There are two things that some of President Obama’s base is finding out. First, you just cannot walk away from war. Before you are “in the office” you can say all you want about ending wars or not getting into wars, but once “you get the seat” just being against war is not a sufficient policy. There are dumb wars and there are smart wars; there are well run wars and there are stupidly run wars; but wars are always present in one way or another. To many of President Obama’s supporters, President Obama is not walking away from war, and they don’t like it!
The second thing is that powerful nations need a healthy business sector. Regardless of how important you feel the role of government is in a society, without a strong economic system that is performing well your government will always be weak relative to other countries that have strong economic systems that are performing well.
I addressed this point from a different perspective in a recent post: see “Emerging Markets and the Future”, http://seekingalpha.com/article/214661-emerging-markets-and-the-future. One can deduce a similar point from Floyd Norris in today’s New York Times, “How to Tell A Nation Is at Risk,” http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/16/business/economy/16norris.html?_r=1&hp.
Norris writes: “Which governments will not be able to pay their bills?
The ones with private sectors that are not doing well enough to bail out the government.
That should be one lesson of the near default this year of the Greek government. Government finances are important, but in the end it is the private sector that matters most.
If so, those who focus on fiscal policy may be missing important things. Spain appeared to be in fine shape, with government surpluses, before the recession hit. Now Spain is being downgraded and has soaring deficits.”
The take away from these two pieces: You need to have a strong, vibrant capitalistic system in place, even if it is a state driven capitalism like that of China. The exception is those despotic nations that have a monopoly on a natural resource like Venezuela or many of the middle eastern fiefdoms, but these situations have their own problems. Economic weakness and slow growth lead to waning economic power. Check out much of Europe.
Today’s New York Times was filled with signs that the Obama administration was cognizant of the role the business sector must play in the economy in order to ensure its success and continuation. On the front page of the Times we read of the “Obama Victory” with respect to the financial reform package. This is the coin thrown to some of his supporters.
The real news, to me, is on the front page of the business sector in bold headlines: “Cut Back, Banks See a Chance to Grow: Its fight ended, Wall St. Is Already Working Around New Regulations.” (See http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/16/business/16wall.html?ref=business.)
Funny, but some of this article seems especially like my recent post “Financial Reform: Ho, Hum”, http://seekingalpha.com/article/213263-financial-reform-ho-hum. The authors of the Times article write:
“The ink is not even dry on the new rules for Wall Street, and already, the bankers are a step ahead of everyone else…
So after spending many millions of dollars to lobby against the legislation, bankers are now turning to Plan B: Adapting to the rules and turning them to their advantage."
The Obama administration and those in Congress that wrote the bill had to have enough in the bill to “declare a win” but many are looking at the legislation as just a cost and an inconvenience. Main street must be given something to justify the possibility of re-electing those currently in office. But, Wall Street must be healthy so that the Administration can stand up to China!
Financial institutions spent a lot to keep a lid on Congress and its “spewing into the gulp” and in this respect have been more successful than BP with its oil spill. But, now that the cap is on in terms of the financial reform bill going to the President, it is time to get back to business. And, really, that is what the administration wants as well.
The third important headline on the front page of the business section (the other two articles were there too) is “With Token Settlement, Blankfein Unscathed”, http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/16/business/16deal.html?ref=business. The New York Times claims that the deal Goldman Sachs reached with the Securities and Exchange Commission was a “Token”…mere pocket change. The people from the S. E. C. declared this to be a victory. What a joke! Well, now we can get back to business!
Just one more piece of information being shared this morning: Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner seems to be very opposed to Elizabeth Warren becoming the head of the new consumer protection agency created by the financial reform package. She is apparently too strong, too emotional of an advocate for the consumer. It seems as if such a person would rock the boat.
The reality of the situation seems to be that the Obama administration needs a strong, rebounding economy. It needs a strong, rebounding economy to not lose much ground in the elections this November. And, it needs a strong, rebounding economy to give the United States more bargaining power in the world.
The United States is still the number one economic and military power in the world. It is just that at this time, with a somewhat weakened economy, room is given to those large emerging nations to be more assertive in world affairs and to gain confidence in their ability to present their positions in world forums. Again, see my post on “Emerging Markets and the Future.”
The Obama administration is walking a narrow line. It cannot afford to lose the support it has been given in the past by the Independent voter and the middle of the political spectrum. And, it cannot afford to be captive of the sovereign wealth funds of the world that control large amounts of financial capital.
In order to achieve these goals, the Obama administration cannot stifle the United States business engine. The issue it now faces is how to support Wall Street and business without appearing to be abandoning Main Street. The danger the administration runs is that in attempting to walk this narrow line, it might not please anybody.
