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12 Deregulatory Steps to Financial Meltdown


By Anonymous - Posted on 08 March 2009

12 Deregulatory Steps to Financial Meltdown
Wall Street's Best Investment - Part II
by Robert Weissman | Common Dreams

What can $5 billion buy in Washington?

Quite a lot.

Over the 1998-2008 period, the financial sector spent more than $5 billion on U.S. federal campaign contributions and lobbying expenditures.

This extraordinary investment paid off fabulously. Congress and executive agencies rolled back long-standing regulatory restraints, refused to impose new regulations on rapidly evolving and mushrooming areas of finance, and shunned calls to enforce rules still in place.

"Sold Out: How Wall Street and Washington Betrayed America," a report released by Essential Information and the Consumer Education Foundation (and which I co-authored), details a dozen crucial deregulatory moves over the last decade -- each a direct response to heavy lobbying from Wall Street and the broader financial sector, as the report details. (The report is available here.) Combined, these deregulatory moves helped pave the way for the current financial meltdown.

Here are 12 deregulatory steps to financial meltdown:

1. The repeal of Glass-Steagall

The Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999 formally repealed the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 and related rules, which prohibited banks from offering investment, commercial banking, and insurance services. In 1998, Citibank and Travelers Group merged on the expectation that Glass-Steagall would be repealed. Then they set out, successfully, to make it so. The subsequent result was the infusion of the investment bank speculative culture into the world of commercial banking. The 1999 repeal of Glass-Steagall helped create the conditions in which banks invested monies from checking and savings accounts into creative financial instruments such as mortgage-backed securities and credit default swaps, investment gambles that led many of the banks to ruin and rocked the financial markets in 2008.

2. Off-the-books accounting for banks

Holding assets off the balance sheet generally allows companies to avoid disclosing “toxic” or money-losing assets to investors in order to make the company appear more valuable than it is. Accounting rules -- lobbied for by big banks -- permitted the accounting fictions that continue to obscure banks' actual condition.

3. CFTC blocked from regulating derivatives

Financial derivatives are unregulated. By all accounts this has been a disaster, as Warren Buffett's warning that they represent "weapons of mass financial destruction" has proven prescient -- they have amplified the financial crisis far beyond the unavoidable troubles connected to the popping of the housing bubble. During the Clinton administration, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) sought to exert regulatory control over financial derivatives, but the agency was quashed by opposition from Robert Rubin and Fed Chair Alan Greenspan.

4. Formal financial derivative deregulation: the Commodities Futures Modernization Act

The deregulation -- or non-regulation -- of financial derivatives was sealed in 2000, with the Commodities Futures Modernization Act. Its passage orchestrated by the industry-friendly Senator Phil Gramm, the Act prohibits the CFTC from regulating financial derivatives.

5. SEC removes capital limits on investment banks and the voluntary regulation regime

In 1975, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) promulgated a rule requiring investment banks to maintain a debt to-net capital ratio of less than 15 to 1. In simpler terms, this limited the amount of borrowed money the investment banks could use. In 2004, however, the SEC succumbed to a push from the big investment banks -- led by Goldman Sachs, and its then-chair, Henry Paulson -- and authorized investment banks to develop net capital requirements based on their own risk assessment models. With this new freedom, investment banks pushed ratios to as high as 40 to 1. This super-leverage not only made the investment banks more vulnerable when the housing bubble popped, it enabled the banks to create a more tangled mess of derivative investments -- so that their individual failures, or the potential of failure, became systemic crises.

6. Basel II weakening of capital reserve requirements for banks

Rules adopted by global bank regulators -- known as Basel II, and heavily influenced by the banks themselves -- would let commercial banks rely on their own internal risk-assessment models (exactly the same approach as the SEC took for investment banks). Luckily, technical challenges and intra-industry disputes about Basel II have delayed implementation -- hopefully permanently -- of the regulatory scheme.

7. No predatory lending enforcement

Even in a deregulated environment, the banking regulators retained authority to crack down on predatory lending abuses. Such enforcement activity would have protected homeowners, and lessened though not prevented the current financial crisis. But the regulators sat on their hands. The Federal Reserve took three formal actions against subprime lenders from 2002 to 2007. The Office of Comptroller of the Currency, which has authority over almost 1,800 banks, took three consumer-protection enforcement actions from 2004 to 2006.

