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Not with a Bang, but a Whimper: Bank of America’s Death Rattle
Bob Ivry, Hugh Son and Christine Harper have written an article that needs to be read by everyone interested in the financial crisis. The article (available here) is entitled: BofA Said to Split Regulators Over Moving Merrill Derivatives to Bank Unit. The thrust of their story is that Bank of America’s holding company, BAC, has directed the transfer of a large number of troubled financial derivatives from its Merrill Lynch subsidiary to the federally insured bank Bank of America (BofA). The story reports that the Federal Reserve supported the transfer and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) opposed it. Yves Smith of Naked Capitalism has written an appropriately blistering attack on this outrageous action, which puts the public at substantially increased risk of loss.
BAC continues to deteriorate and the credit rating agencies have been downgrading it because of its bad assets, particularly its derivatives. BAC’s answer is to “transfer” the bad derivatives to the insured bank – transforming (ala Ireland) a private debt into a public debt. (photo: Wonderlane)
I write to add some context, point out additional areas of inappropriate actions, and add a regulatory perspective gained from dealing with analogous efforts by holding companies to foist dangerous affiliate transactions on insured depositories. I’ll begin by adding some historical context to explain how B of A got into this maze of affiliate conflicts.
Ken Lewis’ “Scorched Earth” Campaign against B of A’s Shareholders
Acquiring Countrywide: the High Cost of CEO Adolescence
During this crisis, Ken Lewis went on a buying spree designed to allow him to brag that his was not simply bigger, but the biggest. Bank of America’s holding company – BAC – became the acquirer of last resort. Lewis began his war on BAC’s shareholders by ordering an artillery salvo on BAC’s own position. What better way was there to destroy shareholder value than purchasing the most notorious lender in the world – Countrywide. Countrywide was in the midst of a death spiral. The FDIC would soon have been forced to pay an acquirer tens of billions of dollars to induce it to take on Countrywide’s nearly limitless contingent liabilities and toxic assets. Even an FDIC-assisted acquisition would have been a grave mistake. Acquiring thousands of Countrywide employees whose primary mission was to make fraudulent and toxic loans was an inelegant form of financial suicide. It also revealed the negligible value Lewis placed on ethics and reputation.
But Lewis did not wait to acquire Countrywide with FDIC assistance. He feared that a rival would acquire it first and win the CEO bragging contest about who had the biggest, baddest bank. His acquisition of Countrywide destroyed hundreds of billions of dollars of shareholder value and led to massive foreclosure fraud by what were now B of A employees.
But there are two truly scary parts of the story of B of A’s acquisition of Countrywide that have received far too little attention. B of A claims that it conducted extensive due diligence before acquiring Countrywide and discovered only minor problems. If that claim is true, then B of A has been doomed for years regardless of whether it acquired Countrywide. The proposed acquisition of Countrywide was huge and exceptionally controversial even within B of A. Countrywide was notorious for its fraudulent loans. There were numerous lawsuits and former employees explaining how these frauds worked.
B of A is really “Nations Bank” (formerly named NCNB). When Nations Bank acquired B of A (the San Francisco based bank), the North Carolina management took complete control. The North Carolina management decided that “Bank of America” was the better brand name, so it adopted that name. The key point to understand is that Nations/NCNB was created through a large series of aggressive mergers, so the bank had exceptional experience in conducting due diligence of targets for acquisition and it would have sent its top team to investigate Countrywide given its size and notoriety. The acquisition of Countrywide did not have to be consummated exceptionally quickly. Indeed, the deal had an “out” that allowed B of A to back out of the deal if conditions changed in an adverse manner (which they obviously did). If B of A employees conducted extensive due diligence of Countrywide and could not discover its obvious, endemic frauds, abuses, and subverted systems then they are incompetent. Indeed, that word is too bloodless a term to describe how worthless the due diligence team would have had to have been. Given the many acquisitions the due diligence team vetted, B of A would have been doomed because it would have routinely been taken to the cleaners in those earlier deals.
