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Banks Gone Wild
"What were they smoking?" asks the cover of the current issue of Fortune magazine. Underneath the headline are photos of recently deposed Wall Street titans, captioned with the staggering sums they managed to lose.
The answer, of course, is that they were high on the usual drug — greed. And they were encouraged to make socially destructive decisions by a system of executive compensation that should have been reformed after the Enron and WorldCom scandals, but wasn't.
In a direct sense, the carnage on Wall Street is all about the great housing slump.
This slump was both predictable and predicted. "These days," I wrote in August 2005, "Americans make a living selling each other houses, paid for with money borrowed from the Chinese. Somehow, that doesn't seem like a sustainable lifestyle." It wasn't.
But even as the danger signs multiplied, Wall Street piled into bonds backed by dubious home mortgages. Most of the bad investments now shaking the financial world seem to have been made in the final frenzy of the housing bubble, or even after the bubble began to deflate.
In fact, according to Fortune, Merrill Lynch made its biggest purchases of bad debt in the first half of this year — after the subprime crisis had already become public knowledge.
Now the bill is coming due, and almost everyone — that is, almost everyone except the people responsible — is having to pay.
The losses suffered by shareholders in Merrill, Citigroup, Bear Stearns and so on are the least of it. Far more important in human terms are the hundreds of thousands if not millions of American families lured into mortgage deals they didn't understand, who now face sharp increases in their payments — and, in many cases, the loss of their houses — as their interest rates reset.
And then there's the collateral damage to the economy.
You still hear occasional claims that the subprime fiasco is no big deal. Even though the numbers keep getting bigger — some observers are now talking about $400 billion in losses — these losses are small compared with the total value of financial assets.
But bad housing investments are crippling financial institutions that play a crucial role in providing credit, by wiping out much of their capital. In a recent report, Goldman Sachs suggested that housing-related losses could force banks and other players to cut lending by as much as $2 trillion — enough to trigger a nasty recession, if it happens quickly.
Beyond that, there's a pervasive loss of trust, which is like sand thrown in the gears of the financial system. The crisis of confidence is plainly visible in the market data: there's an almost unprecedented spread between the very low interest rates investors are willing to accept on U.S. government debt — which is still considered safe — and the much higher interest rates at which banks are willing to lend to each other.
How did things go so wrong?
Part of the answer is that people who should have been alert to the dangers, and taken precautionary measures, instead blithely assured Americans that everything was fine, and even encouraged them to take out risky mortgages. Yes, Alan Greenspan, that means you.
But another part of the answer lies in what hasn't happened to the men on that Fortune cover — namely, they haven't been forced to give back any of the huge paychecks they received before the folly of their decisions became apparent.
Around 25 years ago, American business — and the American political system — bought into the idea that greed is good. Executives are lavishly rewarded if the companies they run seem successful: last year the chief executives of Merrill and Citigroup were paid $48 million and $25.6 million, respectively.
But if the success turns out to have been an illusion — well, they still get to keep the money. Heads they win, tails we lose.
Not only is this grossly unfair, it encourages bad risk-taking, and sometimes fraud. If an executive can create the appearance of success, even for a couple of years, he will walk away immensely wealthy. Meanwhile, the subsequent revelation that appearances were deceiving is someone else's problem.
If all this sounds familiar, it should. The huge rewards executives receive if they can fake success are what led to the great corporate scandals of a few years back. There's no indication that any laws were broken this time — but the public's trust was nonetheless betrayed, once again.
The point is that the subprime crisis and the credit crunch are, in an important sense, the result of our failure to effectively reform corporate governance after the last set of scandals.
John Edwards recently came out with a corporate reform plan, but it didn't receive a lot of attention. Corporate governance still isn't regarded as a major political issue. But it should be.
Paul Krugman is Professor of Economics at Princeton University and a regular New York Times columnist. His most recent book is The Conscience of a Liberal.
