US Bailout Will Subsidize Bank Monopolies, Chase and Goldman,
Excluding CRA and Public Review
Byline:
Matthew R. Lee of Inner
City Press on Wall Street: News Analysis
SOUTH BRONX,
October 21 -- Banks now plan to use
the Federal bail-out funds to acquire other banks, in a
government-subsidized
and -protected process of monopolization shielding from public comment
or
application of the antitrust laws or Community Reinvestment Act.
Executives
from such banks as BB&T and Zions have stated that the cheap
bail-out funds
will help them acquire other banks. JPMorgan Chase, which the Federal
Reserve already
helped to acquire Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual, is understood to
also
plan acquisitive use of its bail-out allocation.
The Federal
Reserve and other regulators, however, have shielded each of their
moves in
recent months from any public much less judicial review. Even such
non-FDIC
proposals as Wells Fargo's proposal to acquire Wachovia are deemed
emergency,
and applicable laws of public notice and comment are over-ridden. Now the deals will be government-funded.
Consider
that Hank Paulson's Goldman
Sachs, deemed a smart institution not in need of a bailout, has veered
into
subprime via Litton Servicing and now what's called Sendera. Given
low-cost
funds by the government, it's foreseeable Goldman will snap up
additional
subprime firepower, to deploy after the shakeout.
Fed's Bernanke and traders, subsidy of
un-scrutinized mergers not shown
The
regulators' failure to consider predatory lending and other
bank-specific issues
on mergers is one for the causes or determinants of the present crisis.
Rather
than bring about increased scrutiny, the Fed's Ban Bernanke and
Treasury's Hank
Paulson are increasingly dispensing with any scrutiny at all. And now they'll be using government to
subsidize and speed up the mergers.
Backstory
First on the fringes
and now on Fox News, the Community Reinvestment Act is being blamed by
some for
today's financial crisis. The argument is that by encouraging
FDIC-insured
banks to lend in lower income neighborhoods, the government -- read,
Democrats,
from Jimmy Carter to Bill Clinton -- created the explosion in high
interest
rate subprime loans.
There's a major factual problem, though: with a single
exception, no bank sought CRA credit for its subprime loans. And the
investment
banks which were purchasing, bundling and securitizing the loans were
not
covered by CRA. Bear
Stearns was not covered by CRA, but was bailed
out by the
Federal Reserve Board for $30 billion dollars. AIG, an
insurance company, was
not covered by CRA, but its subprime activities have led to a $75
billion loan
from the Federal Reserve, whose chairman Ben Bernanke
nevertheless claimed to Inner City Press that the Fed does
not control AIG, despite owning warrants for 79% of its stock, click here for
that story.
In fact,
community advocates had been telling the Federal Reserve about the
dangers of
subprime lending since the 1990s. For
example, Bronx-based Fair Finance Watch commented to the Federal
Reserve about
the practices of now-defunct non-bank subprime lender New Century, when
U.S.
Bancorp bought warrants for 24% of New Century's stock. The Fed, rather
than
take any action on New Century, merely waited until U.S. Bancorp sold
off some
of the warrants, and then said the issue was moot.
Likewise,
when community groups from all over the country complained
to the Office of Thrift Supervision about the subprime practices of
Washington
Mutual's affiliate Long Beach Mortgage, the OTS responded that is was
only
concerned with WaMu's savings bank, not its finance company. WaMu never
got CRA
credit for Long Beach's loans, but now WaMu has failed and been bought
at fire
sale prices by bottom-feeder JPMorgan Chase.
Prince of Citi, growth in subprime had nothing to do with CRA
The list
goes on and on. Non-U.S. institutions that now stand to benefit from
the
bailout bill being quickly considered in Congress are not covered by
the CRA:
UBS of Switzerland, Nomura of Japan, even some sovereign wealth funds
that bought
subprime securities.
Deregulation
and a lack of business ethics are major causes of the subprime
meltdown; these
have been bipartisan. Republicans are more closely identified with
deregulation,
but it was Clinton who oversaw the breakdown of the wall between
investment and
commercial banking, for example. Several Clinton administration
officials went
to work or advocate for subprime lenders, defending their cashing-in as
in
support of the democratization (literally) of credit. While
Republican Phil Gramm went to work for
UBS as it got more and more into subprime, Democrat Robert Rubin went
to work
for subprime-heavy Citigroup and did nothing to reform its practices.
It is
notably that Citigroup has not yet showed up for bailout funds.
Citigroup's grown in
subprime had nothing
to do with the CRA. Rather, insurer Travelers Group, controlled by
Sandy Weill and Chuck Prince (and Robert Willumstad who would later
drive AIG into the ground), which already owned subprime lender
Commercial Credit, bought Citicorp and then subprime lender Associates.
They renamed the operation CitiFinancial, but never sought CRA credit
for Citibank for its operations. And when Inner City Press asked Chuck
Prince of Ciitgroup's securitization of loans by Ameriquest, Prince
said that had nothing to do with the CRA.
There is
more than enough blame to discredit both political parties. But it's
not the
Community Reinvestment Act statute that's to blame. If anything, the
CRA
provided a venue by which many of the problems were raised, and some
were even
solved. When Atlanta-based SunTrust, for example, applied to the
Federal
Reserve for approval of a merger in Memphis, Fair Finance Watch showed
the Fed
that SunTrust was lending to a slew of predatory lenders. SunTrust
ultimately
committed to get out of some of these fields, and had its application
approved.
That was CRA at work, in a way conveniently not mentioned in the sloppy
arguments being advanced.
Click here
for Inner
City Press in Wash Post and Miami on
CRA, here
in Charlotte on the mergers, and here
even praising the FDIC (on other
grounds)
Watch this site, and this Sept. 18 (UN) debate.
* * *
These
reports are
usually also available through Google
News and on Lexis-Nexis.
Click
here
for a Reuters
AlertNet piece by this correspondent
about Uganda's Lord's Resistance Army. Click
here
for an earlier Reuters AlertNet piece about the Somali
National
Reconciliation Congress, and the UN's $200,000 contribution from an
undefined trust fund. Video
Analysis here
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