Posts Tagged ‘sub-prime’

Enforcers Investigate Financial Services Industries While Government Bails Them Out

September 26th, 2008 by Daniel Young | 1 Comment | Filed in Life, Politics

FBI on the case

FBI on the case

One could argue that the current scrutiny of the global finance systems by regulators and enforcers is too little too late but I’m in the better late than never camp.

In an ideal world the punishment for our greedy financiers would be severe destitution and hardship but its not going to happen. These people are bound to remain wealthy and the industry as a whole has been provided a secuirty blanket as a result of the enormous financial bail outs by Governments and reserve banks around the world.

Someone needs to be held to account.

The FBI has launched more than 500 investigations into senior executives in the mortgage industry and is probing records relating to the failure of Lehman Brothers and AIG. This story is covered by The Indepdendent and MarketWatch, among others.

Brothers go their separate ways

Brothers go their separate ways

I reckon it’s only a matter of time until these authorities expose an Enron style pandemic of lies, inflated expectations, fictitious profits, non-disclosure, shady accounting processes and fraud across the industry.

Sadly, we’ll be adding LIES to the list of wrong-doings for the finance sector, which already includes greed and bad judgement.

But does this mean that the US Administration will effectively be bankrolling criminals if it is successful in rushing through the proposed US$700bn rescue package? Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the beneficiary of a multi-billion dollar Government buy-out, are both on the FBI’s watch list, along with 26 other companies. These investigations will take months and years while the rescue package could well be signed in this week.

The trouble is that Government and Finance are so intertwined and so inter-dependent that Government itself will have some difficult questions to answer if it holds the sector to account in a meaningful way.

This takes me back to an earlier post from January 2008, which included the following letter to the editor:

As a small investor, I’d like to wish all the Australian finance insiders – the fund managers, executives, merchant bankers and lawyers – a great year. Although I could never aspire to your earnings, it’s great that my investment funds let me assist your wealth by voting for ever rising executive pay and allowing more and more bonuses and payments to high-priced bankers and lawyers. That fact that you guys are all friends – and therefore know how to reward each other with my money – makes it even better.

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Government bail outs for banking system

March 22nd, 2008 by Daniel Young | No Comments | Filed in Politics

The Old Lady of Threadneedle Street meets Oliver Twist by Steve Bell

In response to the credit crunch, central banks have been using public funds to bail out big business in the financial services sector. There are some big ethical issues around this topic for me.

Mervyn King, the governor of the Bank of England, has warned about the moral hazard of bailing out the banks but ultimately the central banks have been forced to intervene in order to protect the financial system.

The US Federal Reserve has been relatively co-operative when compared with the Bank of England. The European Central Bank recently made billions in EUROs available.

This is the ultimate Government subsidy and its comes in response to years of commercial greed and irresponsible behaviour.

The financial services sector is perhaps the purest form of free-market that we have, yet when things go South the State comes in to bail it out. When the hand of Government is being forced – King eventually conceded to the UK banks after a prolonged lobbying campaign – and the reason given is that the Government needs to protect and uphold the financial system you realise that things are seriously messed up.

But why do we want to protect a financial system that got us into this mess in the first place?

These Government bail outs set a dangerous precedent for the future. Some of these banks should have been allowed to go to the wall in order to highlight the fact that some fundamental changes are required to the system.

The bail outs can’t and won’t solve the under-lying problems that caused this mess and the general feel seems to be that there is a lot more bad news to come from the sector.

This Steve Bell cartoon is called ‘The Old Lady of Threadneedle Street Meets Oliver Twist’, it appeared in The Guardian.

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