Updated: Today
Topic:

Bank Bailouts

The trial of Ben Bernanke

Sen. Bunning to the Fed chairman: "You are the definition of moral hazard"

If we know a man by the enemies he keeps, then who is Ben Bernanke? His foes range across the political spectrum from left to right, and during his confirmation hearings today, few senators offered anything more than a lukewarm endorsement.

Vermont Independent Bernie Sanders has announced he will put a hold on Bernanke's nomination to a second term as chairman of the Federal Reserve, forcing Democratic leaders to round up 60 votes to ensure confirmation. Both Chris Dodd, the Democratic chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, and Richard Shelby, the ranking Republican, offered up laundry lists of criticism and complaints about his tenure. He will probably end up getting confirmed anyway, but he's unlikely to emerge from the Senate hearing room unscarred.

No one managed a more devastating critique than Jim Bunning, R-Ky., who stared Bernanke in the eye and said, "In short, you are the definition of a moral hazard." Ben Bernanke's tenure as Fed chairman, in other words, is a guaranteed get-out-of-jail-free card for reckless financial institutions, no matter how apocalyptic their mistakes.

Fans of Jim Bunning and Bernie Sanders do not often find common ground. Bunning is fond of labeling anything he doesn't like as "socialist." Bernie Sanders is the closest thing the U.S. Senate has to an actual living breathing socialist. The moral of this story is that there is a definite hazard to being the Federal Reserve chairman during a great economic disaster. No matter what happens, some of the blame will stick to you.

And some of it is no doubt deserved. As the inheritor of the Alan Greenspan legacy, Ben Bernanke continued his predecessor's policies, made no moves to clamp down on an out-of-control mortgage lending sector, underestimated the dangers posed to the overall economy by the subprime implosion, and was an integral player in the age of the great Wall Street bailout.

On the flip side, the vast majority of economists believe that once the enormity of the crisis became inescapably manifest, Bernanke moved forcefully and innovatively to flood the financial system with liquidity by any means necessary, and helped prevent, for now, a second Great Depression. That's kind of a big deal. Bernanke's faults and flaws notwithstanding, it is entirely possible that the world is very, very lucky that one of the most acclaimed academic specialists in understanding the first Great Depression was in a position to do something meaningful when all hell broke loose.

But of course no one can prove that Ben Bernanke saved us from the Great Depression. For better or worse, we live in the now, and the now includes 10 percent unemployment while bankers return to their pre-crash plutocrat status quo. People are angry, and politicians are expert at channeling that anger.

All the Senate grandstanding would carry considerably more resonance, however, if the Senate could find the guts to follow through on all of its tough talk and pass financial reform legislation with teeth. Instead of picking on Ben Bernanke, how about some action on regulating derivatives, breaking up too-big-to-fail institutions, and strengthening the power and efficacy of existing regulatory bodies? While the House passes bills, the Senate specializes in squelching or eviscerating them.

Ben Bernanke might be the definition of moral hazard, but the Senate is the definition of government failure.

Out, out, damn TARP!

Desperate to remove that evil bailout stain, the Bank of America suddenly finds $45 billion to pay back its debt

As of 6:30 p.m. EST, Bank of America's promise to pay back, soon, the $45 billion in TARP funds that it owes the government was the lead story on the Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times, and Bloomberg News. (BofA's lengthy press release explaining its strategy is here.)

For Bloomberg and the WSJ, the effort was described as, to borrow the Journal's words, a move that "will allow the bank to begin escaping pay and other restrictions imposed by the U.S." BofA plans to use around $26 billion that it happens to have lying around and raise another $18.8 billion via sales of stock and warrants to buy stock.

Since the U.S. government never really managed to use the leverage that it had obtained by bailing out Bank of America, other than to make some token gestures at limiting compensation, and possibly ousting Ken Lewis as CEO, there will be few tears shed at the prospect of the bank getting out of hock to Uncle Sam. But I'm still intrigued at the spin. Instead of being portrayed as a sign of health or market stability, the effort to return TARP funds is instead seen as a first step to freedom. The freedom to pay executives far more than they deserve! The freedom to thumb noses at regulators, and in fact, to redouble efforts at lobbying to make sure that regulators don't interfere with their god-given right to steer us directly into the next financial cataclysm.

It's hard to even imagine that earlier this year there was even a whisper of a suggestion that banks as big as the Bank of America should be nationalized or forcibly broken up. The status quo is resuming with amazing speed. At the rate events are moving, maybe we can have another financial crisis in time for the midterm elections.

Bailout hater goes over to the dark side

Economist Willem Buiter has said some very hurtful things about Citigroup. But now he's on the company's payroll

The blogosphere is having a field day with the news that Willem Buiter, the caustic London School of Economics professor who has delighted in launching blog posts like grenades throughout the course of the global financial crisis, has been named Citigroup's Chief Economist.

