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Category Archives: economy

What Communication Problem?

29 Monday Nov 2010

Posted by Craig in bailout, economy, Financial Crisis, Obama administration, Politics, Wall Street

≈ 1 Comment

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Charles Ferguson, communication problem, economic message, LA Times, Obama administration, Paul Krugman, Richard Wolffe, Salon, structural problem, White House

I keep reading about the Obama administration’s so-called “communication problem.” The latest being this piece in the LA Times by Richard Wolffe:

“[The] lack of agreement on economic fundamentals is a primary factor behind one of this White House’s most obvious failures: communications. As one senior Obama advisor told me the day after the disastrous midterms: “It was hard to find a single economic message when the economic team couldn’t agree on a single economic policy.”

I don’t get it. To me, the “economic message” has been crystal clear since the president began to name his team of advisors. The message has been and continues to be, save Wall Street by any means necessary. And to that I give a hearty “Mission Accomplished”:

Charles Ferguson, whose documentary about the financial crisis–Inside Job– is a must see, wrote in Salon:

“When Barack Obama was elected, he had an unprecedented opportunity to shape American history by bringing the country’s new financial oligarchy under control. Elected on a platform of change and renewal by a nation in crisis and with strong majorities in both houses of Congress, his election celebrated throughout the world, Obama could have done great things. Instead, he gave us more of the same. America will be paying for his decision for a very long time.

And now, nearly two years later, the Obama administration has established a clear record…It is, in short, overwhelmingly clear that President Obama and his administration decided to side with the oligarchs — or at least not to challenge them.”

Paul Krugman:

“No wonder we’re in such trouble. Obama must gravitate instinctively to people who give him bad economic advice, and who almost surely don’t share the values he was elected to promote. That’s what I’d call a structural problem.”

I’ll take it one fairly obvious (to me anyway) step further, President Obama doesn’t share the values he was elected to promote. (On a related note; if anyone’s looking for a Christmas present for the person who has everything, I’ll make you a good deal on some slightly used snake oil I bought two years ago). He’s the one who put that team in place and who continues to defend them (heckuva job Larry) on their way out the door. I have a difficult time believing that the replacements will be any different. A structural problem indeed.

“The Foreclosure Crisis in 30 Seconds”

01 Monday Nov 2010

Posted by Craig in economy, Foreclosures

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Congressional Oversight Panel, Damon Silvers, foreclosuregate

Damon Silvers of the Congressional Oversight Panel on the Foreclosuregate options:

“We are faced with a choice here. We can either have a rational resolution to the foreclosure crisis or we can preserve the capital structure of the banks. We can’t do both.” ”

“The Stealth Coup D’Etat”

30 Saturday Oct 2010

Posted by Craig in Democrats, economy, Republicans, special interests, too big to fail, Wall Street

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a nation's money, financial sector, Mayer Amschel Rothschild, political power, profits, Stealth Coup D'Etat, Tyler Durden

“Give me control of a nation’s money and I care not who makes her laws.”—Mayer Amschel Rothschild.

From Tyler Durden’s, The Stealth Coup D’Etat:

“…for the past 25 years or so, finance has boomed, becoming ever more powerful. The boom began with the Reagan years, and it only gained strength with the deregulatory policies of the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations.

…From 1973 to 1985, the financial sector never earned more than 16 percent of domestic corporate profits. In 1986, that figure reached 19 percent. In the 1990s, it oscillated between 21 percent and 30 percent, higher than it had ever been in the postwar period. This decade, it reached 41 percent…The great wealth that the financial sector created and concentrated gave bankers enormous political weight—a weight not seen in the U.S. since the era of J.P. Morgan (the man).”

…Once you have control of the financial powers of the U.S. via the tiny Elites of the Congress, the Executive Branch, the Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury, then the rest of the government will follow.

This is how the Stealth Coup D’Etat works: the machinery of governance grinds through a simulacrum [ a slight, unreal, or vague semblance] of democracy, but it’s all for show; the theoretical structures are now completely different from the political realities…The Power Elites and their Stealth Coup are apolitical. They don’t care about the color of your uniform; whether you wear a blue shirt or a red shirt is inconsequential.”

Or as Karl Denninger at The Market Ticker put it, “You’re just voting for which of the two bank robbers you like being assaulted by more – the guy with the red ski mask or the one with the blue one.”

