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Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Take Off The Kid Gloves

Take Off The Kid Gloves

The Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) ended its fiscal year in September having filed a record number of cases (735), up almost 10% from their pace (677) last year. They collected nearly $3 billion in penalties both years. Meanwhile the annual Johnson Associates’ “Executive Compensation Study” shows an alarming drop in pay for the folks on Wall Street, as much as 20% - 30%. Alarming perhaps to the Wall Street types, but to those who are trying to make ends meet the Wall Street pay scale, that begins at a hundred grand and can escalate into seven or eight figures, still looks really good. 

Reuters reports that over the last two years the SEC has removed a management layer and restructured their enforcement division. And, they have created a new whistleblower bounty program alongside other incentives to encourage witnesses to cooperate. Given the two record years they have registered, it must be working.

Or is it? It appears that the SEC is still treading softly with the big banks and the individuals behind the misdeeds (AKA CEOs etc.).  A Federal District Judge, Jed Rakoff, doesn’t seem convinced that a proposed settlement with Citibank is tough enough on the bank. Citi is charged with fraud; selling customers crappy financial instruments at the same time the bank was betting they would fail. The very same double dealing that triggered the financial collapse we are enduring.

In a hearing last week Judge Rakoff questioned the SEC on the settlement: $95 million when the investors Citi ripped off lost $700 million. The judge has taken a similar position with several lowball settlements the SEC proposed in the past. Rakoff also questioned why only one individual in this case has been charged with wrongdoing.

We –along with many others, including State Attorney Generals across the country– have been wondering about the SEC slap-on-the-wrist penalty proclivity. A concern the Attorney Generals also direct toward the Justice Department; why has it not zealously prosecuted bankers who triggered the recession? We know who they are and what they did. Instead, after bailing them out we are forced to watch as they go back to the same risky stuff all over again, sure that we will bail them out again when it collapses. All the while taking home eight-figure bucks.

The banks’ reaction to the relatively mild restraints of the Dodd/Frank Act is to pile new fees on their customers. They have grown so accustomed to inflated profits from what are nothing more than risky gambling schemes that when a little of that revenue stream is cut off, they sock it to their customers instead of living lean. In the meantime we have to listen to Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan Chase “Whiner in Chief,” and Goldman Sachs CEO, Lloyd Blankfein (AKA The Artful Dodger) complain. They are so misunderstood and unappreciated after all they do for us, poor babies.

Alan Johnson, managing director of Johnson Associates, the firm that carried out the Wall Street wage study, put the ethical issue very succinctly, “Wall Street executives,” he said, “haven’t gotten the memo at all.”

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