After a
Massachusetts wake-up call Obama has decided
to pay more attention to Paul Volcker. Is it too
little, too late to quell public anger? What
will the effects be if new Glass-Steagall
legislation is enacted?
Let's explore those questions starting with
Obama to Propose New Rules on Proprietary
Trading.
President Barack
Obama tomorrow will offer proposals to limit
the size and complexity of financial
institutions’ proprietary trading as a way to
reduce risk- taking, an administration
official said.
“We’ve got a financial regulatory system that
is completely inadequate to control the
excessive risks and irresponsible behavior of
financial players all around the world,” Obama
said in an interview with ABC News broadcast
tonight.
“People are angry and they’re frustrated,”
Obama said in the ABC interview. “From their
perspective, the only thing that happens is
that we bail out the banks.”
The proposed rules could limit activities of
banks like Goldman Sachs Group Inc., the most
profitable investment bank in Wall Street
history. Goldman reaped more than 90 percent
of its pretax earnings last year from trading
and so-called principal investments, which
include market bets on securities and stakes
in companies.
Obama to
Propose Limits on Risks
The New York Times also weighs in on the issue
in
Obama to Propose Limits on Risks Taken by Banks.
President Obama on
Thursday will publicly propose giving bank
regulators the power to limit the size of the
nation’s largest banks and the scope of their
risk-taking activities, an administration
official said late Wednesday.
He also would prohibit proprietary trading of
financial securities by commercial banks,
including mortgage-backed securities. Big
losses in the trading of those securities
precipitated the credit crisis in 2008 and the
federal bailout.
Last week he proposed a new tax on some 50 of
the largest banks to raise enough money to
recover the losses from the financial bailout,
which ultimately could cost up $117 billion.
Now, in perhaps his most daring move, he is
calling for a modern-day version of the Glass-Steagall
Act, which in 1933 separated commercial and
investment banking. The new separation would
prohibit standard commercial banks from
engaging in proprietary trading using funds
from their commercial division.
Only a handful of large banks would be the
targets of this legislation, among them
Citigroup, Bank of America, J.P. Morgan Chase
and Wells Fargo. Goldman Sachs, the Wall
Street trading house, became a commercial bank
during this latest crisis, and it would
presumably have to up that status.
Mr. Volcker has been trying for weeks to drum
up support — on Wall Street and in Washington
— for restrictions similar to those passed in
the Glass-Steagall Act in 1933. That law
separated commercial banking and investment
banking, so that the investment arm could no
longer use a depositor’s money to purchase
stocks, sometimes drawing money from a savings
account, for example, without the depositor’s
knowledge.
Mr. Volcker has gradually lined up big-name
support for restrictions on such trading, but
the Obama administration until now had focused
on regulating the activities of the existing
financial institutions, not breaking them up
or limiting their activities.
“When I was running Citi,” Mr. Reed said of
his tenure in the 1980s and 1990s, “we simply
did not trade for our own account.”
Targeting Big
Banks
Either an idea is a good one or it isn't. And if
it is a good one, then it should be uniform. I
see no sense in targeting "a handful of large
banks".
Glass-Steagall
Scapegoat
Moreover, I think Glass-Steagall is a scapegoat
for this crisis. I am not the only one. Please
consider
Volcker's Quest To Reinstate Glass-Steagall.
The loudest argument
to bring back Glass-Steagall usually goes
something like this: Depository
institutions (commercial banks) need to be
very safe and stable. If you allow investment
banks to take big risks with those deposits,
bad things can happen.
Now let's take a step back. What are these
risky securities we're talking about? They're
bonds backed by real estate -- originated by
commercial banks. So really, it was the
commercial banks that took the crazy risks
that almost broke the economy. If there was
never securitization, and the same subprime
loans were made, then we'd have very, very
sick depository institutions, but investment
banks would have been largely unscathed.
