The Permanent TARP: Too Big to Fail as Permanent Federal Policy
by PubliusA must read piece by Peter Wallison in today’s Wall Street Journal:

It’s hard to imagine a worse piece of financial regulatory legislation than the bill Barney Frank and the administration put before the House Financial Services Committee last month. But Sen. Chris Dodd’s effort, introduced last week, clears this hurdle
Much attention has focused on the fact that his “Restoring American Financial Stability Act” differs from the administration and Frank proposals by creating an entirely new agency to function as a “systemic regulator” of nonbank financial institutions, instead of the Federal Reserve. Far more important, however, is the regulatory and bailout powers it gives to the government. Here the Dodd bill follows the same flawed ideas advanced by the administration and Mr. Frank, but in some ways make things worse.
Both bills are intended to cover more than just companies that are engaged in financial activities. Following the administration’s lead, both provide that a company engaged in a financial activity “in whole or in part, directly or indirectly” could be subject to enhanced regulation and supervision.
The Frank bill seems intended to regulate all financial firms as though they are banks. Thus it requires financial activities to be transferred out of operating companies into a separate entity, which would then be regulated like a bank (even in its relations with its parent company).
The Dodd bill is a blunter instrument, proposing to regulate all companies that include financial activities “in whole or in part.” But almost all companies—retailers, manufacturers and service organizations—engage in some financial activities, if only to promote the sale of their products and services. If the administration’s health-care proposal has the potential to nationalize one-sixth of the economy, Messrs. Frank and Dodd are bidding to cover the rest.
The administration’s original legislation would give the Federal Reserve authority to regulate and supervise all large nonbank financial institutions and, if they are in danger of failing, take control of them and resolve their problems outside the bankruptcy system. The underlying notion is that the failure of one of these companies—which include bank holding companies, securities firms, insurance companies, finance companies, hedge funds and possibly others—could cause a systemic collapse.
Although the administration likes to give the impression that its proposal is limited to exceptional cases and the largest financial institutions, its draft legislation, and the Frank and Dodd bills, use very broad language to describe the triggering event for either enhanced supervision or a subsequent bailout.
For example, all would permit bailouts for companies that might, in the language of the Dodd bill, “have serious adverse effects on . . . economic conditions in the United States.” This is not financial collapse; rather it creates a standard much closer to the rationale for bailing out GM and Chrysler. The Dodd bill, by covering all companies engaged in part in financial activities, like financing their sales, would have explicitly authorized the Detroit bailout.
The danger here is that the legislation would spread the Fannie and Freddie model over the whole economy. Because those two government-sponsored enterprises were implicitly guaranteed by the government, they drove all competitors from the portion of the residential mortgage market they played in. The result was a lack of market discipline and competition. And with their implicit government backing, they had easier access to credit and built up huge losses—in the neighborhood of $200 billion to $400 billion—that taxpayers will eventually have to bear.
Read the whole article here.





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22 Comments
looks like the liberals want to choke capital markets that finance economic growth.
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When do you suppose the ire of the common man will be sufficiently raised to cause the individual states to start reasserting their role as protector of their citizens from the oppression of this RENEGADE and DESPOTIC government?
Dodd & Franks are what's WRONG with government. They were at the helm of Fannie and Freddie while the books were being cooked, yet they informed Bush that everything was hunky dory. They should both be investigated.
And like the Government is not already big enough! Have we finished the investigation into the ethics of Barney Rubble Frank and Chris Dodd?
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Support Peter Schiff against Chris Dodd in Connecticut.
http://www.schiffforsenate.com
What needs to happen is Bawney Fwrank, and Chris the sandwich Dodd, should open competing lemonade stands on the capital steps. Whichever one that survives after three months, we’ll allow to make fiscal policy for the USA. This will achieve two things they’ll both get some business experience, and whom ever survives will be the better businessman.
Wake Up America1 anything these two proose has money for them it! wake Up and smeel the manure1 Franks and dobb are getting some sweet heart deal that neds to be exposed and then these two need to be put in jail and throw the key away! Look how well the first stimulaus worked. over three hundred bilion to foriegn companies to payoff their hendgefund loses! did Barney give moeny because your gamble failed? I don’t think so! Look what thses two did and what they allowed at Fredie And Fannie They help Raines cook the books and then took huge campiagn bribes afterwards! wake Up america! Impeach these clowns and save your country. Get off the couch and demand that they step down and that the FBI investigates! wake Up! before your children become slaves!
The Obama Doctrine, "Too Big To Fail"
Dodd was found to be not violating ethics rules in regards to the Countrywide mortgage thing and Frank, well.. he's just ethically bankrupt.
As if the wretched Sarbanes-Oxley hasn't hit the financial markets hard enough……………………………
We no longer live in a world that is partitioned, with many aspects done in isolation! Investors, businesses, and those who work in financial markets of every kind ( stocks, bonds, options, futures, commodities ) can and do go where things are "easier". For example, once Sarbanes-Oxley messed with financial markets here, the vast majority of new American IPOS were taken away from our nation and done in England and Germany. Most are still being done there, or companies are just not going public.
There are good reasons to have some rules and regulations on the markets; however, once more and more and more oversight, regulations, and "rules" are instituted, along with new taxation, everything falls apart and yes………….fails!
"WALL STREET" was keeping NYC and N.Y. state alive. Once that sort of "failed", it sent the city and state into a nosedive and both are buried in deep debt. The same is true, though on a much smaller basis for Chicago and Il. !
why don't the people in mass. vote this frankturd barney out
Barney Frank? Chris Dodd? HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA. These two clowns ARE the inside joke.
Too big to fail is a farce. Instead of propping up the too big to fail companies, the government should be treating them like they did Standard Oil in the early 20th century. Break them up and increase competition.
Investigate? That's too nice. They should be hung.
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These two are just simpletons doing Obama's bidding. Obama is out to destroy American capitalism and replace it with Chavez style government controlled, government run businesses. It has been his plan for a long time and he thinks he's going to pull it off now. But the American people are awake, alert and totally pissed off. His days are numbered and We the People will take back OUR government very soon. I just hope it's not too late.
God bless (and please help) America!
Texas is about there.
Cause they are libs?
…and we'll fix the rate of mortgage foreclosures due to Freddy and Fannie by offering incentives to the lender so that homeowners don't have to go through foreclosure, the infamous "Making Home Affordable". Has Barney taken a look at the default rate of homeowners on that program recently? Is this who I want regulating business?
how come I can’t read your blog on my blackberry (storm)???