Going back to where we began, Durden concludes:

“The Stealth Coup can be traced by a simple dictum: follow the money. Once you control the money–the money supply, the manipulation of yields and bond sales, the budgeting and borrowing–then you control everything.

This is how a small Financial Power Elite dominates the vast, sprawling American Empire.”

Foreclosuregate, Cont’d

20 Wednesday Oct 2010

Posted by Craig in economy, Foreclosures, Justice Department, Obama administration, too big to fail, Wall Street

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Bank of America, BlackRock, bonds, Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force, foreclosures, internal review, Metlife, New York Federal Reserve, no errors, PIMCO

Bank of America has completed its “internal review” of alleged improprieties in its foreclosure proceedings–a review of 102,000 foreclosures that took all of 17 days–and found, surprise surprise, zero mistakes:

“Bank of America  announced on Monday that it would resume home foreclosures in nearly two dozen states, despite the running controversy over how banks handled tens of thousands of cases of homeowners facing eviction.

Bank of America, the nation’s largest bank and the servicer of roughly one in five American mortgages, insisted that it had not found a single example where a foreclosure proceeding was brought in error.”

Not so fast, says one state’s assistant attorney general involved in their own investigation:

“A day after the bank said it would once again pursue defaulting borrowers in the 23 states where foreclosures were overseen by the courts, judges in Florida said they were expecting even more challenges from defaulting homeowners.

…“There has been an attempt by some of the major servicers to indicate there are no problems,” said Patrick Madigan, an assistant attorney general in Iowa. “We’re not at the end of this process. We’re at the beginning.”

But BofA has much bigger problems than a few lawsuits from a few homeowners, the big boys are coming after them to buy back the mortgage bonds packed with toxic garbage that BofA was peddling:

“The fears behind mortgage bond-gate might be real after all. Reports indicate that Bank of America is has been asked to repurchase some of its mortgage bonds by some very prominent investors due to procedural failures. Who are those investors? BlackRock Inc. — the largest money manager in the world, PIMCO — the largest Bond fund investor, and the New York Federal Reserve are said to be among them…Metlife, the biggest U.S. life insurer, is expected to join this group of investors demanding repurchase.

Bank of America is the target thanks to its acquisition of Countrywide in 2008. These investors say that Countrywide failed to properly service mortgages which were repacked into bonds. How many bonds? According to Bloomberg, these investors want Bank of America to repurchase $47 billion worth.”

Here’s why this entire fiasco, from origination to securitization to foreclosure, is going to be difficult if not impossible to unwind. From a BofA June court filing:

“It appears as though many loans and other mortgage-related assets have been double and even triple-pledged to various constituencies”…[T]hat is the reason that two different banks sometimes try to simultaneously foreclose on the same home.”

Finally, the feds are getting in on the act, too:

“Members of President Obama’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force [Justice, Treasury, HUD, and the SEC] and other administration officials are scheduled to meet Wednesday to discuss the foreclosure crisis.”

Frankly, I have no confidence that anything substantive will come from this group. I see one of two outcomes. Either they open an investigation, bury it, and we never hear a word of it again, or they go after a few low-level flunkies and the MOTU skate. As usual.

To be continued…

Who Says Crime Doesn’t Pay?

16 Saturday Oct 2010

Posted by Craig in economy, Financial Crisis, Justice Department, Obama administration, too big to fail, Wall Street

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Angelo Mozilo, Bank of America, Countrywide, insider trading, Justice Department, lawsuit, Masters of the Universe, Securities and Exchange Commission, securities fraud

It certainly paid well for two former executives of Countrywide yesterday in the settlement of a civil lawsuit brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission charging Angelo Mozilo, former CEO, and David Sambol, former president, with securities fraud and insider trading. A scam which netted the two a total of nearly $160 million.

The first two paragraphs of the story read like this:

“Angelo R. Mozilo, who as head of home-loan giant Countrywide was at the center of the housing boom and bust, agreed Friday to pay a record fine as part of a $73-million settlement of a government fraud lawsuit over the lender’s near-collapse.

The deal with the Securities and Exchange Commission requires Mozilo, the highest-profile figure to be accused of wrongdoing in the mortgage meltdown, to personally pay a $22.5-million fine. The government said it would be the largest penalty ever paid by a senior executive of a public company in an SEC settlement.”

