Saturday, March 14, 2009

Removing the risk of failure from the banking equation eliminates discipline within the profession.

From Option ARMageddon:

"Lunchtime Links 3-14 March 14, 2009 – 12:16 pm

by Rolfe Winkler, CFA

(Send links, videos, pics to optionarmageddon at gmail with subject “link” … Thanks to Kippy—$20 —for her donation!)

U.S. Insists Fears Over Debt Unfounded (WSJ) Yeah, right. Another problem for the administration will be its growth targets. Future deficit projections depend on tax receipts, which depend on economic growth. The administration’s growth forecast is way to rosy given the swift deterioration we’ve seen. Look for an epiphany that tax receipts are coming in much lower than forecast in the next few months…

The Looting of America’s Coffers (David Leonhardt) The NYT columnist’s latest is today’s must read.

Bring Back the Bank Run! (James Grant) This article from 1990 is even more relevant today. “What has been lacking in American banking in recent years is the bank run….With the wholesale substitution of federal promises, actual or implied, for conservative banking practices, the caliber of lending has inevitably suffered.” This gets to the problem of deposit insurance, which I have blogged about at length. Removing the risk of failure from the banking equation eliminates discipline within the profession.

Baby Ponzi (The Hook) Virginia man arrested by Feds in $11 million Ponzi case. “He seemed like a very pleasant guy,” said one person who saw [the perp] at work. “I visited his office once….He had a bunch of computers. It seemed like a very sophisticated operation.”

200 FDIC Agents Arrive in Puerto Rico (Carribean Business) “a decision was made to investigate several banks at the same time, which is why so many more agents than usual were in town.” (hat tip CalculatedRisk)

Madoff Lists $826 million of assets (WSJ) Much of it, his ownership interest in his business, is likely worth far less now.

Fannie Mae’s Last Stand (Vanity Fair)

Ethics Education Looks Like a Growth Industry (CFA Mag) DollarCollapse.com’s John Rubino on the need for ethics training. “Business in general and finance in particular operate in tax and regulatory environments where pushing the envelope is both lucrative and frequently encouraged.”

Me:

  1. Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    I’m of big fan of Grant and your blog, but, just as with getting rid of the SEC, which Grant proposes, we can’t get rid of the FDIC.

    Why? Because they’re not in place to protect you or James Grant. In fact, don’t think of them in economic terms at all. Think of them as rules put in to get some people to accept the system. Many people believe that a free market of banks and investors would naturally lead to collusion among them to the detriment of average citizens. The rules and enforcers are there to stop that from happening.

    Now, there’s a very good argument that the rules and enforcers are a kind of Potemkin system designed to fool the average citizen, and that leads to the question of how to change it.

    My guess, and it’s only a guess, is that most people will favor stringent enforcement and better rules, not the abandonment of both, which many would see as the whole point of running the system so poorly: namely, to get rid of it.

    So, some regulations are going to have to be put in place. It’s really a question of how onerous they need to be. Of course, maybe I’m wrong, and people will accept a totally free market system. On that, I wish you good luck, and would be happy to see it happen, if it included a guaranteed income and some form of health care, a la Milton Friedman.

    By Don the libertarian Democrat on Mar 14, 2009

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