Thursday, May 7, 2009

The Future of "Too Big to Fail"

FDIC Chairwoman Sheila Bair addressed "Too Big to Fail" in front of the Senate Committee on Banking Housing and Urban Affairs. Bair urged lawmakers to consider a government regulatory framework to monitor global, systemic financial institutions thought to be “too big to fail.” Read the testimony here.

Stress Test results are out, and BofA's apparent need for $34B in capital has been this week's worst-kept secret. banks will need to raise at least $65B in new capital The WSJ has a helpful interactive graph comparing the 19 banks that were stress-tested. Also, WSJ's David Wessel explains what the stress tests will tell us about bank health.

Matthew Richardson and Nouriel Roubini write about a missed opportunity in the FT. The pair feel that insolvent banks should feel the wrath of the markets, asking "why keep insolvent banks afloat?" and invoke the concept of "creative destruction" first argued by Joseph Schumpeter. fellow Doom-and-Gloomer Nassim Nicholas Taleb calls the current global crisis "vastly worse" than the 1930s becaause the global financial system is so interdependent now.

The GAO criticized former SEC chairman Chris Cox and his regime for creating an atmosphere in which enforcement attorneys felt thay had been weakened in their ability to take action. New SEC chair Schapiro dicontinued Cox' "Pilot Program" which had instituted a pre-approval process for investigations.

Author Richard Posner writes that we should move the spotlight off the bankers for a bit and focus on goverment officials who failed in their role of assuring economic stability.

Regulators looking North for inspiration? Marie-Josee Kravis sets the record straight on why it wasn't regulation, per se, that has spared Canada's banks from the worst of the crisis. She credits prudent management, rather than regulation, which prevented the excesses that were commonplace in the U.S. banking environment.

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