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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- JAB20 I'm a Fan of JAB20 3 fans permalink

I guess I'm naive, but in times of real crisis I have to believe that people like Paulson operate not just out of self-interest but out of the nation's interest. I hope the Democratic modifications become part of the bailout, especially things like the U.S. having an ownership stake (for a short while), and the imposing of caps on executive salaries and bonuses. But I still have to believe Paulson and the congress are doing their vest to act in good faith.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:36 AM on 09/23/2008
- gifu I'm a Fan of gifu 14 fans permalink

Your faith, I am afraid, is going to lose this time. Finite.....learn the word. Ever hear of the Romans???

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:43 AM on 09/23/2008

I agree. He has every reason to do his best.

Goldman is not involved in the mortgage crisis - very little of their business is in this area. They are simply being dragged down by the general economic climate. It is an exceptionally well-run company that has posted profits even when its competitors have posted losses.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:48 AM on 09/23/2008

Yes, but do you know how they posted profits? They were in bed with everyone else when the mortgage bubble was moving upward. No, they weren't the biggest player but they were in the top 10. Paulson and others at Goldman saw the writing on the wall and began to bet against the market. They actively began to bet huge sums that Countrywide and others would fold. They profited on both ends. How do we not know that now Paulson isn't betting on the US to fold and will take all of us with him? China profits. We may not untangle this mess for decades, if then, but I already know enough not to trust a Bush appointed official.
George Bush, you have 119 days left to apologize to the nation for your deception and crimes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:18 AM on 09/23/2008
- lechatnoir I'm a Fan of lechatnoir 7 fans permalink
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It was about time somebody brought that up (thx Mr. Stein). Paulson is the last person qualified to handled this gigantic blunder as he is one of the orchestrators. I love how the GOP gets all prissy and coy, sure, but in the end, the bankers effed up while the Bushies looked the other way. Now they all show up together with long faces, pretending to care, what a laugh. Time to stand firm, look the bums in the eye, and NOT blink.

Think about this next time you see Bernanke et al. doing the sad face:

“I would like to say to Milton and Anna: Regarding the Great Depression. You're right, we did it. We're very sorry. But thanks to you, we won't do it again.”
Federal Reserve Governor Ben Bernanke (Conference to Honor Milton Friedman, University of Chicago 2002)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:35 AM on 09/23/2008
- gifu I'm a Fan of gifu 14 fans permalink

Reminds me of the song "The Monkey and the Engineer."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:34 AM on 09/23/2008
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Before the Congress makes a colossal mistake of committing $700 billion too quickly, why don't they do a dry run and demand to know what Paulson's specific plans are for the buyout of bad debt for until the end of the year? Then we would know exactly what companies are involved and that the Congress could decide on some initial authorization that could stabilize the markets for the time being. Then the Congress could take the time to really think about what they are doing. We would also see what the initial results of Paulson's plans will be.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:34 AM on 09/23/2008

Lots of typos. Like the article, just needs an editor.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:13 AM on 09/23/2008
- Yermammy I'm a Fan of Yermammy 137 fans permalink
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Do you mean typographical errors? Thought so. Busted.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:05 AM on 09/23/2008

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

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:04 AM on 09/23/2008
- gifu I'm a Fan of gifu 14 fans permalink

Absolutely. This is as rigged as the Great Depression was post "Gilded Age." This is history NOT, I repeat, NOT just randomly repeating itself.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:30 AM on 09/23/2008
- DrVeruju I'm a Fan of DrVeruju 4 fans permalink

Yes.

And we need to stop it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:40 AM on 09/23/2008
- OgreDaddy I'm a Fan of OgreDaddy 44 fans permalink
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Why are we not surprised?

Since when has anyone working for the Bush administration taken the side of
working families?

This isn't a financial plan, it's a heist.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:28 AM on 09/23/2008
- gifu I'm a Fan of gifu 14 fans permalink

This "Bush Administration" began with Prescott Bush, G.W.'s Grandpa, a long time ago.......just poke around......and you will see!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:32 AM on 09/23/2008
- PT6 I'm a Fan of PT6 25 fans permalink

His conflict is at least as large as the VP driving us into a fake war.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:54 AM on 09/23/2008
- abby4ever I'm a Fan of abby4ever 268 fans permalink
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A poster on a different thread said that in fine print beneath the clause about how Paulson will have no judicial oversight, it says that he shall be answerable only to the vice president.

