Thursday, November 13, 2008

"So much for the Waxman Witch Trial, as Dealbreaker had billed it. This was more like a love-in. "

Justin Fox on the Hedge Fund Hearings:

"So much for the Waxman Witch Trial, as Dealbreaker had billed it. This was more like a love-in. Some members of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform did razz the five multi-billionaire hedge fund managers assembled before them about the taxation of carried interest (performance fees that are taxed at capital gains rates). But two of the five--George Soros and Renaissance Technologies' Jim Simons--agreed that carried interest should be taxed as ordinary income. Paulson didn't, Philip Falcone of Harbinger Capital and Ken Griffin of Citadel were opposed with some caveats. But that discussion remained civil.

The most heated moment of the whole hours-long hearing came when Indiana Republican Mark Souder gave Soros hell for about 20 seconds for supporting marijuana legalization. But then he switched to a question about whether hedge funds helped bring markets toward equilibrium, and all was friendly again."

You've got to be kidding me.

"He waxed ominous about the dangers of leverage (his fund uses very little), saying that maybe what was needed were higher margin requirements on lots of different asset classes. He said Treasury should demand higher interest rates and bigger equity stakes when it injected capital into banks, and should also require that banks that get its money stop paying cash dividends and cap cash compensation for executives (they could pay all they want in common stock)."

I agree with him.

"That was actually too much for John Paulson. "I in no way want to be critical of Secretary Paulson," he said. "He's done a great deal for this country. He's willing to change his positions when the circumstances change."

We both studied with Keynes. Who didn't nowadays?

Here's my comment:

donthelibertariandemocrat Says: Your comment is awaiting moderation.
"So much for the Waxman Witch Trial" They're pretty much illegal nowadays. Read "The Crucible". "This was more like a love-in." Ah, the sixties."razz the five multi-billionaire hedge fund managers assembled before them" Hey, hedge fund manager. Hey, hedge fund manager."Souder gave Soros hell for about 20 seconds for supporting marijuana legalization" Ah, the sixties. You're joking, right?"If the hedge fund industry is worried about becoming the scapegoat" It's got to be ten more months until Yom Kippur. Rest easy for now."They mainly wanted to ask the hedge fund guys for advice." Can you guys help me get rich like you?"as long as the information stays with the regulators" Curiously, they don't want the competition knowing what their buying."who went from little-known to legendary last year by pocketing a reported $3.7 billion" He must have big pockets. I can only carry loose change."weren't going to rake him over the coals for profiting from the pain of American homeowners, he loosened up." The asbestos he was wearing was getting hot."He waxed ominous about the dangers of leverage (his fund uses very little), saying that maybe what was needed were higher margin requirements on lots of different asset classes. He said Treasury should demand higher interest rates and bigger equity stakes when it injected capital into banks, and should also require that banks that get its money stop paying cash dividends and cap cash compensation for executives (they could pay all they want in common stock)." I agree with this."Paulson did get chided repeatedly for failing to turn on his microphone when he started answering a question" He was busting their chops. ""The headline of this hearing is definitely Paulson vs. Paulson." What are the betting odds? I did pretty well with CDS's."He's willing to change his positions when the circumstances change." I remember when he told Keynes that."Carried interest should be taxed as ordinary income." I agree

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