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Why No Outrage?
James Grant, Wall Street Journal
Op-Ed, online.wsj.com 07/19/08
Through history, outrageous financial
behavior has been met with outrage.
But today Wall Street's damaging
recklessness has been met with
near-silence, from a too-tolerant
populace, argues James Grant
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![[photos]](07-19-08-grants_files/image001.jpg) |
Hulton/Getty Images (2),
Getty Images (2), American
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Why No Outrage?
From top to bottom: New
York's Sub-Treasury Building
in 1929; Angelo Mozilo,
former CEO of mortgage
lender Countrywide
Financial; Unemployed men,
circa 1935; Foreclosure
sign, April 2008, Stockton,
Calif. Strikers, 'scabs'
battle, circa 1935; Bear
Stearns executive arrested,
June 2008; Hooverville
shantytown; NYSE trader,
2008; Mary Lease |
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"Raise less corn and more hell," Mary
Elizabeth Lease harangued Kansas
farmers during America's Populist era,
but no such voice cries out today.
America's 21st-century financial
victims make no protest against the
Federal Reserve's policy of showering
dollars on the people who would seem
to need them least.
Long ago and far away, a brilliant man
of letters floated an idea. To stop a
financial panic cold, he proposed, a
central bank should lend freely,
though at a high rate of interest.
Nonsense, countered a certain
hard-headed commercial banker. Such a
policy would only instigate more
crises by egging on lenders and
borrowers to take more risks. The
commercial banker wrote clumsily, the
man of letters fluently. It was no
contest.
The doctrine of activist central
banking owes much to its progenitor,
the Victorian genius Walter Bagehot.
But Bagehot might not recognize his
own idea in practice today. Late in
the spring of 2007, American banks
paid an average of 4.35% on
three-month certificates of deposit.
Then came the mortgage mess, and the
Fed's crash program of interest-rate
therapy. Today, a three-month CD
yields just 2.65%, or little more than
half the measured rate of inflation.
It wasn't the nation's small savers
who brought down Bear Stearns, or
tried to fob off subprime mortgages as
"triple-A." Yet it's the savers who
took a pay cut -- and the savers who,
today, in the heat of a presidential
election year, are holding their
tongues.
Possibly, there aren't enough thrifty
voters in the 50 states to constitute
a respectable quorum. But what about
the rest of us, the uncounted
improvident? Have we, too, not
suffered at the hands of what used to
be called The Interests? Have the
stewards of other people's money not
made a hash of high finance? Did they
not enrich themselves in boom times,
only to pass the cup to us, the
taxpayers, in the bust? Where is the
people's wrath?
The American people are famously slow
to anger, but they are outdoing
themselves in long suffering today. In
the wake of the "greatest failure of
ratings and risk management ever," to
quote the considered judgment of the
mortgage-research department of UBS,
Wall Street wears a political bullseye.
Yet the politicians take no pot shots.
Barack Obama, the silver-tongued
herald of change, forgettably told a
crowd in Madison, Wis., some months
back, that he will "listen to Main
Street, not just to Wall Street." John
McCain, the angrier of the two
presumptive presidential contenders,
has staked out a principled position
against greed and obscene profits but
has gone no further to call the errant
bankers and brokers to account.
The most blistering attack on the
ancient target of American populism
was served up last October by the then
president of the Federal Reserve Bank
of St. Louis, William Poole. "We are
going to take it out of the hides of
Wall Street," muttered Mr. Poole into
an open microphone, apparently much to
his own chagrin.
There's a gripping story behind
every financial scandal. Here's a
roundup of movies that examine the
money-making industry's dark side:
![[clancy in wall street]](07-19-08-grants_files/image002.jpg)
'Clancy in Wall Street' (1930)
Starring: Charles Murray, Lucien
Littlefield, Aggie Herring and Eddie
Nugent
An Irish-American plumber, Clancy
(Murray), happens on some good
stock-market bets , eventually
making millions and elevating him in
society. But once the market crashes
and he's left with nothing, he
returns to his roots in hopes that
old friends will take him back.
