Obama's Regulatory Plan Would Trim Back Financial Powerhouses

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JIM KUHNHENN | 07/ 5/09 02:51 PM | AP

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Barack Obama

WASHINGTON — They are the biggest of the big _ the Citigroups, the Goldman Sachses, the AIGs and other financial behemoths. The Obama administration doesn't want so many around anymore.

Financial regulations proposed by the president would result in leaner and simpler institutions that don't carry the weight of the system on their marble columns.

Around Washington and Wall Street they have come to be known as TBTF _ too big to fail. It's not just size, though. These companies are so far-flung, so intertwined and so precariously leveraged that a single one's collapse can create systemwide tremors that imperil the finances of millions of Americans.

With that fear in mind, the government stepped in to bail out Citigroup Inc., Bank of America Corp. and American International Group Inc. with tens of billions of public money last year.

Looking to avoid such a costly intervention, President Barack Obama's regulatory plan calls for large, interconnected companies to pay a heavy price for the systemwide risk they pose.

So far, however, congressional debate has centered on the administration's plan to put the Federal Reserve in charge of these "systemically significant" companies. Less attention has focused on the potential effect on the institutions and the financial system's hierarchy.

Under the administration's proposal, companies such as Citi, Goldman Sachs and others in a broad top tier engaged in complex transactions would face stricter scrutiny and have to hold more assets and more cash as cushions against a downturn.

They also would have to anticipate their own demise, drafting detailed descriptions of how they could be dismantled quickly without causing damaging repercussions. Think of it as planning their own funerals _ and burials.

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Obama's plan, in short, aims to make it far less appealing to be so big. That was the middle ground the administration sought, a step short of an outright ban on systemically risky companies.

"Without banning them we're providing some pretty heavy penalties for entering" the top group of institutions that could pose a risk to the entire financial system, said Diana Farrell, deputy director of the White House's National Economic Council.

"The regulator might say to a large institution, 'Make sure there is very good reason to allow yourself to get that big, or that interconnected, or that complex because the penalties will wipe out any advantages, such as lower cost of capital, you might have."

Some companies, such as Citi and Goldman Sachs, might bite the bullet and take on the added burden; in global capital markets some firms need to be large.

Others might choose to reduce their financial footprint.

"It's a very sophisticated and very effective way to force institutions to deconsolidate," said Karen Shaw Petrou, managing partner at Federal Financial Analytics, a consulting firm that advises financial institutions

One nonbank giant is already fighting back.

General Electric Co. has come out against a proposal that would tighten rules limiting companies from mixing banking and commerce. That could require GE to get rid of GE Capital, its sizable financial unit. Analysts say some of the top banks that had Fed stress tests, such as Wells Fargo & Co. or Morgan Stanley, might have to weigh the cost of meeting new regulations against the benefits of their size and reach.

The severity of the conditions remains to be seen. Under Obama's plan, those details would be worked out by the Fed and a council of regulators led by the treasury secretary. Congress would have to agree to that framework, however, and lawmakers from both parties have voiced misgivings about putting the Fed in charge.

"If I was a big player, I'd be very interested in what the specific requirements were likely to be so I would know whether I needed to restructure," said Oliver Ireland, a partner in the financial services practice of the law firm of Morrison & Foerster. "It creates an uncertainty for a significant period going forward."

In the end, there will be institutions that meet top tier specifications and will not break themselves up to escape the tougher oversight.

But others whose business would place them just inside or outside of that classification could end up divesting or reconsidering expansion or acquisitions,

"Where you're going to see the impact of that regime affecting size and complexity decisions of management is on the cusp," said John Dearie, executive vice president of the Financial Services Forum, a group made up of chief executives of 17 of the largest and most diversified financial institutions doing business in the United States.

For those that qualify for top tier designation, the administration proposes a system that would dismantle them quickly if they get into financial trouble. Right now, the government has authority to step in and take down troubled banks, but not the conglomerates that pose greater risks to the economy. That lack of authority prevented the government from dissolving Bear Stearns Cos., Lehman Brothers and AIG in an orderly manner.

Under the administration's plan, the Treasury could decide to take a company swiftly through a bankruptcy-like process, appointing the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. as a conservator or receiver. The FDIC currently now only has the authority to take over troubled banks.

