Sunday, November 23, 2008

"So ends he who evil did. The death of a sinner always reflects his life"

In my continuing search to blame actual human beings for our current difficulties, I might have to add an addiction to opera and skiing:

"Canada’s Carney Says Some Bankers Focused on Opera, Not Lending

By Greg Quinn

Nov. 22 (Bloomberg) -- Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney said the global financial crisis was caused in part by banking executives who thought about opera and ski trips instead of risks in their loan portfolios.

Regulators and executives were “seduced” by the idea that risk was “spread thinly around the world” by packages of loans, Carney told the British Broadcasting Corp. in a radio interview broadcast today.

Carney, 43 and a former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. investment banker, also said he was troubled by talks he had with bank executives during the past five years.

“If you were having a conversation with a central banker like myself, and the chief executive drifted into opera or the ski slopes of Davos or some type of social setting, that’s an issue,” Carney told the London-based network."

A bit off topic, I'd say.

“There is vicious natural selection going on right now in the financial services industry, and it’s appropriate,” Carney said in the interview. “Those who weren’t on top of things are gone or going.”

He sounds delighted. A kind of ebullient Herbert Spencer. I agree, but don't want to dance on their graves.

"The credit crisis might have been prevented if other countries had regulations like Canada’s, Carney said. The country’s banks were rated the strongest by the World Economic Forum last month. "

Could be.

“It’s like many things -- it’s excess,” Carney said in the radio interview. “Fundamentally, the ideas were sound, but they got applied too widely and ultimately by people who had forgotten about the fundamentals, or never knew the fundamentals of what they were doing.”

I agree. Maimonides. The Golden Mean. They're still forgetting the fundamentals.

"Carney spoke in London on Nov. 19, saying regulators should avoid worsening a worldwide recession by forcing lenders to stockpile more capital while economies are slowing."

I think that's what I'm saying.

"He also said countries need to bolster domestic regulations to improve the “transparency” of new types of securities, and should strengthen international bodies to better monitor emerging strains in financial markets."

I agree here as well.

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