Assange Releases Document Showing How Bank Regulation is Being Stifled

 

Deal among 50 countries would help prevent added regulation of financial services, website says.  WikiLeaks-secret-tisa-financial-annex

WikiLeaks has published what it calls “the secret draft text for the Trade in Services Agreement (TISA) Financial Services Annex,” apparently covering 50 countries and most of the world’s trade in services.

“The draft Financial Services Annex sets rules which would assist the expansion of financial multinationals — mainly headquartered in New York, London, Paris and Frankfurt — into other nations by preventing regulatory barriers,” the website says in a statement.

The draft deal is seen as a way to prevent more regulation of financial services, despite calls for tighter regulatory measures that followed the 2007-08 world financial crisis. That market meltdown set the world’s biggest banks up against critics who said governments needed to rein them in.  Canada is among the countries named as being partner to the negotiations. The last round of TISA talks took place April 28 to May 2 in Geneva.

WikiLeaks also alleged in its statement that the U.S. is “particularly keen on boosting cross-border data flow” and that this would include personal and financial data.

On Wednesday, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange promised the release of a massive cache of documents Thursday, involving 50 countries, including Canada.

Trade om Services Agreement

 

Citibank Shareholders To Fight Big DoJ Fines

Bank of America and JP Morgan Chase were more deeply involved in subprime mortgages than Citibank. JP Morgan settled because they assessed the risk of going to court with a possible criminal indictment too great for the bank to take…and survive.

An institutional Citibank shareholder said, “There’s no good PR to go through what your underwriting practices were and the losses that resulted.”

Why is Citi’s penalty so much greater than JP Morgan Chase’s.  Presidential politics?

DoJ and Citi Bank

The US Fed’s Role in the Economy

Barry Eichengreen argues:  Central banks should focus on developing more effective macro-prudential instruments. They should widen the regulatory perimeter – that is, they should work to bring nonbank financial institutions under their regulatory umbrella. They should use the resulting instruments and powers preemptively. And they should adjust monetary policy to address potential financial risks as a last resort, not as their first line of defense.

The Role of the Fed

People’s Bank of China Lowers Reserve Requirements

PBOC will cut the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) by 0.5 percentage points for banks engaged in proportionate lending to agricultural and small firms. The cut will take effect from June 16, said a statement released by the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), the central bank.

In the west, reserve requirements have been fodder for regulators trying to make banks more stable.  China’s use of the reserve requirement to help sectors of the economy is probably a much better use of reserves, which at Basel levels don’t do much good anyway.

Change in banks’ cash reserves in China are aimed at boosting agriculture.  The statement provided the details following a cabinet decision late last month to launch narrow-based RRR cuts for banks engaged in lending to agriculture-related businesses and small and micro-sized companies, in efforts to enhance financial support to the real economy.

Banks eligible for the cut include those whose new loans to agriculture-related entities accounted for at least half of their total new lending in the last fiscal year; banks whose outstanding loans to agriculture-related entities accounted for at least 30 percent of their total outstanding loans in the last fiscal year will also be qualified for the cut, the statement said. The same rule applies to banks engaged in lending to small and micro-sized companies, according to the central bank.
“According to the standard, the targeted RRR cut will cover around two-thirds of city commercial banks, 80 percent of rural commercial banks above county level as well as 90 percent of rural cooperative banks above county level,” said the statement.

Meanwhile, the central bank will cut the RRR for finance companies, financial leasing firms, and automobile finance enterprises by 0.5 percentage points. The cut is aimed to improve the capital use efficiency of these companies and boost consumption, the statement said.

The central bank noted that the cut will not apply to county-level rural commercial banks and rural cooperative banks, who had their RRR reduced on April 25.
Zhang Zhiwei, an economist with Nomura Securities, said in a research note that the cut is estimated to inject 95 billion yuan ($15.45 billion) of liquidity to the economy.
“Combining this measure and other liquidity injection actions through the re-lending facility and the RRR cut on April 25, we estimate the PBOC will inject 545 billion yuan of liquidity into the economy by the end of June,” Zhang said.
Even though the announcement marks the second targeted RRR cut within two months, the central bank said this did not mean a change to the country’s fundamental monetary policy.

“The PBOC will continue to implement a prudent monetary policy, maintain reasonable liquidity, as well as reasonable growth in both monetary credit and social financing,” the central bank statement said.
It added that the directive RRR cut could boost credit structure, and such a monetary policy tool will also help with the nation’s economic restructuring efforts.

Banking Reserves

Dirty Money in the Seychelles

 

Seychelles, a thousand miles from anywhere, is an offshore magnet for money launderers and tax dodgers. A look at this corruption-haunted archipelago shows how the offshore secrecy system has grown — and where it’s going.

In the fall of 2012, two strangers from Africa showed up in Seychelles, an emerald-green archipelago in the Indian Ocean nearly a thousand miles east of Somalia. Unlike Prince William and Kate Middleton and other A-list celebrities who favor Seychelles as a getaway, these visitors didn’t come to enjoy the islands’ natural beauty and luxury accommodations. They were there, they said, to conduct business in Seychelles’ bustling offshore financial center.