Then come the “buts”:

“Mozilo…also agreed to pay $45 million in “ill-gotten gains” to former Countrywide Financial Corp. shareholders, who lost billions when the company’s stock price plunged as defaults on home loans surged. But Bank of America Corp., which bought Countrywide in 2008, and Countrywide’s insurers will pay that amount under terms of Mozilo’s employment contract.

Countrywide’s former president, David Sambol, agreed to pay $520,000 in fines and $5 million in restitution. Bank of America will reimburse him for the latter.”

So to recap, Mozilo pays $22.5 million, Sambol pays $520,000. During the period covered by the suit Mozilo received $141.7 million, Sambol $18.3 million, while Countrywide was losing $1.6 billion. But that’s just a snapshot:

“For years, Mr. Mozilo was among the highest-paid executives in America and his S.E.C. fine is a fraction of the vast wealth he amassed running Countrywide. In one eight-year period, from 2000 until he left the company in 2008, Mr. Mozilo received total compensation of $521.5 million, according to Equilar, a compensation research firm.”

Mozilo is still the subject of a criminal investigation by the Justice Department, but anyone who believes this DOJ will pursue criminal charges against any of the financial industry’s Masters of the Universe hasn’t been paying attention. The next one prosecuted will be the first. Gotta keep looking forward, you know.

Foreclosure Fraud Just the Tip of the Iceberg

12 Tuesday Oct 2010

Posted by Craig in bailout, Congress, economy, Financial Crisis, financial reform, financial regulation, Foreclosures, Justice Department, Obama administration, special interests, too big to fail, Wall Street

≈ 2 Comments

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40 states, attorneys general, bailout, BofA, Chase, Congress, David Axelrod, Dylan Ratigan, financial reform, foreclosure, fraud, insolvent, Karl Denninger, Market Ticker, mortgages, national moratorium, resolution authority, securities, Wall Street, White House

Dylan Ratigan, Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner, and Karl Denninger of The Market Ticker unravel foreclosure fraud:

To reiterate, the fraud in foreclosures that we’re seeing now is just the tip of the iceberg. The purpose is to try and cover up, and cover for, the fraud in the mortgage process all the way back to the origination of the mortgages, which were then packaged into securities and fraudulently sold to investors as AAA quality, a rating gained by paying off the ratings agencies. As our parents always told us, one lie requires another one to cover up the first one, which requires another lie to cover up the second one, and so on, and so on, and…….

In my opinion, that’s why the Senate tried to sneak through the legislation that President Obama vetoed—it would have given the big banks protection from liability in this entire mess. As an aside–again just my opinion– but the only reason the president vetoed the bill was because of the attention it received and the light that was shone on its alleged “unintended consequences” (and if you’ll buy that….) My cynical nature when it comes to politicians tells me that “sending the bill back for modifications” translates into, ‘We’ll try again when the heat’s off.’

It’s also why, according to David Axelrod, the hope in the White House is that “this moves rapidly and that this gets unwound very, very quickly.” And why the White House opposes a national moratorium on foreclosures. A moratorium would give investigators and especially some 40 states’ attorneys general time to delve back into fraud and deceit at every level of the process

As Mr. Denninger explained, the only remedy is to force the big banks to buy back the toxic securities that they sold to investors under false pretenses. They can’t do that, which means Chase, BofA, et al, are insolvent. Actually, they’re insolvent now but for the phony profits from peddling this garbage to unsuspecting investors.

There is a provision in the financial reform legislation for resolution authority, that is breaking up large financial institutions that pose a “systemic risk” to the entire economy. Will Congress use it or will they do what they have done in the past and bail out their Wall Street cronies and contributors—again. If Republicans take control of Congress will they hold true to their campaign rhetoric of “no more bailouts” or will they dance to the tune of their big donors on Wall Street?

We may soon find out.

“A Factory of Fraud”

09 Saturday Oct 2010

Posted by Craig in Congress, economy, Financial Crisis, Politics, special interests, too big to fail, Wall Street

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Alan Grayson, foreclosuregate, fraud

Congressman Alan Grayson explaining what is becoming known as Foreclosuregate. And if you think it just affects people who aren’t making their mortgage payments, think again. It concerns everyone:

“We are approaching a point where the easiest way to make a buck is to steal it.”

No, we’re already there. We have been and we will be until the perpetrators, and those who aid and abet this “factory of fraud,” (including our elected representatives) are behind bars.

