By Zach Carter, Media Consortium Blogger
Bailout pay czar Ken Feinberg raised a ruckus last week when he announced plans to slash cash payouts to executives at seven companies that have received massive levels of taxpayer support. While better oversight of the bailout barons is helpful, the best way to change Wall Street pay practices is to adopt a set of tough, comprehensive regulations that cover everything from the executive suite to the loan department. As is, many of the executives Feinberg cracked down on will still make millions this year from stocks and other perks, while the very banks that depend the most on bailout money are spending like mad to lobby against reform.
Feinberg’s new salary limits only apply to executives at Citigroup, Bank of America, AIG, GM, Chrysler, GMAC and Chrysler Financial. But while these new rules are an effort to reduce the incentive for executives to take big risks for short-term gains, the rules of the game for non-bailout barons haven’t changed at all. Risky securities trading and unenforced consumer protection regulations still allow financiers to make a killing by gambling on mortgages and credit cards.
As Greg Kaufmann explains for The Nation, Feinberg has been barred from altering some of the most egregious bonus arrangements at even the biggest fund recipients, as the employment contracts were signed prior to the government’s bailout. AIG plans to pay out $198 million in bonuses in March 2010, and none of Feinberg’s recent rulings will change that. As Kaufmann also notes, back in March, AIG agreed to pay pack $45 million of the bonuses it shelled out early this year. After over seven months, just $19 million has been repaid.
The government’s hands-off approach to AIG employment contracts is a rather flagrant display of deference to executives. Nothing stopped the government from renegotiating contracts for union laborers when it bailed out Chrysler and GM, as Dean Baker notes for The American Prospect.
Lest we forget, the government literally owns AIG, and would own both Citigroup and Bank of America had it demanded a market rate of return for its investment. Taxpayers injected several times the stock market values of both Citi and BofA into the troubled banks, but settled for a 36% stake in Citi and preferred stock in BofA. As Mike Madden emphasizes for Salon, Feinberg is still letting executives make several times the median household income in cash alone—nevermind stock—and it’s unlikely that his move will spark changes among bankers outside the handful of companies ordered to make changes.
"Executives are still taking home paychecks that dwarf what the average American earns. And it’s not clear whether any other companies will get on board with the Treasury plan unless they’re forced to," Madden writes.
Congress hasn’t taken any significant steps to curb Wall Street paydays since the crisis broke, but lawmakers did take two other important steps toward banking reform this week. Two different House committees passed bills to rein in the wild world of derivatives trading and establish a new Consumer Financial Protection Agency (CFPA). In a video piece for the Huffington Post Investigative Fund, Amanda Zamora and Lagan Sebert detail the legislative battle to create a CFPA, which has faced an enormous lobbying push from both banks and the top lobby group for the corporate executive class, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
Zamora and Sebert note that top bank lobbyist Ed Yingling is arguing that if regulators simply enforced the existing consumer protection laws, all of the major abuses in mortgage lending and credit cards would have been prevented. Even for a corporate lobbyist, Yingling’s disingenuousness is absolutely breathtaking. He acknowledges that existing regulators are not enforcing consumer protection laws, says he wants the laws enforced, and then says it would be a bad idea to create a new agency to enforce those laws.
The CFPA won’t have any mysterious new powers. It will have the same authorities on credit cards and mortgages that existing federal regulators have. But the current regulators are focused primarily on bank profits, which often run directly contrary to fair play with consumers. Yingling and Wall Street are really afraid of a serious regulator who will stand up for consumers. They’re terrified that the CFPA will actually enforce consumer protection rules against powerful banks—but are talking as if all they want is effective enforcement. It’s a lie, pure and simple.
On Monday and Tuesday, thousands took to the streets in Chicago to protest a meeting of Yingling’s lobby group, the American Bankers Association (ABA). Esther Kaplan details the protests in a piece for The Nation, complete with video footage. The ABA retaliated against Kaplan’s reporting by revoking her press credentials, but it appears to have been worth it, as her piece describes everything from citizen outrage to police intimidation and awkward banker solidarity. As Democracy Now! explains, the ABA has spent decades lobbying against rules to strengthen the economy and prevent banker abuses, and is now at the heart of an effort to use taxpayer bailout money to lobby Congress against financial reforms.
So far, their efforts seem to be paying off. Last week, one of the CFPA’s chief advocates, Rep. Brad Miller (D-NC), co-authored an amendment significantly restricting the agency’s enforcement powers. As Sebert and Zamora note, Miller agreed to exempt banks with $10 billion or less in assets from regulatory examinations by the CFPA—roughly 98% of all banks. The existing, corrupted regulators who didn’t lift a finger to prevent the subprime mortgage crisis will be the people actually going to the banks and reviewing their books. While the CFPA could send along one of its own regulators to participate in the exam, the new agency can’t tax the bank to pay for it, which would make it very difficult for the CFPA to keep an eye on smaller banks.
Even worse, there is nothing to prevent a giant bank like Bank of America from moving all of its most egregiously predatory activities into a series of small corporate subsidiaries. By exploiting this loophole, 100% of U.S. banks could be exempt from CFPA enforcement, including the giant banks most heavily involved in subprime mortgage abuses.
The other big piece of Obama-backed financial legislation to make its way through Committee last week had to do with derivatives, also known as the wild Wall Street securities that brought down AIG. The best way to fix the derivatives mess is to require that derivatives be traded on an exchange the same way stocks are, so that companies can’t make crazy bets without regulatory and market scrutiny. But Obama only wants "standardized" derivatives to be processed through a central clearinghouse—like an exchange, except without any public pricing information. And so long as a derivative contract can be deemed "customized," it would be totally exempt from even this limited reform.