Eventually they made their way to the offices of Zen Offshore, one of dozens of firms on the islands that set up hard-to-trace “shell companies” for clients around the world. They explained that they represented an individual who served as a “liaison officer between the Zimbabwean government and the rich diamond mines.”

For anyone who understands the nexus of corruption and money laundering in resource-rich, economically poor countries, this statement should have raised suspicions. But before they could go further, a Zen Offshore representative cut them off.

“Yep, we don’t want to know that,” he said, chuckling. “If we have knowledge of that, we have to put it forwards. So I haven’t heard a word you said in the last couple of minutes.”

The operative went on to explain how the pair could set up a company in Seychelles and hide the identity of who was really behind it by creating a labyrinthine ownership structure, putting “a company inside a company inside a company.”

The Seychellois company would be controlled by a company in Dominica, which would be controlled by a company in Belize, and so on. Anyone trying to discover the real owner would never be able to follow the paper trail around the world.

“It’s just impossible,” the Zen Offshore man said. “No one is going to try and chase that sort of information.”

The islands are a  magnet for Arab princes, Chinese investors, pirates, fugitives, mercenaries, mobsters — and outlanders who want to hide their money or disguise their business activi

Thanks to its offshore industry, Seychelles, an island nation with a population smaller than Davenport, Iowa, maintains a Zelig-like presence in the annals of international corruption and money laundering. Where there’s an odor of financial scandal, there’s often a good chance Seychelles is involved.

Dirty Money

 

 

Meet Elizabeth Warren, Warrior

 

U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren talks real pocketbook issues, as in, why yours is empty.

And she means what she says, writes Margery Eagan in the Boston Herald.  In barely a year in the Senate, she’s turned into a Robin Hood for the “hammered” middle class, her endlessly repeated line. But are you in the middle class? Then you know: You are hammered. Can’t afford to retire. Can’t afford the mortgage, taxes, car repairs, college. If you’ve just finished college you can’t afford to move from mom’s basement. Why? The four-figure college loan payments you owe each month.

This is not how it’s supposed to be if you work hard and play by the rules in America. But this is how it is.

Who’s talking about this mess nonstop?

Elizabeth Warren.

The rich keep getting richer, she says, while the poor get poorer and the middle class, let me repeat, gets “hammered.” The banks that were too big to fail in 2008 are even bigger now. Soon we’ll get taxed to bail them out, again.

Rant about EBT cards all you want. If every one disappeared tomorrow, you’d still be hammered. The real money’s in big corporations and on Wall Street. And they own most of our pols. “Meet the Woman who Stood Up to Wall Street.” So reads a huge headline in a fawning article about Warren in young ladies’ favorite sex-tip magazine, “Cosmopolitan.” That’s the magazine that featured a near-nude young Scott Brown, the penny stock investor — whoops! — whom Warren vanquished. Now “Cosmo” features a fetching young Warren in thigh-hugging jeans and details her rise from divorced mother to the country’s most powerful financial reformer.

Has she reformed anything yet? No.

Is she making progress? Yes — from trashing federal regulators for refusing to regulate banks to crusading for a higher minimum wage. Just yesterday, President Obama praised her for introducing a bill that would let college graduates refinance loans at lower rates. Because it’d be paid for by ending a tax break for millionaires, it will likely fail in a Republican House that takes care of millionaires instead of the “hammered.”

But since it’s finally dawning on the “hammered” millions that the system is indeed rigged, Warren, eventually, could prevail. Says Marty Walsh adviser Michael Goldman, “For politicians, the hardest thing to get is the perception that you actually, deep down, believe in what you’re saying.”

Apparently more and more of us not only believe Warren believes what she says. We also believe she’s right.

Warren works step by step on individual issues.  She is graceful, calm and forceful. Watch her take down the big boys with a cool insistence.  Is she ready for the big time?  Maybe yes, maybe no.  Interestingly, Mrs. Clinton is bringing what she knows about global politics to the front of her speeches.  Is this what Americans are thinking about?

With Thomas Piketty

Taking down Timothy Geithner

Warren

 

The Role of Household Debt in Financial Crises

Did the response to the financial crisis focus too much on banks while neglecting over-indebted homeowners?  House of Debt: How They (and You) Caused the Great Recession, and How We Can Prevent It from Happening Again, by Atif Mian and Amir Sufi, University of Chicago Press.

House of Debt focuses on the deterioration of household balance sheets, an analysis that has profound implications for policy directed both at preventing crises and responding to them when prevention fails.

The book examines a profoundly important question: what causes protracted downturns in economic activity? They have marshalled new data – for example, on spending by zip code – to test their hypotheses, assembling such a range of evidence from so many different sources that their conclusions are not susceptible to challenge by those looking to point out statistical errors.

