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Money matters October 5, 2011

Posted by Elena in Uncategorized.
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“Make no mistake. Lurking here is another giant bailout of the Street. The United States wants Europe to bail out its deeply indebted nations so European banks don’t implode. And they don’t want European banks to implode because they don’t want the Street to crash again like it did three years ago. Full circle. In other words, Greece isn’t the real problem. Nor is Ireland, Italy, Portugal, or Spain. The real problem is the financial system – centered on Wall Street.”

Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)
Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)

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Another Giant Bailout of Wall Street?

By Robert Reich, Robert Reich’s Blog

04 October 11

RSN Special Coverage: Occupy Wall Street

 

Follow the Money: Behind Europe’s debt crisis lurks another giant bailout of Wall Street.

oday Ben Bernanke added his voice to those who are worried about Europe’s debt crisis.

But why exactly should America be so concerned? Yes, we export to Europe – but those exports aren’t going to dry up. And in any event, they’re tiny compared to the size of the US economy.

If you want the real reason, follow the money. A Greek (or Irish or Spanish or Italian or Portugese) default would have roughly the same effect on our financial system as the implosion of Lehman Brothers in 2008.

Financial chaos.

Investors are already getting the scent. Stocks slumped to 13-month low on Monday as investors dumped Wall Street bank shares.

The Street has lent only about $7 billion to Greece, as of the end of last year, according to the Bank for International Settlements. That’s no big deal.

But a default by Greece or any other of Europe’s debt-burdened nations could easily pummel German and French banks, which have lent Greece (and the other wobbly European countries) far more.

That’s where Wall Street comes in. Big Wall Street banks have lent German and French banks a bundle.

The Street’s total exposure to the euro zone totals about $2.7 trillion. Its exposure to to France and Germany accounts for nearly half the total.

And it’s not just Wall Street’s loans to German and French banks that are worrisome. Wall Street has also insured or bet on all sorts of derivatives emanating from Europe – on energy, currency, interest rates, and foreign exchange swaps. If a German or French bank goes down, the ripple effects are incalculable.

Get it? Follow the money: If Greece goes down, investors start fleeing Ireland, Spain, Italy, and Portugal as well. All of this sends big French and German banks reeling. If one of these banks collapses, or show signs of major strain, Wall Street is in big trouble. Possibly even bigger trouble than it was in after Lehman Brothers went down.

That’s why shares of the biggest US banks have been falling for the past month. Morgan Stanley closed Monday at its lowest since December 2008 – and the cost of insuring Morgan’s debt has jumped to levels not seen since November 2008.

It’s rumored that Morgan could lose as much as $30 billion if some French and German banks fail. (That’s from Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council, which tracks all cross-border exposure of major banks.)

$30 billion is roughly $2 billion more than the assets Morgan owns (in terms of current market capitalization.)

But Morgan says its exposure to French banks is zero. Why the discrepancy? Morgan has probably taken out insurance against its loans to European banks, as well as collateral from them. So Morgan at least feels safe.

Should it? Does anyone remember something spelled AIG? That was the giant insurance firm that went bust when Wall Street began going under. Wall Street thought it had insured its bets with AIG. Turned out, AIG couldn’t pay up.

Haven’t we been here before?

Republicans and Wall Street executives who continue to yell about Dodd-Frank overkill are dead wrong. The fact no one seems to know Morgan’s exposure to European banks or derivatives – or that of most other giant Wall Street banks – shows Dodd-Frank didn’t go nearly far enough.

Regulators still don’t know what’s happening on the Street. They don’t know whether Morgan is telling the truth. They have no clear picture of the derivatives exposure of giant US financial institutions.

Which is why Washington officials are terrified – and why Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner keeps begging European officials to bail out Greece and the other deeply-indebted European nations.

Several months ago, when the European debt crisis became apparent, Wall Street banks said not to worry. They had little or no exposure to Europe’s problems. The Federal Reserve said the same. In July, Ben Bernanke reassured Congress the exposure of US banks to European nations in trouble was “quite small.”

Now we’re hearing a different tune.