That scenario, the one B of A presents, is not credible. It is far more likely that B of A’s senior management made it clear to the head of the due diligence review that the deal was going to be done and that his or her report should support that conclusion. This alternative explanation fits well with B of A’s actual decision-making. Countrywide’s (and B of A’s) reported financial condition fell sharply after the deal was signed. Lewis certainly knew that B of A’s actual financial condition was much worse than its reported financial condition and had every reason to believe that this difference would be even worse at Countrywide given its reputation for making fraudulent loans. B of A could have exercised its option to withdraw from the deal and saved vast amounts of money. Lewis, however, refused to do so. CEOs do not care only about money. Ego is a powerful driver of conduct, and CEOs can be obsessed with status, hierarchy, and power. Of course, Lewis knew he could walk away wealthy after becoming a engine of mass destruction of B of A shareholder value, so he could indulge his ego in a manner common to adolescent males.
Acquiring Merrill Lynch: the Lure of Liar’s Loans
Merrill Lynch is the quintessential example of why it was common for the investment banks to hold in portfolio large amounts of collateralized debt obligations (CDOs). Some observers have jumped to the naïve assumption that this indicates that the senior managers thought the CDOs were safe investments. The “recipe” for an investor maximizing reported income differs only slightly from the recipe for lenders.
- Grow rapidly by
- Holding poor quality assets that provide a premium nominal yield while
- Employing extreme leverage, and
- Providing only grossly inadequate allowances for future losses on the poor quality assets
Investment banks that followed this recipe (and most large U.S. investment banks did), were guaranteed to report record (albeit fictional) short-term income. That income was certain to produce extreme compensation for the controlling officers. The strategy was also certain to produce extensive losses in the longer term – unless the investment bank could sell its losing position to another entity that would then bear the loss.
The optimal means of committing this form of accounting control fraud was with the AAA-rated top tranche of CDOs. Investment banks frequently purport to base compensation on risk-adjusted return. If they really did so investment bankers would receive far less compensation. The art, of course, is to vastly understate the risk one is taking and attribute short-term reported gains to the officer’s brilliance in achieving supra-normal returns that are not attributable to increased risk (“alpha”). Some of the authors of Guaranteed to Fail call this process manufacturing “fake alpha.”
The authors are largely correct about “fake alpha.” The phrase and phenomenon are correct, but the mechanism they hypothesize for manufacturing fake alpha has no basis in reality. They posit honest gambles on “extreme tail” events likely to occur only in rare circumstances. They provide no real world examples. If risk that the top tranche of a CDO would suffer a material loss of market values was, in reality, extremely rare then it would be impossible to achieve a substantial premium yield. The strategy would diminish alpha rather than maximizing false alpha. The risk that the top tranche of a CDO would suffer a material loss in market value was highly probable. It was not a tail event, much less an “extreme tail” event. CDOs were commonly backed by liar’s loans and the incidence of fraud in liar’s loans was in the 90% range. The top tranches of CDOs were virtually certain to suffer severe losses as soon as the bubble stalled and refinancing was no longer readily available to delay the wave of defaults. Because liar’s loans were primarily made to borrowers who were not creditworthy and financially unsophisticated, the lenders had the negotiating leverage to charge premium yields. The officers controlling the rating agencies and the investment banks were complicit in creating a corrupt system for rating CDOs that maximized their financial interests by routinely providing AAA ratings to the top tranche of CDOs “backed” largely by fraudulent loans. The combination of the fake AAA rating and premium yield on the top tranche of fraudulently constructed (and sold) CDOs maximized “fake alpha” and made it the “sure thing” that is one of the characteristics of accounting control fraud (see Akerlof & Romer 1993; Black 2005). This is why many of the investment banks (and, eventually, Fannie and Freddie) held substantial amounts of the top tranches of CDOs. (A similar dynamic existed for lower tranches, but investment banks also found it much more difficult to sell the lowest tranches.)
Merrill Lynch was known for the particularly large CDO positions it retained in portfolio. These CDO positions doomed Merrill Lynch. B of A knew that Merrill Lynch had tremendous losses in its derivatives positions when it chose to acquire Merrill Lynch.
Given this context, only the Fed, and BAC, could favor the derivatives deal
Lewis and his successor, Brian Moynihan, have destroyed nearly one-half trillion dollars in BAC shareholder value. (See my prior post on the “Divine Right of Bank Profits…”) BAC continues to deteriorate and the credit rating agencies have been downgrading it because of its bad assets, particularly its derivatives. BAC’s answer is to “transfer” the bad derivatives to the insured bank – transforming (ala Ireland) a private debt into a public debt.
