MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.) said on Tuesday that her bipartisan Wall Street reform negotiations will continue, despite strong signals from the White House that exemptions in the bill for end users of derivatives are not up for discussion. End users are farmers, airlines, dairy producers or other companies that use derivatives as an integral part of their business, [...] Banks are seeking exemptions for end users, however, as a loophole to keep the derivatives market in the dark, as it is currently. Brokers and swaps dealers have been pressuring end users to lobby Congress for an exemption.Then, hours later ... U-Turn! Josh Marshal proclaims, Blache Lincoln turns populist! While Greg Sergent observes that primaries have consequences and "Lincoln is now tilting to the left on financial reg reform, possibly earning props from progressive groups". The Politico story causing all the hubbub dropped within hours the HuffPo one. A casual observer might think she made a full 180 in less than 12 hours. In fact, the opposite seems to be true (my emphasis):
Under Lincoln's proposal, manufacturers, agriculture companies and commodities producers would not be covered by this clearing requirement.The merits of the exemptions and such are a different topic (that commodities thing bugs me), but it should be noted this announcement seems to conflict with Obama's desires. At least it represents a serious stand-down from the "all derivatives on an exchange" position. Push-back from the WH (or lack thereof) should be telling IMO.
"It will include strong mandatory trading and clearing requirements as well as real-time price reporting that will bring 100 percent transparency and accountability to Wall Street. My bill will vigorously reform unregulated markets, close all loopholes, and protect jobs on Main Street," Lincoln said in a statement to POLITICO.Ummmm. Really? Goodness, I was just hoping to catch a couple dozen of the worst loopholes and you got 'em ALL? Go GIRL!
Under Lincoln's plan, any "major swap dealer" would be barred from getting Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation backing, or funds from the Federal Reserve. That means that even if the big banks spin off their derivatives operations to separate subsidiaries -- as would be expected under Lincoln's bill -- those new commercial units would be allowed to fail if their derivatives trades go bad.Implicit in Lincoln's announcement about trying to "avoid future bailouts" is that this proposal would prevent a situation such as TARP. I simply don't see how this is even possible without declaring TARP unconstitutional. TARP was it's own legislation which pretty much self-created the bailout. Having a provision as described would likely limit actions such as the first AIG bailout, but there simply is no way that a piece of legislation can prevent a future congress from passing another TARP type bill. Kind of misleading.