© 2007 The New York Times
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Show AllThe last/'great' Depression was rigged, also -- and 'equalized' the massive war&NewWorld-profits back-overseas (along with most of our gold, made available by the blackmailed-Wilson -- forced to support both the FedReserve-scam and our entry into a 'Balfour-inspired'-war). But that depression served many-purposes, otherwise -- including laying the groundwork for entry into the next/'great'-War (serving same-Interests, btw), as a revitalized/massively-'energized', and focused war-machine/economy -- as the world had never-seen.
So, don't look for 'one/primary-Motive/beneficiary' back any of 'This' or 'That' that rightfully-disturb you. Look for 'many' -- as most Policy and bad-Governance is at a Nexus of disparate (but surely Interest-serving) Machinations.
http://www.ahealedplanet.net/savings.htm#enron
The-above gives real-insight into the fraud behind most-changes/Deregulation since WW-II (especially when coupled with the man's Historical-insights/interpretations -- see Index and Links). A long-read, but part of the grounding needed to actually 'understand' what has happened within our once-comfortable 'World' -- and our place-in-it.
The Complexity behind 'neo' Politico/Economic-steering is part of what enables-it. Most Americans are too-engaged on their 'treadmills' (or have too-much to 'lose' by any struggle-against), and/or are too 'dumbed-down' or confused/divided to unbalance their over-simplified 'world-view'/self-image -- the Public, therefore, cannot Unify to defeat changes that already have 'great Inertia', and work in-concert. And, all these 'changes' are so-rapid, that once one 'responds' to One, Two-others are already 'sneaking-through'.
What is 'wrong' is, essentially, what is also 'right' -- Capitalism, and its corporate-enactment. But, a Capitalism that is now controlled/steered due to its 'Checks/Balances' and needed-Regulations having been long-gutted. This allows a tiny-minority (if/when acting with deliberateness and in-concert) of the 'already-Empowered' to tilt the playing-field in any direction serving their Interests. 'They' are now unfettered by past-needs to serve any Public-Interests proportionate to their-own, and that has 'given wings to their dreams' (leaving the rest of us to die in the Dust).
Solutions generally-forwarded here range from the naive/partial to the ridiculous. I believe that is primarily due to the extremes of 'divisionary-tactics' that this System has deliberately-fostered (with our 'two-party'-joke, demise in Education, MSM-input, Propaganda, injected 'Generational-Gaps', etc.). The 'Interests of the Many' simply have no-chance for being addressed -- although far-Greater/more-Legitimate, their strength is their-weakness. This is because they cannot Unite into a cohesive/shared 'force' in exerting/obtaining their Will (while the tiny-'Them' can easily decide on their-Interests and manipulate all-others into inadvertent 'cooperation').
I can't imagine what it would take, at this juncture, to 'turn the tide'. Mass-education and a cooperative/unified-Demand for the return to an acceptable-degree of 'Public-Interests, Served' seems like an 'impossible dream'. Results for the "American Experiment" are in -- the People have long-lost and will "inherit the wind", and a few/new aristocrats and corporate-Interests will then move-on to join old-Peers in leading the masses with the 'actualized'&tired Old-'Mythos' ('Enlightenment' has ended).
[It could/should have been 'different', methinks...we Americans failed in 'guarding-well our real-Inheritance'...]
I think the solution to the world's problems is to shoot everyone wearing a necktie, but be sure to get the red neckties first. Try it, and you'll see that I'm right!
Kem wrote: "We need a king or a queen. Or, one who could handle both roles. As long as we have one who isn't evil, selfish, a damn crook and stupid."
Kem, if it's any King besides B.B. or Queen besides Latifah, we're in for trouble. Of course, electing the Queen of Mean, Leona Helmsley, as our first US Queen-For-Life has certain entertaining aspects to it, now that she's dead, especially changing the national motto from "E Pluribus Unim" to the more truthful, "Only Little People Pay Taxes!" -- why, just think of all the defaced statuary!
