Paulson's Conflicts Of Interest Spark Concern

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First Posted: 09-22-08 11:01 PM   |   Updated: 10-23-08 05:12 AM

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As the financial markets took a turn for the worse over the past few weeks, conventional wisdom on Wall Street and Washington was that Hank Paulson, the Treasury Secretary, was the right man for the difficult job. A seasoned hand on financial matters, the former Goldman Sachs head had an acute understanding about how markets work, and had earned accolades from both political parties for his willingness to take a level-headed approach on these matters.

Now, however, confidence in Paulson is eroding, with critics questioning whether the Treasury Secretary's Wall Street connections have impacted his approach to the current crisis. Both progressive and conservatives and sounding the alarm.

"Some are saying that we should simply trust Mr. Paulson, because he's a smart guy who knows what he's doing," wrote Paul Krugman of the New York Times. "But that's only half true: he is a smart guy, but what, exactly, in the experience of the past year and a half -- a period during which Mr. Paulson repeatedly declared the financial crisis 'contained,' and then offered a series of unsuccessful fixes -- justifies the belief that he knows what he's doing? He's making it up as he goes along, just like the rest of us."

Then there was conservative pundit Michelle Malkin, hardly of the same ideological ilk of Krugman, who declared on Fox News: "I think that Hank Paulson's corporate...record is very important. While he was a Goldman Sachs, the company was buying up a lot of Chinese banks in particular, and at the time of his nomination, there were very serious questions raised about the conflicts of interest involved, and where his priorities are, and who he really is looking after."

Malkin was referencing the stipulation, in Paulson's bailout plan, for the U.S. Treasury to help prop up some foreign banks. But the main thrust of her point -- that Paulson's past mattered -- was echoed among economists, analysts, and lawmakers throughout Monday. Some of Paulson's former associates and colleagues are the very people he now is in position to help aide with taxpayer dollars. As McClatchy News reported, "Paulson's former assistant secretary, Robert Steel, left in July to become head of Wachovia, the bank based in Charlotte, N.C., that has hundreds of millions of troubled mortgage loans on its books."

Moreover, as Bloomberg News reported: "Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley may be among the biggest beneficiaries of the $700 billion U.S. plan to buy assets from financial companies while many banks see limited aid..."

On Monday, Oregon Democratic Rep. Peter DeFazio put a voice to this concern, warning House colleagues against being "rolled by a Wall Street executive who is masquerading as the secretary of the Treasury."

There is a certain irony to a former head of a major investment firm now being tasked with reforming the very system that made him so wealthy. Goldman, while never a huge player in the mortgage bond industry, nevertheless reported pre-tax earning of more than $6.2 billion in its trading division - which included such bonds - in 2005. Similarly, under lax federal oversight, Goldman's investment banking division had pre-tax earnings of $413 million during that same year, according to an annual report.

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Having been steeped in this environment, observers argue, Paulson is seeking to tackle the current crisis from too narrow an angle; in essence, ignoring the cause (the failing housing market) in favor of the symptom (the crisis among investment banks).

"He does have potential personal conflicts of interest - not only regarding his associates, and his next finance position, but also the fact that part of his wealth almost certainly is in a blind trust that includes large holdings in Goldman Sachs and other funds," said Robert Shapiro, president of Sonecon and the undersecretary of commerce in the Clinton White House. "But even if Paulson is unaffected by such issues - and he may be, I just don't know - the more important issue is whether his former and future positions create a distorting prism for the bailout design. This crisis is ultimately driven by the falling housing market, and we will not finally get past it until the housing market stabilizes, which is why almost all economists say we're probably only halfway through this crisis. Yet, instead of trying to stop mortgage foreclosures and stabilize the housing market with loans to homeowners facing foreclosure, a Treasury headed by one of this period's leading investment bankers focuses only on loans and other bailouts for institutions that borrowed huge amounts to invest recklessly in the securities and derivatives based on those mortgages."

Economists have additional concerns with Paulson's approach, also related to the secretary's background. In his last report at Goldman Sachs, Paulson received a compensation package of $38 million. And while he was reportedly instrumental in decreasing the size of the former New York Stock Exchange head Richard Grasso's golden parachute in 2001, others see him now as too willing to protect the earnings of the big-time CEOs in the current bailout proposal.

Then there is the issue of transparency and judgment. "I would borrow directly from Ronald Reagan, trust but verify," said James Galbraith, a professor of economics at the University of Texas, when asked about Paulson. "The guy is clearly competent. He has worked with Democratic leadership in the Congress very well. If this was John Snow still in the Treasury, there would be no question you couldn't do business. On the other hand, I wouldn't want to turn my back on him... This is a guy who thought he could weaken the SEC and even a couple of weeks ago, when he wanted advice on the risks with Fannie and Freddie, he went to Morgan Stanley."