Make no mistake. Lurking here is another giant bailout of the Street. The United States wants Europe to bail out its deeply indebted nations so European banks don’t implode. And they don’t want European banks to implode because they don’t want the Street to crash again like it did three years ago.

One of the many ironies here is some European nations went deeply into debt bailing out their banks from the last crisis.

Full circle.

In other words, Greece isn’t the real problem. Nor is Ireland, Italy, Portugal, or Spain. The real problem is the financial system – centered on Wall Street.


Robert Reich is Chancellor’s Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor under President Bill Clinton. He has written thirteen books, including “The Work of Nations,” “Locked in the Cabinet,” “Supercapitalism” and his latest book, “AFTERSHOCK: The Next Economy and America’s Future.” His ‘Marketplace’ commentaries can be found on publicradio.com and iTunes.

Comments  

+41 #noitall 2011-10-04 20:30

Iceland did the right thing. The people voted 93% to not bail them out but instead, ordered their arrest and began investigations. I believe they said that they’d rather live like Cubans than like Hatians. We apparently have chosen to live like Hatians. Soon as we bail out the banks they’ll come back and bail us out…surely they won’t pull the same crap they did the last time! Hey, wanna buy a good used car? again?

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+23 #DaveM 2011-10-04 20:33

Why should we the taxpayers throw good money after bad? Let some of those firms which cannot seem to balance their books go out of business. Someone who can handle money competently will step in to take their places. Meanwhile, get your money out of the stock market while you still can, and for the foreseeable future, do not expect any “investment” (including a bank account) to pay any significant dividend. Get your money in cash and deposit it in The Bank Of Under The Mattress. It won’t accrue interest (if indeed what is paid on current accounts can be called “interest” at the moment), but you won’t lose it either, and it’ll be yours and private besides (no credit companies tracking your spending). Do your business in cash and you’ll never need to worry about being maxed out on a credit card.

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+2 #Ralph Averill 2011-10-05 00:31

I agree with you, but….
Let “some” firms go down? The reason for the fear everywhere is that it’s all tied together. Pull out one or two cards and the whole house of cards goes down; the good with the bad. That’s one point of Reich’s essay. The other point, implied, is that maybe that is exactly what needs to happen, so we can lay to rest the absurd abstraction known as the “free market.”
A lot of people, myself included, can’t “get our money out of the stock market.” We get a pension and have no control over the pension fund’s investments.
Any way you look at it, it’s a hard rain that’s gonna fall. Maybe that’s what needs to happen.

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+19 #giraffee2012 2011-10-04 20:42

1. The Supremes MUST take back their 2010 “person hood” decision – so “we the people” have some say in “who runs our country” and ‘how we regulate’ those who are stealing while actually “preventing” job creation!2. Carl Rove has entered the GOP to setup the negative (twisted) ads that he did before the 2000 and 2004 elections (yes, he’s already begun – twisting the “job bill” with rhetoric that it’s a ploy to raise taxes)

3. Carl Rove & Koch & etc will spend about a Billion (Rachael Maddows gave exact amount)

4. Several MILLION Americans will not be able to vote because of the laws GOP/TP governors have passed (along with not including democratic registered people getting ballots, etc.)

5. J.P. Morgan gave the N.Y. P.D. several hundred $$$ (gift?) NO — those are the “white shirts” you see at the Brooklyn Bridge etc.

If the USA cannot control our government — the whole world will be bought up by these pigs (Koch Bro, Rove, etc)

VOTE DEM + VOTE OBAMA + get other dems to go with you to poor, minority, etc dem neighborhoods to insure those people get IDs and mail-in ballots. Our elections are free and so are those IDs -
This is the most important election ever! Do NOT NOT vote DEM

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+1 #lightsout 2011-10-05 03:05

giraffee2012, is that a vote FOR Dems….
or DO NOT vote FOR Dems?

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+35 #Susan W 2011-10-04 21:12

Isn’t it time to just let the “too big to fail” go ahead and fail? Enough already.