Banking regulators have known for well over a century about the acute dangers of conflicts of interest. Two related conflicts have generated special rules designed to protect the bank and the insurance fund. One restricts transactions with senior insiders and the other restricts transactions with affiliates. The scam is always the same when it comes to abusive deals with affiliates – they transfer bad (or overpriced) assets or liabilities to the insured institution. As S&L regulators, we recurrently faced this problem. For example, Ford Motor Company attempted to structure an affiliate transaction that was harmful to the insured S&L (First Nationwide). The bank, because of federal deposit insurance, typically has a higher credit rating than its affiliate corporations.
BAC’s request to transfer the problem derivatives to B of A was a no brainer – unfortunately, it was apparently addressed to officials at the Fed who meet that description. Any competent regulator would have said: “No, Hell NO!” Indeed, any competent regulator would have developed two related, acute concerns immediately upon receiving the request. First, the holding company’s controlling managers are a severe problem because they are seeking to exploit the insured institution. Second, the senior managers of B of A acceded to the transfer, apparently without protest, even though the transfer poses a severe threat to B of A’s survival. Their failure to act to prevent the transfer contravenes both their fiduciary duties of loyalty and care and should lead to their resignations.
Now here’s the really bad news. First, this transfer is a superb “natural experiment” that tests one of the most important questions central to the health of our financial system. Does the Fed represent and vigorously protect the interests of the people or the systemically dangerous institutions (SDIs) – the largest 20 banks? We have run a real world test. The sad fact is that very few Americans will be surprised that the Fed represented the interests of the SDIs even though they were directly contrary to the interests of the nation. The Fed’s constant demands for (and celebration of) “independence” from democratic government, combined with slavish dependence on and service to the CEOs of the SDIs has gone beyond scandal to the point of farce. I suggest organized “laugh ins” whenever Fed spokespersons prate about their “independence.”
Second, I would bet large amounts of money that I do not have that neither B of A’s CEO nor the Fed even thought about whether the transfer was consistent with the CEO’s fiduciary duties to B of A (v. BAC). We took depositions during the S&L debacle in which senior officials of Lincoln Savings and its affiliates were shocked when we asked “whose interests were you representing – the S&L or the affiliate?” They had obviously never even considered their fiduciary duties or identified their actual client. We blocked a transaction that would have caused grave injury to the insured S&L by taking the holding company (Pinnnacle West) off the hook for its obligations to the S&L. That transaction would have passed routinely, but we flew to the board of directors meeting of the S&L and reminded them that their fiduciary duty was to the S&L, that the transaction was clearly detrimental to the S&L and to the benefit of the holding company, and that we would sue them and take the most vigorous possible enforcement actions against them personally if they violated their fiduciary duties. That caused them to refuse to approve the transaction – which resulted in a $450 million payment from the holding company to the S&L. (I know, $450 million sounds quaint now in light of the scale of the ongoing crisis, but back then it paid for our salaries in perpetuity.)
Third, reread the Bloomberg column and wrap your mind around the size of Merrill Lynch’s derivatives positions. Next, consider that Merrill is only one, shrinking player in derivatives. Finally, reread Yves’ column in Naked Capitalism where she explains (correctly) that many derivatives cannot be used safely. Add to that my point about how they can be used to create a “sure thing” of record fictional profits, record compensation, and catastrophic losses. This is particularly true about credit default swaps (CDS) because of the grotesque accounting treatment that typically involves no allowances for future losses. (FASB: you must fix this urgently or you will allow a “perfect crime.”). It is insane that we did not pass a one sentence law repealing the Commodities Futures Modernization Act of 2000. Between the SDIs, the massive, sometimes inherently unsafe and largely opaque financial derivatives, the appointment, retention, and promotion of failed anti-regulators, and the continuing ability of elite control frauds to loot with impunity we are inviting recurrent, intensifying crises.
I’ll close with a suggestion and request to reporters. Please find out who within the Fed approved this deal and the exact composition of the assets and liabilities that were transferred.
