Where's the controversy in this bill?I love the notion of a bank-funded bailout reserve. And the requirement that banks hold x% of the derivatives they create.Call me cynical, but I think the reason why I've not read of any specific Republican complaints is because there are no specific Republican complaints.
4/26/2010 8:56:40 PM
Hey, if the GOP wants to keep making front page news during election season like this, be my guest.And there doesn't need to be controversial, they'll just make up reasons, like we shouldn't do more than one thing at once is a good reason to avoid addressing climate change:http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2010/04/24/graham-move-imperils-obama-push-for-immigration-reform-climate-change/?fbid=CeukDESvFZn
4/26/2010 9:23:19 PM
4/27/2010 12:22:02 AM
4/27/2010 1:13:39 AM
one legit complaint i have heard (though not all that much) is that there's an exemption for fannie and freddie.dems claim that they want to do that in a separate bill.this is the sort of thing that republicans could harp on if they let the bill come to the floor.but i think they know that this issue is a winner for the dems in the long run. so they'd rather make the dems look powerless as long as possible and filibuster the motion to bring the bill to the floor.^yet you just said this:
4/27/2010 1:16:16 AM
4/27/2010 10:13:49 AM
4/27/2010 10:24:09 AM
4/27/2010 10:31:52 AM
4/27/2010 10:51:57 AM
#1 should be the goal. If you shrink the banks down to a reasonable size through reasonable legislation (mostly around what they're required to hold as reserves) then the impact of a failed bank is minor. The shareholders eat it, but any valuable assets will be picked off by better banks. In addition, the guarantee that there will be no external bailout ever will make banks much less likely to take on risk. By saying "oh, well, if you go down we'll bail you out" or "oh, well, if you go down these other banks will bail you out" does nothing to discourage risk taking.
4/27/2010 10:57:59 AM
Paul Ryan is aguing against this bill bc it encourages wreckless behavior. Basically if you are "to big to fail", you are backed with taxpayer money at that point. Thus you are less risky to investors/lenders and then have access to cheaper credit. So the incentive is to become "to big to fail".I agree with Loneshark completely. But I do like the idea of banks having to hold a percentage of thier own derivatives. But I fail to see where that will protect taxpayers. Maybe one of you could explain that to me.
4/27/2010 10:59:02 AM
Explain the shrinkage via reserve requirements thing, please?Because when I think of breaking up too-big-to-fail banks, I think if the gov't chopping up banks that meet an arbitrary capital cut-off.
4/27/2010 11:13:41 AM
Prior to the 1850s, bailouts were the norm. The bank of England was required by law to bailout large firms. As a result, every decade or so, the same people would show up for a bailout with ever larger losses. Then, for whatever reason, the English Government changed its mind, legislation was passed outlawing future bailouts. Within the decade these same financial actors showed up yet again for a bailout, but none was forthcoming, costing their creditors dearly. They never went into business again, and while recessions still occurred, the financial system of England was no longer the chief cause. For 120 years, bailouts were unheard of. Banks didn't even bother asking for them. Bad banks harmed only themselves and their creditors. As such, for all that time, creditors kept a watchful eye on those they loaned money to. Bad actors were put to death early by creditors cutting off the supply of credit, early enough for losses to be absorbed by shareholders. But not while bailouts are legal. Well, here we are, having forgot our history, eager to play the game again. Eager to suffer decade after decade of ever larger leverage induced collapses, until we yet again learn our lesson.
4/27/2010 11:21:07 AM
Requiring that banks have the reserves to payout everything owed to customers will mean that they'll take on less risk and/or be required to shrink the size of investments they do with customer money in order to meet the requirementsEx: in the past, I give my money to a bank, they invest that money in a pack of subprime mortgages (thats insured by the same or another bank). Turns out the pack of mortgages is worthless, the insurer cant pay out insurance, the bank i gave my money to goes under, and im left holding the billPreferably, it would go something like this in the future. I give my money to a bank, they're required to keep my money available, so they invest it in something safer than a pack of sub prime mortgages. Or lets say they do invest it in subprimes, then the amount of the payout for insurance on that package is held in reserve by the insurer. So when everyone realizes the package was worthless, the insurer eats it for taking on too much risk, but they still payout the full insurance amount to my bank. My bank may eat it on part of the investment, but my money is still there. Saying "Banks over x inches tall may not ride" or whatever arbitrary capital size limit doesn't actually touch the risk side of things. A bunch of small, but risky banks would not be as good as larger but much less risky banks. By limiting risk, you limit the apparant size of the bank and protect customers at the same time.
4/27/2010 11:28:40 AM
How do you expect to limit the amount of risk banks take?
4/27/2010 11:44:51 AM
By requiring that they hold the reserves to payback their obligations and removing all possibility of bailouts. I mean i just posted it.In the insurance example, if an insurer knows theres no possibility of bailout and that they must keep on hand reserves to payout all insurance claims, they will 1. insure fewer things because they have limited reserves and 2. insure less risky things because they dont want to risk their limited reserves when they know there wont be any bailouts.
4/27/2010 11:49:45 AM
^^ How the banks manage to serve the demand for safety from their creditors is their business. The nice thing about this whole ordeal is we don't need to pass any fancy laws beyond outlawing bailouts. The creditors will handle it from there. Either by demanding insurance, only lending to sound institutions, or only lending money they can stand to lose.
4/27/2010 11:56:05 AM
Q: What steps can we take to save the world?A: THE MARKET!!!
4/27/2010 11:58:23 AM
^ you're right, we should just continue the government's solution of rewarding failures
4/27/2010 12:01:21 PM
The fractional reserve banking system is what needs to change, along with our central bank wiring money to who knows where. You won't see many politicians pushing for that legislation, though.
