Jeffrey Sachs, in an article for Project Syndicate (hat tip Mark Thoma), argues that private sector efforts alone won’t yield sufficient progress in achieving needed progress on the environmental and anti-poverty fronts. Part of this, of course, is the classic problem of externalities: carbon emissions are free to the perps, but impose costs on everyone. […]

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The End of the Current Model of Financial Capitalism?

A comment in today’s Financial Times, “The fall of a financial model,” by Jean-Louis Beffa, chairman of Saint Gobain and Xavier Ragot of the Paris School of Economics argues that the approach to financial capitalism in operation for the last decade is coming to an end. They define the model as giving a primary to […]

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The Treasury Doth Speak With Forked Tongue (Housing Bailout Edition)

Man, not only does the Administration tell whoppers, but it is completely shameless about them. The latest sighting comes from Reuters: Treasury Undersecretary Robert Steel told the Reuters Housing Summit it is proper for homeownership to hold a special status…. “If I default on my credit card debt, no one here knows and it has […]

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Desperate Measures: Treasury May Support Housing Via "Negative Equity Certificates"

Any doubts that we are going down the Japan path of trying to shore up inflated asset value rather than letting the market find the right level, should now be over. Bloomberg tells us that the Office of Thrift Supervision is looking into a plan that will enable homeowners to refinance houses that have negative […]

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