![[it's a wonderful life]](07-19-08-grants_files/image003.jpg)
'It's a Wonderful Life' (1946)
Starring: James Stewart, Donna
Reed and Lionel Barrymore
Generally filed away in the
holiday-favorite category, this
film's run-on-the-bank scene and its
fallout is a classic example of
financial duress on the silver
screen.
![[Wall street]](07-19-08-grants_files/image004.jpg)
'Wall Street' (1987)
Starring: Michael Douglas,
Charlie Sheen, Daryl Hannah and
Martin Sheen
Oliver Stone's classic film centers
on Gordon Gekko (Douglas, pictured
right), a ruthless Wall Street
corporate raider who takes an
ambitious young stockbroker (Charlie
Sheen) under his wing and exposes
him to the perks and pitfalls that
come with the high-stakes territory.
![[glengarry glen ross]](07-19-08-grants_files/image005.jpg)
'Glengarry Glen Ross' (1992)
Starring: Al Pacino, Jack Lemmon,
Alec Baldwin and Alan Arkin
In this film based on David Mamet's
Pulitzer Prize-winning play, a group
of tough real-estate salesmen
struggle to deal with a downturning
housing market -- or face the ax.
![[rogue trader]](07-19-08-grants_files/image006.jpg)
'Rogue Trader' (1999)
Starring: Ewan McGregor, Anna
Friel, Yves Beneyton and Betsy
Brantley
In this film, based on a true story,
Ewan McGregor plays a trader working
in Singapore who makes illegal
trades to cover up his losses. He
ends up in jail.
If by "we," Mr. Poole meant his
employer, he was off the mark, for the
Fed has burnished Wall Street's hide
more than skinned it. The shareholders
of Bear Stearns were ruined, it's
true, but Wall Street called the loss
a bargain in view of the risks that an
insolvent Bear would have presented to
the derivatives-laced financial
system. To facilitate the rescue of
that system, the Fed has sacrificed
the quality of its own balance sheet.
In June 2007, Treasury securities
constituted 92% of the Fed's earning
assets. Nowadays, they amount to just
54%. In their place are, among other
things, loans to the nation's banks
and brokerage firms, the very
institutions whose share prices have
been in a tailspin. Such lending has
risen from no part of the Fed's assets
on the eve of the crisis to 22% today.
Once upon a time, economists taught
that a currency draws its strength
from the balance sheet of the central
bank that issues it. I expect that
this doctrine, which went out with the
gold standard, will have its day
again.
Wall Street is off the political
agenda in 2008 for reasons we may only
guess about. Possibly, in this time of
widespread public participation in the
stock market, "Wall Street" is really
"Main Street." Or maybe Wall Street,
its old self, owns both major
political parties and their
candidates. Or, possibly, the $4.50
gasoline price has absorbed every
available erg of populist anger, or --
yet another possibility -- today's
financial failures are too complex to
stick in everyman's craw.
I have another theory, and that is
that the old populists actually won.
This is their financial system. They
had demanded paper money, federally
insured bank deposits and a heavy
governmental hand in the distribution
of credit, and now they have them. The
Populist Party might have lost the
elections in the hard times of the
1890s. But it won the future.
Before the Great Depression of the
1930s, there was the Great Depression
of the 1880s and 1890s. Then the price
level sagged and the value of the
gold-backed dollar increased. Debts
denominated in dollars likewise
appreciated. Historians still debate
the source of deflation of that era,
but human progress seems the likeliest
culprit. Advances in communication,
transportation and productive
technology had made the world a
cornucopia. Abundance drove down
prices, hurting some but helping many
others.
The winners and losers conducted a
spirited debate about the character of
the dollar and the nature of the
monetary system. "We want the
abolition of the national banks, and
we want the power to make loans direct
from the government," Mary Lease --
"Mary Yellin" to her fans -- said. "We
want the accursed foreclosure system
wiped out.... We will stand by our
homes and stay by our firesides by
force if necessary, and we will not
pay our debts to the loan-shark
companies until the government pays
its debts to us."
