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Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Our Banking Problem

Last week (02.23.12) Bank of America kissed off Fannie Mae saying it would no longer sell mortgages to the (closet taxpayer backed) mortgage buyer. Published reports say the break is over some of the crappy mortgages BofA sold Fannie in the past. Mortgages, Fannie thinks BofA knew –or should have known – were crap. Fannie apparently wants their money back. BofA says the mortgages went south because of the recession, so Fannie (we the taxpayers) should eat them.

Like a lot of bad things this looks back to 2008. BofA bought subprime mortgage lender Countrywide Financial as it was about to go belly up. BofA says the Feds “made us” buy it; some think BofA thought it was getting a real steal. In any case, BofA is down +/- $30 billion on the deal so far. The once biggest dude in the world of banking has been on a diet slimming down, dumping anything it can and backing away from the mortgage business, whilst dodging its responsibilities and sticking the taxpayers with its problems at every opportunity. Case in point: last August, when BofA ran their manure spreader through Fannie they picked up a half billion dollars of our money.

It’s sickening when you consider how much (+/- $45 billion in TARP) we gave BofA to forestall their potential collapse. Not to mention BofA’s use of the Federal Reserve “Discount Window” where the Fed passes under-the-radar loans to the banks. Late in 2008 as BofA was attempting to take over Merrill Lynch, between them the two entities were living on about $80 billion in the Fed’s stealth loans.

All the while, regular folks, many of whom had been -through their naivety- lured into home loans they could not possibly hope to pay, were getting no help from the banks. Instead of using TARP and the other taxpayer bucks to help little folks they had set up to fail, the banks went back to gambling with more of the shaky financial products like derivatives that got us into this mess.

How big a deal is BofA’s decision to stop selling loans to Fannie Mae? It’s pretty big if you think it’s the people’s job to make sure that these too-big-to-fail banks don’t fail. BofA says it’s no big deal, they can sell off their mortgages to Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae. These two agencies complete the triumvirate of federal agencies created to help make the American Dream –home ownership- come to be. Like Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac is a publically owned company and is “wink, wink” not backed by the taxpayers. Ginnie Mae was spun off from Fannie and is the only openly taxpayer backed entity of the three.

It’s past time to stop the reckless gambling, to break up these ethically challenged too-big-to-fail behemoths, and get the resultant smaller banks refocused on the reason for their existence, to provide the funds to keep our economy moving. If we could get the banking sector resized and refocused, the two Maes and a Mac might be good for us; right now they are just good for the banks.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

What BP Was Hiding


Two years ago come April reckless shortcutting by BP and its partners in the Gulf of Mexico triggered a blowout of one of its deepwater wells killing eleven of those working on the platform and injuring 17 others. For roughly three months the well spewed crude oil into the Gulf. It was five months before it was capped once and for all.

Monday (02.27.12) the people of the United States will finally begin to get their day in court. The U.S. District Court in New Orleans begins what will be years of responsibility dodging and finger pointing by BP, Halliburton, Transocean, and some of the other players in this tragedy. Among the +/- 600 claimants there will be one more class of the ethically challenged, those who make false claims in an attempt to cash in on this awful event.

An event that we do not as yet know its full impact. Some environmental damage could play out for years. Some facts up to now hidden will come out in court. One shocker was disclosed as a part of the run-up to the trial. In the early hours of the first day BP managers estimated that the spill could dump 3.4 million gallons of crude oil into the Gulf every day. A number higher than the final US estimate by about a million gallons a day.

But instead of following the tried and true “Prepare for the worst and hope for the best” path, BP instead buried this estimate. Internal memos and emails released last week show that BP engaged in a frantic effort to keep secret their estimates of the potential damage of the spill and to browbeat the US Coast Guard into down playing it as well; despicable.

It will be years, two or three at least, perhaps another twenty before the claims are all settled. BP is trying to settle as many as possible before they get into court. They are looking to settle much as $20 billion in federal fines before the trial gets underway. There’s the much of the touted $20 billion that BP set aside early on to pay those (especially the little folks) who suffered financially from the spill and they could face more. All of these big numbers need to be viewed in light of the windfall BP and others enjoyed when the blowout triggered a spike in oil prices.

