Posts Tagged ‘Wall Street’

How lo9ng till the mob starts burning down the offices of those that rob them? It might be nearer than you think ... especially when they work out what's going on.

How long till the mob starts burning down the offices of those that rob them? It might be nearer than you think … especially when they work out what’s been going on.

The fascinating piece of reportage that follows from Bloomberg deserves to be re-blogged on every damn blog in the world. And if you’re a blogger reading this, I mean you. And if you’re not a blogger, then just repeat it on every FB page and email list in sight.

Let me first say this: I am not against banks per se – they’re a necessary evil in a modern mixed economy.

Am I against banks where the executives vote themselves massive salaries, yet where they fail to create any real shareholder value, and where without a subsidy from the poor bloody customers that every day they f*** over with unreasonable fees, charges and restrictive practices they would go broke? Yes I f****** am against them. I am customer, hear me roar.

Am I against them when they rort and skew the banking system to allow themselves to behave with utter irresponsibility lending money to people who will never be able to repay it, and then sloughing off that debt onto people they should deal fairly with but in fact they dupe, and doing so knowingly and ruthlessly? You damn rootin’ tootin’ I’m against them.

Am I against their executives not being prosecuted for their idiocy, but just shuffled around the boardroom tables of Wall Street, London, Paris, Athens, Rome, Madrid etc etc until the paper trail becomes so convoluted that no-one’s sure who is really guilty? Yes. I am against that. And if they all end up in jail together because no one can be sure who started the mess, then frankly serve them all damn well right.

In short: stop working class welfare for bankers before it wrecks our society!

The Bloomberg article follows, referring the the USA, but essentially the story is repeated in every advanced country in the world. Bankers have got used to hanging off the teat of Government by crying poor. Enough is enough. Oh, and just a side note? The entire foodstamp programme for the USA cost $78 billion last year …

Why Should Taxpayers Give Big Banks $83 Billion a Year?

On television, in interviews and in meetings with investors, executives of the biggest U.S. banks – notably JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Jamie Dimon – make the case that size is a competitive advantage. It helps them lower costs and vie for customers on an international scale. Limiting it, they warn, would impair profitability and weaken the country’s position in global finance.

So what if we told you that, by our calculations, the largest U.S. banks aren’t really profitable at all? What if the billions of dollars they allegedly earn for their shareholders were almost entirely a gift from U.S. taxpayers?

It's your money. Just keep saying that to yourself as you consider how you feel about this story. It's YOUR money.

It’s your money. Just keep saying that to yourself as you consider how you feel about this story. It’s YOUR money.

Granted, it’s a hard concept to swallow. It’s also crucial to understanding why the big banks present such a threat to the global economy.

Let’s start with a bit of background. Banks have a powerful incentive to get big and unwieldy. The larger they are, the more disastrous their failure would be and the more certain they can be of a government bailout in an emergency. The result is an implicit subsidy: The banks that are potentially the most dangerous can borrow at lower rates, because creditors perceive them as too big to fail.

Lately, economists have tried to pin down exactly how much the subsidy lowers big banks’ borrowing costs. In one relatively thorough effort, two researchers — Kenichi Ueda of the International Monetary Fund and Beatrice Weder di Mauro of the University of Mainz — put the number at about 0.8 percentage point. The discount applies to all their liabilities, including bonds and customer deposits.

Big Difference

Small as it might sound, 0.8 percentage point makes a big difference. Multiplied by the total liabilities of the 10 largest U.S. banks by assets, it amounts to a taxpayer subsidy of $83 billion a year. To put the figure in perspective, it’s tantamount to the government giving the banks about 3 cents of every tax dollar collected.

The top five banks – JPMorgan, Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc., Wells Fargo & Co. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. – account for $64 billion of the total subsidy, an amount roughly equal to their typical annual profits (see tables for data on individual banks). In other words, the banks occupying the commanding heights of the U.S. financial industry – with almost $9 trillion in assets, more than half the size of the U.S. economy – would just about break even in the absence of corporate welfare. In large part, the profits they report are essentially transfers from taxpayers to their shareholders.

Neither bank executives nor shareholders have much incentive to change the situation. On the contrary, the financial industry spends hundreds of millions of dollars every election cycle on campaign donations and lobbying, much of which is aimed at maintaining the subsidy.

Monopoly. It's meant to be a game, not a blueprint for the world banking system.

Monopoly. It’s meant to be a game, not a blueprint for the world banking system.

The result is a bloated financial sector and recurring credit gluts. Left unchecked, the superbanks could ultimately require bailouts that exceed the government’s resources. Picture a meltdown in which the Treasury is helpless to step in as it did in 2008 and 2009.

(And picture what it would mean to the very people who are propping the banks up then and now. That’s you and me. Ed.)

Regulators can change the game by paring down the subsidy. One option is to make banks fund their activities with more equity from shareholders, a measure that would make them less likely to need bailouts (we recommend $1 of equity for each $5 of assets, far more than the 1-to-33 ratio that new global rules require).

Another idea is to shock creditors out of complacency by making some of them take losses when banks run into trouble. A third is to prevent banks from using the subsidy to finance speculative trading, the aim of the Volcker rule in the U.S. and financial ring-fencing in the U.K.

Once shareholders fully recognized how poorly the biggest banks perform without government support, they would be motivated to demand better.

This could entail anything from cutting pay packages to breaking down financial juggernauts into more manageable units.

The market discipline might not please executives, but it would certainly be an improvement over paying banks to put us in danger.