Showing posts with label financial refom bill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label financial refom bill. Show all posts
Friday, July 16, 2010
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Ho-hum, the Financial Reform Bill is Going to be Passed
Perhaps the most benign statement about the passage of the United States financial reform bill passed by the House of Representatives last week and whose passage is pending in the Senate comes from Richard Bove, banking analyst at Rochdale Securities: The bill, he states, “doesn’t seem to be terribly onerous.” (See “JPMorgan Brushes Aside Bill Concerns,” http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/24bcbc8c-8858-11df-aade-00144feabdc0.html.)
In terms of the regulation of swaps, especially credit default swaps, “The once-feared swap provision has become toothless.”
The recent debate in Congress over the financial reform bill: A lot of “sound and fury signifying nothing.”
This legislation, the most comprehensive reform of the financial system since the 1930s, seems be passing into the history books with very little fanfare.
Sure, the financial institutions “huffed and puffed” and spent tons of money to fight Congress “every inch of the way.” But, what else did you expect. Perhaps you need to read a good economics book on “Game Theory”.
And, now?
Can’t you hear the executives at the big banks say, under their breath, “Well, the bill is passed, now we need to get back to business. Sure we spent a lot of money that could have gone elsewhere, but that is now history. In terms of where we are going to focus in the future, we just continue doing what we have been doing, finding the best way to do business and to make money. The bill, itself, will cause some inconvenience in some areas, hurt the smaller institutions more than the larger ones, but will not basically change what we are going to be doing.”
The article cited above states it all. JPMorgan acquired a large energy and metals trader last week. How will the financial reform bill impact this deal? After all, “Commodities are among a handful of derivatives still targeted…” by the bill.
The author of the article writes: “Blythe Masters, head of commodities at JPMorgan, said the bank already traded most energy through an affiliate and the law would ‘not substantially’ affect business.”
I have been arguing for months that the large banks had already moved beyond the reach of the regulations being discussed in Congress and that anything enacted by the legislators would be DOA, “dead on arrival.” The large banks started to reform and restructure themselves soon after the fall of 2008 when the financial crisis was at its peak! By the spring of 2009 these banks were well on the way to the future.
Congress, on the other hand, was mired in the past.
JPMorgan, to my mind, is one of the organizations leading us into the future. See, for example, my blog post “Follow the Dimon,” (http://seekingalpha.com/article/212236-follow-the-dimon). But, there are many others that are also out there pushing finance into the future.
Similar discussion are taking place in all areas of the finance field. Just this morning, the Wall Street Journal contained the article “What’s a ‘Prop’ Trader Now?” relating to the proprietary trading that many of the largest financial institutions engage in. (See, http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703620604575349161970563670.html?mod=ITP_moneyandinvesting_0&mg=com-wsj.) The article addresses issues like, “What are ‘Prop’ traders?” and “How are banks redefining ‘Prop’ traders?” and “Where are ‘Prop’ traders located within the organization?”
The answers to these questions will help the larger financial institutions “churn out” billions of dollars in profits. Thus, the banks are willing to spend millions of dollars in hiring “the best and the brightest” lawyers and financial experts to come up with the answers. Congress is just not capable of matching the resources available to these publically-traded firms and so will lag behind what is going on in the private sector. To me, the information “gap” between the public sector and the private sector has never been larger.
The problem is that Congress is attempting to achieve “outcomes”. They want to keep banks from becoming “too big to fail” and to keep banks from taking on too much risk. Historically, we see that laws and regulations that seek “outcomes” are bound to fail because, specifying “outcomes” tells those being regulated what they have to “get around”, what they have to “evade.”
In this Age of Information, it has become exceedingly easy to “get around” laws and regulations and “evade” the restrictions imposed by the legislators and regulators. (See the series of posts I began on January 25, 2010, “Financial Regulation in the Information Age”: http://seekingalpha.com/article/184153-financial-regulation-in-the-information-age-part-a.)
Laws and regulations work better when they are aimed at processes, the way that the regulated firms do business. These kinds of rules and regulations have to do with information flow (corporate disclosure and transparency), how trades are made, how trades are constructed, margin requirements, and so forth. One can see successful examples of “process” oversight in the creation of the Financial Futures Market and the Options Market in the latter part of the 20th century.
A proposal for overseeing the assumption of risk by financial institutions has been put forward by Oliver Hart, an economics professor at Harvard, and Luigi Zingales, an economics professor at the University of Chicago, in the Spring 2010 copy of National Affairs, titled “Curbing Risk on Wall Street,” (http://www.nationalaffairs.com/publications/detail/curbing-risk-on-wall-street). I have threatened several times to present a critique of this proposal in one of my posts. Hopefully, I will accomplish this soon for the Hart/Zingales proposal, I believe, offers a lot for people to consider.
So, the world goes on. The financial reform package will be passed. Banking and finance will continue to thrive. Big banks will get bigger and there will be fewer and fewer small banks. Hedge funds and venture capital funds will, in general, continue to do what they do well. And, sometime in the future there will be another financial crisis.
Things are not different.