By and by, the lefties carried the
day. They got their
government-controlled money (the
Federal Reserve opened for business in
1914), and their government-directed
credit (Fannie Mae and the Federal
Home Loan Banks were creatures of
Great Depression No. 2; Freddie Mac
came along in 1970). In 1971, they got
their pure paper dollar. So today, the
Fed can print all the dollars it deems
expedient and the unwell federal
mortgage giants, Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, combine for $1.5 trillion
in on-balance sheet mortgage assets
and dominate the business of mortgage
origination (in the fourth quarter of
last year, private lenders garnered
all of a 19% market share).
Thus, the Wall Street of the Morgans
and the Astors and the bloated
bondholders is today an institution of
the mixed economy. It is hand-in-glove
with the government, while the
government is, of course -- in theory
-- by and for the people. But that
does not quite explain the lack of
popular anger at the well-paid people
who seem not to be very good at their
jobs.
Since the credit crisis burst out into
the open in June 2007, inflation has
risen and economic growth has
faltered. The dollar exchange rate has
weakened, the unemployment rate has
increased and commodity prices have
soared. The gold price, that running
straw poll of the world's confidence
in paper money, has jumped. House
prices have dropped, mortgage
foreclosures spiked and share prices
of America's biggest financial
institutions tumbled.
One might infer from the lack of
popular anger that the credit crisis
was God's fault rather than the doing
of the bankers and the rating agencies
and the government's snoozing
watchdogs. And though greed and error
bear much of the blame, so, once more,
does human progress. At the turn of
the 21st century, just as at the close
of the 19th, the global supply curve
prosperously shifted. Hundreds of
millions of new hands and minds made
the world a cornucopia again. And,
once again, prices tended to weaken.
This time around, however, the Fed
intervened to prop them up. In 2002
and 2003, Ben S. Bernanke, then a Fed
governor under Chairman Alan
Greenspan, led a campaign to make
dollars more plentiful. The object, he
said, was to forestall any tendency
toward what Wal-Mart shoppers call
everyday low prices. Rather, the Fed
would engineer a decent minimum of
inflation.
In that vein, the central bank pushed
the interest rate it controls, the
so-called federal funds rate, all the
way down to 1% and held it there for
the 12 months ended June 2004. House
prices levitated as mortgage
underwriting standards collapsed. The
credit markets went into speculative
orbit, and an idea took hold. Risk,
the bankers and brokers and
professional investors decided, was
yesteryear's problem.
Now began one of the wildest chapters
in the history of lending and
borrowing. In flush times, our
financiers seemingly compete to do the
craziest deal. They borrow to the eyes
and pay themselves lordly bonuses.
Naturally -- eventually -- they drive
themselves, and the economy, into a
crisis. And to the scene of this
inevitable accident rush the
government's first responders -- the
Fed, the Treasury or the
government-sponsored enterprises --
bearing the people's money. One might
suppose that such a recurrent chain of
blunders would gall a politically
potent segment of the population. That
it has evidently failed to do so in
2008 may be the only important
unreported fact of this otherwise
compulsively documented election
season.
Mary Yellin would spit blood at the
catalogue of the misdeeds of
21st-century Wall Street: the willful
pretended ignorance over the triple-A
ratings lavished on the flimsy
contraptions of structured mortgage
finance; the subsequent foreclosure
blight; the refusal of Wall Street to
honor its implied obligations to the
holders of hundreds of billions of
dollars worth of auction-rate
securities, the auctions of which have
stopped in their tracks; the
government's attempt to prohibit short
sales of the guilty institutions; and
-- not least -- Wall Street's reckless
love affair with heavy borrowing.
For every dollar of equity capital, a
well-financed regional bank holds
perhaps $10 in loans or securities.
Wall Street's biggest broker-dealers
could hardly bear to look themselves
in the mirror if they didn't extend
themselves three times further. At the
end of 2007, Goldman Sachs had $26 of
assets for every dollar of equity.
