Independent Finance Experts: Bank Execs, Boards Should Be Fired (VIDEO)

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First Posted: 06-12-09 05:15 PM   |   Updated: 07-13-09 05:12 AM

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Officials from the Treasury, Federal Reserve and the Securities and Exchange Commission told the House Financial Services Committee Thursday that executive compensation can be better controlled by giving shareholders a nonbinding vote on pay levels. Having someone other than the CEO pay consultants, who report to their compensation committees would be helpful, too.

"Our goal is to help ensure that there is a much closer alignment between compensation, sound risk management and long-term value creation for firms and the economy as a whole," Treasury counselor Gene Sperling said.

Earlier in the week, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner had made a similar point, saying, "Our goal is not to have the government micromanage private sector compensation."

Maybe they don't want to micromanage, but Rep. Alan Grayson (D-Fla.) asked, what about setting an example?

"We are trying to make policy on the basis of recent memory," Grayson said, addressing the second panel at Thursday's hearing. "For the past few months we've seen banks that have brought themselves to the brink of ruin, brought the whole U.S. economy to the brink of ruin, and what people see is that nobody's been held accountable for that. Nobody's been punished for that. Maybe the gravy train has slowed down for them a little bit, but it's still rolling.

"I want to hear your best ideas about how we should hold accountable the people who've already screwed up, the people who've already caused the destruction of their own banks and caused the taxpayers to have to give out billions upon billions of dollars," he said. "And I want to know what we should do in the future about people like that."

The second panel, which consisted of financial experts who are not currently working in government, offered a simple solution: Kick them out.

"There is a limitation on ex post facto laws, there's not much you can do about what has already happened, but I would certainly strongly urge Congress to make sure that anyone involved can never serve on the board of a public company or as an officer of a public company ever again," said Nell Minow of The Corporate Library, an independent corporate-governance research firm.

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"It's unthinkable to me that these people continue to be involved," she said.

That punishment, according to Minow, typically applied by the SEC in cases of illegal trading, should include the executives and boards of directors of all the major financial institutions still participating in the Troubled Asset Relief Program.

Panel members offered a variety of disciplinary measures typically applied in cases of fraud, and Grayson stressed that the issue was punishment for "gross mismanagement," which is technically legal. Fortunately, former SEC chief accountant Lynn Turner said, the two dovetail somewhat, thanks to the Enron generation of financial scandals.

"When you passed the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, you gave the SEC the authority to find that when they look at directors or officers and find that they're substantially unfit to fill those roles, they can bar them forever from serving in those roles at a public company," Turner said. "And I think in some of the instances in these companies, we're going to find that some of these directors are in fact substantially unfit to fulfill that role, haven't demonstrated the fitness ability and the SEC should forever bar them from being an officer or director of a public company."

Though the other two panelists were more than comfortable suggesting a legal framework for further action against finance executives, Harvard Law professor Lucien Bebchuk seemed reluctant to prescribe new legislation to the committee. Grayson grew impatient.

"Mr. Bebchuk, I'm asking you what should the law be?" he said. "That's what we do around here, we determine that."

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Officials from the Treasury, Federal Reserve and the Securities and Exchange Commission told the House Financial Services Committee Thursday that executive compensation can be better controlled by giv...
Officials from the Treasury, Federal Reserve and the Securities and Exchange Commission told the House Financial Services Committee Thursday that executive compensation can be better controlled by giv...
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"I hope we shall... crush in its birth the aristocracy of our
moneyed corporations, which dare already to challenge our
government to a trial of strength and bid defiance to the laws of
our country."

--Thomas Jefferson to George Logan, 1816.

Corporatism is IMHO just tyranny imposed upon We The People by other means.

Leland R. Erickson

Citizen

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:19 PM on 06/14/2009
- munki I'm a Fan of munki 34 fans permalink
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YES and YES...

WE NEED CHANGE!!!!

NO more of those selfish executives, boards, etc....

For the BEST INTEREST of shareholders!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:29 AM on 06/14/2009
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BofA using BlackRock wants to outsize JPM+Goldman and control the Oligarchy as well!

We are living in an Oligarchy with Wall Street buying the Regulation at the rate of:

1. $7.5 Million for a average Senator every four years
2. $1.86 Million for a average House Member every four years

The ELITES dictate all MOVES BY CONGRESS and have Geithner as their TECHNICAL FLUNKY!

Nice way to run a country! Can you say Argentina?

__________­__________­__________­__________­_

But lets don't insult Argentina!

Argentina's oligarchy acts like your irresponsible teenager

The U.S. oligarchy acts like Madoff : driven by the basest of greed and completely lacking in scruples and devoid of one fiber of morality.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:14 AM on 06/14/2009
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Bank Execs, Boards Should Be Fired?

I have been asking this question for about 9 months and still they all are in place!

It is called Oligarchy and Rule by the Rich EL1TES! Not democracy!

The plan by the EL1TES will succeed in part. They will bring about the DEEP Recession, but turmoil and unrest will get so far out of control that things will not be brought back into a neatly wrapped package for them. The world economy will not recover from the ruling el!tes’ manipulation of the economic systems the way they have planned.

