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Bank Lobbyists Still Strong- Egads!

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  • Bank Lobbyists Still Strong- Egads!

    Who would have thunk it- we all thought they were road kill :rolleyes:

    June 5, 2009
    Back to Business
    Ailing, Banks Still Field Strong Lobby at Capitol

    By STEPHEN LABATON

    WASHINGTON — As he often does, President Obama took the opportunity in a bill-signing ceremony last month to remind Congress “to do what we were actually sent here to do — and that is to stand up to the special interests, and stand up for the American people.”

    But Mr. Obama did not mention that the measure he was signing, the Helping Families Save Their Homes Act, was missing its centerpiece: a change in bankruptcy law he once championed that would have given judges the power to lower the amount owed on a home loan.

    It had been stripped out three weeks earlier in a showdown between Senate Democrats and the nation’s banks, including many that are getting big government bailouts.

    As Congressional Democrats and the White House crow about multiple victories over the financial industry, including new rules for credit card issuers, banks are quietly savoring an even bigger victory of their own.
    The defeat of the bankruptcy proposal is a testament to the enduring influence of banks, even as the industry struggles financially and suffers from its role in the economic crisis.

    It also shows that in the coming legislative battles that will shape the future of the economy, the financial industry — through a powerful and well-financed lobbying force — may have a far stronger hand to play than might seem evident.

    Documents and interviews with lawmakers, lobbyists and administration officials show that the banks defeated the bankruptcy change — the industry picturesquely calls it the “cramdown” provision — by claiming that it would push up interest rates and slow the housing market’s recovery, even though academic studies have countered such claims.

    The industry also steadfastly refused offers to negotiate over a weaker version. And it poured millions of dollars into lobbying: four of the industry’s top trade groups spent nearly as much on lobbying in the first three months of this year as they did in all of 2001.

    “This would have been a much different deal if Obama had pressed it,” said Camden R. Fine, head of the Independent Community Bankers of America and one of the chief lobbyists opposing the bankruptcy change. “The fact that Obama effectively sat it out helped us a great deal.”
    Surprising Ease

    In the end, the banks’ startling success in defeating the provision, which was pushed hardest by Senator Richard J. Durbin, Democrat of Illinois, caught even their lobbyists by surprise. Not only did they defeat the cramdown provision, but the banks walked away with billions in new bailout money.

    The housing bill Mr. Obama signed on May 20 saves banks and credit unions at least $13 billion in special fees that they would have had to pay to replenish dwindling deposit insurance funds.

    But the real threat was to their profits. The proposal would have shifted negotiating power to the millions of troubled homeowners who could use the threat of bankruptcy to wrest lower monthly payments from lenders.

    $13 Billion. Hey, more than enough to cover the bribes...errr... lobbying costs. How can you not say the financial oligarchy didn't spend, and when the occasion is right, continue to spend their money, well on the Obama Dama. ;)

  • #2
    Re: Bank Lobbyists Still Strong- Egads!



    'not dead yet!'

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Bank Lobbyists Still Strong- Egads!

      My solution to the despair caused by the slavish devotion of Congress to the financial industry is to buy bank stocks.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Bank Lobbyists Still Strong- Egads!

        Originally posted by metalman View Post


        'not dead yet!'
        [MEDIA][/MEDIA]

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Bank Lobbyists Still Strong- Egads!

          Originally posted by metalman View Post

          'not dead yet!'
          FIRE Economy:






          US Congress:




          The situation resolves when the Congressional and Administration "firefighters" figure out they need to get the FIRE-interest's foot off the hose, or the FIRE finally runs out of fuel. Given the Obama Administration's performance to date, I bet it's the latter.

          Then again maybe that's too optimistic...:p
          ...We didn't start the fire
          But when we are gone
          It will still burn on, and on, and on, and on...

          --Billy Joel; from Storm Front, 1989--

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Bank Lobbyists Still Strong- Egads!

            Noam Schreiber writing for The New Republic covered this a month ago.

            http://www.tnr.com/story_print.html?...f-2c881ddf5870

            a funny thing happened while the big banks and investors were uniting against the cram-down push: The banks cut their own deal. Top executives at four large banks--Citigroup, Bank of America, J.P. Morgan, and Wells Fargo--descended on Congress to proclaim they'd love nothing more than to modify mortgages, just like the president wants. It's just that, with all those greedy investors out there, you never know who's going to sue. The solution, they argued, was a "safe harbor" provision: Give us legal immunity, and we'll modify all the loans you send us. "They said it's necessary to protect them from lawsuits," recalls one House Democratic aide. "Our position was, to the extent there are barriers to modifications, let's erase those barriers." (Spokesmen for J.P. Morgan and Wells Fargo declined to comment; the other banks did not return calls.)