Yikes. No wonder they wanted Pa lin, can you see someone as ignorant of economics as she is, standing up to somone as knowledgeable about them as HE is?

They made him answerable all right, to the one person that will never be any position to question him.

What a plan!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:48 AM on 09/23/2008
- partyofone I'm a Fan of partyofone 45 fans permalink

Look at Paulsen's resume and tell me why the American public should simply "trust" him with $1 trillion dollars on the promise he will look after their interests? His public service amounts to two stints in government, serving the two most dishonest presidents in history: Nixon and George Bush.

For the 35 year balance of his career has been at Goldman Sachs "earnging" mega-millions by serving global corporate clients and the investment needs of the super rich . And that is exactly what he is doing as Sec. of Treasury and with this bail out plan. Isn't it curious the the bailout plan comes only after Lehman Brothers, a top Goldman Sachs rival, is allow to fail?

Paulsen wants to continue the high stakes Wall Street gambling game, bank-rolled by $1 tillion in tax dollars. If it works he and his corporate cronies are all the richer. If it fails, the taxpayer is holding the bag and Paulsen cannot be investigated or prosectuted. Sweet.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:49 AM on 09/23/2008
- abby4ever I'm a Fan of abby4ever 268 fans permalink
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***Look at Paulsen's resume and tell me why the American public should simply "trust" him with $1 trillion dollars on the promise he will look after their interests?***

Here are some excerpts from something by Robert Kuttner, writing in The American Prospect, the piece is called 'Paulson's Folly':

"The deal proposed by Paulson is nothing short of outrageous. It includes no oversight of his own closed-door operations. It merely gives congressional blessing and funding to what he has already been doing, ad hoc. He plans to retain Wall Street firms as advisers to decide just how to cut deals to value and mop up Wall Street's dubious paper."

"When you think about it, Hank Paulson is about the last person in America who should be entrusted with this emergency infusion of public capital -- because his perspective is entirely that of the bankers who created the mess in the first place. Paulson is treating the U.S. Treasury as a branch office of Wall Street."

"Thus the stage is set for an epic game of chicken, against a very tight deadline. Will the Democrats insist on some serious help for Main Street and constraints on Wall Street as the price of a deal?"

I don't trust him and I don't trust a gov't that would devolve that much power into one man.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:42 AM on 09/23/2008
- research I'm a Fan of research 297 fans permalink

Nobody should have the power Paulson has Demanded.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:47 AM on 09/23/2008
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OMG! OMG!! OMG!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:35 AM on 09/23/2008
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Dodd has some good ideas here:

So yeah, the Dodd plan. Good plan. Buying up mortgages for 15% less than the current market value of the house, then reissuing a clean mortgage to homeowners helps the banks while still giving them a slight haircut (but only slight, odds are home prices will drop more than 15% before the slide is over.) It helps homeowners stay in their houses. It sets a market price so that banks know what mortgages are worth and thus what the derivatives based on houses are worth. And giving the mortgages bought to the FDIC, one of the few agencies that Bush didn't cripple, is genius.

Giving the government stock equal to the value of any bailout for the company is also only fair. If they get bailed out, taxpayers should have a chance to get their money back. If they don't like that, well, beggars, and they are beggars, shouldn't be choosers.

Having a review board is a good idea, though having the Treasury Secretary, Fed Chairman and FDIC chief on it is perhaps unwise. Still Congress chooses two of the members. I'd prefer direct oversight through the Congressional Budget Office, which reports directly to Congress, but this isn't too bad.

Clawing back compensation based on fraudulent financial reporting is a stroke of genius and may be what Dodd put in so that he could eventually trade it for something else,

http://firedoglake.com/2008/09/22/chris-dodd-stares-down-paulson/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:34 AM on 09/23/2008
- FogBelter I'm a Fan of FogBelter 296 fans permalink
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Paulson is by no means the United States' salvation in this matter ... he is tainted by his affiliations and his credibility is non existent after the way he has morphed from the "All is well" Treasury Secretary to the "We're Doomed!" Treasury Secretary in a matter of weeks.

