Good Video Dr William Black - Great American Bank Robbery
Frankcoins
Posts: 4,569 ✭✭✭
Year old, but a great video on the banking system and the failure of regulators. At 40:20, Dr. Black rips Tim Geithner a new one.
Link
Link
Frank Provasek - PCGS Authorized Dealer, Life Member ANA, Member TNA. www.frankcoins.com
0
Comments
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
His comparisons of the 1989 S&L crisis and today's banking & economic crisis are interesting, especially noting that he helped in over 1,000 convictions as a result of the 1989 debacle while exactly zero indictments have been handed down as a result of the current banking crisis, much less prosecuted and convicted. (I guess Madoff doesn't count because he wasn't part of the banking fiasco.)
His opinions of and litany of the grossly incompetant recommendations by the economists who have helped formulate & direct policy for the past three administrations and the current administration is damning, as is his analysis of how the banking system is tied together. No surprise there, as we have been following and highlighting these issues in this forum for years.
His observations and prognostications for the next two years are not encouraging in terms of the economy, as he expects further failures to continue to shock the whole system, while the only people in power who could make a positive impact for corrective actions - are few and far between.
My own observation is that guys like Phil Black are great at what they do and should have more influence on policy, but that they are also very, very prone to be co-opted by one side or the other, in spite of their unwillingness to be used as political pawns.
Added: One last question occurs to me. Does anyone here know what John McCain's actual involvement was in the Keating 5 Scandal, and exactly why he was absolved (sorta) as only having had "bad judgement" instead of being found guilty of inappropriately trying to influence the ongoing prosecutions of Lincoln Savings & Loan? What did he do and not do? Anyone know? Just curious.
I knew it would happen.
"Interest rates, the price of money, are the most important market. And, perversely, they’re the market that’s most manipulated by the Fed." - Doug Casey
<< <i> the Community Reinvestment Act which he says did not contribute in a major way to create the present crisis. I lost track of how he disconnects that from the fact that 40% of all housing loans in 2006 (or 2007) were sub-prime. >>
The CRA banned banks from "red lining" poor neighborhoods...meaning they would only take deposits from those people, but make no loans. The CRA loans were mostly made in poor black neighborhoods, average mortgage $20,000...mostly to remodel exisiting homes.
The CRA requires the appropriate federal financial supervisory agencies to encourage regulated financial institutions to meet the credit needs of the local communities in which they are chartered, consistent with safe and sound operation. There are no quotas and never a requirement that money be loaned to people who are not credit worthy.
The subprime loans that caused most of the trouble were for new houses in new subdivisions, to people who could barely make the "teaser" first year payments...which often did not even cover the interest (negative amortization) When the normal interest rate kicked in, the payments were unaffordable. But the realtor, builder, appraiser, and bank that packaged the loans all got their commissions and service fees, so they didn't care what happened to the buyer.
FBI had this on record in 2004 as a major "meltdown"!
Obama doing policy through the Fed to avoid congress.
I was not clear on Mr Black's fix? He did mention CEO compensation many times as being "root of all evil".
roadrunner
Yes, Frank - I understand that explanation but the question is why it happened and to whom. My question would be whether or not the CRA was involved in those cases as well. My understanding to date is that the banks were intimidated by the regulators into providing those loans in neighborhoods to people who didn't qualify. And that is subject to interpretation depending on which ideology you follow. That's been my opinion until I learn otherwise.
Obama doing policy through the Fed to avoid congress.
Black does mention the tactic of using existing banking regulations to enforce the correct policies, even though the statutes have been repealed or made weaker. I am not sure that I would ever agree to having regs that are inconsistant with existing law or vice versa. That simply leads to the very overstepping by regulatory agencies that Black himself criticized in the video.
I was not clear on Mr Black's fix?
I took him to say that he would utilize existing banking regulations, which were not removed when the laws were repealed or weakened. Why not just re-enact the post-depression Glass Stegal Act along with any modern tweaks that might make sense? There's also the issue of private, non-exchange traded funds and transactions. Would private transactions be regulated, and would that be considered an obstruction of free enterprise?
He did mention CEO compensation many times as being "root of all evil".
He referred to CEO compensation as a problem, but I thought he described CEO corruption as one of the biggest problems. I forget what he said the remedy for those problems would be.
I knew it would happen.