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Keyword: bankers

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  • The Informational Advantage- What do you Know that Other People Don’t

    06/29/2010 10:52:07 AM PDT · by bananaman22 · 1 replies
    OilPrice.om ^ | 06/29/2010 | Dave Forest
    Bank of Japan Deputy Governor Kiyohiko Nishimura discusses "informational advantage" this week at the Lujiazui Forum on economics and finance in Shanghai: "In my understanding, the Volcker Rule [proposed legislation restricting banks from making certain speculative investments] is designed to deter banks from taking excessive risk in capital markets, where volatility is inherently high and in which bankers do not necessarily have informational advantage in predicting market developments. Rather, the Volcker Rule urges banks to return to their traditional stronghold of commercial banking business, in which they can utilize their informational advantage based on long-term relationships with their customers." Informational...
  • Saving America from Corporate-Statism

    05/07/2010 8:39:45 PM PDT · by Nelson Hultberg · 18 replies · 468+ views
    Americans for a Free Republic ^ | April 28, 2010 | Nelson Hultberg
    With each passing year America sinks deeper into the tyranny of bureaucratic corporatism via today's incestuous relationship between Washington and Wall Street...Our schools, our churches, our publishers, and our entertainment industries are being infested with the serpents of Cultural Marxism. Political correctness dominates the herd mentalities and philistines who overwhelm the perceptive and productive at the polls every other November. The ignominious despotism that Tocqueville warned would come from "unbridled democracy" is stealing over our lives like the debilitating paralysis that invades the bodies of the arthritic. Yet our pundits revel in hosannas to their phony "engineered economic recovery" and...
  • Obama’s phony banking “reform”

    04/27/2010 3:54:25 AM PDT · by ResistorSister · 21 replies · 542+ views
    World Socialist Web Site ^ | April 27, 2010 | Barry Grey
    Debate on the Senate version of the Obama administration’s bank regulatory overhaul is expected to begin shortly. The House of Representatives passed its banking bill last December. Neither bill does anything to curb the power of the banks or limit their parasitic and socially destructive activities. What the media is calling the “most sweeping overhaul” of the banking system since the Great Depression in reality sanctions the ever greater monopolization of the financial system by a handful of Wall Street giants, imposes no limits on executive pay, and allows the banks and hedge funds to continue gambling on exotic and...
  • The best financial reform? Let the bankers fail

    04/23/2010 6:34:02 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 3 replies · 228+ views
    Washington Post ^ | 04/23/2010 | James Grant, editor of Grant's Interest Rate Observer
    The trouble with Wall Street isn't that too many bankers get rich in the booms. The trouble, rather, is that too few get poor -- really, suitably poor -- in the busts. To the titans of finance go the upside. To we, the people, nowadays, goes the downside. How much better it would be if the bankers took the losses just as they do the profits. Happily, there's a ready-made and time-tested solution. Let the senior financiers keep their salaries and bonuses, and let them do with their banks what they will. If, however, their bank fails, let the bankers...
  • Ex-Citigroup leaders contrite, defensive on crisis

    04/08/2010 6:44:13 PM PDT · by mlocher · 4 replies · 251+ views
    Reuters via Fidelity.com ^ | 4/8/10 | Rachelle Younglai and Kevin Drawbaugh
    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Charles Prince and Robert Rubin, who led Citigroup (Symbol : C Loading... ) in the run-up to the 2008 banking crisis, voiced regrets on Thursday but accepted no responsibility for mega-bank's massive losses. The two came under heavy fire before a congressional panel hearing for being blind to financial risks that Citi took on, which ultimately led to its near collapse, prevented only by a $45-billion taxpayer bailout. His hands visibly shaking as he answered questions, Rubin told congressional investigators he was not a decision-maker at the bank during the worst of its troubles. The former U.S....
  • (Obama and Giannoulias) Banking on Corruption In The Windy City

    03/09/2010 4:34:10 PM PST · by raptor22 · 3 replies · 571+ views
    Investor's Business Daily ^ | March 9, 2009 | Investor's Business Daily staff
    Politics: Another bank failure is nothing new these days — except if the bank is run by the family of a U.S. Senate candidate who profited handsomely and lent millions to a convicted felon. But then, that's the Chicago way. 'I did not run for office to be helping out a bunch of fat-cat bankers on Wall Street," President Obama said in a recent interview with "60 Minutes." Speaking to those bankers, he said: "You guys are drawing down 10, 20 million dollar bonuses after America went through the worst economic year that it's gone through in — in decades,...
  • Female Bankers in India Earn Chances to Rule