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+2 #postpen 2011-10-04 22:26

Scariest thing I’ve read yet. If we can pass the Jobs Bill, create a million new jobs (and the new businesses and hiring their spending will lead to), we will right the deficit at the same tax level we pay today and right the Ship of State as well. Which will lead to restoration of services and infrastructure– and more jobs.
Without this turnaround, this “bailout” of the entire American economy, there’s no hope.
And the hedge fund managers at the banks are running with their current license to print money and stash it.
With that investment in our *people*, and the spending that will lead to, worldwide *confidence* will return. And investments in the businesses that still survive, the businesses that employ people.
Is it too late, though?
Put the trillion into jobs, not banks. Then the banks will survive, as a consequential benefit, again, because both bank confidence, and the public’s, will return.
Phone your congressperson now and urge passage of the Jobs Bill immediately. Obama isn’t kidding around. This is the moment; we are about to plunge off an unimaginable cliff, after which money itself will lose its value. . ,
Reich isn’t kidding either.

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+4 #jlohman 2011-10-04 23:17

no more bailouts, only nationalization . If we are going to spend the money I want to own the bank and control the CEO.

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+2 #angelfish 2011-10-04 23:44

Maybe it’s time for the Koch sucking brothers and their buddies to start bailing out their friends instead of having US do it all again. Let THEM put their money where their Mouths are and save THEMSELVES for once in their puny, little lives. We’ve been there, done that, so now it’s THEIR turn to bite the bullet, don’t you think? Let Main Street have a free ride for a change!

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0 #sanrose3 2011-10-05 00:09

Prof. Reich is a man of great sympathy. But I suspect that his exposition confuses Morgan Stanley assets, which approximate one trillion dollars, with its capital, which is about $60 billion.
What’s more, there is nothing inherently wrong with diffusing credit risk by using the credit default swap market, provided that, unlike AIG, which insured but retained its mortgage exposure, one appropriately lays off that exposure with another counterparty.

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+3 #SeriousCitizen 2011-10-05 03:18

I very nice explanation of the pending crisis. And then there are blind-side events to push the mess into the vortex, for example, a California earthquake, or another nuclear reactor melting, or a new war on Iran causing oil to spike. Any business that is said to be “too big to fail” is necessarily a monopoly that the government should have broken up. Oh, and in 2012, vote for any party that is NOT Democrat and is NOT Republican.

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+1 #Martintfre 2011-10-05 04:07

Only a big nanny socialist state does bail outs.

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-2 #sanrose3 2011-10-05 04:09

The problem with AIG is not that it used the market for credit default swaps, but that it did not lay off its exposure, as Morgan Stanley may have done with its European bank exposure. That’s because almost the whole country was “long” on mortgages at the time, a problem that is related to regulatory permissiveness in allowing financial institutions to make so many mortgages to such questionable borrowers. The Federal Reserve could have acted to restrain this practice, as it was duty bound under the HOEPA law. It just didn’t. Thus primary responsibility for the AIG debacle, which is being at least partially re-echoed in the European bank crisis today, resides not with Wall Street, but with the US Government.
Sanford Rose

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0 #Todd Williams 2011-10-05 04:29

I’m telling you people, if this shit happens again, there WILL be a revolution. And it won’t be peaceful. The days for talk and voting are just about over. I’m prepared are you?

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+4 #video4315 2011-10-05 04:32

This was all predictable. We didn’t follow through the last time to setup safeguards and regulations. We let the Republicans slash the Dodd-Frank effort in order to get something passed. President Obama capitulated early on by allowing Larry Summers and Tim Geitner to run his economic policies. These two had direct ties to Goldman Sachs. In fact, Mr. Reich fails to mention Goldman Sachs role in the Greek debt crisis. Maybe we deserve this for letting our elected officials get away with all that they do and don’t do. The Wall Street Occupation is not savvy enough to see all of the inner workings, but they do sense that there is a certain rot or infection in the workings.

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+4 #Carolyn 2011-10-05 04:48

Bailing out a sinking global financial ship is not a solution. We are all going down together. Our government would rather cut the programs our society depends and use the money for bailing out the banks.
the first step is to reinstate FDR’s Glass-Steagall Act with which he saved America in 1933, separating the world’s big bank system from our own local banks. Ask your representatives to pass the Glass-Steagall Act that the Bush Adminstration got rid of.

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