Keep in mind that this court date is just to determine financial responsibility. Yet to come –we can only hope– are the criminal charges that may be leveled at some of the entities and individuals involved. It is important to remember the horrific deaths and injuries sustained in the explosion, the fireball, and the crash into the Gulf that day in April are of much greater significance than any other part of this tragedy. The environment will heal. Financial loss will be recovered - or not. But those left in physical and mental pain, along with the families left without their sons and brothers, and fathers, and husbands, they will live with their loss for the remainder of their lives.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

A Glimmer Of Justice

Last week (2.9), we finally got a deal for a few big banks to make a $25 billion down payment on what they owe America. You’ll recall that less than a decade after they conned Congress into dumping the Glass-Steagall Act passed in 1932 to protect Americans from reckless bankers, reckless bankers drove most of the world off a cliff. A cliff created through their relentless efforts to profit from packages of securitized mortgages. They lured naïve folks into mortgages the bankers and their cronies knew they couldn’t afford. When the bottom fell out did the bankers use the money we gave them 2008 to help those they had enticed?

Nope, but the alarm bells were set off by Hank Paulsen, plucked by George Bush from his post as CEO of Goldman Sachs –perhaps the most reckless and devious nest of bankers on the planet– to become Secretary of the Treasury. The Congress passed the $700 Billion TARP Act (largely crafted by Paulson) to save the banks. At the same time – unbeknownst to most of us until earlier this year– the Federal Reserve poured about ten times that much into the banks, interest free. The $25 billion –chump change for these banks– will help a few of the millions who owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth. Others, pushed out of their homes erroneously may get a few bucks.

The deal, in the works forever, was held up by two State Attorneys General who refused to sign because the banks got protection against future prosecution. California AG Kamala Harris and New York’s Eric Schneiderman booted the get-out-of-jail-free-cards. Housing Secretary Shaun Donovan brokered the deal over Super Bowl week and last Friday (2.10) announced that 49 states, the Justice Department, and other Federal entities had signed onto the deal. Ally Financial (formerly GMAC), Bank of America, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, and Wells Fargo, the biggest mortgage servicers, are coming up with the$25 billion.

It better be a down payment; the bankers received hundreds of billions from the American taxpayers. Up to now they have used our money mostly to return to the reckless risks that got us into this mess in the first place. An outcome Mr. Paulson could have forestalled, had there been any real conditions attached to the bailout bucks. But why would he? Could it be because Paulson had his hand on the tiller at Goldman while they were raking in billions selling crap (their term), all-the-while betting against their customers with the idiots at AIG? The same AIG we bailed out only to have Goldman suck up a ton of that bailout, collecting on the sure losers they hung on AIG.

Before sundown the day the $25 billion deal went public Schneiderman sued three big banks: Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, and Wells Fargo, along with the MERS system. The banks set up and control MERS cloaking the foreclosure world. The banking entities and some of the individuals involved left the ethical line far behind in this display of unbridled greed.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

A Return To Stability

Close to 3000 movers and shakers took to the world stage in Switzerland last week (01.25-29) for the annual World Economic Forum, commonly referred to as Davos. This year’s theme was The Great Transformation, Shaping New Models. And while there was much discussion on new models, most looked a lot like the model that emerged from the Great Depression and served America well for two generations. That would be the model we dismantled in the 1980s and 1990s.

As the doings began at Davos, Bloomberg released their Global Poll of more than 1.200 investors, analysts and traders who shared their thinking on the state of the economy. Surprising numbers; more than half agree with the Occupy Wall Street movement that income inequality harms the economy, harms growth. Seven in ten believe the banks have too much control over government. Two-thirds of the respondents think governments should pursue policies to tackle that issue.

A participant on the opening panel at Davos, Sharan Burrow, general secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation said, “If you’ve got a group that is too big to fail, what it means is that you are the biggest bullies on the planet. The financial sector has lost its moral compass.” More than 80% of the respondents to the Bloomberg study think banks need to be regulated so they’re not too big to fail.
 
About two-thirds see at least some truth in the argument that bankers’ actions are driven by greed and harm the economy. This is in line with studies showing that when executive pay scales escalate too far above the average employee in their company, it takes focus off what’s best for the company and moves it to what’s best for those at the top. When bankers start focusing on their pay, they forget their role in the community. They forget they are there to protect the funds the members of the community entrust to them. They forget that they are there to find local businesses that need loans to grow. They forget that they are there to help people in their community finance their homes. 

When it comes to the investment bankers on Wall Street, they get so focused on their paychecks that they forget they are there to help create capital. Instead they are busy devising ways to play high-stakes gambling games, all the while setting up their customers to take the fall if the bank’s bet goes south. Moral compass? There’s none to be found. While most business people and small businesses are striving to do the right thing every day, the Wall Street types have the morals of an alley cat.