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Jamie Dimon Profile Misses The Point: Trusting Bankers Is Too Stupid To Try Again

First Posted: 12/05/10 06:50 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:15 PM ET

Jamie Dimon
Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase & Co., gestures during a news conference in San Francisco, Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2009. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)

Poor, sad Jamie Dimon, the frustrated and--by his account--tragically misunderstood chief of megabank J.P. Morgan Chase.

It's not enough that he gets to keep the tens of millions of dollars he netted turning an already enormous institution into a sprawling empire of finance that now controls $2 trillion in assets, even as it has tangled ordinary people in the red tape of the foreclosure mess and seized hundreds of thousands of homes. He wants us to like him, too, and give him props for magnanimously saving the world.

The government has been unfairly putting the blame for the financial crisis on Wall Street bankers, he complains to Roger Lowenstein in a profile gracing the cover of Sunday's New York Times Magazine. "It's harmful, it's unfair, and it leads to bad policy," Dimon is quoted as saying, leaving you free to imagine the sad strains of the string quartet playing for him as he nurses a brandy at one or another of his residences. "I am not embarrassed to be a banker," he says.

Feel free to take it as given that Dimon is indeed the wisest, best-intentioned banker around, as Lowenstein eagerly urges us to conclude. ("Dimon's mantra is 'Do the right thing,'" Lowenstein asserts, content to let that characterization sit without scrutiny.) But the intentions and characters of those in the boardrooms of giant banks is the one thing that ought to be pretty much irrelevant by now, as we seek to recover from the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. What matters from here is the rules at play, and whether they are clear enough and sufficiently enforced to deter the kinds of shenanigans that became standard operating procedure on Wall Street in the years leading up to the crash.

We need rules that make it beside the point whether an enlightened risk manager runs the bank with a focus on long-term health, or rather a corporate looter intent on raking off short-term illusory profits before leaving the mess to someone else. And we need to ensure that Too Big To Fail institutions are sliced down to manageable size.

The personal profiles and motives of the people at the top have no place in shaping the regulatory posture toward financial institutions whose failure is big enough to pose risks for the world economy. What matters is whether the authorities can see clearly how much money a bank really owns and how much it has lent out; whether they force management to set aside real dollars in reserve against something going wrong so that taxpayers are not the only line of defense between solvency and a system-wide panic.

The saddest thing about Lowenstein's suck-uppy portrayal of Dimon is how it invites the public to have faith that a smart and decent guy is at the helm of one of the primary survivors of the financial crisis, as if that should make us all feel better about the prospects of another shock to the system. This sort of faith was the modus operandi of the would-be regulators who allowed a disturbing credit bubble to burgeon unchecked into the financial crisis. They assumed that all was good and stable not because of any dispassionate scrutiny of the numbers, but because of the supposed caliber of the people in control of the money.

For years, as Wall Street grew increasingly fat on borrowed money--expanding its business by lending to people with dubious credit and then trading complicated derivatives that they manufactured out of fresh home loans--Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan counseled that all was swell on the basis of a naïvely ideological conception known as counterparty risk management. The government did not need to examine the books to make sure that megabanks were setting aside real dollars in reserve against its trades going bad. The counterparties to the trades could be depended upon to do that all by themselves. The institutions on the other side of the trades would never agree to deals without first ensuring that their trading partners had the money required to pay up. In essence, the managers at Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns had much greater motivation to ensure that their trades were properly hedged than any annoying Washington bureaucrat.

The Clinton administration was saturated in this sort of thinking, as a pair of Treasury Secretaries, Bob Rubin and Larry Summers, dismantled the authority of one regulatory agency, the Commodity Futures and Trading Commission, which sought to increase scrutiny of derivatives trading. They, too, argued that leaders on Wall Street had sophisticated risk models that obviated regulatory scrutiny. In short, Wall Street was supposedly full of the sorts of people Lowenstein tells us Jamie Dimon appears to be--smart, trustworthy and decent--so the rules did not matter.

But if there is a single takeaway from the financial crisis, it's this: Forget the individuals running the banks, and keep your eye on the incentives at work. The financial system did not blow up because lazy idiots and miscreants ran the banks, but because Wall Street was overseen by people who were in fact very good at what they did. And what they did was satisfy the market's urge for immediate growth. They got paid enormous sums to figure out how to make their share prices go up in the short term, and never mind the longer-term consequences.