4/27/2010 12:23:52 PM
5^You can't completely eliminate risk. Banks can't make money (or loan money) if they need to keep 100% of every customer's assets on hand for payout. Same with insurers.
4/27/2010 1:00:21 PM
Fractional banking needs to stay. The percentage just needs to change and should be more fluid. Bailouts need to be outlawed.
4/27/2010 1:14:30 PM
http://www.alternet.org/economy/146428/speculating_banks_still_rule__ten_ways_dems_and_dodd_are_failing_on_financial_reform
4/27/2010 1:16:55 PM
Can somebody break it down to me how the FDIC would supposedly cover everyone's money if some of the big banks failed?Aren't there trillions of dollars in checking and savings accounts, under the $250k limit, in the country?Whereas the FDIC has what, a couple hundred billion to supposedly cover the loss of...trillions of dollars?[Edited on April 27, 2010 at 1:26 PM. Reason : keywords: "if some of the big banks failed"]
4/27/2010 1:26:30 PM
4/27/2010 1:29:47 PM
^^ in that situation, there would just be a bailout ala 2008.
4/27/2010 1:47:54 PM
4/27/2010 2:13:09 PM
Tree, its just one of many empty, unfunded, promises to make you feel better. (I think its mostly there to prevent runs on banks, which will crash things)
4/27/2010 2:26:59 PM
^^ So do you think Goldman Sachs did anything fraudulent?obviously its still early, and the hearings may or may not bring more to light. I agree that a good bit of it is probably posturing and trying to appear tough on the banks.
4/27/2010 2:34:55 PM
I don't know, and this isn't the way to find out OR make a constructive way forward.[Edited on April 27, 2010 at 2:48 PM. Reason : holy fuck, if they've asked 100 questions, they've only allowed them to answer about 2 of them][Edited on April 27, 2010 at 2:49 PM. Reason : cutting them off and putting words in their mouths irritates the shit out of me]
4/27/2010 2:46:51 PM
All Obama has to say is that he is going to change regulation so that it's somewhere between Bush and Reagan.
4/27/2010 7:29:54 PM
because bush and reagan have such good records regarding bank regulation.also heard a good this american life from a couple weeks ago where they talked about magnetar. this firm basically funded the most risky parts of CDOs -- thus making them more likely to happen (and often influencing investment managers to make the CDOs MORE risky). They then shorted the CDOs more than they had invested to begin with and made billions.the propublica article about it:http://www.propublica.org/feature/all-the-magnetar-trade-how-one-hedge-fund-helped-keep-the-housing-bubble[Edited on April 27, 2010 at 7:36 PM. Reason : .][Edited on April 27, 2010 at 7:37 PM. Reason : .]
4/27/2010 7:33:18 PM
Quick poll: how many of you would support legislation that would make it illegal to buy insurance (via a CDS or some other product) on a product you don't own? I know that was only a contributing factor to the crisis, but the fact that that was and still is legal blows my mind.
4/27/2010 7:37:09 PM
sign me up!^also see the story i posted for info on how that may have been a bigger part of this than you thought before. they posit that magnetar propped up a CDO market that was looking like it was in decline in 2005 through 2006 into 2007 and the crash -- making the crash far more severe.[Edited on April 27, 2010 at 7:40 PM. Reason : .]
4/27/2010 7:39:13 PM
Yeah, the Planet Money peeps did a big thing on This American Life about the Pro Publica piece last week. You should check it out if you haven't already.
4/27/2010 7:44:39 PM
4/27/2010 9:05:02 PM
4/27/2010 9:50:44 PM
Bring back the Glass–Steagall Act
4/27/2010 10:34:37 PM
4/27/2010 10:49:54 PM
Posturing. Seems like reality doesn't match with the public narrative:
4/28/2010 7:45:54 AM
From the correspondences of Fabricio "Fab" Tourre, VP of Goldman Sachs:
4/28/2010 12:20:24 PM
Republicans drop filibuster!these guys are getting killed, i think the whole point was to score some points after getting their asses handed to them over healthcare but they just made it infinitely worse
4/28/2010 10:18:34 PM
The finance bill is weak sauce, but not in the ways the repubs are saying.It's dumb to block the feds from bailing out the banks. If the banks screw up and go bankrupt, that is OUR money. That's how banks work. If banks lose money, the people lose money. That is BAD.What needs to happen is to ramp up monitoring of the bankers and personally punish them for cheating the systems, or shorting assets that they are still trying to sell other people.Protect peoples' money, but eliminate golden parachutes.
4/28/2010 10:22:16 PM
4/29/2010 1:01:56 AM
moron, stop trolling. you know damn well banks already have a bailout agency known as the FDIC. As to your idea of monitoring, what good does government monitoring do when it was the government pushing them to engage in the bad behavior in question? At no point did monitoring fail, no one who bothered looking didn't know bankers were leveraging heavily into mortgages.
4/29/2010 1:53:21 AM
4/29/2010 7:46:34 AM
President Obama: "I want to be clear, we’re not trying to push financial reform because we begrudge success that's fairly earned. I mean, I do think at a certain point you've made enough money.""Fairly earned"? does he mean legally earned or earned with some sort of "social justice" tied to it?And when did it become the President's job to decide when you've made enough money?
4/30/2010 12:20:17 AM
he has an opinion. he's allowed to have an opinion. he signs the bills that he wants from the congress.
4/30/2010 12:29:44 AM
4/30/2010 1:13:14 AM
5/1/2010 12:13:44 PM