Administration plans for end of ?too big to fail'

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Specop 007

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Jan 31, 2005
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So it seems there will be an end to the river of money. Admittedly it seems to be about 2 trillion too late but I guess better late then never. Obama had a chance to pay off his union thugs and supporters and get a stake in big business so now he can sit back and smile.

Article

Administration plans for end of ?too big to fail?

Megabanks may be slimmed down, told to prepare plans for own demise

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.
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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.

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.

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smack Down

Diamond Member
Sep 10, 2005
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Huh, that doesn't eliminate to big to fail, it defines what companies get an explicit government backing. Might as well let them just print money.
 

Rainsford

Lifer
Apr 25, 2001
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What kind of partisan bullshit thread is this? Paying off "union thugs" by propping up failed banks? That doesn't really make sense to me...
 

Specop 007

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Jan 31, 2005
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Originally posted by: Rainsford
What kind of partisan bullshit thread is this? Paying off "union thugs" by propping up failed banks? That doesn't really make sense to me...

I bet you're a really good dancer.
 

Craig234

Lifer
May 1, 2006
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Great news - unless they compromise too much. Pretty much the opposite of the Republicans' policy which is "the bigger the better, in bed with us".
 

DealMonkey

Lifer
Nov 25, 2001
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Originally posted by: Specop 007
Originally posted by: Rainsford
What kind of partisan bullshit thread is this? Paying off "union thugs" by propping up failed banks? That doesn't really make sense to me...

I bet you're a really good dancer.

IOW: Unions are bad and Specop007 manages to bash 'em every chance he can. Even when it makes no f'ing sense whatsoever.
 

alchemize

Lifer
Mar 24, 2000
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Originally posted by: Rainsford
What kind of partisan bullshit thread is this? Paying off "union thugs" by propping up failed banks? That doesn't really make sense to me...
Well, I could care less about tossing the carcass of GM to the UAW, they kind of earned it in a bizarre way.

But surely you've caught the news lately - TARP, citibank, Merril, etc.? That's called propping up clearly banks that were ready to fail (and should have gone into receivership).

 
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