"Hello fellas, need a hand keeping the pitchforks at bay?"

“Hello fellas, need a hand keeping the pitchforks at bay?”

Read more : How Obama squibbed his chance to rein in Wall Street.

Susan Bysiewicz admits her ad is lying, yet thinks it’s close enough to be OK to still run it. What … what?

So, as Scully Communications have pointed out, the campaign for wannabee Democrat Senate candidate Susan Bysiewicz (who is trying to replace Senator Joe Liebermann who is retiring, and is contesting with another Democrat contender Chris Murphy) is running an attack TV ad that is demonstrably false, and her campaign team have admitted it.

Apparently the idiots confused the candidate they were attacking with another person of the same name. Yet they are not taking the ad down!

As Scully explains in a story headlined “New Low in Political Advertising”:

“US Senate candidate Susan Bysiewicz should immediately take down her untruthful attack ad against Democratic rival Chris Murphy, apologize, and find another way to throw a Hail Mary pass in her flagging campaign.

However, the very fact that there is a general lack of outrage about the ad (except in the Murphy camp) speaks volumes about the depths to which political advertising has sunk.

A quick refresher: Bysiewicz, who at this point needs the stars to align perfectly (or maybe have one crash to earth right on him) to beat Murphy, went up with a TV ad portraying Murphy as something of a Wall Street Waterboy.

Here it is:

The problem is that the main claim in the ad, “He’s taken more hedge fund money than any other Democrat in Congress” is patently and verifiably false.

The SuBy campaign apparently targeted the wrong Murphy. They were called on it, admitted the charge was false but said the ad would still run. Is this what it’s come to? A campaign admits it’s running a false ad yet won’t take it down? Pathetic. Murphy asked the TV stations running the ad to pull it under these unique circumstances. Apparently, they can’t (which is an entirely different problem).

This past weekend, Bysiewicz defended continuing the ad with yet another false claim as pointed out by CTMirror.org’s Mark Pazniokas. What in the name of Joseph Pulitzer is going on here? Bysiewicz is clearly counting on the fact that many voters are busy with summer camps, vacations and other activities and may not be paying attention to this very important Democratic US Senate primary race. They see the ad, don’t know it’s false and hold it against Murphy because everyone seems to hate Wall Street these days. Then again, that may be her only shot to win.

If Bysiewicz wants to portray Murphy as some kind of flunky for the Rich Uncle Pennybags of the world, have at it! But I don’t we should tolerate using false data to back it up. The very-much -missed former candidate Lee Whitnum called Murphy “a whore” during a televised debate. Ok, but she didn’t then contend that Murphy was arrested in Berlin Turnpike motel taking $20 for giving a filibuster.

The guess here is that this whole thing backfires on Bysiewicz. It only adds to her reputation for scorched-earth campaigning, even against fellow Democrats. It dates back to 1998 when she faced fellow Democrat Ellen Scalettar in a primary for secretary of state. She won but only a series of TV ads that distorted Scalettar’s views and record. To this day, there are hard feelings about that one among Democrats.

Murphy is running a near-flawless campaign, has plenty of money and even turned this whole disgraceful episode into a fundraising vehicle of his own. Bysiewicz is not going to beat him even with an admittedly false ad running.”

Just how serious is this? Pretty damn serious, in my humble opinion.

I congratulate Mr Scully and others on bringing this travesty to light to a wider audience. But the bit that really fascinates me is the fact the Federal Law prevents TV stations from removing the ad even when they know it contains a lie.

This is surely nuts, and is even a bigger scandal, I propose, than Ms . Bysiewicz’s shameless mendacity.

Only in America, right? Sadly, no.

We have a similar situation in Australia where the only advertising that legally does not have to be truthful is political advertising. (Labor and the conservative Liberal-National Coalition combined to defeat a move by the now-vanished Australian Democrats to legislate this anomaly away some years ago.)

No wonder “ordinary people” despairingly think all politicians are liars, when the law specifically protects their right to be so.

Sadly, this is just one more nail in the coffin of participatory Western-style democracy.

When people no longer have enough confidence to participate in the political process, no matter how minimally, then we are in great danger of slipping into a very different society: one run not by elected representatives, but a sham democracy, which is really controlled by vested interests, crony politicians, and powerful businesses. In short order, any real opposition will be silenced, first through ridicule, (aided and abetted by a compliant media) then by legal entanglements, (step forward, Julian Assange and Bradley Manning) including not being allowed to present a coherent defence as happened to Manning recently, and if that doesn’t work, by simply physical persecution and murder.

“I love a good soak.”

Indeed, we may be there already, or very close to it.

Further chaos in the world’s economy will hasten the decline. The West is suffering, as I have said, from boiling frog syndrome. The cuts to our freedoms are continual, incremental, but often so small in and of themselves that no one notices. So we sit in the warm water, satiated by bread and circuses, not noticing that everything is changing, fatally.

This is surely an area where many on the left, and the libertarian Right, should bury at least some of their differences and fight back.

We have plenty of time to debate the appropriate role of government and taxation down the track, when and if we re-take control of the levers of power from the hands of those who don’t actually think that truth – simple, verifiable truth – should be the first principle of any democratic society.

Where will it end? Will the outrage simply peter out over time? Or are we seeing the beginning of a mass movement to end the death penalty in America once more? I would very much appreciate your opinions.

http://newamericamedia.org/2011/09/troy-davis-protesters-occupy-wall-street.php

How sad to see the police in NY reacting with typical brutishness. Has anything changed since 1968?