Washington Mutual-- the giant mortgage lender whose remains fell into Jamie Dimon's hands when it finally collapsed--did not fail because its chief executive, Kerry Killinger, was a fool, but because he willingly handed the market precisely what it was paying for: a swiftly growing loan book. The bank handed out mortgages to virtually all-comers, following through on it's mantra, "The Power of Yes."

And the demise of WaMu did not leave Killinger sleeping under a bridge or relinquishing his mansion to foreclosure. He cashed out tens of millions of dollars along the way. For him, this supposed debacle was an extraordinary financial success.

Implicit in Lowenstein's valentine for Jamie Dimon is the assumption that the bankers have been chastened and have learned lessons, which would seem to make another crisis less likely. But that requires that we view megabanks like human beings, as if shame and social standing matter. The people running banks have a fiduciary responsibility to maximize profits for their shareholders. Some will succumb to shareholder pressures to juice up the present while jeopardizing the future--not just the bank's future, but that of the broader economy. Unless we get that part straight and change the rules appropriately, we will be here again.

Worst of all, if we fail to absorb that takeaway and simultaneously allow J.P. Morgan Chase and the other behemoths to control an even bigger slice of assets without limiting their size, the consequences of the next crisis are likely to be worse than the last one.

The recent meltdown laid bare the sharp divergence between the interests of Wall Street and those of everyone else. Ordinary people need a stable, transparent banking system that allows businesses to borrow and households to finance the purchase of homes, cars and education. But the chiefs running banks can cash in spectacularly as individuals even as they lead the rest of us off a cliff.

And now Jamie Dimon complains that this view hurts his feelings. Well, cry me a river, Mr. Chairman, but trusting in the decency of the bankers who control trillions of dollars--as opposed to regulating them effectively--seems an idea that's Too Stupid To Try Again.

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Poor, sad Jamie Dimon, the frustrated and--by his account--tragically misunderstood chief of megabank J.P. Morgan Chase. It's not enough that he gets to keep the tens of millions of dollars he netted...
Poor, sad Jamie Dimon, the frustrated and--by his account--tragically misunderstood chief of megabank J.P. Morgan Chase. It's not enough that he gets to keep the tens of millions of dollars he netted...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Siebenstein
99% -Don't do what they tell you !
05:04 AM on 12/11/2010
Jamie Dimon is a s0c10p@th
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Siebenstein
99% -Don't do what they tell you !
05:04 AM on 12/11/2010
Jamie Dimon is a sociopath
madame48
NO..it's a gop Cookbook !Tempus edax,homo edacior
09:46 AM on 12/07/2010
during the real estate bubble here, my husband and I constantly joked, "where is all this money coming from?, they can't ALL be drug dealers"...well GREED, a diffrent type of drug. AND that the RICHEST bankers weren't satisfied with the millions they had...they HAD to make more, and feel entitled to do so.....that is the cancer on our country
08:29 AM on 12/07/2010
Bankers are a total joke. They lie and cheat for a buck. I hope all major banks go under. Americans will dance in the streets if they do.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Siebenstein
99% -Don't do what they tell you !
05:04 AM on 12/11/2010
agreed
06:27 PM on 01/22/2011
Credit Union.
08:21 AM on 12/07/2010
Higher education doesn't teach ethics, just greed. No wonder we are in the fix we are.
02:12 AM on 12/07/2010
HARVARD and assorted “eunuchs in the harem.. know how it should be done, see it done every day, but can't do it†...The colossal contribution of Business Schools to current financial mayhem is understated. These schools promoted not only short term financial goals for the narcissist boards of corporations but actively advanced non saving and managing for the moment. If these fools were farmers there would be nothing left to produce a harvest in a very short time.
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FoxIslander
Fox Island...no relation to Fox News
02:10 AM on 12/07/2010
"I am not embarrassed to be a banker..."

Really? that's hard to imagine...and in that photo you look like your ready to burst into tears.
madame48
NO..it's a gop Cookbook !Tempus edax,homo edacior
09:47 AM on 12/07/2010
shows he has no soul
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Being Middle Class
01:51 PM on 12/07/2010
He sold it.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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ronkw
Wake up and smell the whiskey
07:56 PM on 12/06/2010
The Banks became players in a game created by our politicians.