Of course, there was securitization, and that
was done by the investment banks. Where might
Glass-Steagall have helped here? Well, it
wouldn't have. Securitization existed before
the Act was repealed, and it would exist if
it's brought back. Commercial banks can still
sell mortgages into giant pools for investment
banks to make securities out of, with or
without the mortgage originators and bankers
living under the same umbrella. Commercial
banks also still would have retained lots of
their mortgage exposure, and still been quite
sick. Just ask Countrywide.
Merits of
Glass-Steagall
The idea that Glass-Steagall would have done
much, if anything to prevent this crisis is
potty. Goldman Sachs, Bear Stearns, and Lehman
would all have done what they did. Wells Fargo
would have kept its pool of option arms, and the
rest of the banks would have followed their lend
to securitize model and the regional banks would
still be losing their asses on silly commercial
real estate deals.
That said, I am in favor of these initiatives
for the simple reason they help prevent fraud.
Many of the large institutions hand out advice
and trade against it. Goldman Sachs is accused
of front-running trades. Their disclosure
documents even allow it.
Hedge Funds And
Banking
I would go one further than Obama. Goldman Sachs
is best viewed as a hedge fund. It is ridiculous
that such an operation can borrow money from the
Fed for virtually nothing and not only trade
that money, but trade against the advice they
are handing out to clients, with leverage!
Thanks to the Fed, Goldman Sachs can do just
that. So the first thing I would do would be to
remove the bank holding company status of
Goldman Sachs.
The second thing I would do would effectively
require it to break up.
Soft
Separations Do Not Work
Expecting trading divisions to not talk to
investment advice divisions within a single
company is like expecting unsupervised teenagers
in a room with a keg of beer to not drink. It
won't happen.
I believe it is unethical if not outright
fraudulent to front run trades or to trade
against advice given to clients. Units that
offer advice must be physically separated, not
logically separated from units that trade their
own accounts. The only sure-fire way to make
that happen is to physically breakup the
companies.
All of this dark-pool stuff of sniffing out
orders and front-running trades has to go as
well.
Outside of that, I do not care what Goldman does
or how much money they make or how much bonuses
they hand out, as long as taxpayers are not on
the hook for what they do.
Given that Goldman makes nearly all of its money
trading, I think Goldman ought to go private. No
one would then know or care how much they make,
and taxpayers would have the side benefit of
Goldman coming out of too big to fail category.
Morgan Stanley and Merrill Lynch should not be
bank holding companies either. Citigroup, Wells
Fargo and literally all the banks need to bring
off-balance sheet garbage onto the balance sheet
and mark it to market.
Banks need to get back to making loans to
qualified customers and holding those loans for
the term. All of this other crap adds risk to
the system an puts taxpayers at risk.
What About The
Free Market?
Are such proposals inconsistent with a free
market? I think not. The free market is not the
same as anarchy. The role of government is to
protect property rights and civil rights. There
are rules and regulations to prevent theft,
murder, and fraud, as well there should be.
Glass Steagall would not have prevented this
crisis, but the proposals would prevent front
running trades and betting against advice given
to clients, both of which I believe constitute
fraud.
However ......
Be Careful What
You Wish
Everyone is railing about banks not lending and
the bonus pools at Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, and
Morgan Stanley. Well guess what?
-
Reduced leverage
means reduced lending and reduced profit
potential.
-
Marking loans to
market would reduce lending and reported
earnings.
-
Goldman Sachs going
private would reduce S&P 500 earnings.
-
Bringing assets on
to the balance sheets of banks would reduce
S&P 500 earnings.
-
Reduced earnings (in
the long run) means lower share prices
Everyone wants more
small business lending and less risk. Sorry
folks, that is physically and logically
impossible. Reducing reckless risk, especially
risk born by others (taxpayers) is a good idea,
but it's important to understand exactly what
that will mean to earnings going forward.
Think of the affect lower share prices and
reduced risk taking will have on pension plans
and 401Ks. In the long run, less risk is a good
thing, and I am in favor of it. I just doubt
people are prepared for what it means.
The stock market is already insanely overvalued,
and the regulatory actions everyone is clamoring
for will make it even more so. Good luck with
that.