8. Federal preemption of state enforcement against predatory lending

When the states sought to fill the vacuum created by federal non-enforcement of consumer protection laws against predatory lenders, the Feds -- responding to commercial bank petitions -- jumped to attention to stop them. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Office of Thrift Supervision each prohibited states from enforcing consumer protection rules against nationally chartered banks.

9. Blocking the courthouse doors: Assignee Liability Escape

Under the doctrine of “assignee liability,” anyone profiting from predatory lending practices should be held financially accountable, including Wall Street investors who bought bundles of mortgages (even if the investors had no role in abuses committed by mortgage originators). With some limited exceptions, however, assignee liability does not apply to mortgage loans, however. Representative Bob Ney -- a great friend of financial interests, and who subsequently went to prison in connection with the Abramoff scandal -- worked hard, and successfully, to ensure this effective immunity was maintained.

10. Fannie and Freddie enter subprime

At the peak of the housing boom, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were dominant purchasers in the subprime secondary market. The Government-Sponsored Enterprises were followers, not leaders, but they did end up taking on substantial subprime assets -- at least $57 billion. The purchase of subprime assets was a break from prior practice, justified by theories of expanded access to homeownership for low-income families and rationalized by mathematical models allegedly able to identify and assess risk to newer levels of precision. In fact, the motivation was the for-profit nature of the institutions and their particular executive incentive schemes. Massive lobbying -- including especially but not only of Democratic friends of the institutions -- enabled them to divert from their traditional exclusive focus on prime loans.

Fannie and Freddie are not responsible for the financial crisis. They are responsible for their own demise, and the resultant massive taxpayer liability.

11. Merger mania

The effective abandonment of antitrust and related regulatory principles over the last two decades has enabled a remarkable concentration in the banking sector, even in advance of recent moves to combine firms as a means to preserve the functioning of the financial system. The megabanks achieved too-big-to-fail status. While this should have meant they be treated as public utilities requiring heightened regulation and risk control, other deregulatory maneuvers (including repeal of Glass-Steagall) enabled them to combine size, explicit and implicit federal guarantees, and reckless high-risk investments.

12. Credit rating agency failure

With Wall Street packaging mortgage loans into pools of securitized assets and then slicing them into tranches, the resultant financial instruments were attractive to many buyers because they promised high returns. But pension funds and other investors could only enter the game if the securities were highly rated.

The credit rating agencies enabled these investors to enter the game, by attaching high ratings to securities that actually were high risk -- as subsequent events have revealed. The credit rating agencies have a bias to offering favorable ratings to new instruments because of their complex relationships with issuers, and their desire to maintain and obtain other business dealings with issuers.

This institutional failure and conflict of interest might and should have been forestalled by the SEC, but the Credit Rating Agencies Reform Act of 2006 gave the SEC insufficient oversight authority. In fact, the SEC must give an approval rating to credit ratings agencies if they are adhering to their own standards -- even if the SEC knows those standards to be flawed.

From a financial regulatory standpoint, what should be done going forward? The first step is certainly to undo what Wall Street has wrought. More in future columns on an affirmative agenda to restrain the financial sector.

None of this will be easy, however. Wall Street may be disgraced, but it is not prostrate. Financial sector lobbyists continue to roam the halls of Congress, former Wall Street executives have high positions in the Obama administration, and financial sector propagandists continue to warn of the dangers of interfering with "financial innovation."

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Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Multinational Monitor, and director of Essential Action.

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to bring back the housing market.

ARREST BUSHCO & RICO PNAC/FARA AIPAC...PNAC is Bush/Cheney's "Helter Skelter" !

It would be convenient to point to specific events in history which caused the cards to tumble in 2008 but this would not be realistic. The most honest way to determine the cause(s) of the crash(es) is to look at what actually happened. In a nutshell, the effects of overpriced real estate rippled throughout the economy. Keep in mind, a real estate bubble of this size would be impossible without the support of intense regulation and subsidy.

According to Mr. Weissman, the crash was the result of twelve specific instances of deregulation. Let’s examine his “proof”.

1. The repeal of Glass-Steagall

Mr. Weissman suggests that with the repeal of Glass-Steagall banks were now able to invest more cash (from checking and savings accounts) into risky new instruments such as the infamous MBS or credit default swap. However, he conveniently leaves out the reason why banks are able to invest their customers’ money willy-nilly into such risky ventures: this money is largely guaranteed by the FDIC. The bank could lose every dollar on deposit without affecting most of its customers’ savings. Talk about free money!