If a swift end could cause a systemwide risk, the administration would allow a government intervention that still could require taxpayer money up front. The administration recommends that the cost of any taxpayer infusion be paid later with fees assessed on bank holding companies. Farrell noted that capitalization requirements for the companies would help lessen the infusion of government money.

The government would be aided by the failing company's own plan to wind down.

Anil Kashyap, an economist at the University of Chicago School of Business, said simply creating a "funeral plan" could lead some companies to reconsider some of their business strategies.

"The ones that would be more complicated would have to explain to their shareholders why they are so complicated and why they would have to have more capital" to cover their dissolution, Kashyap said. "That would be a very productive outcome."

___

On the Net:

Treasury's financial stability site: http://www.financialstability.gov/

WASHINGTON — They are the biggest of the big _ the Citigroups, the Goldman Sachses, the AIGs and other financial behemoths. The Obama administration doesn't want so many around anymore. Financi...
WASHINGTON — They are the biggest of the big _ the Citigroups, the Goldman Sachses, the AIGs and other financial behemoths. The Obama administration doesn't want so many around anymore. Financi...
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- getalong I'm a Fan of getalong 5 fans permalink
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Too big to fail?
According to whom?
How do you know the consequences of letting these big corporations fail?
Isn't the fact that they are failing now, but still allowed to live, more damaging than just letting them fail?

Let them fall.
We'll be fine.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:05 AM on 07/06/2009
- masher I'm a Fan of masher 49 fans permalink

We would actually be far better off in the long run. The problem though is that these corporations are a great source of kickback, contributions, etc for politicians.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:18 AM on 07/06/2009

then maybe the politicians need to go.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:50 AM on 07/06/2009
- cuchulain I'm a Fan of cuchulain 54 fans permalink

@wilsonveteran,

DId you complain about debt the last eight years? If not, why start now? Bush doubled the debt he inherited from Clinton. He turned a surplus into record yearly deficits, and handed Obama a debt of 11 trillion. He also handed Obama a current accounts deficit of nearly 1.3 trillion.

Did you complain about that?

Bush set records for highest trade deficits, too. Every single year. Tax receipts declined for Bush's first three years and his last. He handed Obama the worst American economy since the Great Depression. Again, did you complain about that?

Bush created a total of 1.45 million jobs in eight years, which is one of the worst performances since the Great Depression.

He also handed him two wars. The war in Iraq, aside from killing hundreds of thousands of innocent people, will cost taxpayer trillions.

Did you complain about that?

Obama's not destroying the economy. It was destroyed before he became president. Thirty years of Reaganism did that. Thirty years of deregulation, tax cuts for the rich, and all too little investment in our future did that. Voodoo economics did that. Casino capitalism did that. Right wing economics did that. Obama is left to clean up the mess created by "conservatives" in both parties.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:53 PM on 07/05/2009
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Yes I did complain about that bush had 1.2 trillion in debts combined in eight years. Obama has 1.45 trillion in debt this year alone and another 1.2. trillion next year. Bush was credited with createding 5-6 million jobs in the eight years for six of those eight we were almost a full employment.
The cost of the wars is a drop in the buket when you look at the cost of the bailouts obama has had and the spending on health care that won't work, and larger government. He is destroying the economy to gain more power read "Rules for Radicals." this was a text book for Obama when he taught for acorn.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:31 AM on 07/06/2009
- teron678 I'm a Fan of teron678 135 fans permalink
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Bush created 5-6 million jobs ....?????? .. LMAO ........ in the Military Maybe .. certainly not here on the mainland .... compare the unemployment rate at the start of Dubya's presidency & the end of his presidency ....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:35 AM on 07/06/2009

Fox and Friends are anything but. They flat out lie to their audience in order to keep the rich richer and the poor poorer. They are not a reliable source for info.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:33 AM on 07/06/2009
- cuchulain I'm a Fan of cuchulain 54 fans permalink

Bush created 1.45 million jobs in eight years. That's the official tally. Clinton, by way of contrast, created 22 million.

It's obvious you don't understand debt or the budget. Bush handed Obama a current accounts deficit of nearly 1.3 trillion. The economy was in the dumpster. Obama's first budget is 3.4 trillion, which is only 300 billion more than Bush's last (3.1 trillion). He did the stimulus, which added another 800 billion or so. The bailout is a continuation of Bush policy. It's been roughly in the trillion dollar range. The Fed put out its own stimulus. Obama has no control over that.