            From the banks' perspective, the beauty of legal immunity was that it would give them a free hand to modify mortgages owned by investors while collecting cash incentives from the government and protecting their second liens--a proposition potentially worth billions. From the investors' perspective, it meant the cost of modifications would come entirely out of their pockets. If the fight in Congress was essentially over who would eat hundreds of billions of dollars in housing market losses, the genius of the banks was to realize early on that, given the political environment, it wasn't going to be homeowners. That left them duking it out with investors, even if the latter weren't aware of it.

            And so, while the investors droned on to glassy-eyed congressmen about the sanctity of their contracts, the banks waxed expansive about all they wanted to do for the man on the street. "The investors don't make a sympathetic case. The banks positioned themselves as happy to help modify the loans," says one neutral finance industry lobbyist. "By essentially throwing investors under the bus, they created a glide path for loan modifications."

            When the House passed its bill in early March, the investors were stunned to see that it contained the safe harbor provision they feared and loathed. They'd hardly realized it was even on the table and had made no attempt to fight it. Their only consolation was the belief that safe harbor was joined at the hip to the cram-down measure, so the banks would work with them to defeat the entire package in the Senate. But it soon became clear that Senator Dick Durbin, who was spearheading the cram-down legislation, had no intention of letting it torpedo the overall bill--which, in addition to safe harbor, also included a larger credit line for the FDIC. (Durbin eventually decided to slice off cram-down for a separate vote.)

            The investors realized they'd been had. They quickly pulled out of the broader lobbying effort and formed their own group--called the Mortgage Investors Coalition--which spent most of April frantically pleading their case. They argued that, even without safe harbor, the lenders had all the legal protection they needed. They insisted the only thing safe harbor would accomplish is to protect banks who made fraudulent loans, which they'd essentially be able to launder through modification.

            [..]

            Pressed by the big banks, the Senate defeated cram-down yesterday and is on the verge of passing safe harbor as early as Monday. (J.P. Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon was spotted in the chamber on Wednesday.) "We're trying to cram six-to-eight months of education into three-to-four week period," bleats one beleaguered investor lobbyist.

            In the end, the problem for investors was largely sociological. Banking is a heavily regulated industry; in order to succeed, a bank's top executives must be as deft at navigating Washington as they are at lending money. But, with a few important exceptions, most hedge funds live by a meritocratic credo: You make money by having the more sophisticated computer model or arbitrage strategy. "Traditionally, investors aren't lobbyists, they don't have an eye toward Washington," says the finance industry lobbyist. "They have an eye on deal-making." That helps explain the irony that, even though Obama himself is closer to more hedge fund managers than bank executives, the banks look to have won this fight. (The administration did finally work out a compromise between investors and banks on the second-lien issue, though.)
            via opensecrets.org: $37 million in campaign contributions from hedge funds since 1990 ($17 million in 2008) pales in comparison to the $214 million from commercial banks...

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Bank Lobbyists Still Strong- Egads!

              Originally posted by GRG55
              The situation resolves when the Congressional and Administration "firefighters" figure out they need to get the FIRE-interest's foot off the hose, or the FIRE finally runs out of fuel. Given the Obama Administration's performance to date, I bet it's the latter.

              Then again maybe that's too optimistic...:p
              I'm not sure FIRE CAN run out of fuel. If Zimbabwe is an analogy - that Ponzi has been going for years now and shows no sign of abatement.

              Even widespread and real suffering - malnutrition et al - hasn't led to a government change.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Bank Lobbyists Still Strong- Egads!

                Originally posted by c1ue View Post
                I'm not sure FIRE CAN run out of fuel. If Zimbabwe is an analogy - that Ponzi has been going for years now and shows no sign of abatement.

                Even widespread and real suffering - malnutrition et al - hasn't led to a government change.
                The big picture (10 years...5 years...1 year?) isn't that complicated, on the daze when a clear head gives one perspective. (On the other daze the details can be devilish)

                Simply follow the money. $12Trillion in stripped out public assets, with more to come. The biggest military budget since WW2. A National Security State that only grows.

                Perhaps if we were a small nation, like the Arab Emirates, we'd be put on an overpaid dole for domestic busy work but we're not, we're a very big country so subsistence for most is the next new thing. Those of us doing better will more than likely find we can do no better than maintain and not slide into the subsistence abyss. The Land of Opportunity will require for most wearing a uniform.

                Internationally we move closer to what will most likely be pitched, by historians at least, as the Energy Wars. Currency Wars is much closer to the truth.

                As the global production centers continue to secure access to needed energy, the financial oligarchy curtails and seizes, not what they need for production, they continue to ship that out, but what they need to prop up the Dollar and the Euro with their superior military assets. This contradiction tends to lead to war.

                Accommodations, of course, are possible but if the near-future cartoon caricature of America is a bloated bankster, chest crisscrossed with ammo belts, cradling a massive high-tech weapon, standing in a land of debt serfs with nothing else to offer, what's to negotiate. That cartoon bankster will have to have to have his $1200 shoe holding down the world's energy python to have a hand worth playing.

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