2. Off-the-books accounting for banks

This is a favorite tactic of the government as well but is not the result of deregulation as his post implies. That said, dishonest practices such as this are the result of government regulation, not deregulation.

3. CFTC blocked from regulating derivatives

Another example of a practice which was not deregulated. However, the claim that regulating a financial instrument creates safety for consumers is patently fraudulent as evident by the extensive history of bubbles and crashes within regulated instruments.

4. Formal financial derivative deregulation: the Commodities Futures Modernization Act

A restatement of “proof” number three which we already discussed. So much for “12 deregulatory steps to financial meltdown”.

5. SEC removes capital limits on investment banks and the voluntary regulation regime

Yet another so-called “deregulation” that isn’t. Mr. Weissman claims that the removal of the capital limits allowed banks to push debt to net capital ratios “to as high as 40 to 1” resulting in “a more tangled mess of derivative investments”. Banks previously were allowed debt ratios of 15 to 1 which he appears to consider acceptable risks. However, the only way to determine adequate risk levels is through the pricing system. If a bank is all but guaranteed a bailout in the event of excessive risk, the problem is not with the debt ratio, which is arbitrarily chosen, but with the insulation of risk itself! A bank which must consider the possibility of the redemption of its debt is more apt to make wise decisions regarding its scarce capital. As the definition and redemption of capital becomes blurry due to the de facto guarantee by the Fed, banks get more loose with their practices because they don’t have to worry about the effects of failure.

6. Basel II weakening of capital reserve requirements for banks

Mr. Weissman admits that this particular “proof” has not even been implemented yet (if ever). It makes one wonder who his intended audience is and whether or not he believes they will even bother to read his piece.

7. No predatory lending enforcement

He now expects us to believe that a lack of predatory lending enforcement (again not an instance of deregulation) resulted in a real estate crash. Perhaps he should have focused more on the ability of prospective homeowners to obtain financing with little to no proof of income, no proof of employment, poor credit history, and all of the other glaring warnings which banks ignored in an effort to put people into homes. The result of which was created by government programs to lower credit requirements and guarantee loans once they were approved. Where’s the deregulation?

8. Federal preemption of state enforcement against predatory lending

I will agree with his implied frustration with obtrusive federal meddling but once again this is not an instance of deregulation.

9. Blocking the courthouse doors: Assignee Liability Escape

Finally, Mr. Weissman brings up a good point. Why should the liability of MBS holders be different than that of any other investment instrument? However, this is yet another example the unintended consequences of government regulation at work. This exemption would not be possible without some sort of legislation making it so.

10. Fannie and Freddie enter subprime

Fannie, Freddie, Ginnie and all of the other kids are all major players in the real estate crash yet Mr. Weissman shrugs them off as “not responsible for the financial crisis”. Then why bother including them in your list?! Half of the items on his list would not even be possible were it not for these GSE giants! These agencies allowed the reckless mortgage issuance to begin and blossom by securitizing the risky mortgages and providing a secondary market of virtually risk-free securities. I will agree that these GSEs are not the cause of the crash but they are certainly major factors. And as usual, this is not an example of deregulation.

11. Merger mania

He almost gets this one right. Mr. Weissman claims the “deregulatory maneuvers enabled [the banks] to combine size, explicit and implicit federal guarantees, and reckless high-risk investments”. In other words, repealing the Glass-Steagall act (his only example of actual deregulation), combined with federal guarantees (which are only possible thanks to industry regulation), on top of risky investment instruments (which again are only possible due to government regulation) somehow caused the crash. Deregulation indeed!

12. Credit rating agency failure

Topping off his list of “12 deregulatory steps to financial meltdown” is the final non-deregulation step. The credit rating agencies enjoy a government provided oligopoly of their industry. Various regulations encourage the overvaluation of government debt and has almost single-handedly allowed the entire government (at all levels) to issue debt beyond a reasonable or fiscally sound level. Governments are essentially broke and deserve an ‘F’ rating, not the ‘AAA’ that they have been handed for years.

In summary, Mr. Weissman provides us with only one example of deregulation and expects us to glaze over his redundancies and finger-pointing to draw the conclusion that only government regulation can cure this problem which “Wall Street has wrought”. Instead, I encourage readers to consider the other parties of this issue: namely the government. Without implicit and explicit government guarantees, regulation, and coercion, the real estate market would not have become overvalued as it did thus preventing the creation of an explosive real estate investment bubble which ultimately burst. Over-regulation cannot be cured by more regulation.

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