    02/17/2010 1:01:53 AM PST · by cold start · 3 replies · 296+ views
    The New York Times ^ | 27.1.2010 | HEATHER TIMMONS
    MUMBAI — In New York and London, women remain scarce among top bankers despite decades of struggle to climb the corporate ladder. But in India’s relatively young financial industry, women not only are some of the top deal makers, they are often running the show. HSBC, JPMorgan Chase, Royal Bank of Scotland, UBS and Fidelity International in India are run by women. So is the country’s second-biggest bank, Icici Bank, and its third-largest, Axis Bank. Women head investment banking operations at Kotak Mahindra and JPMorgan Chase and the equities division of Icici. Half of the deputy governors at the Reserve...
  • Obama coddles bankers

    02/07/2010 9:43:40 PM PST · by FromLori · 10 replies · 341+ views
    Pittsburgh Post Gazette ^ | 2/7/10 | Jack Kelly
    In his State of the Union address, President Barack Obama said: "We face a deficit of trust -- deep and corrosive doubts about how Washington works that have been growing for years. To close that credibility gap, we have to take action on both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue -- to end the outsized influence of lobbyists; to do our work openly; to give the people the government they deserve." The day after the president uttered those words, a senior Democrat offered private policy briefings to lobbyists on the administration's plans. "In the upcoming elections, voters will face a choice between...
  • Feds gave banks access t0 23.7 TRILLION dollars, not 700 billion (MSNBC reports it!?!)

    01/31/2010 3:35:35 AM PST · by Daisyjane69 · 16 replies · 1,208+ views
    MSNBC via You Tube ^ | 1/30/10 | Dylan Ratigan
    This number sounds suspiciously similar to the number used by the Inspector General over TARP about 10 months ago during congressional hearings.
  • Bankers in favour of paying global fee

    01/30/2010 10:35:21 PM PST · by the invisib1e hand · 3 replies · 360+ views
    Financial Times ^ | 013010 | Patrick Jenkins in Davos and Tom Braithwaite in Washington
    By Patrick Jenkins in Davos and Tom Braithwaite in Washington Published: January 30 2010 00:02 | Last updated: January 30 2010 00:02 Some of the world’s most prominent bankers have come out in favour of a global bank wind-down fund, a concession from the industry after weeks of fighting proposals for new taxes in the US and Europe. Josef Ackermann, chief executive of Deutsche Bank, told the Financial Times on Friday : “To help solve the too-big-to-fail problem I’m advocating a European rescue and resolution fund for banks. Of course, the capital for this fund would have to come from...
  • Bankers in favour of paying global fee

    01/29/2010 5:39:32 PM PST · by Cheap_Hessian · 23 replies · 690+ views
    Financial Times ^ | January 30, 2010 | Patrick Jenkins
    Some of the world’s most prominent bankers have come out in favour of a global bank wind-down fund, a concession from the industry after weeks of fighting proposals for new taxes in the US and Europe. Josef Ackermann, chief executive of Deutsche Bank, told the Financial Times on Friday : “To help solve the too-big-to-fail problem I’m advocating a European rescue and resolution fund for banks. Of course, the capital for this fund would have to come from banks to a large degree.” Bob Diamond, president of Barclays , also supported the idea of a global levy, which could see...
  • Obama and the 'Fat Cat Bankers'

    01/13/2010 4:26:40 PM PST · by Nachum · 4 replies · 195+ views
    WSJ ^ | 1/13/10 | Jonathan Macey
    Surprise! Banks with government guarantees take the biggest risks, make the most money, and pay the highest bonuses. President Obama said last month on "60 Minutes" that he "did not run for office to be helping out a bunch of fat cat bankers on Wall Street." This assertion may mollify his constituents, but it is not consistent with his administration's own policies. We are on the cusp of what is going to be the most highly visible and contentious bank bonus season in history. Bonuses are predicted to run into the billions of dollars, and many of the banks that...
  • Bankers apologize for actions that led to crisis (but 'they seemed appropriate at the time')

    01/13/2010 2:51:03 PM PST · by NormsRevenge · 8 replies · 309+ views
    AP on Yahoo ^ | 1/13/10 | Jim Kuhnhenn and Daniel Wagner - ap
    WASHINGTON – Challenged by a skeptical special commission, top Wall Street bankers apologized Wednesday for risky behavior that led to the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. But they still declared it seemed appropriate at the time. The bankers — whose companies collectively received more than $100 billion in taxpayer assistance to weather the crisis — offered no regrets for executive pay that is now likely to increase as a result of their survival. They did say they are correcting some compensation practices that could lead to excessive risk-taking. The tension at the first hearing of the Financial Crisis...
  • Central Problem: the Central Bank