OneParty wrote: "Reading the fine print might work if most people could understand it. Most people cannot. The Corporate Party (most Dems and most Repubs)could change this, if only they wanted to."
Years ago in my Age of Computer Innocence, I signed up for a free trial of AOL. I read the fine print where it said your credit card would not be charged for service unless you authorized the charge. I never authorized any charges and, when the free trial was up, I tried to cancel my account at the AOL home page, AKA the Orwellian Nightmare. Every time I clicked on the button to cancel, it sent me to a page thanking me for choosing AOL and listing all the benefits of AOL membership. I finally called the miscreants. Two shaves later, I got someone on the line from Billing and told them to cancel the account; they told me I had to go online to cancel. (See above.) Ultimately, after much frustration, Mrs. Himmler in Billing said she would cancel my account. A month later a charge was on my credit card bill for a month's AOL service. After much wrangling with my credit card company, they finally refused to pay AOL. Then the calls started from AOL Billing, trying to get me to either pay for a month of service I didn't want or to upgrade my account. I won't bore you further, but reading and understanding the fine print often means nothing. I'm not the only one who has had these kinds of experiences with AOL and other US businesses not living up to their end of the bargain.
"I think the solution to the world's problems is to shoot everyone wearing a necktie, but be sure to get the red neckties first. Try it, and you'll see that I'm right!"
Grousefeather, good idea, but I'd go after the yellow 'power tie' club first. Personally, I only wear a necktie when attending weddings and funerals which, if you think about it, are eerily similar events.
What will happen when masses of people realize they can, or because of circumstances must, stop paying bills to the banks and creditors? There will be a meltdown that makes the Great Depression seem like a mild "correction". This is the looming crisis that will bring big changes. There are not enough bill collectors in the world to convince people to pay bills they don't have the money to pay. Credit ratings are meaningless to folks in that position. As long as the illusion of endless credit and the need to pay on it exists the bubble continues. I think it is about to burst. The housing crisis was just the first little pop in the big bang.
Goliath is falling.
Its not that complicated.....this happens when government doesn't do its real job. It happens when you let buffoons like Cheney, et al deregulate business and cripple oversight. These regulations were put in place after the Depression for a good reason.
ME ALSO TOO,
Please consider letting down the burden of pessimism, as there may be much BE'ing that we can accomplish without access to wealth, power and privilege. The HAVING and DOING portions of existence are floating upon the context of BEING - which we all have intrinsically. We need all hands "on deck".
The criminal enterprises bringing suffering to ALL can only have existence out of each us individually granting them acceptance, of their massive media distortions, propaganda, authoritarian control, fluff, materialism, and attachments. We do create our own world(s), in every moment and because its the overwhelming majority that suffer, we also DO have the power to make changes - all that it takes is BEING connection, abundance, and LOVE - and the rejection of the myths of scarcity and separation.
When we each move forward in committed action, aligned with a consensus and context of peaceful living, discounting the naysayers and dross of DARKNESS, we will gradually enlighten our load and lead each other to the LIGHT. Remember that we are HUMAN BEINGs 1st and foremost, spiritual souls living a physical existence.
We have a proposal to greet each as a blessing, celebrating and acknowledging each other's light, and this BEING in the ONENESS of the LIGHT. Please follow this link here to learn more about my salutation Namaste below.
Namaste
Right on AWAKEN, which is really a damn shame. Based upon the signs, I figure it will hit us about March or April of next year. I sincerely do "hope" we are both wrong. Hope is a nice word, and a necessity, when one's chute doesn't open.
To site monitor:
You took down my noon posting. This is amazing. Common Dreams is now deleting posts that call for passive resistance in the face of this current bushco nazi régime. Amazing.
Likely a lawsuit avoidance approach, which is in some ways IS good, to allow this site to stay open - for less controversial postings.
Please consider use of indirection, or leading similarly minded ones to a common electronic meeting place elsewhere, to be un-impeded.