Most in the financial community, the policy community and the commentariat see a breakdown in financial intermediation as the root cause of the financial crisis and Great Recession. The failure to bail out Lehman Brothers is usually viewed as the prelude to

The authors argue that, rather than failing banks, the key culprits in the financial crisis were overly indebted households. They highlight how harsh leverage and debt can be – for example, when the price of a house purchased with a 10 per cent downpayment goes down by 10 per cent, all of the owner’s equity is lost. They demonstrate powerfully that spending fell much more in parts of the country where house prices fell fastest and where the most mortgage debt was attached to homes. So their story of the crisis blames excessive mortgage lending, which first inflated bubbles in the housing market and then left households with unmanageable debt burdens. These burdens in turn led to spending reductions and created an adverse economic and financial spiral that ultimately led financial institutions to the brink.

Households do not spend while they are still overly indebted, which precipitates slow growth even after banking is restored to health. Spending slowdowns are caused by household over-indebtedness, so of course they precede problems in the banking system. And, when consumers do not spend, businesses have less need to borrow to finance investment, inventories or receivables.
Their analysis, presented with far more depth and subtlety than I have been able to reflect here, is a major contribution that furthers our understanding of the crisis. It certainly affects what I will examine in trying to predict and forestall future crises. And it should influence policies aimed at crisis prevention by demonstrating the insufficiency of keeping financial institutions healthy and by making a case for macroprudential measures directed at preventing runaway growth in household debt.

With hindsight some argue that more pain should have been imposed on the financial sector. In the moment, though, the overwhelming imperative was restoring confidence at a time when complete breakdown looked like a real possibility. The government got back substantially more money than it invested. All of the senior executives who created these big messes were out of their jobs within a year. And stockholders lost 90 per cent or more of their investments in all the institutions that required special treatment by the government.

Reducing mortgage debt would have spurred spending.  The idea of  “cram-down”: the notion that bankruptcy judges should be allowed to write down mortgage debt, and that permitting them to do so would increase the bargaining power of homeowners seeking relief probably would have worked.

Critics who disagree at this late date are obliged to provide an alternative analysis of the political calculus, not a mere recitation of the arguments for cram-down.  In the US at the time of the crisis there was no political will to do “cram-down.”

Banks had substantial mortgage holdings and especially large quantities of subordinated second mortgages and home equity lines of credit, which would have been wiped out if mortgage principal had been reduced in a way that respected the seniority of first mortgages. We recognised that large-scale principal reduction would draw in a large number of mortgages that were not delinquent and would otherwise be paid in full. As a consequence, there was the risk of sucking hundreds of billions of dollars out of the banking system. Given that government funds for capital infusions were scarce and that each dollar of bank capital supports $12 of lending, we worried that the spending gains from reducing mortgage debt might well be exceeded by the spending losses from reducing the flow of capital. This fear may have been exaggerated. If they think so, Mian and Sufi owe an explanation as to why.

Future lending might have been chilled. The housing market’s problems might have been prolonged.  If the government had bought underwater mortgages from banks.
There was the danger of prolonging the housing market’s problems. Even the relatively limited programmes in place have spent as much as a third of their money delaying, rather than avoiding, foreclosures. All that we heard at the time suggested that a significant part of the reason why the housing market was dead was that no one wanted to buy because of a fear that it had further to fall. Delaying inevitable foreclosures with relief risked exacerbating this problem and risked larger foreclosure discounts when houses were ultimately sold.

In many cases mortgage assets were carried on banks’ books at valuations far above what appeared to be current market value. Buying them at such valuations would have been a massive backdoor subsidy to banks of the kind we would not accept.  All future work on financial crises will have to reckon with the household balance sheet effects the authors stress.

Underwater Mortgages

Fixing Banks is Not the Answer?

Adair Turner writes about addresses the Eurozone’s economic problems:

A “credit crunch” – particularly in trade finance – was certainly a key reason why the financial crisis generated a real economy recession. Taxpayer-funded bank rescues, higher bank capital requirements, and ultra-easy monetary policy have all been vital to overcome credit supply constraints. But there is strong evidence that once the immediate crisis was over, lack of demand for credit played a far larger role than restricted supply in impeding economic growth.   Draghi’s Funding for Lending Scheme
That argument is persuasively made by Atif Mian and Amir Sufi in House of Debt, an important new book that analyzes US data on a county-by-county basis. Mian and Sufi show that the recession was caused by a collapse of household consumption, and that consumption fell most in those counties where pre-crisis borrowing and post-crisis real-estate prices left households facing the largest relative losses in net wealth.

Draghi

 

Modi an Equal Partner with the US?

The US has demanded over recent years that India buy defense weapons, allow big US corporate banks into the country, and ease patents helping Big Pharma.    Prime Minister Modi, who was banned from the US six years ago, has a long memory.  He will demand parity with the US.  President Obama says that this relationship is a big US priority?  Can we move forward?  Modi wants investors to flock to the manufacturing sector.  He is looking to China and Japan.

Modi