The Oligarchy will END as will the FED!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 AM on 06/14/2009
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For more Thomas Paine related comments:

http://www.godlikeproductions.com/forum1/message626325/pg1

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:49 AM on 06/14/2009
    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:51 AM on 06/14/2009
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Salary, bonuses, benefits, and luxuries were the methods of skimming or pilfering the profits of these companies for the benefits of a million Wall Street employees, especially the top 5% to 10%. Leaving the companies vulnerable to the slightest problems and taxpayer backfilling of their GREED!

This was NOT Capitalism it was mafia Oligarchy with the FED as a primary TOOL! Like every mafia scheme it eventually self-destructs under its own weight of GREED! We thought Kennedy defeated the mafia but it simply went underground into finance and surfaced as this High Level Employee Skimming of illegally generated profits form every unimaginable scheme the mafia could invent using its Ivy League Talent base of PhDs, MBAs, and PhD Financial Engineers that were indoctrinated into the ways of the clan!

It took time but the mafia is alive and well controlling Congress with its ill-gotten loot!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:16 AM on 06/14/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 359 fans permalink
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What about the folks at the Fed and the Treasury who apparently committed bank fraud in the Bank of America and Merrill Lynch merger?

Did Bernanke and Paulson Commit Bank Fraud?

New revelations from the New York State Attorney General’s office have all but proven that Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and former Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson committed bank fraud crimes in the case of the Merrill Lynch/Bank of America merger that took place last year. New York State Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo revealed that Paulson and Bernanke illegally suppressed adverse financial data on the merger and threatened to replace the Bank of America CEO and board of directors if the company backed out of the Merrill Lynch merger.

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=13786

Hands of Obama Officials Seen in 2008 BofA Talks

JUNE 12, 2009 WASHINGTON -- The Obama administration is being drawn into the drama over Bank of America Corp. because of notes taken by bank executives suggesting Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Lawrence Summers, the president's top economic adviser, supported efforts last year to pressure the bank to consummate its merger with Merrill Lynch & Co.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124476761129508565.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:24 AM on 06/14/2009
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They are under the same invisible protective shield the Wall Street crowd is under!

If a couple go the whole house of cards begins to fall!

That is why Geithner refuses to let any banks go down as the rats will not only desert the ship that will gladly sink the whole DARN FLEET!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:48 AM on 06/14/2009

with O in their back pocket I doubt they are losing any sleep about. They are safe as O's other favoured charges, Di ck&Ge orge.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:15 PM on 06/13/2009

Obama is going to get some of his biggest campaign contributors fired? Fat chance of that happening!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:35 PM on 06/13/2009
- jeliz I'm a Fan of jeliz 16 fans permalink

Wasn't HuffPo's own Arianna Huffington calling for this at the beginning of this mess? That would have saved us all a lot of trouble had it be done first, as suggested.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:33 PM on 06/13/2009
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Now that it looks like Lewis could be faced with perjury charges, thanks to Congressman Kucinich's grilling, Lewis will probably asked to be terminated in hopes of thwarting further investigation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:41 PM on 06/13/2009
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Hmmm, it is so amusing to watch people hold onto old ideas. Money has no value. Money is a tool of the past. Our debt is a joke. We just start the printing press, print more money. Buy our debt back. limit money supply in America for a few years, and wala, we have no national debt. Truely all American bills cannot be accounted for in the world. That is why China got upset and said we bett not print anymore money. It's highway robbery, but we are Americans. I like the plan. Oh yeah, we are not the only country doing this. Now if we could get rid of all those toxic imports we imported from China. Our country is no good with three finger children.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:48 PM on 06/13/2009
- TJCole I'm a Fan of TJCole 160 fans permalink
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Funding these banks without Nationalizing them, is theft pure and simple..!

Also just throwing good money after bad...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:21 PM on 06/13/2009

Term limits, eliminate lobbyist $$ contributions or else force lawmakers to recuse themselves from a vote and from sponsoring a bill which puts them into a conflict of interest. Transparency = accountability.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 PM on 06/13/2009
- Ranta I'm a Fan of Ranta 28 fans permalink
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When your favorite football team has a record of 1 and 10 the coach doesn't get a big bonus. He gets the ax. Why is it that these free enterprise magnates believe in competition for everyone else but not themselves?
As for Geithner and Obama , what good is having Wall Street shills like them in place if nothing is going to change? The goal should be to improve the system, not get it back to the status quo.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:47 PM on 06/13/2009
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Would executive compensation be an issue if these companies were allowed to fail? Nope. Does the government create problems, then blame others who follow the rules the government makes, then create more problems to "fix" the situation? Yes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:36 PM on 06/13/2009
- freelyb I'm a Fan of freelyb 23 fans permalink

Wow. If we could get red and blue and purple to agree to focus on this one issue -- the illegitimacy of the bank bailouts -- we could turn it around. But we'd have to agree to check all other issues at the door. Is it possible?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:05 PM on 06/13/2009
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