Published in CommPro.biz 2013.05.06
The Disposable Bankers
Matthew Marshall Taylor is probably on his way to jail. The 34-year-old
took a wire fraud plea deal for making up stuff to cover some wild trades that
cost his employer, Goldman Sachs, $118 million. The charges against Taylor are not as serious
as they might be because his crime did not put Goldman Sachs’ financial
existence at risk and he followed his usual work patterns. Understand, Taylor didn’t steal
anything; he just threw Goldman Sachs’ dice for more bucks than he was authorized
to put at risk. He was trying to look good by making a big killing and maybe
increase his take home pay. Apparently he was having trouble getting by on the over
a million and a half he was paid in 2007 when all this came down.
While we understand that Goldman Sachs couldn’t allow this
kind of reckless behavior –they had no choice but to prosecute Taylor– it does, however, seem ironic that a
minor player goes to jail for covering up reckless financial behavior at, of all
places, Goldman Sachs. The same outfit that crafted investment vehicles
referred to within the firm as “Crap” so they would look like good stuff, then
pressured the rating agencies to bless this crap with top notch ratings. While
Matthew Marshall Taylor never put the stability of Goldman Sachs at risk with
his $118 million loss, in the same time frame Goldman Sachs put the World
Economy at risk with reckless bets that went bad crashing that economy.
Nobody from Goldman Sachs is facing jail for those bad bets.
In fact their head honcho is so arrogant as to claim that he is “Doing God’s
Work.” He feels free to mock the members of a Congressional Committee and lie
through his teeth while testifying under oath – a felony. He is not facing
prison time, nor are any of the other monster bank executives whose reckless
behavior, in concert with Goldman Sachs, drove the world economy off the cliff.
Not only are they not headed for jail they are right back playing the same reckless
games. Why wouldn’t they? They are livin’ large, taking home carloads of money,
secure in the knowledge that if they blow it the taxpayers will come to their
rescue again, and again, and again.
The Dallas Federal Reserve Bank has a proposal to break
these monsters up and take the taxpayers off the hook. In a Bloomberg View OP-ED, Joshua Rosner, a
financial research guru takes another tack. He picks up on the monster banks’
defensive position that frames them as part of a worldwide system. Rosner
suggests “outsourcing” these fragile monsters, urging them to move to some
other country whose citizens don’t mind crazy bankers. These banks do little or
nothing for America.
There are thousands of slightly smaller banks more than able to support our
banking needs. Banks that would no longer have to compete with the Las Vegas style banking
model the monster banks represent.
We like it. Let the monster banks set sail, and as they
disappear over the horizon taking their risky behavior with them, we can all
breathe a sigh of relief.
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