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Tuesday, April 15, 2014



Published CommPro.biz 2014.04.08

Too Big To Manage, Not Too Big To Fail

In an effort to forestall another “Too Big Too Fail” recession, our Federal Reserve established the so-called Stress-Tests. The Fed looks at a number of aspects of a bank’s operations and determines its potential to go belly-up, requiring another taxpayer bailout, even triggering another recession. Frankly, none of the monster banks are stable. They engage in what would be illegal gambling except for the exemption the Congress gave them to label risky behavior as “Investments.” The eight largest banks have all been told to beef up; to add close to $70 billion in fresh capital.

The latest stress-test dealt a blow to Citicorp. The sprawling giant failed for the second time in two years. The last stress-test failure in 2012 led to a change in leadership, unseating the CEO. This is the second blow Citi has suffered in recent months; in February its Mexican operation was hit with a $400 million fraud. Basically the Fed found that Citi is out of control, not just too big to fail, but too big to manage. It’s clearly time to break up Citi’s operations; it’s time for Citi to become a bank again.

It’s obviously time for all the monster banks to break up their uncontrollable global operations. They’re all clearly too big to manage. When banks count their Vice Presidents by the tens of thousands, that alone should indicate that the same conditions that led to the breakup of the monster banks of the day in the 1930s are in place again today.  It’s also apparent that these behemoths serve no real purpose in our society.

Quite the opposite, the monster banks disrupt the banking sector. Aside from the role they play in manipulating interest rates and other hanky-panky, they make it more than difficult for our community banks. Take credit cards for instance. With the revenue from their legalized gambling operations, they can make offers that a legitimate community bank cannot match. They suck off the checking and savings accounts as well.

But unlike the community banks they don’t use the funds harvested from these sources to provide small business loans. They pour this cash into risky gambling ventures with no social benefit. That leaves the small businesses that create most of the new jobs in our economy starved for operating cash and our economy the worse for it. In addition to Citi, the Fed failed three international banks with operations in the United States including British giant HSBC which our Justice Department considered too big to jail when they were exposed as facilitating international criminal enterprises.

There are a host of reasons why the monster banks should become a thing of the past. Problem is they pour cash into the pockets of our legislators and thwart any effort to restrict or control them. Arrogant CEOs like Chase über kommandant Jamie Dimon strut and lecture our Congressional leaders, flashing cuff links with the Presidential Seal. Those sent to take care of the people’s business are instead increasingly beholden to those with the cash to dictate to them, among others the monster banks.
 
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