Before
the Election was Over, Wall Street won
Before
the campaign contributors lavished billions of dollars on their
favorite candidate; and long after they toast their winner or drink
to forget their loser, Wall Street was already primed to continue its
reign over the economy.
Nomi
Prince
23
October, 2012
For,
after three debates (well, four), when it comes to banking, finance,
and the ongoing subsidization of Wall Street, both presidential
candidates and their parties’ attitudes toward the banking sector
is similar – i.e. it must be preserved – as is – at all
costs, rhetoric to the contrary, aside.
Obama
hasn’t brought ‘sweeping reform’ upon the Establishment Banks,
nor does Romney need to exude deregulatory babble, because nothing
structurally substantive has been done to harness the biggest banks
of the financial sector, enabled, as they are, by entities from the
SEC to the Fed to the Treasury Department to the White House.
In
addition, though much is made of each candidates' tax plans, and the
related math that doesn’t add up (for both presidential
candidates), the bottom line is, Obama hasn’t explained exactly WHY
there’s $5 trillion more in debt during his presidency, nor has
Romney explained HOW to get a $5 trillion savings.
For
the record, both missed, or don’t get, that nearly 32% of that
Treasury debt is reserved (in excess) at the Fed, floating the
banking system that supposedly doesn’t need help. The ‘worst
economic period since the Great Depression’ barely produced a
short-fall of an approximate average of $200 billion in
personal and corporate tax revenues per year, according to federal
data.)
Consider
that the amount of tax revenue since 2008, has dropped for individual
income contributions from $1.15 trillion in 2008 to $915 billion in
2009, to $899 billion in 2010, then risen to $1.1 trillion in 2011.
Corporate tax contributions have dropped (by more of course) from
$304 billion in 2008 to $138 billion in 2009 to $191 billion in 2010,
to $181 billion in 2011. Thus, at most, we can consider to have lost
$420 billion in individual revenue and $402 billion in corporate
revenue, or $822 billion from 2009 on. The Fed has, in addition, held
on average of $1.6 trillion Treasuries in excess reserves. That, plus
$822 billion equals $2.42 trillion, add on the other $900 billion of
Fed held mortgage securities, and you get $3.32 trillion, NOT $5
trillion, and most to float banks.
The
most consistent political platform is that big finance trumps main
street economics, and the needs of the banking sector trump those of
the population. We have a national policy condoning
zero-interest-rate policy (ZIRP) as somehow job-creative. (Fed Funds
rates dropped
to 0% by the end of 2008,
where they have remained since.)
We
are left with a regulatory policy of pretend. Rather than
re-instating Glass-Steagall to divide commercial from investment
banking and insurance activity, thereby removing the platform of
government (or public) supported speculation and expansion, props
leaders that pretend linguistic tweaks are a match for financial
might. We have no leader that will take on Jamie Dimon, Chairman of
the country’s largest bank, JPM Chase, who can devote 15% of the
capital of JPM Chase, which remains backstopped by customer deposit
insurance, to bet on the direction of potential corporate defaults,
and slide by two Congressional investigations like walks in the park.
Pillars
of Collusion
A
few months ago, Paul Craig Roberts and I co-wrote
an article about the LIBOR scandal;
the crux of which, was lost on most of the media. That is; the banks,
the Fed, and the Treasury Department knew banks were manipulating
rates lower to artificially support the prices of hemorrhaging assets
and debt securities. But no one in Washington complained,
because they were in on it; because it made the over-arching problem
of debt-manufacturing and bloating the Fed’s balance sheet to
subsidize a banking industry at the expense of national economic
health, evaporate in the ether of delusion.
In
the same vein, the Fed announced QE3, the unlimited version – the
Fed would buy $40 billion a month of mortgage-backed securities from
banks. Why – if the recession is supposedly over and the housing
market has supposedly bottomed out – would this be necessary?
Simple.
If the Fed is buying securities, it’s because the banks can’t
sell them anywhere else. And because banks still need to get
rid of these mortgage assets, they won't lend again or refinance
loans at faster rates, thereby sharing their advantage for cheaper
money, as anyone trying to even refinance a mortgage has discovered.
Thus, Banks simply aren’t ‘healthy’, not withstanding
their $1.53
trillion of
excess reserves (earning interest), and nearly $900 billion in
mortgage backed securities parked at the Fed. The open-ended QE
program is merely perpetuating the illusion that as long as bank
assets get marked higher (through artificial buyers, zero percent
interest rates, or not having to mark them to market), everything is
fine.
Meanwhile,
Washington coddles and subsidizes the biggest banks - not to
encourage lending, not to encourage saving, and not to better
the country, but to contain harsh truths about how badly banks
played, and are still playing, the nation.