But your main point is ludicrous. The best way for Obama to guarantee reelection is for the economy to turn around. If he "destroys the economy" as you speculate, he loses, and the Dems get chased out of town.

He'll lose power, not gain it. Your speculations are absurd and irrational.

I think he's wrong to continue Bush policies. He should have listened to Stiglitz, Krugman, Galbraith and other liberal economists instead, and gone full out turbo Keynesian. But there's no doubt he thinks what he's doing will help the economy, not hurt it.

You need to take off that hat and stop thinking in X-Files terms.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:40 AM on 07/06/2009
- cyndeewi I'm a Fan of cyndeewi 24 fans permalink
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Obama did not teach acorn with that book Repub. Why are you lying on the man?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:31 AM on 07/06/2009
- cyndeewi I'm a Fan of cyndeewi 24 fans permalink
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I agree!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:34 AM on 07/06/2009
- GrainOSand I'm a Fan of GrainOSand 269 fans permalink
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""Without banning them we're providing some pretty heavy penalties for entering" the top group of institutions that could pose a risk to the entire financial system, said Diana Farrell, deputy director of the White House's National Economic Council."

That's fair -- not opposed -- but not a doormat either. TBTF then TBTT (Too big to trust) or TBTBLTOOD (Too big to be left to one's own devices).

Let us see if it goes anywhere.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:46 PM on 07/05/2009
- KQuark I'm a Fan of KQuark 267 fans permalink
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The is a great move the TBTF concept is one of the main things that made the financial crisis so difficult to handle.

Putting TBTF financial institutions into receivership if they fail is exactly what people have been promoting but the mechanism was not there and new regulations would solve that problem.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:29 PM on 07/05/2009
- SorenB I'm a Fan of SorenB 21 fans permalink

Let the Fed manage it??? That's not the solution that is part of the problem.

The Fed is unaudited and not within our control.

This would not be the solution, but the final tombstone of the United States of America.

I feel like Obama is channelling Wilson:

"We have come to be one of the worst ruled, one of the most completely controlled and dominated governments in the civilized world. We are no longer a government by free opinion, no longer a government by conviction and the vote of the majority, but a government by the opinion and duress of a small group of dominate men. I have unwittingly betrayed my country." — President Woodrow Wilson, 1916

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 PM on 07/05/2009

Will we ever learn?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:19 AM on 07/06/2009
- cyndeewi I'm a Fan of cyndeewi 24 fans permalink
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So Obama is destroying the economy in 6 months of his presidency? What are saying?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:37 AM on 07/06/2009
- SorenB I'm a Fan of SorenB 21 fans permalink

Yes he is CONTINUING to destroy it as Bush did.

He has done nothing SUBSTANTIALLY different than Bush in regards to the economy. Other than give great talks about all the transparency and accountability that he will do that his team never seems to get around to.

Geithner is just a mini-me of Paulson.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:21 AM on 07/06/2009
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Good

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:23 PM on 07/05/2009
- jinxed I'm a Fan of jinxed 37 fans permalink
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ITS ABOUT TIME WE GOT RID OF THE GOUGING, PRICE FIXING, ANTI-CONSUMER CORPORATIONS!

Its called anti-trust and I was beginning to get concerned that the Prez was going to let them slip by under the wire...SURPRISE!

What goes around, comes around and it is finally Mega-Banks turn! HA HA HA HA HA HA HA AAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHH!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:18 PM on 07/05/2009
- masher I'm a Fan of masher 49 fans permalink

Bwah ahahahaha! Funny, you are acting like Obama, the guy who came up with PPIP would ever do anything to regulate corporations that corporations didn't agree to. Funny.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:26 AM on 07/06/2009
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I was beginning to wonder just how long this notion of TBTF would last. Thank goodness it is coming to an end. Cleaning up after 20+ years of rethug influence on the economy, with their laizes-faire, no rules, no regulation fantasy fest, will take years of deliberate effort to correct. At least we now have a president who is very much up to the task.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:16 PM on 07/05/2009
- masher I'm a Fan of masher 49 fans permalink

How exactly has it come to an end? Seriously people. Serious.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 AM on 07/06/2009

