Shadow-Boxing With the CEOs: Day One at the Financial Crisis Inquiry Hearings

The heads of Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, and
Bank of America came to testify and said... just about nothing.

Yes, they made mistakes. But gee, they had learned a great deal and
they certainly didn't cause the crash. They promised they are managing
risk better, even though they claimed always to have done so. Also,
they insist they are not too big too fail and they are reforming
compensation so we shouldn't worry about their sky-high compensation
packages.

After these predictable pronouncements, Phil Angelides -- the former
Democratic California State Treasurer and Chairman of the Financial
Crisis Inquiry Commission (FCIC) -- came out swinging at Lloyd
Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs. But he ended up shadow-boxing.

Angelides threw his best punches at Goldman Sachs concerning reports
that it provided toxic assets to customers while it was betting against
them. "It sounds to me a little bit like selling a car with faulty
brakes and then buying an insurance policy on the buyer of those cars,"
said Angelides.

Blankfein easily parried the punches by explaining that that's what
market makers are supposed to do. He then diverted the conversation
into technical language that few of the public can understand.
Meanwhile, the big questions weren't asked.

Angelides almost cornered Blankfein with the question of whether or
not Goldman Sachs would have gone under had it not been bailed out by
the taxpayer. Blankfein again successfully parried the punches by
saying, No one knows. We were doing the best they could, and better
than everyone else.

Angelides' best punch came when he listed a slew of government
programs that supported Goldman Sachs: TARP, the AIG pass through of
taxpayer money, no-interest loans from the Fed, guarantees from the
FDIC and more.

Blankfein bobbed and weaved. But Angelides missed the chance to nail
him. It was the perfect time to bring up the fact that AIG gave Goldman
Sachs our money to cover its bets at 100 cents on the dollar.

This is key to the allegations that Geithner pressured AIG to give
Goldman Sachs $12.9 billion dollars to settle bets whose market value
was about $2 billion. This was clearly a gift of taxpayer money that
has directly fattened the bottom line of Goldman Sachs and their bonus
pool. (See GeithnerGate)

Heather Murren, a former Merrill Lynch analyst chosen by the
Democrats for the Commission, pushed Blankfein at bit more: "Did anyone
ask you to take anything less than 100 cents on the dollar?"

Blankfein said other staff had that discussion but it never really
came up to him. Unfortunately, she backed off and didn't follow up with
the obvious question: "Shouldn't you have taken much less -- yes or no
-- since you admitted already that you didn't really need taxpayer
support?"

The answer might have had severe consequences for Geithner and for
Goldman Sachs' outrageous bonus pool. Clearly, Geithner helped Goldman
Sachs walk off with taxpayer money that it didn't need then and
certainly doesn't need now. Tough public questioning might help provide
Obama the basis for taxing it back.

Overall, the Commission let the big boys off the hook. Here are the
kind of questions they failed to ask and if they don't ask them soon,
the American people will tune out.

1. Now that you've paid back TARP, how much government support are you getting currently from various government programs?
This would punch through the PR spin that says the big banks have paid
back the government. The reality is that these highly profitable
institutions are still taking advantage of an array of government
financial programs that are padding their bottom lines and bonus pools.

2. Given all the mergers that have taken place during the
crisis, is your institution, right now, too big to fail? If so,
shouldn't we break you up?
The committee should be setting
up the basis for the break up of these giant companies. Keith
Hennessey, a Republican, started to get there. The other commissioners
should help him follow-up.

3. How do you justify having your employees earn 10 to 100 times the compensation earned by the leading neurosurgeons?
The Commission needs to point out that the pay scale is wildly
excessive in the financial markets and that it represents a distortion
of our entire system. The free market alone cannot correct it. There is
no economic justification for it.

4. Are your banks paying for lobbyists that are working against efforts to create a Financial Consumer Protection Agency? This is the perfect time to get these bankers to explain how they are lobbying against the public's interest.

5. Given all the support you have received (and are still
receiving), and given all the damage your industry has done to the
economy and to the lives of millions of Americans, why shouldn't the
government place a windfall profits tax on your near record profits and
bonuses?
This might pressure the Obama administration to get back some of our money.

Dynamite from one Expert Witness:
In its second panel, the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission heard from
Kyle Bass, of Hayman Financial Advisors, who read a statement that had
some juice to it. I don't know this guy, but it's pretty clear no PR
flack scripted him.

He took direct aim at the fiction that top traders at troubled
institutions like AIG must receive top compensation or we will lose the
vital "talent" needed to unwind their complicated bets. Those traders
at AIG placed more than $450 billion in bets on toxic securities. The
traders, of course, made these bets because of the enormous fees and
bonuses they received.

But why should we continue to pay these traders, given their
disastrous track records and the fact that the taxpayer is bailing out
AIG to the tune of more than $150 billion? Unfortunately, the Obama
administration is going along with the myth that these traders need to
receive large compensation packages because if they leave AIG, it will
hurt the taxpayers' investment.

But Bass demolished that argument by saying flat out that he knew of
hundreds of unemployed derivative brokers who would gladly to do the
job for $100,000 a year instead of for millions. The trading emperors
have no clothes.

Too bad the commissioners didn't bring up that argument to the CEOs
before them in the AM session. The commission should hire Bass for its
staff.

It's only Day One of the hearings, but they let the big fish get
away. Let's hope they find other witnesses to help capture the public's
attention.

Join Us: News for people demanding a better world


Common Dreams is powered by optimists who believe in the power of informed and engaged citizens to ignite and enact change to make the world a better place.

We're hundreds of thousands strong, but every single supporter makes the difference.

Your contribution supports this bold media model—free, independent, and dedicated to reporting the facts every day. Stand with us in the fight for economic equality, social justice, human rights, and a more sustainable future. As a people-powered nonprofit news outlet, we cover the issues the corporate media never will. Join with us today!

Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.