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(NC) Why No Regulatory Action on Banksters’ “Destabilize the Markets” Threats?

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Political Heretic Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-01-10 09:37 PM
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(NC) Why No Regulatory Action on Banksters’ “Destabilize the Markets” Threats?
Edited on Mon Mar-01-10 09:38 PM by Political Heretic
From http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2010/03/why-no-regulatory-action-on-banksters-destabilize-the-markets-threats.html">Naked Capitalism

We have pointed out more than once that a major impediment to reform of the financial services industry is that a small number of firms control infrastructure crucial to modern capitalism:

1. Credit is essential to any society beyond the barter stage

2. Debt markets are now at least as important in providing credit as traditional lending, by a lot of measures, even more so

3. A handful of firms are crucial because they operate the debt markets

4. These firms are deeply enmeshed. If one goes, the others are at risk of failure, which will take down the entire debt markets apparatus.

The banksters understand this situation full well, that they have a knife at the throat of the economy, and they will fiercely resist any efforts to disarm them. And note that the enmeshed-ness is one of the sources of their leverage (no pun intended). If single firms could be taken out and shot wound down, the firms collectively would have much less power. The interconnectedness of the players, via their credit exposures to each other (most importantly but not limited to the repo and credit default swaps markets) makes “reforms” like living wills of dubious value. Unless the tight coupling is substantially reduced, these living wills remain fig leaves for political and regulatory inaction.

Put it this way: if banks can forestall a not very ambitious reform program by huffing and puffing about “destablizing markets” when the financial markets are on comparatively sound footing, do you think anyone, in bona fide financial crisis, will take the risk of putting down a significant player in an untested wind-down protocol? A bailout is the less risky course of action (although some ancillary operations might be hived off of a floundering firm to improve the optics).


Yves Smith writing to acknowledge one of the major obstacles to significant economic reform. Any attempts as real reform are attacked by Wall Street, who create and use market destabilization to influence policy.

Remember when the Bailout was voted down the first time? Do you honestly believe that the 800 DJI stock drop the next way wasn't at least partly punitive? I threat to Capitol Hill?

There's a lot more worth reading at the link.



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jotsy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-01-10 10:01 PM
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1. Their holding a public hostage and will continue to suck it dry.
Sooner or later they'll discard are hollowed masses in search of other publics to program and feed off of. I think we can handle the shock if we cut them loose first. But that's just me, perhaps too old to be so naive, as I dare to dream and choose to believe.

k and r.
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Political Heretic Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-02-10 02:56 PM
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2. Kick. I know the important stuff isn't as sexy as some of the other news, but its really critical.
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