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Smith Faculty
Opinion Article
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July 10,
2008
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
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Bernanke, Congress and President Drive Stock Market Rout
On Tuesday, Federal Reserve Chairman
Ben Bernanke outlined Washington efforts
to restore confidence in U.S. financial
institutions. Initially, this gave the
market a lift. After closer examination
by investors, the market continued its
downward spiral on Wednesday, led by
financial stocks.
Simply, Bernanke's speech offered
little new. The Fed is reforming the
practices of mortgage brokers, which
should improve the quality of loan
applications and transparency about the
risk of specific loans, and he further
outlined plans to extend bank regulation
to securities firms through capital
requirements and better Fed access to
their financial data. However, these
steps fail to address the most
fundamental flaws eroding market
confidence in both banks and securities
companies. These are business models
that encourage executives to seek risky
arbitrage opportunities--such as through
questionable auction rate securities,
mortgage finance and hedge funds. By
permitting executives to reap annual
bonuses in the millions when bets go
right and stick stockholders with the
losses when things go wrong, banks are
inclined to imprudent risks that
ultimately victimize shareholders.
Consequently, the banks' problems are
much deeper and far reaching than their
losses on subprime securities.
Citigroup's losses on Old Lane hedge
fund provide a classic illustration. To
attract CEO Vikram Pandit, Citigroup
purchased Old Lane for $800 million.
Although the fund never made much
profit, the transaction netted Pandit
$165 million. Subsequently, Citigroup
wrote down more than $200 million in
losses. Pandit used some of his proceeds
to purchase Tony Randall's Manhattan
apartment for $17.9 million, and
Citigroup shareholders took the loss.
Nothing Bernanke has proposed will stop
that kind of reckless behavior, which
has nothing to do with the subprime
debacle.
The market recognizes Bernanke's
proposals are hollow, and bank stocks
continue to fall. Home builders can't
recover without steady banks, and their
stocks and the stocks of supplying
industries, such appliance makers, head
south with them.
Meanwhile, Congress seems little
inclined to do much that could quickly
address the drag of high priced imported
oil on the U.S. economy. Solutions from
wind power to free up natural gas for
use in vehicles, suggested this week by
T. Boone Pickens, to simply accelerating
the build out of hybrids through
judicious incentives are all being
ignored by the Democratic Congress and
President Bush. It is no wonder that
consumers are pessimistic, auto stocks
are skidding and taking the equity
values of many supply industries with
them.
Until Bernanke gets serious about
reforming the business practices of the
large New York banks and securities
companies and Congress and the President
show a pulse on near-term energy
solutions, neither the economy nor
stocks can recover.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
Robert H. Smith School of Business and former Chief Economist at
the U.S. International Trade Commission. ►More Faculty
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