    12/26/2009 12:49:45 PM PST · by reaganaut1 · 5 replies · 513+ views
    Barron's ^ | December 26, 2009 | Robert Klein and George Reisman
    ... [T]his is neither a housing crisis nor a Wall Street banking crisis. This is a monetary crisis, rooted in the lending of money created out of thin air. This is what leads to economic booms and busts. The current crisis goes back to the Asian Contagion of 1997 and the meltdown of the Long Term Capital Management hedge fund in 1998. In response to each of these situations, the Federal Reserve cut interest rates and rapidly expanded the money supply. This excess liquidity helped push stocks, especially tech issues, to unsustainably high levels. The excess money created by the...
  • President will meet with community bankers

    12/21/2009 11:11:56 PM PST · by Nachum · 4 replies · 321+ views
    Chron.com ^ | 12/21/09 | KATE ANDERSEN BROWER
    President Barack Obama will meet with chief executive officers and presidents from a dozen community banks today to discuss his proposals to boost small-business lending and his plans for regulatory overhaul.
  • Credit Suisse's Secret Deals

    12/16/2009 7:05:32 PM PST · by PaulAllen · 6 replies · 465+ views
    The Wall Street Journal ^ | DECEMBER 16, 2009, 8:08 P.M. ET | AARON LUCCHETTI And JAY SOLOMON
    U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said Credit Suisse Group helped clients in Iran and elsewhere conduct financial transactions in secret, saying Wednesday the Swiss bank "established a business model to allow these rogue players access to U.S. dollars." Mr. Holder and Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau detailed a decade-long effort by the bank to carry out transactions from Iran, Libya, Sudan, Burma and Cuba. The men announced a $536 million settlement by Credit Suisse, one of several banks accused in a long-running case that has netted roughly $1 billion in fines. The bank, which paid the biggest of the fines,...
  • The two faces of O: Prez's lovefest with Wall St. 'fat cats'

    12/15/2009 3:59:45 AM PST · by Scanian · 19 replies · 931+ views
    NY Post ^ | December 15, 2009 | CHARLES GASPARINO
    In public, President Obama is on a tear against Wall Street. In private, not so much Over the weekend, Obama attacked fat-cat investment bankers, telling "60 Minutes" he didn't become president to aid and abet Wall Street -- which, only a year after the financial meltdown and taxpayer bailout, is now scheduled to hand out tens of billions of dollars in bonuses to its bankers and traders. But the president's meeting yesterday with the CEOs of the largest banks was nearly a lovefest, I'm told by attendees. Yes, White House spinmeisters advertised the gathering as a chance for Obama to...
  • President pressures bankers to lend more; back reform bill

    12/14/2009 1:40:56 PM PST · by Nachum · 10 replies · 296+ views
    Market Watch ^ | 12/14/09 | Ronald D. Orol
    WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- President Barack Obama on Monday pressed the chief executives of the nation's largest banks to lend more to small businesses, increase their assistance to troubled homeowners and end their opposition to bank regulatory reform legislation moving on Capitol Hill. "I urged these institutions here today to go back and take a third and fourth look about how they are operating when it comes to small business and medium-sized business lending," Obama said after meeting at the White House with the bankers. "Banks could be doing more to lend to small businesses." See full text of Obama's remarks....
  • White House Tells Bankers to Boost Lending After Bailout Successes (Or Else !)

    12/14/2009 9:55:38 AM PST · by SeekAndFind · 54 replies · 1,513+ views
    FOX NEWS ^ | 12/14/2009
    President Obama is calling on the financial industry to help dig the economy out of the pit the White House says it helped create, as the president and bank executives headed into a potentially tense meeting Monday morning. President Obama is calling on the financial industry to help dig the economy out of the pit the White House says it helped create, as the president and bank executives headed into a potentially tense meeting Monday morning. The president set the tone for the meeting in an interview broadcast the night before in which he called Wall Street bankers "fat cats"...
  • 1,000 UK bankers hit exits over pay

    12/09/2009 8:44:21 PM PST · by CutePuppy · 20 replies · 868+ views
    NY Post ^ | December 7, 2009 | Paul Tharp
    In a London preview of Wall Street's bonus nightmare, more than 1,000 investment bankers have quit Royal Bank of Scotland to work at rivals due to curbs on their paychecks, according to people familiar with the situation. Wall Street banks fear top talent would flee en masse for greener pastures if Uncle Sam's pay czar, Ken Feinberg, and Congress try to put more ceilings on bonuses and pay at financial firms. In the UK, the rules are modeled after US actions to curb pay at firms bailed out by the government.RBS will soon be about 84-percent owned by the British...