Sunday, January 10, 2010

The Other Plot to Wreck America

Yesterday I gave a three hour seminar to a group of real estate investors, one of whom owns a commercial contracting company. The common lament? The near impossibility to get financing. This investor said that his work orders were 1/3 of what they were in the previous year, which was not a good year to start with. Meanwhile, headlines shout out how banks are giving out BILLIONS in bonuses after being bailed out with taxpayer funds. Instead of lending, these leaches are giving bonuses to themselves. It's disgusting - indeed, it's obscene - and it's killing the recovery of the real estate market, the collapse of which is what took down the economy in the first place. There is a serious need for drastic reform of the banking regulations and I strongly support Ariana Huffington's call to move deposits from greedy banks that are "too big to fail" and move them to community banks which are about the only source for business and commercial loans for small business. Here's a link to more on here "Pledge to Move Your Money Now." I guess I was ahead of the curve because I moved my accounts from Wachovia and Bank of America several years ago to a much more user friendly regional bank (owned by a Canadian bank) that seems to actually value my business. Frank Rich has a column that looks at what banking greed and reckless behavior has wrought. Here are some highlights:
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Americans must be told the full story of how Wall Street gamed and inflated the housing bubble, made out like bandits, and then left millions of households in ruin. Without that reckoning, there will be no public clamor for serious reform of a financial system that was as cunningly breached as airline security at the Amsterdam airport. And without reform, another massive attack on our economic security is guaranteed. Now that it can count on government bailouts, Wall Street has more incentive than ever to pump up its risks — secure that it can keep the bonanzas while we get stuck with the losses.
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The White House’s chief economic hand, Lawrence Summers, has repeatedly announced that “everybody agrees that the recession is over” — which is technically true from an economist’s perspective and certainly true on Wall Street, where bailed-out banks are reporting record profits and bonuses. The contrary voices of Americans who have lost pay, jobs, homes and savings are either patronized or drowned out entirely by a political system where the banking lobby rules in both parties and the revolving door between finance and government never stops spinning.
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Angelides gets it. But he has a tough act to follow: Ferdinand Pecora, the legendary prosecutor who served as chief counsel to the Senate committee that investigated the 1929 crash as F.D.R. took office. Pecora was a master of detail and drama. He riveted America even without the aid of television. His investigation led to indictments, jail sentences and, ultimately, key New Deal reforms — the creation of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Glass-Steagall Act, designed to prevent the formation of banks too big to fail.
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Why was our money used to make these high-flying gamblers whole while ordinary Americans received no such beneficence? Nothing less than complete transparency will connect the dots. Among the big-name witnesses that the Angelides commission has called for next week is Goldman’s Blankfein. Geithner, Henry Paulson and Ben Bernanke should be next.
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If they all skate away yet again by deflecting blame or mouthing pro forma mea culpas, it will be a sign that this inquiry, like so many other promises of reform since 9/15, is likely to leave Wall Street’s status quo largely intact. That’s the ticking-bomb scenario that truly imperils us all.

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