End note: for a “good read” check the lead article in the business section of the New York Times on Sunday about Ken Rogoff and Carman Reinhart and their book “This Time Is Different”: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/04/business/economy/04econ.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=ken%20rogoff%20and%20carmen%20reinhart&st=cse.
In terms of the regulation of swaps, especially credit default swaps, “The once-feared swap provision has become toothless.”
The recent debate in Congress over the financial reform bill: A lot of “sound and fury signifying nothing.”
This legislation, the most comprehensive reform of the financial system since the 1930s, seems be passing into the history books with very little fanfare.
Sure, the financial institutions “huffed and puffed” and spent tons of money to fight Congress “every inch of the way.” But, what else did you expect. Perhaps you need to read a good economics book on “Game Theory”.
And, now?
Can’t you hear the executives at the big banks say, under their breath, “Well, the bill is passed, now we need to get back to business. Sure we spent a lot of money that could have gone elsewhere, but that is now history. In terms of where we are going to focus in the future, we just continue doing what we have been doing, finding the best way to do business and to make money. The bill, itself, will cause some inconvenience in some areas, hurt the smaller institutions more than the larger ones, but will not basically change what we are going to be doing.”
The article cited above states it all. JPMorgan acquired a large energy and metals trader last week. How will the financial reform bill impact this deal? After all, “Commodities are among a handful of derivatives still targeted…” by the bill.
The author of the article writes: “Blythe Masters, head of commodities at JPMorgan, said the bank already traded most energy through an affiliate and the law would ‘not substantially’ affect business.”
I have been arguing for months that the large banks had already moved beyond the reach of the regulations being discussed in Congress and that anything enacted by the legislators would be DOA, “dead on arrival.” The large banks started to reform and restructure themselves soon after the fall of 2008 when the financial crisis was at its peak! By the spring of 2009 these banks were well on the way to the future.
Congress, on the other hand, was mired in the past.
JPMorgan, to my mind, is one of the organizations leading us into the future. See, for example, my blog post “Follow the Dimon,” (http://seekingalpha.com/article/212236-follow-the-dimon). But, there are many others that are also out there pushing finance into the future.
Similar discussion are taking place in all areas of the finance field. Just this morning, the Wall Street Journal contained the article “What’s a ‘Prop’ Trader Now?” relating to the proprietary trading that many of the largest financial institutions engage in. (See, http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703620604575349161970563670.html?mod=ITP_moneyandinvesting_0&mg=com-wsj.) The article addresses issues like, “What are ‘Prop’ traders?” and “How are banks redefining ‘Prop’ traders?” and “Where are ‘Prop’ traders located within the organization?”
The answers to these questions will help the larger financial institutions “churn out” billions of dollars in profits. Thus, the banks are willing to spend millions of dollars in hiring “the best and the brightest” lawyers and financial experts to come up with the answers. Congress is just not capable of matching the resources available to these publically-traded firms and so will lag behind what is going on in the private sector. To me, the information “gap” between the public sector and the private sector has never been larger.
The problem is that Congress is attempting to achieve “outcomes”. They want to keep banks from becoming “too big to fail” and to keep banks from taking on too much risk. Historically, we see that laws and regulations that seek “outcomes” are bound to fail because, specifying “outcomes” tells those being regulated what they have to “get around”, what they have to “evade.”
In this Age of Information, it has become exceedingly easy to “get around” laws and regulations and “evade” the restrictions imposed by the legislators and regulators. (See the series of posts I began on January 25, 2010, “Financial Regulation in the Information Age”: http://seekingalpha.com/article/184153-financial-regulation-in-the-information-age-part-a.)
Laws and regulations work better when they are aimed at processes, the way that the regulated firms do business. These kinds of rules and regulations have to do with information flow (corporate disclosure and transparency), how trades are made, how trades are constructed, margin requirements, and so forth. One can see successful examples of “process” oversight in the creation of the Financial Futures Market and the Options Market in the latter part of the 20th century.
A proposal for overseeing the assumption of risk by financial institutions has been put forward by Oliver Hart, an economics professor at Harvard, and Luigi Zingales, an economics professor at the University of Chicago, in the Spring 2010 copy of National Affairs, titled “Curbing Risk on Wall Street,” (http://www.nationalaffairs.com/publications/detail/curbing-risk-on-wall-street). I have threatened several times to present a critique of this proposal in one of my posts. Hopefully, I will accomplish this soon for the Hart/Zingales proposal, I believe, offers a lot for people to consider.
So, the world goes on. The financial reform package will be passed. Banking and finance will continue to thrive. Big banks will get bigger and there will be fewer and fewer small banks. Hedge funds and venture capital funds will, in general, continue to do what they do well. And, sometime in the future there will be another financial crisis.
Things are not different.
End note: for a “good read” check the lead article in the business section of the New York Times on Sunday about Ken Rogoff and Carman Reinhart and their book “This Time Is Different”: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/04/business/economy/04econ.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=ken%20rogoff%20and%20carmen%20reinhart&st=cse.
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