There is a simpler way to limit the shenanigans. Do not allow the financial institutions to sell shares to the public. They should be restricted to Partnership status or to closely held corporations. Current shareholders have suffered great losses while cherry picked profits became the basis for enormous bonuses while the companies as a whole lost money. This never happened when they were partnerships because they were self regulating and all the owners were insiders.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:05 PM on 07/05/2009
- gfs5541 I'm a Fan of gfs5541 29 fans permalink
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In a way, the Obama administration seems to be going back to the second Glass-Steagall Act. Say you got a company that an investment bank, a commercial bank and they did securities. Institutions like these would have to face more regulation oversight, but if they just was a commercial bank, or an investment bank or they just did securities, then won't face as much scrutiny. In essence, "Big is Bad". No more TBTF behemoth institutions that can take down the economy and the government will have to bail out when something goes wrong.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:04 PM on 07/05/2009
- Billy Hell I'm a Fan of Billy Hell 45 fans permalink
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The fox guarding the chicken coop. Smart move Wall Street!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:53 PM on 07/05/2009
- Billy Hell I'm a Fan of Billy Hell 45 fans permalink
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Former Chairman House Banking and Currency Committee, Rep. Louis T. McFadden, 1932:

"We have in this country one of the most corrupt institutions the world has ever known. I refer to the Federal Reserve Board...This evil institution has impoverished...the people of the United States...and has practically bankrupted our Government. It has done this through...the corrupt practices of the moneyed vultures who control it."

Sound like anything we're experiencing right now?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:05 PM on 07/05/2009
- AdV2k1 I'm a Fan of AdV2k1 6 fans permalink
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He was a Republican.

Republicans hate the Federal Reserve. They want the "" Invisible Hand "" to guide the market.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:26 AM on 07/06/2009
- gfs5541 I'm a Fan of gfs5541 29 fans permalink
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Nonsense. If the republicans spent more of their time worrying about the people instead of worrying about the companies they represent, this country will truly be a better place. In short, you conservatives got us into this mess, but you don't think your policies caused it.

Recently, I told this ultra-liberal that there's nothing wrong with making money. Now, I sorry that I said that. Nowadays, we got these folks who are protecting their ability to make profit at our expense. Paul Buchheit was right http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don't_be_evill): We the people, are up against these companies who tend to exploit us and they don't want to stop the exploitation. It's private companies who are "being evil", not the government!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 AM on 07/06/2009
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The new American way is when you start a business you can only grow as big as President Obama wants you to. I am glad he wasn't around when Bill Gates and Steve Jobs got their start. Just another way for the government to control you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:48 PM on 07/05/2009
- PLUTim I'm a Fan of PLUTim 2 fans permalink
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That's ridiculous....

There is no reason that a car company (GM) should be slanging Mortgages (GMAC). Just like there is no reason that an insurance company should be in the mutual fund or commercial banking business.

Bill Gates and Steve Jobs built their businesses in ONE line of business. They aren't multi-sector giants that would crush main street if they failed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:10 PM on 07/05/2009
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People like you like to forget that due to GM's unprofitable business model, the only way GM stayed in business for decades was because of their finance arm. In fact, it was only after selling GMAC that the most recent bout of negative equity began.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:07 AM on 07/06/2009
- cyndeewi I'm a Fan of cyndeewi 24 fans permalink
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I agree!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:39 AM on 07/06/2009
- MeDonut I'm a Fan of MeDonut 5 fans permalink

This article is just administration propaganda.
It's a collection of talking points straight from Axelrod's office.

What a shame -- I thought Huffpost was different from the MSM.
Not anymore.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:47 PM on 07/05/2009
- LeeCalif I'm a Fan of LeeCalif 83 fans permalink

President Obama-
You better do more than TRIM And What are you waiting for ??

Congressional obstruction by your Democratic party ??

Grow a backbone and start acting Presidential.

You can't be Everybody's friend. And if anyone threatens you, your AG will know what to do !!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:42 PM on 07/05/2009
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Thank god for some Democrats that do not believe in the massive power grab by the White House and King Obama.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:49 PM on 07/05/2009
- PLUTim I'm a Fan of PLUTim 2 fans permalink
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Because power should be in the hands of corporations!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:11 PM on 07/05/2009
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This is part two that was scrubbed before. Rules for Radicals

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1El4g3KjeNA

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:41 PM on 07/05/2009
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