Thought this was the best, most pointed grilling proposed for the TBTF bankers I've seen:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/12/bu...l?ref=business
It's by Andrew Ross Sorkin, author of "Too Big Too Fail." Haven't read it (anyone else suffering GFC fatigue?)
A pointy example:
"This question is for Mr. Mack. In November, in a surprisingly candid moment, you publicly declared, “Regulators have to be much more involved.” You then added, “We cannot control ourselves.” Can you elaborate on those comments? Is Wall Street inherently incapable of policing itself — a view contrary to what most of your peers have argued?"
The whole thing is well worth a read.
What I would really like to know is how they would defend themselves against the charge in this piece which I linked to a couple of weeks back:
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/fe462a30-e...nclick_check=1
This article coughs up the answer to something I've been wondering for a long time: how does cash flow work in a trading firm. Speaking of the ever-rising pay scales the author states:
"Observers of financial services saw unbelievable prosperity and apparently immense value added. Yet two years later the whole industry was bankrupt. A simple reason underlies this: any industry that pays out in cash colossal accounting profits that are largely imaginary will go bust quickly. Not only has the industry – and by extension societies that depend on it – been spending money that is no longer there, it has been giving away money that it only imagined it had in the first place. Worse, it seems to want to do it all again.
What were the sources of this imaginary wealth? First, spreads on credit that took no account of default probabilities (bankers have been doing this for centuries, but not on this scale). Second, unrealised mark-to-market profits on the trading book, especially in illiquid instruments. Third, profits conjured up by taking the net present value of streams of income stretching into the future, on derivative issuance for example. In the last two of these the bank was not receiving any income, merely “booking revenues”. How could they pay this non-existent wealth out in cash to their employees? Because they had no measure of cash flow to tell them they were idiots, and because everyone else was doing it. Paying out 50 per cent of revenues to staff had become the rule, even when the “revenues” did not actually consist of money."
I almost felt sick when I read this the first time. Unless someone wants to correct me, I take this to mean that effectively the bailouts go directly to the bonusses. Even the patina of legitimacy here is simply a misunderstanding of the accounting involved.
It should be noted that the author is the former chief executive of Barclays!!!
So I would ask the bankers to simply explain why the good ex-chairman is wrong. And if they can't, to simply give the money back.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/12/bu...l?ref=business
It's by Andrew Ross Sorkin, author of "Too Big Too Fail." Haven't read it (anyone else suffering GFC fatigue?)
A pointy example:
"This question is for Mr. Mack. In November, in a surprisingly candid moment, you publicly declared, “Regulators have to be much more involved.” You then added, “We cannot control ourselves.” Can you elaborate on those comments? Is Wall Street inherently incapable of policing itself — a view contrary to what most of your peers have argued?"
The whole thing is well worth a read.
What I would really like to know is how they would defend themselves against the charge in this piece which I linked to a couple of weeks back:
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/fe462a30-e...nclick_check=1
This article coughs up the answer to something I've been wondering for a long time: how does cash flow work in a trading firm. Speaking of the ever-rising pay scales the author states:
"Observers of financial services saw unbelievable prosperity and apparently immense value added. Yet two years later the whole industry was bankrupt. A simple reason underlies this: any industry that pays out in cash colossal accounting profits that are largely imaginary will go bust quickly. Not only has the industry – and by extension societies that depend on it – been spending money that is no longer there, it has been giving away money that it only imagined it had in the first place. Worse, it seems to want to do it all again.
What were the sources of this imaginary wealth? First, spreads on credit that took no account of default probabilities (bankers have been doing this for centuries, but not on this scale). Second, unrealised mark-to-market profits on the trading book, especially in illiquid instruments. Third, profits conjured up by taking the net present value of streams of income stretching into the future, on derivative issuance for example. In the last two of these the bank was not receiving any income, merely “booking revenues”. How could they pay this non-existent wealth out in cash to their employees? Because they had no measure of cash flow to tell them they were idiots, and because everyone else was doing it. Paying out 50 per cent of revenues to staff had become the rule, even when the “revenues” did not actually consist of money."
I almost felt sick when I read this the first time. Unless someone wants to correct me, I take this to mean that effectively the bailouts go directly to the bonusses. Even the patina of legitimacy here is simply a misunderstanding of the accounting involved.
It should be noted that the author is the former chief executive of Barclays!!!
So I would ask the bankers to simply explain why the good ex-chairman is wrong. And if they can't, to simply give the money back.
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