The
SEC’s Role
According
to the SEC’s
own report card on
“Enforcement Actions: Addressing Misconduct that led to or arose
from the Financial Crisis”: the SEC has levied charges against 112
entities and individuals, of which 55 were CEOs, CFOs, and other
Senior Corporate Officers.
In
terms of fines; the SEC ‘ordered or agreed to’ $1.4 billion of
penalties, $460 million of disgorgement and prejudgment interest, and
$355 million of “Additional Monetary Relief Obtained for Harmed
Investors. That’s a grand total of $2.2 billion of fines.
(The Department of Justice dismissed additional charges or punitive
moves.)
Goldman,
Sachs received the largest fine, of $550 million, taking no
responsibility (in SEC-speak, “neither confirming nor denying’
any wrongdoing) for packaging CDOs on behalf of one client, which
supported their prevailing trading position, and pushing them on
investors without disclosing that information, which would have
materially changed pricing and attractiveness. (The DOJ found nothing
else to charge Goldman with, apparently not considering misleading
investors, fraud.)
Obama-appointed
SEC head, Mary Shapiro, originally settled with Bank of America for a
friendly $34 million, until Judge Rakoff quintupled the fine to $150
million, for misleading shareholders during its Fed-approved,
Treasury department pushed, acquisition of Merrill Lynch, regarding
bonus compensation. (Merrill’s $3.6 billion of bonuses were
paid before the year-end of 2008, while TARP and other subsidies were
utilized). Still embroiled in ongoing lawsuits related to its
Countrywide acquisition, Bank of America agreed to an additional
$601.5 million in one non-SEC settlement, and $2.43 billion in
another relating to those Merrill bonuses. Likewise, Wells Fargo
agreed to pay $590 million for its fall-2008 acquisition of
Wachovia’s foul loans and securities. These are small prices to pay
to grow your asset and customer base.
Citigroup
agreed to pay $285 million to the SEC to settle charges of misleading
investors and betting against them, in the sale of one (one!) $1
billion CDO. Judge Rakoff rejected the settlement, but Citigroup is
appealing. So is its friend, the SEC. Outside of that,
Citigroup agreed to an additional $590 million to settle a
shareholder CDO lawsuit, denying wrongdoing.
JPM
Chase agreed to a $153.5 million SEC fine relating to one (one!) CDO.
Outside of Washington, it agreed to a $100 million settlement for
hiking credit card fees, and a $150 million settlement for a lawsuit
filed by the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists
retirement fund and other investors, over losses from its purchase of
JPM’s Sigma Finance Hedge Fund, when it used to be rated
‘AAA.’
There
you have it. No one did anything wrong. The total of $2.2 billion in
SEC fines, and about $4.4 billion in outside lawsuits is paltry.
Consider that for the same period (since 2007), total Wall Street
bonuses topped
$679 billion,
or nearly 309 times as much as the SEC fines, and 154 times as much
as all the settlements.
The SEC
& Dodd Frank Dance
The
SEC embarked upon 90 actions, divided into 15 categories, related to
the Dodd-Frank Act that amount to proposing or adopting rules with
loopholes galore, and creating reports that summarize things we know.
Some of the obvious categories, like asset backed related products or
derivatives, don’t even include CDOs, which got the lion’s share
of SEC fines and DOJ indifference.
Rather
than tightening regulations on the most egregious financial product
culprits; insurance swaps, such as the credit default swaps imbedded
in CDOs, the SEC loosened them. It did so by approving an order
making many of the Exchange Act requirements
not applicable to security-based swaps.
In one new post-Dodd-Frank order, it stated, a “product will not be
considered a swap or security-based swap if ,,, it falls within the
category of…insurance, including against default on individual
residential mortgages.” Thus, credit default swaps, considered
insurance since their inception, warrant no special attention in the
grand land of sweeping reform.
The
credit ratings category includes 20 items proposed, requested, or
adopted. Under things accomplished, the SEC gave a report to Congress
that basically says that the majority of rating agency business is
paid for by issuers (which we knew), and proclaims (I kid you not)
that a security is rated “investment grade” if it is rated
“investment grade” by at least one rating agency. Further
inspection of SEC self-labeled accomplishments provides no more
confidence, that anything has, or will, change for the safer.
The
White House & Congress
Yet,
the Obama White House wants us to believe that Dodd-Frank was
‘sweeping reform.’ Romney and the Republicans are up and arms
over it, simply because it exists and sounds like regulation, and
Democrats defensively portray its effectiveness.
Ignore
them both and ask yourself the relevant questions. Are the big banks
bigger? Yes. Can they still make markets and keep crappy securities
on their books, as long as they want, while formulating them into
more complicated securities, buoyed by QE measures and ZIRP? Yes. Do
they have to evaluate their positions in real world terms so we know
what’s really going on? No.
