The Lehman Brothers went bankrupt five years ago. What has changed since then? (photo: unknown)
Happy Anniversary Lehman Brothers, We Never Learn
09 September 13
hile attention is focused on Syria, the gambling addiction of Wall Street's biggest banks is more dangerous than ever.
Five years ago this September, Lehman Brothers went
bankrupt, and the Street hurtled toward the worst financial crisis in
eighty years. Yet the biggest Wall Street banks are far larger now than
they were then. And the Dodd-Frank rules designed to stop them from
betting with the insured deposits of ordinary savers are still on the
drawing boards - courtesy of the banks' lobbying prowess. The so-called
Volcker Rule has yet to see the light of day.
To be sure, the banks' balance sheets are better than
they were five years ago. The banks have raised lots of capital and
written off many bad loans. (Their risk-weighted capital ratio is now
about 60 percent higher than before the crisis.)
But they're back to too many of their old habits.
Consider JPMorgan Chase, the largest of the bunch.
Last year it lost $6.2 billion by betting on credit default swaps tied
to corporate debt - and then lied about it. Evidence shows the bank paid
bribes to get certain counties to buy the swaps. The Justice Department
is investigating the bank over improper energy trading. That follows
the news that the anti-bribery unit of the Security and Exchange
Commission is looking into whether JPMorgan hired the children of
Chinese officials to help win business. The bank has also allegedly
committed fraud in collecting credit card debt, used false and
misleading means of foreclosing on mortgages, and misled credit-card
customers in seeking to sell them identity-theft products. The list goes
on.
JPMorgan's most recent quarterly report lists its
current legal imbroglios in nine pages of small print, and estimates
resolving them all may cost as much as $6.8 billion. That's not much
more than a pittance for a company with total assets of $2.4 trillion
and shareholder equity of $209 billion.
Which is precisely the point. No company, least of all
a giant Wall Street bank, will eschew a chance to make a tidy profit
unless the probability of getting caught and prosecuted, multiplied
times the amount of any potential penalty, is greater than the expected
profits.
Have we learned nothing since September, 2008? Five
years ago this month Wall Street almost went under. We bailed it out.
Millions of Americans are still suffering the consequences of the
Street's excesses. Yet the Street's top guns and fat cats are still
treating the economy as their own private casino, and raking in even
more than before.
The fact is, the giant Wall Street banks are
ungovernable - too big to fail, too big to jail, too big to curtail.
They should be split up, and their size capped. There's no need to wait
for Congress to do it; the nation's antitrust laws are adequate to the
job. There is ample precedent. In 1911 we split up Standard Oil. In 1982
we split up Ma Bell. The Federal Reserve has authority to do it on its
own in any event. (Would Larry Summers take such an initiative?)
Legislation is needed, however, to resurrect the
Glass-Steagall Act that once separated commercial banking from casino
capitalism. But don't hold your breath.
Happy fifth anniversary, Wall Street.
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