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81 Comments so far
Show AllWilliam K. Black is the nation's foremost expert on white collar crime. During the S&L crisis he helped throw 1,000 bankers in prison. He's a major upgrade from the Reich, Nichols lilly-livered weak-tea misinformation contaminating CD.
I urge everyone to watch Mr. Black's video interviews most of which can be found on The Real News Network or You Tube.
In his most recent interview he calls out Paul Krugman for his "Tribal" affiliations and refusing to use the "F" word...FRAUD.
http://tinyurl.com/5sx5bjb
http://dailybail.com/home/must-see-dylan-ratigan-with-david-degraw-bill-black-we-put-t.html
Agreed. Black's work is magnificent, and devastating.
Bill Black was on Democracy Now this morning. Folks should check it out.
I will definitely be viewing that later this evening. I've watched every Bill Black interview at least three times.
Thank you William K. Black for articulation of clear witness.
"We took depositions during the S&L debacle in which senior officials of Lincoln Savings and its affiliates were shocked when we asked “whose interests were you representing – the S&L or the affiliate?” They had obviously never even considered their fiduciary duties or identified their actual client."
Since then, the torquing of the system even further - by choice - makes the accurate posing of the right questions ever more valuable.
Bill Black agrees with and has been involved in the OWS movement - pushing for Fraud charges against the too big to fail predators - and he wants to Break Them Up.
He has offered his services as an attorney to the OWS movement.
Here's a good interview by Dylan Ratigan of Bill Black and David Degraw of ampedstatus.com
http://ampedstatus.org/ows-interview-prosecute-the-wall-street-mafia-will-black-dylan-ratigan-david-degraw-on-the-destruction-of-the-rule-of-law/
Systemic fraud ignored by the obama admin - calls out obama for saying that the banks were immoral but didn't break any laws.
Black calls that out as BS. --
The movement is No Longer (if it ever was) only a bunch of hippies and broke students - not when it's attracting people such as black, degraw and ratigan.
3 mainstream people who say FRAUD is ongoing.
Must also see... Max Keiser and co-host, Stacy Herbert, (10-18-11) talk about JP Morgan’s bet against itself...aka "arson scam" just like Eric Cantor (R-VA & day -insider- trader/traitor) did during the last budget deal this past spring. Save the global 99% from the Real Pirates on Wall St. Crashing their country's economy is treason.
Another good source of info... http://www.iwatchnews.org/
The 'Fed' is part of the Big Bank cabal. America needs a real government bank.
Thank you for this essay. Black writes so clearly that even someone who is not well versed can understand what has taken place. Since the Fed is not a government entity is it any wonder that they do nothing to protect the shareholders or "we the people"? If the US is to remain a capitalist country it must at least have reasonable regulation over the banking industry, among others, or it will certainly become a TOTALLY fascist state (if it isn't already). I am hoping that OWS, and all its derivatives, pushes us into something more like the Scandinavian nations.
"The story reports that the Federal Reserve supported the transfer and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) opposed it." ........Once again, the privately-owned Federal Reserve was more concerned with protecting the "private" sector while dumping its worthless assets on to taxpayers. ......This is without a doubt, corporate mugging on a grand scale. ......Occupy, Occupy and keep Occupying until the frauds are brought to justice.
Another reason to Nationalize the Federal Reserve as Step #1 of the OWS movement.
It may not be good enough to nationalize it and put it under the control of a corrupt, bought and paid for Federal government. Possibly give the states more control. I know they're corrupt as well, but it's a lot harder to buy off 50 separate entities than one. The states, at least some of them, have been a lot more aggressive about attacking this corruption than the Federal government has.
There is no bottom, to the hole, where these corporate maggots reside.
The Terrorists at Bank of America are trying to dump $75 TRILLION in derivative garbage debt from their Merrill Lynch casino into their subsidiary backed by the government (FDIC insurance). This would allow Bank of America to have their almost unimaginably large losses compensated, yet again, via a government (public) bailout. Meanwhile the FDIC fund, meant to backstop our bank accounts, will be ravaged by Bank of America. Predictably, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Helicopter Shalom Bernanke has given the thumbs up to this robbery. The media, through their silence, is complicit.