Back to freddie, Fannie, CRA and redlining.
Gov.wasn't smart enough to foresee the unintended consequences..... all in the name of buying votes/favoritism/pandering amongst voting blocks.
06:52 AM on 12/07/2010
Agreed. The corrupt political system IS smart enough, however, to convince millions of Americans to blame somebody else, and to vote the worst of the worst back into power. Dimon is a scapegoat.
madame48
NO..it's a gop Cookbook !Tempus edax,homo edacior
09:51 AM on 12/07/2010
it was even more than that, listen to the testimony of 20 year old GED mortgage writers talk about how they were pressured to pass bad mortgages....has nothing to do with redlining there
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Reno Fickler
Head Lifeguard/Dead Sea Marina
07:53 PM on 12/06/2010
In small towns the biggest house always belonged to the banker. Now they've moved to the city.
06:55 PM on 12/06/2010
I posted this earlier, but I'm posting it again - Jamie Dimon loves to see Americans on Food Stamps - he makes profit from people on Food Stamps, by administering the program as a middleman.

Watch a JP Morgan exec talk about how they make big profits thanks to Food Stamps.

http://www­­.youtube.­c­om/watch­?v­=Gl6sPa­bt9­Fw

People being out of work and on Food Stamps is Profitable for JP Morgan and Jamie Dimon is happy to see that happen. That's what kind of guy Jamie Dimon is, and we are hoping he will do the right thing for America?
11:24 PM on 12/06/2010
here's the link directly:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gl6sPabt9Fw
05:14 PM on 12/06/2010
the small businesses are getting ignored in these issues, especially when looking for small business loans or financing. The banks that got the money aren’t approving small businesses for badly needed loans, that are why more and more merchants are turning to merchant business cash advance, or merchant cash advance loans to leverage their credit card receipts.

Charles Baratta
http://www.merchantloans.com
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rallis
Virtue is Harmony
04:39 PM on 12/06/2010
crash jp morgan buy silver
03:47 PM on 12/06/2010
"It is not very unreasonable that the rich should contribute to the public expence, not only in proportion to their revenue, but something more than in that proportion." Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations.

Like the televangelists and mega-church preachers and the Vatican have turned Jesus's teaching inside-out and upside-down, the bank conservatives have eviscerated the words of their patron saint, Adam Smith. You can bet your life on one thing: if a conservative is talking, he or she is lying.
madame48
NO..it's a gop Cookbook !Tempus edax,homo edacior
09:53 AM on 12/07/2010
i see it every day on the teevee...had to stop watching , my screaming at the lies was too much
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Enigma2008
Still 99% @BlueGoatNews
03:38 PM on 12/06/2010
Boxers need a referee so that they don't kill each other. Drivers need traffic signals to control right-of-way. Business needs regulations to keep them from scavenging customers--to save them from themselves. Greed and the profit motive are a stronger motivator than the urge to build community. Balance is the key. Without rules of competition and oversight by referees it's back to dog eat dog of the dark ages.
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lemealone
It will take more than condiments to foil my brill
03:56 PM on 12/06/2010
government corruption and incompetence trumps greed and profit of the free market.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
judiNJ
The Free Market is Not Free
04:06 PM on 12/06/2010
No way! Big business and Big Banks are the worst of the worst. I would never in a million years trust my Social Security to Wall Street. When my company went bankrupt, I lost a huge commission, my vacation pay and my last pay check. The only thing I was able to keep was my 401K... thanks to the Federal Government..
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DaveInWheaton
Corporatism Destroys All - both here & abroad
06:05 PM on 12/06/2010
"Government corruption and incompetence" - Thank you President Bush!

We should copntinue to let the market "regulate itself". That's worked out SO well.

Go back too reading your talking points. We already know what they are, and that they will be the destruction of what's left of this country after 30 years of Reaganomics..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JeffreyGold
Senator Jeffrey Gold (I)
04:46 PM on 12/06/2010
Nicely said!
03:02 PM on 12/06/2010
People like that believing the things as he does is a problem.
Here's what we can do. Regulate financial institutions like this. If the head of it does something good for the community, it's stock holders and the economy as a whole, he get's a food pellet. If he does something bad like, I don't know, promoting the sale securities made up of packages of unsecured loans that he knows will fail and then letting someone else make money on the failure of all those loans; instead of giving him a million dollar bonus he doesn't get any food pellets for a long time and he and his familly have to go live in the street.
I think this would make good bankers that we could trust.
madame48
NO..it's a gop Cookbook !Tempus edax,homo edacior
09:56 AM on 12/07/2010
how about that death penalty they are so fond of? THAT might get them to behave....stick up a bank get death...banks stick up the people, no problem
02:55 PM on 12/07/2010
That works with rats, but bankers are more resistant to moral education.