Merrill Lynch had $32, Bear Stearns
$34, Morgan Stanley $33 and Lehman
Brothers $31. On average, then, about
$3 in equity capital per $100 of
assets. "Leverage," as the laying-on
of debt is known in the trade, is the
Hamburger Helper of finance. It makes
a little capital go a long way, often
much farther than it safely should.
Managing balance sheets as highly
leveraged as Wall Street's requires a
keen eye and superb judgment. The rub
is that human beings err.
Wall Street is usually described as an
industry, but it shares precious few
characteristics with the
metal-fasteners business or the
auto-parts trade. The big brokerage
firms are not in business so much to
make a product or even to earn a
competitive return for their
stockholders. Rather, they open their
doors to pay their employees --
specifically, to maximize employee
compensation in the short run. How
best to do that? Why, to bear more
risk by taking on more leverage.
"Wall Street is our bad example
because it is so successful," charged
the president of Notre Dame
University, the Rev. John Cavanaugh,
in the time of Mary Lease. He meant
that young people, emulating J.P.
Morgan or E.H. Harriman, would worship
the wrong god. The more immediate risk
today is that Wall Street, sweating to
fill out this year's bonus pool, runs
itself and the rest of the American
financial system right over a cliff.
A LIBRARY OF MARKET MAYHEM
Some classic nonfiction and fiction
on financial troubles.
'L'Argent' by Émile Zola (1891)
First published as a newspaper
serial, Zola's "L'Argent" ("Money")
tells of Aristide Saccard, a
down-and-out financier who founds a
bank. As speculation flourishes,
Saccard goes to great lengths to
keep the stock rising, lying to
investors and covering up schemes.
'Little Dorrit' by Charles Dickens
(1855-57)
The novel features Mr. Merdle, a
banker whose schemes lead to
financial ruin for many.
'Extraordinary Popular Delusions &
The Madness of Crowds' (1841)
Scottish writer Charles Mackay's
classic examines the psychology of
crowds, touching on everything from
the popularity of beards to witch
hunts. The last three chapters look
at financial manias, such as the
Dutch tulip bubble of the 17th
century.
'The Great Crash 1929,' by John
Kenneth Galbraith (1954)
A best seller when it was first
published in 1954, this book by the
noted Harvard economist details the
U.S.'s most famous crash and the
events that precipitated it.
It's just happened, in fact, under the
studiously averted gaze of the
Street's risk managers. Today's bear
market in financial assets is as
nothing compared to the preceding
crash in human judgment. Never was a
disaster better advertised than the
one now washing over us. House prices
stopped going up in 2005, and cracks
in mortgage credit started appearing
in 2006. Yet the big, ostensibly
sophisticated banks only pushed
harder.
Bear Stearns is kaput and Lehman
Brothers is reeling, but Morgan
Stanley perhaps best illustrates the
gluttonous ways of Wall Street. Having
lost its competitive edge on account
of an intramural political struggle,
the firm, under Chief Executive John
Mack, set out to catch up to the rest
of the pack. In the spring of 2006, it
unveiled a trillion-dollar balance
sheet, Wall Street's first. It
expanded in every faddish business
line, not excluding, in August 2006,
subprime-mortgage origination (the
transaction, intoned a Morgan Stanley
press release, "provides us with new
origination capabilities in the
non-prime market, which we can build
upon to provide access to high-quality
product flows across all market
cycles"). Nor did it pull in its horns
as the boom wore on but rather
protruded them all the more, raising
its ratio of assets to equity to the
aforementioned 33 times at year-end
2007 from 26.5 times at the close of
2004. Naturally, it did not forget the
help. Last year, Morgan Stanley paid
out 59% of its revenues in employee
compensation, up from 46% in 2004.
Huey Long, who rhetorically picked up
where Lease left off, once compared
John D. Rockefeller to the fat guy who
ruins a good barbecue by taking too
much. Wall Street habitually takes too
much. It would not be so bad if the
inevitable bout of indigestion were
its alone to bear. The trouble is
that, in a world so heavily leveraged
as this one, we all get a stomach
ache. Not that anyone seems to be
complaining this election season.
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