Zero Hedge has more: : http://tinyurl.com/6b3qqw7
Can't this garbage derivative dumping clearly be shown as an indictable offense? What's your prediction that there will be enough traction on this for an official inquiry, investigation and prosecution?
This is robbing every Peter Paul and Mary, Tom, Dick and Harry, just to pay the rich friends of Barry. OWS has been an excellent start, but when are We The Poeple ever going to really wake up and GET PISSED OFF?!
What, do the banks have to start eating our babies for breakfast before we decide to stand up and stop this despicable thuggery against We The People?
"OWS has been an excellent start, but when are We The Poeple ever going to really wake up and GET PISSED OFF?!"
.....Salusa, We are still in the infancy stage. The worst of the pissed off is yet to come.
Hey, pissed off is better than pissed on. Take your time OWS, we're with you.
"This is robbing every Peter Paul and Mary, Tom, Dick and Harry, just to pay the rich friends of Barry. "
Everyone better read this post many times because Obama is a very good friend to the bankers ansd works for them and not the People. Have any Obamabots been watching your savior?? When he fired Howard Dean I said, "we are screwed".
While I agree with you that we are screwed, I don't believe it's one presidents' fault...they are all vetted by the ruling elites, make no mistake about that. They are paid to be the word man, fall guy, whatever it takes to forge the NWO agenda and each it is rumored, has something in their background they don't want found out..... With that said and the theft of elections, why do we even discuss political parties as if they're representative of WE the 99%...because there isn't one. Not a one and that is a fact.
True.
The Bankster's War Machine has been exposed and rebel whistle blowers like Black are vital to the future.
The fact that our movement does not tell folks how or who to vote for is our strongest tactic. Exposing the truth with facts like Black and others do is social love.
This makes us better than just politics as usual.
If you take someones money by force - it's robbery.
If you take someones money by by deceit - it's fraud.
If you take someones money by false promise - it's a Ponzi.
If you take someones money by changing the laws to make it legal - it's called finance/banking.
You said it!
The best way to rob a bank is to own one. Mr. Black is right on target. Very well written article by Mr. Black.
William K. Black was interviewed today by Amy Goodman on Democracy Now.
Freewheelin Franklin
William K. Black was interviewed in depth on these topics yesterday on the show "On Point" with Tom Ashbrook on NPR:
Prosecuting Financial Titans
http://onpoint.wbur.org/2011/10/18/prosecuting-wall-street
It's a great discussion.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Thanks William Black. Be sure to watch the great interview with William Black on Democracy Now today---October 19. He has a wonderful ability to explain what has happened with the criminal fraud of the Wall Street banks clearly and understandably. He is a national asset along with his UM-KC colleague, Michael Hudson, for clear and direct explanations and analysis of the mess we are all in at home and also in the EU and other nations tangled in the morass of criminality the Wall Street banksters and their bought and paid for political partners created. Both men speak clearly and directly and name names of who is responsible at the top. Spread and share their voices as widely as possible in your networks everywhere..
Agreed. To drive the point home: Wall Street, or the stock/bond markets specifically, worldwide in all countries/continents, are part and parcel of the systemic fraud being committed across the board, not just in the Banks of "Wall Street."
In other words, whatever schemes the Banks are using on their financials, (ie valuations, off-balance sheet accounting, etc,) the Corps are using them too to specifically and directly enrich the officers/boards (CEOs, CFOs, COOs, etc,) in the short-terms (ie quarterlies.) The stockholders, the bondholders, and the public are completely in-the-dark about what these Corps financial "health" really is, a-la Enron type accounting/reporting/auditing/risk ratings. And thusly, "Wall Streets" do not, repeat, DO NOT, reflect the economic health, even in a "classical economic sense," of ANY economy. "Wall Street," and all their worldwide machinations, are pure and simple fraud to enrich those already rich at the top. Herein lies the ability of the 1%, worldwide, to concentrate their wealth directly from the 99%. Period.
This fraud applies to publicly-traded healthcare Corps, defense Corps, pharma Corps, insurance Corps, ALL and EVERY SINGLE ONE. And with the final nail on the coffin of The People, "corps are now the people," thanks to the Supreme (bought and paid-for) Court. In fact, all three branches of gov't are now completely bought and paid for in this country. The Corp coup d'état is complete, as Hedges describes here: http://forum.prisonplanet.com/index.php?topic=195635.0;wap2.