To some extent, the political world is still grappling with how much responsibility Paulson deserves for the current crisis he has now been tasked with remedying. As it stands now, the Treasury Secretary still enjoys tremendous deference within the halls of power, with everyone from the Obama campaign to Michael Bloomberg and Mitt Romney expressing, at a minimum, basic confidence in his competency for the task. His past statements, specifically, his declaration six months ago that "our institutions, our banks and investment banks, are strong," is chalked up as a forgivable attempt to soothe public concern. And while backlash to his initially proposal for handling the financial crisis is growing on Capitol Hill, the consensus seems to be that - with the end of the Bush administration in site - criticism and vetting of Paulson won't be overtly intense.

"If this were to the end of Bush's first term and is going to be reelected, this stuff would matter more," said Steve Hayward of the conservative American Enterprise Institute. "But he is going to be gone in three months. It is the next Treasury Secretary who will be doing the deeds and overseeing the money."

As the financial markets took a turn for the worse over the past few weeks, conventional wisdom on Wall Street and Washington was that Hank Paulson, the Treasury Secretary, was the right man for the d...
As the financial markets took a turn for the worse over the past few weeks, conventional wisdom on Wall Street and Washington was that Hank Paulson, the Treasury Secretary, was the right man for the d...
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- robeson I'm a Fan of robeson 24 fans permalink
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An honest broker would step down.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:55 AM on 09/23/2008
- huffy2001 I'm a Fan of huffy2001 50 fans permalink
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Re bailout:

If we are going to spend a trillion dollars on bailing people out, why don't we work from the bottom up, for once. Provide people who are in danger of losing their homes with mortgage terms they can live with an meet. This would probably solve the banking crisis with much less capital...­loan guarantees instead of actually purchasing bad loans...an­d would stop the actual problem. It would also keep people in their homes.

Then, with the rest of the trillion we want to hand over to the wall street pirates we could use to build up our infrastructure. Repair roads, bridges and dams. Bolster the levies in New Orleans. Help the Ike victims. Achieve energy independence. Improve education and health care. Do all the things we really need to do.

Coming out the other end we would actually be stronger, rather than weaker. And in the process, we could probably increase our capital base enough to actually decrease the deficit.

Paulsons plan merely transfers more wealth to wall street. It doesn't solve a single problem. Why don't you start to actually think and act boldly. You might actually end up with a legacy you can be proud of.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:52 AM on 09/23/2008

that solution would take longer to enact; have more long-lasting effects; not generate any commissions; and be tantamount to the creation of a Society

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:00 AM on 09/23/2008
- SeniorTour I'm a Fan of SeniorTour 2 fans permalink
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Has anybody seen whether Warren Buffett has weighed in on this?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:41 AM on 09/23/2008
- Lemeritus I'm a Fan of Lemeritus 108 fans permalink
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Apparently both Buffet and Gates are losing "more than $60 million PER DAY! They were calling Hedge fund managers Sharks(among other explitives) for creating unstability in an already weakened market." (Protrade, 9/22/08). In 2002, Buffet called derivatives "financial weapon of mass destructio­n." McCain would like to see Buffet on a bi-partisan committee to manage the bail-out (which I will not dismiss out of hand simply because McCain suggested it).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:58 AM on 09/23/2008
- Sparty1 I'm a Fan of Sparty1 19 fans permalink

Did you see McCain throwing out Buffet's name at one of his town halls? He apparently forgot that Buffet is an Obama adviser. While Obama has highly intelligent and respected financial/business leaders strategizing with him, McCain's throwing out ridiculous punchlines. I know that I'm an Obama supporter, but I've criticized him before. But what are the McCain supporters getting from him on the economy when he doesn't have any talking points?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:24 AM on 09/23/2008
- All in All I'm a Fan of All in All 62 fans permalink

Conflict of Interest is a understatement!!

Connect the dots, do the Math, and read in-between the lines fully!

Some of this has been done in this Article, however there are a few things that are not either being looked or just said!

I'll just say it like this; When a Group of People choose to Privatize Companies and even People (Military Forces) as/into Their Own assets they now have Personal obligations that need to be upheld too those Companies & People, which usually means doing whatever it takes to keep those Companies & People well funded.

The question is now; Is this in Our/Americas best interest as-well?

This all depends on whom is controlling all of these Private Companies & People, and what will they do with them, will they use them for their Own & Friends (close Associates) Personal interest & profit or will they be used too better Us all & America as a whole ?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:38 AM on 09/23/2008
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If Democrats in Congress do not grow a backbone and stop this, throw those bums out.

