Michael Greenberger: Setting the Stage for the Next Financial Crisis
Proprietary trading by Wall Street banks precipitated the 2008 financial
crisis that resulted in a near 13 trillion dollar bailout by American
taxpayers of Too Big To Fail financial institutions. As early as 2007,
Morgan Stanley lost $9 billion dollars due to bullish bets on complex
derivatives related to mortgages and in 2008 American International
Group famously lost billions of dollars betting on complex derivatives.
Similarly, toward the end of 2008, Merrill Lynch lost nearly $16 billion
and Deutsche Bank lost nearly $2 billion due to complex bets on risky
securities. Additionally, JPMorgan‟s $9 billion loss on a giant
derivatives trade made by its London trading desk known colloquially as
the London Whale is a stark reminder that proprietary trading by Too Big
To Fail financial institutions poses an acute risk to U.S. financial
markets and exposes U.S. taxpayers to the risk of future bank bailouts.
The
whole rationale for what ultimately became known as the “Dodd-Frank”
bill was to prevent a recurrence of the 2008 crisis. Has it served its
purpose? No, according to Michael Greenberger, a Professor at the
University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law, and a former
top official with the Division of Trading and Markets at the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) working directly for then-Chairperson
Brooksley Born. He focused on issues relating to financial regulation
and derivatives.
In the interview below, Professor Greenberger
discusses the current state of play of regulatory reform and gives a
barely passing grade. He argues that investors have little confidence in
banks because they’ve grown since the financial crisis and have managed
to delay or water down much of the most robust regulatory proposals
initially outlined in the wake of the crisis.
“The reason their
current and prospective investors are concerned is that there’s every
likelihood that what happened in 2008 will repeat itself,” he said,
calling the rigging of global interest rates and recurrent trading
losses since the 2009 as evidence of ongoing systemic instability.
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ReplyDeleteto have the too big to fail, fail, is quite simple, they are falling, NATO will soon no longer exist and these are the feets of the 2 big to fail. at some point arms will cause war, however if russia invades to save, lives of russian being mutilated in those regions, america will stand alone with porochenko, NATO has no other choice but to disband, as europe is russia russia is not in australia, or new york, Obama is. is more are europeans ready to die for washington or not. is a simple question..!!
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