And so, Black is structurally correct in his analysis of the WS fraud. But Hudson, so too, is extremely proficient in his analysis of the entirety of the elites economic malfeasance, worldwide, and thus makes a further leap of understanding the "Wall Street problems" that we have today, moreso than Black.
"The stockholders, the bondholders, and the public are completely in-the-dark about what these Corps financial "health" really is..."
Yes, you are correct. It goes far beyond Wall Street and the banks, though that is the center of the rot. I work for a large technology firm. Our execs have been hollowing the firm out for decades, throwing away the employees who developed their products and most recently replacing them with off-shore workers whose turnover has been close to 50% per year due to job hopping for higher wages. A car will continue to run for years after you stop changing the oil, and if it continues to look good on the outside, you can sell it to someone who doesn't know what you've been doing. That's essentially what our execs have been doing to their stockholders for years.
Like Frankenstein our monster has broken free and is loose amongst the people
Okay, the Ron Paulistas are right (about the Fed).
This level of rank, stinking criminality can't be allowed to stand.
No way and I mean NO WAY are taxpayers going to take this shit.
Oh but they will. Obama's got their hands cuffed to their ankles, and a ball gag in their mouths. Sure, the People will shout, but no one will hear their muffled cries.
And Ron Paul is not right about the Fed. He wants to bring back gold-backed currency. Possibly worse than what we have now. The gold standard serves only the 1%... and so does privatization of everything.
Privatization is THEFT!
Deregulation is CORRUPTION!
Corporate Personhood is a WEAPON AGAINST WE THE PEOPLE!
"He(Ron Paul) wants to bring back gold-backed currency. Possibly worse than what we have now."
Yes it is. Not probably, IS Worse.
" Ron Paul is not right about the Fed."
No he is not.
I was a libertarian for 35 years. That was before I started seeing the ideology for what it really is.....................................................................NeoFeudalism.
Disagree?
Run all they want out to it's logical conclusion and see what you get in the real World.
Privatizition gives us a feudal state where the private powers(corporations) run the whole show. They do not answer to the people or the representative of the people, the government. They answer to their MAJORITY shareholders and that aint you Bubba with your $10,000 IRA.
I have been thinking of reading "The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire".
As the power and control of Rome waned each territorial govenor rose in power and when Rome fell to the Barbarians(were they really barbarians?) these states became the feudal states of the Dark and Middle Ages. It took centuries for France, Spain, etc. to reform into modern states. Every state govenor that wants state powers to grow at the expense of the federal government is on this same path. The USA would be broken up and be a basket of feifdoms and certainly not great by any stretch of the imagination.
IMO, libertarianism is Neo Feudalism and DAs like Paul and all you other libertarians better stop thinking legalization of marijuana would be a nice result of libertarianism better think a bit farther. Start listening to all that the Paul Family wants and run it out to it's logical conclusion. It is the Pox.
Oh yeah, you will be able to smoke pot on your own property but will you have enough money to own your property. Will you make enough to buy your own property?
Just read a book on the fall of the roman empire - contained these nuggets to ponder:
"the eternal city was filled with the comings and goings of impotent men - senators, magistrates, bustling administrators of all kinds - performing meaningless duties. Augustus, while seizing all power, had wisely left in place all the trappings of democracy. The empty show that resulted only emphasized the more the importance of HOW things were done - since no one wanted to avert to the vanity of WHAT was being done"
Thank you for that quote mtdon.
I suspect that most of us who own our own property will eventually be unable to pay the property taxes on it, and will be eventually turned out onto the streets for that reason.
I think the property tax should be eliminated or reformed, as it only hurts the small guy, and helps the banksters (once again). Perhaps the tax should be limited to holdings over a certain size, such as anything over 500 acres. Also, a tax on transfer of ownership makes sense, as well as a means to democratically challenge/dispossess landowners who are egregiously bad/abusive stewards of their land.
As a person planning on buying a small parcel of land to live on and farm, its disconcerting to think I *have to* be able to continually churn out cash returns just to stay on my land.
Nope, the revolution escalates at people's doors.