Namaste
Kem, it's always possible we'll get lucky like that New Zealand sky diver and hit a bramble bush, breaking our 5,000-foot fall. I definitely know that no allegedly human named Bush will save us, so we'll just have to count on vegetation. (I know, it's sometimes hard to tell the difference.)
We can only hope Hillary, Barack or John Boy will transmogrify into FDR when they hit the Oval Office. Dennis is primed and ready, but can he get the votes?
Hi RSJ. Dennis? not very likely unless the press faired up 1,000% and that is not likely either. (I never remember how to spell special K's his last name ether.)
Bet that sky diver was hoping. Of course it wasn't hope that saved him, ___ it was luck.
I work in corporate accounting. More regulation doesn't work - we have regulation coming out our ears, and it didn't stop the derivatives mess. They will put in regulation, but negotiate language just vague enough to cause things like the derivatives mess.
So what do you do now, as an individual and as an investor. Here's my list:
1. Sell your home now, and rent. I promise you, you will be able to buy a home much cheaper in 4 years. Plus, you'll need to move anyway.
2. Liquidate your IRA and 401K to cash, and pay the taxes and penalty. If you don't, it will be sucked into a banking crisis eventually.
3. With your cash, have 15% in cold hard $20's in a safe in your house. Have another 50% in American Eagle gold coins, in a safe, in your house.
4. Take the other 35% and put it in two brokerage accounts, either Fidelity or Schwab for one (good capitalization) and a foreign brokerage like Europacific Capital for the other. Buy Proshares Ultrashort Financial ETF's with the Schwab account. Invest the Europacific account in Singapore Petroleum and Asian utility stocks.
5. Relax. You have now bulletproofed your portfolio. Live frugally and watch everyone else go through the carnage of bank runs, frozen brokerage accounts, repossessions, and hyperinflation. It will be ugly.
Fazsha, by 'good capitalization' you mean no exposure to SIV's CDO's MBS's etc? Thanks!
I still like the idea of owning property to bury that gold under.
If we rent a house we can have both, and all of those attachments did need to go regardless.
Namast
UhhHH FAZSHA,___ you forgot to post your address.
Anyone attempted to sell their house lately? The selling market is not real good at the moment and likely won't be good in the next four years, it's worse than 1982. For a goodly number, one half actually, they now owe more for their five bedroom, four baths, formal dining, bay windows, three car garage, with a tiny yard, than they could possibly sell it for. Over half of the adjustable rate mortgage holders are three months behind on their house payments.
Perhaps the best thing to do, is insure you have adequate insurance and pray for a tornado or forest fire. Take the money the insurance company finally offers, buy a tent and some sleeping bags, a fishing rod and run for the hills before the depression hits. No torando or forest fire, the prayers didn't hack the mission? Find some empty refrigerator boxes, stuff em with newspapers and get some candles at the dollar store. ___ Then pray again, ___ pray harder, Bush says it works. You can trust him.
Got shovel?
For my bull or Bushs'?
Golden opportunities await those who know where to dig
americas debt is a burden for the whole world
the sooner this rotten system collapses the better
While many of the still blind and ignorant stab fingers at the opposing political party in blame...a world government is being created all around them. Those who are bouncing endlessly off the walls of an illusion fail to see the false left-right paradigm that has been manufactured for them.
This manufactured and prepackaged illusion is like a cage suspended in the middle of a house of mirrors that reflects only images created by the corporate controlled media for their sponsors at the military industrial banking complex.
Everything that is happening is an illusion designed to rattle the cage of the false paradigm. The sheeple who live in the cage will react like lab rats and scurry through a prefabricated maze of staged events like 9/11, sub-prime and my favorite, the devaluation of the fiat dollar by a pain/reward response of less freedom more security.
Like all creatures who avoid pain the sheeple or lab rats, blindly stampede through the maze never knowing that their course was pre-mapped, pre-scripted and post-produced by their cage builders with lights, sound and the all inspiring music bed.