A staunch critic of bailouts, Buiter has been especially vicious towards Citigroup; in April he called the financial institution "a conglomeration of worst-practice from across the financial spectrum" and in June he described the decision by U.K. finance minister Alistair Darling to appoint former Citigroup CEO "Win" Bischoff to "to co-chair the writing of a report on UK international financial services" as "the most ridiculous appointment since Caligula appointed his favorite horse a consul."

I'd like to suggest my own contribution from the Buiter archives. In September 2007, Buiter took issue with what he characterized as then-Financial Times columnist Larry Summers' "never seen a potential bail out he did not like" predilection in a blog post titled "Support Markets, Not Banks."

I cannot think of a single financial institution that is too big to fail, in the sense that it would damage some systemically important social institution.... I recognize the upside of bail-outs for those who arrange them: they look like movers and shakers, making and shaping events. It's heroic, in an industry where heroism can be rarely displayed. But in all of the examples mentioned above, the bail-out did more harm than good.

So now Buiter will be taking a paycheck from one of the very biggest of the bailed-out too-big-to-fail institutions. Which means, whether he likes it or not, Buiter is being bankrolled with the support of the American taxpayer... and implicit backing of Larry Summers. If Citigroup hadn't been bailed out, would Buiter have gotten this job?

On housing crisis, Wall Street feels no shame

While Americans suffer, glutted banks refuse to renegotiate mortgages or scale back bonuses
AP
People exit the the Financial Square building following the Goldman Sachs shareholders meeting, Friday, May 8, 2009 in New York.

One out of four homeowners is now under water, owing more on their homes than the homes are worth. Why? The biggest single factor behind the housing crisis is rising unemployment. According to the latest ABC-Washington Post poll, one out of every three Americans has either lost their job or lives in a household with someone who has lost a job. Today it takes two and sometimes three incomes to buy the groceries and pay the mortgage or the rent. So if one of those incomes is gone, a homeowner can't make the payment.

The scourge of unemployment is splitting America into three groups: 1) the third just mentioned, whose households are in danger of losing their homes and whose kids are surviving on food stamps (that's up to one in four children in America today); 2) the vast majority of Americans who are managing but worried about keeping their jobs and homes; and 3) a small number who are taking home even more winnings than they did in the boom year 2007.

Prominent among Category 3 are Wall Street bankers, many of whom are now concluding their most profitable year ever. Goldman Sachs is so flush it's preparing to give out bonuses in a few weeks totaling $17 billion. That will mean eight-figure compensation packages for lots of Goldman executives and traders. JPMorgan Chase is rumored to have a bonus pool of around $5 billion. The three other major Wall Street banks are ratcheting up their compensation packages so their "talent" won't be poached by Goldman or JPMorgan.

Wall Street is booming again in large part because the rest of America -- categories 1 and 2, above -- bailed it out to the tune of $700 billion last year. The Street has repaid some of that but, according to the bailout program's inspector general, much of it is gone forever. For example, the taxpayer money that bailed out giant insurer AIG went directly through AIG to its "counterparties" like Goldman Sachs -- to whom Tim Geithner, according to the inspector general, gave away the store. As Goldman Sachs prepares to dole out some $17 billion to its executives and traders, it's worth noting that Goldman received $13 billion a year ago from the rest of us via AIG and Geithner, no strings attached.

Which brings us back to homeowners who are falling further behind. The $75 billion federal program designed to bribe banks to modify mortgages has been a bust. No one knows the exact number of mortgages that have been modified (that will be reported next month) but housing experts I've talked with say it's a tiny fraction of the number of homeowners in trouble. Seems that the big banks can't be bothered. "Some of the firms ought to be embarrassed," Michael Barr, the assistant Treasury secretary for financial institutions, told the New York Times.

Barr says the government will try to use shame as a corrective, publicly naming institutions that have moved too slowly. But the banks have done almost nothing to date. "We've made dramatic improvements, and we continue to try to get better," says a spokesman for JPMorgan Chase, but as a practical matter JPMorgan has done squat.

Shame? If we've learned anything over the last year, it's that Wall Street has none. Ten months ago Wall Street lobbyists beat back a proposal to give bankruptcy judges the right to amend mortgages in order to pressure lenders to reduce principle owed, just like Wall Street lobbyists are now beating back tough regulations to prevent the Street from causing another meltdown.

Shame? For Wall Street, it all comes down to P.R., at minimal cost. Goldman Sachs, attempting to preempt a firestorm of public outrage when it dispenses its $17 billion of bonuses, is setting up a crudely conceived $500 million P.R. program to help Main Street.

Shame won't work. Only political muscle and courage will. Congress and the Obama administration should give homeowners the right to go to a bankruptcy judge and have their mortgages modified.

And while they're at it, resurrect the Glass-Steagall Act that used to separate investment from commercial banking, so Wall Street can't continue to use other people's money to gamble.