But as Art Levine notes for AlterNet, the derivatives bill actually got worse in committee. Plenty of non-financial businesses use derivatives to legitimately hedge real risks: Airlines try to insure themselves against swings in oil prices, for instance. Lawmakers agreed to exempt any contract with these companies, termed "end-users" in the financial jargon, from central clearing requirements. The trouble is, big Wall Street hedge funds and private equity firms can be classified as "end-users," opening a fatal loophole in the legislation. The five banks who control 95% of the derivatives market will just conduct all of their most reckless trades with hedge funds and avoid oversight entirely.
A modest reform on paychecks for bailout recipients is nowhere near sufficient to protect our economy from banker excess. If Wall Street is going to serve any productive economic function, it has to be subject to serious consumer protection rules, and its derivatives casino has to be dismantled.
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10 Comments







More, and this is disgusting. Greenberg is back–and he may have been aided in luring talent in his new “enterprise” because of limitations on pay at AIG!
Link.
More on how the casinos work: Goldman Sachs says “dark pools” help investors
Goldman runs the second largest dark pool Sigma X. So no surprise.
I found this post sort of all over the place saying how efforts were being made to rein in derivatives and create the CFPA, and then going on to say how none of this is really happening. And the Feinberg stuff is old news and once again we see how little it actually amounts to. It also fails to note that he can’t reduce salaries on players like Goldman even though Goldman still benefits mightily from government credit lines. And let’s remember when its autoworkers there has been no problem reducing benefits and wages. So the idea that these deals with the banksters are sacrosanct is just bankster spin and propaganda, which the poster uncritically repeats.
All this makes the title “Dismantling the Wall Street Casino” wildly inaccurate.
Thnx so much, Hugh. Please consider expanding on all of this in a separate post. We cannot exert enough pressure to try and get some oversight/investigations going before they totally wreck us and the rest of the world, too.
Agreed, just like the focus on executive pay and bonuses distracts from the dangers inherent in the casino which generates enough cash to pay those bonuses, focus on CFPA likewise allows the casino to continue operating, just so long as they take steps to warn people who had been desperate jump into debt in order to keep up with their neighbors of the consequences of the contracts into which they enter.
The WalMartization of the US, the notion that the greatest good is achieved by everyday low prices is at the core of what has destroyed our domestic productive capacity, and has Americans putting short-term savings before long term investment.
Credit needs to be more expensive in whatever the new normal ends up as. Wages need to rise so that we don’t have to be reliant on credit. But the people who have been promoting financialism, where instead of lubricating capitalism, speculation and credit become and replace productive capitalism, have been at the forefront of the hollowing out of the real economy so that we must rely on household credit to facilitate more and more of our necessary economic activity such as housing, transportation, education and most recently, consumption.
Jubilee!
There is no way to leverage 30-40:1 other than recklessly, as the pseudo insurance contracts of swapish derivatives have proven. Indeed, that kind of leverage sucks capital away from productive endeavors, hollowing out the economy. Leverage rates that high must be sustained with a continual inflow of capital from the masses, and it is at that point where the system is vulnerable to regulatory chokehold.
The repeal of Glass Steagal by Gramm Leach Bliley broke down the walls between various financial sectors, finance, insurance and real estate (FIRE). The FIRE economy of the 21st century looks very different than that constellation of factors which led to the great depression, and as such will require the level of innovation which led to the economic crash to regulate.
I’d prefer that the USG maintain a hands-off position on finance bonuses and adopt another approach. Under the assumption that high rates of leverage generate the kind of money which can attract the best and brightest Americans from productive sectors to toil on creating new esoterica for finance, the government needs to compete with the finance sector to attract talent smart enough to understand what Wall Street’s whiz kids are doing and shut down operations that threaten the innocent.
Thus, a 100% tax on the top half of Finance, Insurance and Real Estate economic whizzes would be able to fund a regulatory regime which could go toe to toe with Wall Street instead of being spooked by the opacity of each new Big Thing.
Close the Casino, don’t slap the hands of those on it.
The entirety of Wall Street should be under scutiny, because it makes the Mafia look like look like two year old kids.
Ah! The love of money makes those who find a way to get it look like saints, even if it on the backs of Business, investors, and taxpayers.
The Casino cannot operate without the safety net artifice of managing risk. No insurance company would insure gambling. So they turned to each other to pretend to cover each other in the event of casualty. The devices used to cover each other, unlike insurance, were not regulated to require capital reserves in place to cover those contracts when they went south. Thus a system designed to prevent systemic failure by ensuring adequate capitalization to cover losses was short circuited to avoid those requirements and, predictably, failed.
Thank you for this excellent post.
It seems that any bank reform is going to require the same level of pressure and scrutiny from the public that health care is receiving.
Does this mean she can no longer report on the ABA or report anything at all. Either way, I was wondering why MSM doesn’t pick up this story, as they were happy to report on tea parties whether those were thought “real” or “faux”.
I wish Rachel would cover this – the footage from chicago is TV ratings worthy imho, and crystalizes the entire issue: Banks vs. citizens.
Hmmm, I’m seeing a pattern developing here…..
If you’re one of the two or three people here who haven’t seen this about the wonderful protest demo going on in Chicago, by all means go see: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RFqOy6H5N_s