Then,
there’s the Volcker Rule which equates spinning off private
equity desks or moving them into asset management arms, with
regulatory progress. If it could be fashioned to prohibit all
speculative trading or connected securities creation on the backbone
of FDIC-insured deposits, it might work, but then you’d have
Glass-Steagall, which is the only form of regulatoin that will truly
protect us from banking-spawned crisis.
Meanwhile,
banks can still make markets and trade in everything they were doing
before as long as they say it’s on behalf of a client. This was the
entire problem during the pre-crisis period. The implosion of piles
of toxic assets based on shaky loans or other assets didn’t result
from private equity trading or even from isolating trading of
any bank’s own books (except in cases like that of Bear Stearns’
hedge funds), but from federally subsidized, highly risky,
ridiculously leveraged, assets engineered under the guise of
'bespoke' customer requests or market making related ‘demand.’
When
the Banking Act was passed in 1933, even Republican millionaire
bankers, like the head of Chase, Winthrop Aldrich, understood that
reducing systemic risk might even help them in the long run, and
publicly supported it. Today, Jamie Dimon shuns all forms of
separation or regulation, and neither political party dares
interfere.
But
things worked out for Dimon. JPM Chase’s board (of which he is
Chairman) approved his $23 million 2011 compensation package (the top
bank CEO package), despite disclosure of a $2 billion (now about $6
billion) loss in the infamous Whale Trade. He banked $20.8 million in
2010, the
highest paid bank CEO that
year, too. In 2009, Dimon made $1.32 million, publicly, but really
bagged $16 million worth of stock and options. He made $19.7 million
in total compensation for 2008, and $34 million for 2007. Still a New
York Fed, Class A director, he’s proven himself to be untouchable.
Yet,
the kinds of deals that were so problematic are creeping back.
According to Asset Backed Alert, JPM Chase was the top asset-baked
security (ABS) issuer for the first half of 2012, lead managing $66
billion of US ABS deals.
In
addition, according to Asset Back Alert, US public ABS deal volume
rose 92.8% for the second half of 2012 vs. 2011, while issuance of US
prime MBS (high quality deals) fell 50.6%. Overall
CDO issuance rose 50.2%.
(Citigroup is the lead issuer (up 552%.))
ZIRP’s
hidden losses
According
to a comprehensive analysis of data compiled from regulatory
documents by Bill Moreland and his team at my new favorite
website, www.bankregdata.com,
some really scary numbers pop out. Here’s the kicker: ZIRP
costs citizens and disproportionately helps the biggest banks, by
about $120 billion a year.
Between
2005 and 2007, US commercial banks held approximately $6.97 trillion
of interest bearing customer deposits. During the past two quarters,
they held an average of $7.31 trillion. During that first period,
when fed funds rates averaged 4.5%, banks paid their customers an
average of $39.6 billion of interest per quarter. More recently, with
ZIRP, they paid an average of $8.9 billion in interest per quarter,
or nearly 77% LESS. In dollar terms - that’s about $30.7 billion
less per quarter, or $123 billion less per year.
Since
ZIRP kicked into gear in 2008, banks have saved nearly $486 billion
in interest payments. Average salary and compensation increased by
approximately 23%. Dividend payments declined by 14.05%.
The
biggest banks are the biggest takers. Consider JPM Chase’s cut.
Although its deposits disproportionately increased by 46% from 2007
(pre ZIRP and helped by the acquisition of Washington Mutual) to
2012, its interest expenses declined by nearly 89%. From 2004 to
2007, Chase paid out $34.4 billion in interest to its deposit
customers. From 2008 to mid-2012, it paid out $3.4 billion. JPM
Chase’s ratio of interest paid to deposits of .27% is the lowest of
the big four banks, that on average pay less than smaller banks
anyway.
The
percentage of JPM Chase’s assets comprised of loans and leases is
lower at 36.04% compared to its peers’ percentage of 52.4%. Its
trading portion of assets is higher, as 14.78% vs. 6.88% for its
peers, and 4.23% for all banks.
Looking
Ahead
To
recap: savers, borrowers, and the economy are still losing money due
to the preservation of the illusion of bank health. More critically,
the big banks grew through acquisitions and the ongoing closures of
smaller local banks that provided better banking terms to citizens.
The big banks have more assets and deposits, on which they are
over-valuing prices, and paying less interest than before, due to a
combination of Fed and Treasury blessed mergers in late 2008, QE and
ZIRP. Yet, we’re supposed to believe this situation will somehow
manifest a more solid and productive economy.
Meanwhile,
past faulty securities and loans will fester until their
transfer to the Fed is complete or they mature, while new ones take
their place. This will inevitably lead to more of a clampdown on
loans for productive purposes and further economic degradation and
instability. Financial policy trumps economic policy. Banks trump
citizens, and absent severe reconstruction of the banking system, the
cycle will absolutely, unequivocally continue
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