I don't mean make a little noise. I mean STOP IT.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:36 AM on 09/23/2008

Rather than giving the money to corporations to bail them out, why not give it back to homeowners in the form of mortagage rebates. Also for those people who lost their homes to foreclosure, they should be allowed to use their rebates to help get their home back by refinancing for a better fixed rate loan.

This way, the money goes back in to the economy and the average citizens benefits in some way rather than giving the money to companies and American citizens are left without a home and pay the debt of these leeches.

I do not trust Paulson and any man who was appointed by Bush should not be trusted to do the right thing, period.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:35 AM on 09/23/2008
- euthman I'm a Fan of euthman 45 fans permalink
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The entire world economy is grossly over-leveraged, and severe adjustments will be made, one way or another. Bad things are going to happen. The Paulson "fix" is a shell game. It simply transfers the inevitable losses from Wall Street companies to the US Treasury. Of course, the taxpayers won't actually pay for this directly, because raising taxes is political suicide. Instead, we'll pay indirectly by erosion of our buying power due to the government's printing money to service the enormous public debt. This works out well for the politicians, since no one entity can be held accountable, which is why both Dems and Republicans, all complicit in the deregulatory orgy that led to the debacle, were so quick to accept the Paulson scheme last week. What we're seeing this week, I think, is a canny American public, burned so many times by Bush administration mendacity and incompetence, standing up and saying, "Whoa! Not so fast!"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:34 AM on 09/23/2008
- Donk I'm a Fan of Donk permalink

NO Golden Parachutes, Minimal Executive Compensation and suspended dividends for the flailing banks should take the wind out of the GOP's sails. Plus the repudiation of "Sec Paulson's decisions are final and unreviewable" should be used to spank the evildoers!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:34 AM on 09/23/2008
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Lookit, they always were going to crash the markets when the biggest wave of baby boomers started retiring. They could not get our social security so they are taking our 401k

They are afraid the Republicans won't have control in January, so they had to do it now, under a Republican administration, to be sure a Republican congress would bail them out on the backs of ordinary Americans.

Criminals, and anyone who cannot see it is truly blind.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:34 AM on 09/23/2008
- boing007 I'm a Fan of boing007 9 fans permalink

leoeris

Are we witnessing the most public, open-air, in-your-face heist in all of history?

Yes. Can't wait for October.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:30 AM on 09/23/2008
- gcallaghan I'm a Fan of gcallaghan 52 fans permalink
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Ben Stein wrote a piece today about the Credit Default Swap market which appears to be the root of this crisis. Their very existence should be questioned. I read it as they boil down to bets between investment banks on which loans will sour. Many other instituions are swimming in that same cesspool.

If this bailout is to save the investment banks and the others or to stave off the effects of their collapse - screw them. Not every bank bought into it. Let the strongest among them survive. All the money leaving the credit market is going somewhere, it's not disappearing. Follow it to see who's behind this scheme. I suspect you'll find a lot of repubes names

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:22 AM on 09/23/2008
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I agree, let the economy fall!

Any bailout is not a real fix, as then we have the trillions in debt to deal with.

The neocons have created a depression and we will just have to suffer it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:35 AM on 09/23/2008
- spiffarino I'm a Fan of spiffarino 10 fans permalink

Strongly regulate - or do away entirely with - derivatives. Then rewrite the laws so that markets favor investing over gambling.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:44 AM on 09/23/2008
- dhertzfe I'm a Fan of dhertzfe 6 fans permalink

I smell a rat!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:20 AM on 09/23/2008
- grf67 I'm a Fan of grf67 36 fans permalink

bush is simply trying to find someone else to blame for the mess he has put the ountry in.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:15 AM on 09/23/2008
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Section 8 of Paulsons plan needs to be addressed. If you will remember the savings and loan crisis of the 1990's the people the goverment chose to run the program was the ceo's who got us in that mess to begin with. What better people to fix the problem than those that caused it, they know where all the bodies are buried so they can dig them up. They can do it with the right oversight body watching.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:07 AM on 09/23/2008

Did you not read the article where Bush telling you that the Secretary of State is "next to God" and there is no oversight?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:37 AM on 09/23/2008

I meant Secretary of Treasury, Paulson.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:38 AM on 09/23/2008

With countries like Russia, Venezuala and Iran all being bashed by the U.S. they seem to be galvanizing themselves into one force to deal with impending threats of the Bush/Cheney/McCain administration. Then add to this the financial crisis in the U.S. of which the world is aware of and the economy may be the least of the problems.

Unfortunately an astute politician can't advocate getting out of the conquering the world policy or they would be considered weak and unamerican but at some point in time I would think the U.S. is going to have to worry more about their country and it's citizens than world dominance as of right now they aren't really scaring anyone.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:02 AM on 09/23/2008
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