The Party of “No” or The Party of No Backbone

24 Friday Sep 2010

Posted by Craig in Congress, Democrats, economy, Politics

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Democrats, Harry Reid, lame-duck session, mid-terms, November, Republicans, Senate, taxes

Gutless. Spineless. Cowards.

“Senate Democrats said Thursday that they had abandoned plans for a pre-election showdown with Republicans over taxes, postponing any vote on extending Bush administration tax cuts until after the November midterms.

Democrats discussed the issue during a caucus luncheon but left the final decision to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.)”

That was your first mistake, leaving it up to Sir Robin Harry Reid.

“Late Thursday, Reid spokesman Jim Manley said, “We will come back in November and stay in session as long as it takes to get this done.”

Bullshit. If the Republicans take control of Congress, and how can they not with opposition like this, does anybody with half a brain (which excludes Reid) think they’ll be in the mood to make a deal after the election. Here’s what will happen:

“…the GOP is going to shout and scream and throw feces and demand what it will deem one of two acceptable options:  a permanent extension of all cuts or a one- or two-year extension.  And one of these will pass.  And if it’s the temporary extension, the renewal will come up before the very Congress these midterms are going to elect, meaning it will be an even more Republican Congress than the one in the lame-duck session.  So the tax cuts for the rich will be made permanent then.”

Meanwhile, back in D.C.:

“The Senate left for the weekend Thursday afternoon and will not return until early next week, when Reid has scheduled a vote on a bill to prevent firms from sending jobs overseas and reward those that bring jobs back to the United States. Congressional leaders are aiming to get lawmakers out on the campaign trail by the end of next week.”

No, don’t go back at all. Slither your worthless invertebrate asses home and stay there. Don’t even come back for the lame-duck session. Get ready for your post-Senatorial careers. At least we can save on the cost of utilities by keeping the Capitol building dark, you useless wastes of space.

The party of no or the party of no backbone. One hell of a choice.

A Tale of Two Presidents

22 Wednesday Sep 2010

Posted by Craig in economy, Obama, Politics, Wall Street

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anti-business, Bob Rubin, Franklin Roosevelt, I welcome their hatred, Lawrence Summers, National Economic Council, prominent corporate executive

There’s good news and there’s bad news. First, the good:

“White House officials expect Lawrence Summers to leave his job as the president’s National Economic Council director after November’s congressional elections, according to three people familiar with the matter.”

Now the bad:

“Administration officials are weighing whether to put a prominent corporate executive in the NEC director’s job to counter criticism that the administration is anti-business, one person familiar with White House discussions said. White House aides are also eager to name a woman to serve in a high-level position, two people said. They also are concerned about finding someone with Summers’ experience and stature, one person said.”

A “prominent corporate executive?” To “counter criticism that the administration is anti-business?” A tale of two presidents. President Franklin Roosevelt:

“We had to struggle with the old enemies of peace—business and financial monopoly, speculation, reckless banking, class antagonism, sectionalism, war profiteering….Never before in all our history have these forces been so united against one candidate as they stand today. They are unanimous in their hate for me—and I welcome their hatred.”

President Barack Obama: ‘If I give them this maybe they’ll stop saying mean things about me.’

Let’s see, a prominent corporate executive with Summers’ experience and stature who’s a woman. Just convince Bob Rubin to have a sex change and you’re there.

Krugman: “Sacrifice is For the Little People”

20 Monday Sep 2010

Posted by Craig in budget, Congress, Democrats, economy, Politics, Republicans, Taxes, Unemployment

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campaign contributions, little people, Paul Krugman, poverty, Republicans, rich, Social Security cuts, taxes

Never mind this, let’s just be sure we keep rich people’s taxes low.


And it’s not just Republicans. Why? Paul Krugman explains:

“You see, the rich are different from you and me: they have more influence. It’s partly a matter of campaign contributions, but it’s also a matter of social pressure, since politicians spend a lot of time hanging out with the wealthy. So when the rich face the prospect of paying an extra 3 or 4 percent of their income in taxes, politicians feel their pain — feel it much more acutely, it’s clear, than they feel the pain of families who are losing their jobs, their houses, and their hopes.

And when the tax fight is over, one way or another, you can be sure that the people currently defending the incomes of the elite will go back to demanding cuts in Social Security and aid to the unemployed. America must make hard choices, they’ll say; we all have to be willing to make sacrifices.

But when they say “we,” they mean “you.” Sacrifice is for the little people.”

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