Finally, before Goldman hands out $17 billion in bonuses, claw back the $13 billion Goldman took from AIG and the rest of us and add it to the pool of money going for mortgage relief.

Treasury Secretary Jamie Dimon?

The New York Post's suggestion that the JPMorgan CEO replace Geithner would please absolutely no one in Washington

Most ridiculous economics-related story of the week (I know, it's early yet, but it's a short week): A New York Post article by Mark DeCambre suggesting JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon as a replacement for Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner.

Yes, Geithner is under fire from legislators from both parties right now, but neither Republicans nor Democrats are likely to be looking for a figure even more deeply embedded in Wall Street than either Geithner or Larry Summers.

JPMorgan Chase has been a prime beneficiary of government bailouts, cheap credit, and the orchestrated devourment of both Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual. The liberal Democrats who are hammering the Obama administration as insufficiently progressive would have a collective seizure if Geithner stepped down, only to be replaced by the CEO of one of the world's largest financial institutions. Nor would Republicans who have suddenly become populist banker-bashers and defenders of the working man be likely to cheer. The political "optics," as Washington-watchers like to say, would be simply awful.

The idea is too dumb for words. OK, maybe not as dumb as Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein getting the nod, but still absurd.

Liberals, conservatives, agree: Geithner must go

No love for the Treasury Secretary from either the hard right or the hard left Video

What does it mean when a conservative Republican and a liberal Democrat both call for Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner to be fired? Is it a sign that he's lost the confidence of both parties and should be immediately disposed of? Or is it confirmation that he is steering safely down the middle of the river, while the left and the right banks seethe with rage?

This morning, the normally almost supernaturally composed Geithner got into it with Texas Republican Kevin Brady, a pillar of the conservative right, during a Joint Economic Committee hearing in Congress.

The Wall Street Journal's Damien Palleta has the transcript:

Mr. Brady opened up his questioning by telling Mr. Geithner Republicans, Democrats, and the American people had lost confidence in the Treasury Secretary and asked him to resign.

"It is a great privilege to serve this president," Mr. Geithner responded. "I agree with almost nothing you said."

Mr. Geithner then took it a step further: "You gave this president an economy falling off the cliff."

Mr. Brady wasn't done: "Remind me, Mr. Secretary, what post were you holding when President Obama took office?"

Geithner: "I was the President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York."

Brady then accused him of "shirking responsibility for the design of this bailout."

Mr. Geithner said the government's steps were "absolutely necessary to break the back of this financial panic." He said without the Obama administration's steps, "you would have an economy still falling, not growing."

Meanwhile, last night, Oregon Democrat Peter DeFazio, a staunch member of the House's progressive caucus took some hard swings at Geithner for paying more attention to Wall Street than to Main Street during an MSNBC interview with Ed Schultz. He finished by calling for both Larry Summers and Geithner to be fired, saying with a smirk, "We may have to sacrifice just two more jobs to get millions back for Americans."

Brady, of course, is mad that Congress passed a stimulus bill while DeFazio is furious that the stimulus bill wasn't even bigger. Hard to satisfy both those constituencies... My own opinion is that conservative Democratic Senators are a far greater obstacle to direct government assistance to Main Street than either Summers or Geithner, and I agree with the Treasury Secretary that the financial panic had to be broken with extreme measures or we would be in a much worse position now than we already are. But, as noted by DeFazio, Geithner's performance during the AIG bailout can be easily faulted and the pivot that the entire White House is making towards emphasizing deficit reduction is ill-timed and insensitive to what this country really needs right now.

Ultimately, I seriously doubt whether President Obama will heed either the conservatives or the progressives at this point. I'm betting he continues on with his team intact. But like everything else, the political future of the White House and all his economic advisers can be pinned to one economic indicator -- the unemployment rate. The further up it goes, the hotter the kitchen will get.

Page 1 of 13 in Bank Bailouts Earliest ⇒

Bank bailouts in the news

Loading...

Recommended Reads

We own the banks. Now what do we do with them?
As the majority shareholders in failing banks, the American public should push management to cut executive compensation and make more loans to Main Street.
By Robert Reich, Salon

Who caused the economic crisis?
Economist Simon Johnson and "Obamanomics" author John Talbott say there's plenty of blame to go around.
By Simon Johnson and John Talbott, Salon

Does Obama's plan for Wall Street measure up?
Take a wild guess.
By Robert Reich, Salon

The $1 trillion game of chicken
Getting to the bottom of the government stress tests.
By Andrew Leonard, Salon

NPR's Planet Money podcast
A cogent, entertaining way to keep up with the increasingly complex financial crisis.
NPR

Bailout blues: why bank nationalization makes sense
Maybe nationalization is not such an incendiary notion after all.
By Ruth Conniff, The Progressive

The quiet coup
Recovery will fail unless we break the financial oligarchy that is blocking essential reform. And if we are to prevent a true depression, we’re running out of time.
By Simon Johnson, The Atlantic

Currently in Salon