Paulson should step down from his position before he creates more havoc.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:25 AM on 09/23/2008
- gmlaster I'm a Fan of gmlaster 43 fans permalink

This is the same Hank Paulson who's been telling us for the last 10 months that while there was concern about the market, THERE WAS NO CRISIS. This is the same guy who's so-called "attempts" to correct the problems utterly failed. Now we're supposed to trust him with a blank check, require no oversight by either the legislature or the judiciary, and demand no accounting of expenditures?

Remember that movie "Goodfellas"? The guy goes to Big Paulie and asks him to come into his restaurant business for protection. Paulie "reluctantly" agrees and immediately proceeds to run up the bills and gut the restaurant, and the poor guy is too scared of him to say anything. Finally the restaurant collapses and the owner stands there practically in tears, watching the last of his assets get carried off by creditors while Big Paulie walks off into the sunset with all his money. The moral: Sometimes it's better to just leave well enough alone, because the wise guy's solution is way more terrifying than the problem ever was.

I can't get this out of my mind. Paulson is definitely Big Paulie, and if we let this guy help us, we'll definitely be in a depression by the time he's done helping. Big Paulie is going to walk off into the sunset with all our money and join all his rich banker friends in the Bahamas for a barbecue, where they'll watch from a comfortable distance as America goes up in smoke.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:17 AM on 09/23/2008
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Excellent take! Now, what do we do?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:37 AM on 09/23/2008
- partyofone I'm a Fan of partyofone 45 fans permalink

Congress should enpanel an expert advisory group of top, respected econ0mists, honest retired Wall Street veterans (if any can be foound) and representatives of at least two taxpayer watchdog groups, to receive and sort through all proposals for a bailout, hammer and compromise and present it to Congress to enact. The panel should be NONPARTISAN, not bi-partisan, and should not include any paid representatives of banks.

Congressional staff members and their banking lobbyist cronies should not be allowed to tinker in any way with the legislation. They can submit their "plans" to the advisory panel like everyone else.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:57 AM on 09/23/2008
- Forest I'm a Fan of Forest 7 fans permalink

Now, we need to hear from Joseph Stiglitz.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:03 AM on 09/23/2008
- TRichards I'm a Fan of TRichards 18 fans permalink
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Super post. Something has to be done, but Paulson's overnight Hail Mary! and effort to get $750 billion with no accountability (and no real plan) isn't it. Nothing may be better than this something. If credit dries up and there is a run on money markets, so be it. This trickle-down bullshit has to stop.

The bottom has fallen out (i.e., at the bottom of the "sludge" are those who cannot pay their mortgages on loans they probably would never have been given if the lenders had anything to lose on a loan default). A solution that involved those that could pay at least 80% of their mortgage being allowed to keep the houses with gov. assistance on the 20% would provide some cessation of the bleeding. The catch? The homes would be the government's to sell out from under them, at its option, if they could not move on to full payments after a while. As for walking away from the mortgage, the government's stick should be used to attach wages of those who could pay at least part of what they signed on to pay until a buyer is found.

This is a rough idea. Its only merit is that it gets away from pouring money into the top of the pitcher whose bottom is not sealed. That money will go the way of the money before it. The only way truly to fix the problem is from the bottom up.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:59 AM on 09/23/2008
- partyofone I'm a Fan of partyofone 45 fans permalink

Pualsen's conflicts of interest should have "sparked concern" when he was nominated. His advocacy for Wall Street, his deep involvments with China, and on and on.

What exactly does Congress do except make noise, meet with lobbyists, and campaign for re-election. They fail MISERABLY to represent the interests of the American pepole, particularly in the face of dishonest, greedy, profiteering corporations who under the Bush Administration are having a feeding freenzy at the debt-filled and fueld Federal trough.

Washingotn will not change and America will not improve for average Americans until Congress is replaced. Long-serving incumbents of both parties are irresponsible, out of touch, and in the pockets of corporate profiteers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:15 AM on 09/23/2008
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