The poor and unsuppecting creatures or "useless eaters", as our cage builders like to call us, will be forced to race insanely through their gauntlant of perilous props until we all screech to a halt in a frozen awe and wonder at the glimmering spectacle and pageantry of our new cage of security...the AMERO and the North American Union. All bought to you by...our fine sponsors, world government Inc.
Here's a great idea... Let's outsource millions of jobs to Asia and import tens of millions of "non documented workers" to take whatever jobs Citizens still have left then we can blame the Citizens of being bad credit risks as they default on their loans... Meanwhile, the banks can repo restate and get free cash from the Fed to further drive down the dollar so we can make the case for a new currency! We can call it the Amero!
Can you get behind the spirit of this wonderful idea?
In spite of what caused these banks, bankers and mortgage brokers to take an immoral plunge into this debacle, a small but growing number of people are leaning toward a negative growth economy.
A negative growth economy makes sense in many ways, if the idea won't please any of these typically Libertarian economists today.
A negative growth economy would eventually end the war, if the demand for oil declined considerably, and if the demand for everything else went down too. A negative growth economy would end much of the greed is good paradigm of our existence. There would be an end to bubble economies.
Still, the most appealing aspect of the movement toward a negative growth economy is that we all would be taking a moral step toward preserving something of this world for the future.
Don Robertson, The American Philosopher
Tese guys for the most part don't worship Mammon...It's Baal. The moneychangers from Christ's day have only become more hitech. Same tribe
Mr. Krugman styles the current crisis as mainly a matter of greed - excessive executive compensation - "corporate governance."
But -even though his latest book portrays him as a "liberal," there is no hint of a suggestion on his part for DIRECT relief for the tens thousands of people lured into buying homes whose monthly payments they could not afford as their monthly mortgage payments escalate due to interest rate adjustments.
Dean Baker has suggested a government program to permit such homebuyers to stay on as renters at a market rental. A better idea is a federally-guaranteed emergency loan program with locked-in, lower-than-market interest rates.
Such a program would, of course, amount to rewarding such homebuyers for bad home purchase decisions - a "moral hazard." And, it would probably have to be be devised so as also to underwrite the holders/seller of these endangered mortgages, in the "sliced-and-diced" CMO form (and other forms) in which they've been marketed worldwide - another moral hazard, on top of the direct bailout of the banks and speculators (hedge funds,e.g.) given thus far by the federal reserve.
But such steps will probably have to be taken to avoid the millions - perhaps billions - of dollars in direct economic costs and in social disruption would result from the predicted defaults of so many homeowners.
I don't wish to seem rude, but liberalism is more than "I-told-you-so" Chicken-Little ranting in newspaper columns and on the internet by academic or media-bound lukewarm neo-Keynesian economists like the estimable Paul Krugman and Robert Shiller.
Liberalism -at its most potent, as in the FDR-"New Deal" version which saved the U.S. from class warfare in the 1930s - that New Deal liberalism -- warning, what follows here is a dirty word, even to many liberals at the New York Times - means "PLANNED," directed intervention in a modern economy in such a way that said economy functions in an equitable, efficient and non-self-destructive manner. It functions with capitalist means but a socialistic aim: "business and finance and ecnomomics AS IF PEOPLE MATTER.("Regarding "non-self-destructive" - i.e., modern interventionist liberalism gains an insight from both Marx and from Keynes - and others - that the "price system" [alternate tag for capitalism, courtesy of Thorsten Veblen] can and does inevitably function in ways both directly destructive to itself - and indirectly destructive to itself - in the second case, by destroying the socio-political systems in which all centralized, instituionalized controlling operations, be they government, business, finance, the mass media (in our culture) - even religion ( in some societies) - are embedded.)
"Oversight," "transparency," "corporate governance reform," even "regulation" - they are not enough, however badly deficient the current highly financialized version of capitalism we are now stuck with needs all four of them. "Planning" as described above is essential to avoid a major socioeconomic crash in the U.S. in the next generation.
Good idea MARCO, it probably wouldn't fly though, I mean who could ever get it started.