Yeah, but we're Americans. That's when homeowners start going after the "real culprits" -- Jews, blacks, gays, Mexicans, etc. etc.
re: "all you other libertarians better stop thinking legalization of marijuana would be a nice result of libertarianism better think a bit farther."
Perhaps a lot farther. Those who think Ron Paul is the answer don't really know what question they're asking..
Well said SR... there's been far too much wasted time here even contemplating a RP victory in 2012. As you mention, under full Libertarianism, 'property' will be a thing for the ultra-rich, and no-one else. Neo-Fuedalism indeed.
I too was a Libertarian years ago, and still consider myself a libertarian. What most other libertarians fail to understand is that corporations are creatures of government, which grants their charters. There is nothing in common law that limits the liability of an individual or partnership that causes damages to other members of society. Without a limited liability charter, an individual's entire net worth is at risk for any damages or debts incurred by his/her enterprises and investments. Thus, limited liability is an economic distortion, created by government, that facilitates fraud and other criminality. There is good reason to believe that the outright abolition of corporate limited liability cold turkey would devastate society. But certainly if government is going to grant these charters, it has the right and responsibility to regulate the entities it thus creates.
There is nothing fundamentally anti-business or anti-capitalist about regulating corporations, including limiting the size of a corporation in terms of its market cap, revenues or profits, fraud prevention, setting minimum working conditions and even setting a firm cap on executive compensation as a multiple of the lowest paid employee's pay.
The original Boston Tea Party was direct action against the mother of all corporations, the East India Company, and the special privileges granted to it by the British government without the representation of all British citizens.
Good point, and well said!
True deregulation is essentially a euphemism for mafia-rule or officially endorsed piracy. And any government official fighting for dergulation, is basically railing against their own profession. Thus my conclusion that deregulation is corruption manifest.
Good regulation is not a bane, it is a boon and essential component of a healthy marketplace.
Hell, most of the taxpayers don't even know about it.
Interesting article. BofA is the king of sleaze. Another thing BofA did was acquire MBNA. MBNA was really loose with credit when money was cheap and available. They never considered whether those they loaned to would be in a position to pay back money borrowed. The acquisition made BofA bigger on paper but, really BofA acquired many uncollectable accounts. People were servicing debt with no ability to ever pay back the principle. These accounts are still on the balance sheet of BofA as current assets. The loss has yet to be recognized.
BofA just this week made the financial news with accounting tricks that make them look profitable. BofA's balance sheet is a house of cards. The issue is who will take the hit? Will the titans of finance be able to shift the burden to John Q. Public? Depends who they pay off.
I wasn't in the Banking Business when credit began to be cheap and available, I was in the computer business as a programmer/analyst. In one of the many meetups I attended a session on credit which laid out how to make a profit even when not everyone would pay back the money borrowed.
The jist of the presentation was a graph with time running along the bottom and two lines crisscrossing above which showed 1) as credit is made more easy, more money is loaned and thus more money is made, and 2) as credit is made more easy, the amount of profit goes down due to defaulters. The critical point is where the two lines cross: up until then the loss due to default is simply a cost of doing business as net profit is still positive.
This was in the days when everybody who graduated from UCLA got a free BofA credit card. There were many stories about how those cards were used for wild charging resulting in defaults but evidently they weren't enough to stop the lending as it was still profitable.
Yes, It is profitable on paper. The income statement shows profit but, the balance sheet hides ever growing losses from stockholders. It is boom till bust and everyone is surprised when the bust comes. BofA types always seem to get a government bailout of their troubles. They are too big to fail. True communism - no risk of loss. True capitalism has an inherent risk of loss. Monopoly has destroyed capitalism.
Yes, of course, it's profitable on paper that's what bank deal in.
For the stockholders it's kind of like surfing where you need to catch the big one to get a good ride but not let the big one slam you down to the bottom. Must be exciting for some people but it's never interested me.
When the rich have taken all we have; when there is nothing left to steal, the FDIC will no longer exist.
Value of Derivitives held by:
74 trillion. ---- Bank of America
79 trillion ------- JPMorgue
60 trillion = World GDP
15 trillion = USA GDP
Just so it's clear the amounts of money we're talking about.