Editore"s Note
Tilting at Windmills

Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Sign up for Free News & Updates

September 21, 2008
By: Hilzoy

Reformers, Take 2

Having gone over McCain and Obama's legislation on banking and mortgage reform, I thought I'd continue my search for John McCain, Scourge Of Wall Street by looking at his website to see what new regulations he proposes for financial institutions. As far as I can tell, though, not only is there nothing in his issues section that spells that out, there's nothing that so much as mentions any aspect of the present crisis other than the need to help homeowners in foreclosure. As far as his position papers are concerned, the financial crisis, like foreign policy, simply doesn't exist.

So I decided to check out the various speeches McCain has given on the economy during this campaign, to see how his career as a financial reformer might have manifested itself in them. On March 25, he gave a speech on the housing crisis. Given his recent claims to be a champion of tighter regulation on Wall Street, you might expect that he would have called for new regulations back in March. Au contraire: while he did call for more transparency in lending, here's what he said about regulating financial institutions:

"In financial institutions, there is no substitute for adequate capital to serve as a buffer against losses. Our financial market approach should include encouraging increased capital in financial institutions by removing regulatory, accounting and tax impediments to raising capital."

That's right: we need fewer regulations on financial institutions. How prescient!

McCain gave a speech on the economy on April 10: he did not mention any reforms of financial institutions, though he did call for "an immediate DOJ task force to aggressively investigate potential criminal wrongdoing in the mortgage lending and securitization industry." On April 15, he gave a speech on the economy. For the most part, he focussed on tax cuts, restraining spending, and trade deals. Here's the sum total of his remarks on reforming financial institutions:

"It's important as well to remember that the foolish risk-taking of lenders, investment banks, and others that led to these troubles don't reflect our free market as it should be working. In a free market, there must be transparency, accountability, and personal and corporate responsibility. The housing crisis came about because these standards collapsed -- and, as president, I intend to restore them."

On April 22, McCain actually mentioned the need to reform Wall Street. Unfortunately, he didn't say much about it: "Reckless conduct and the abuse of power must be called to account -- on Wall Street, in Washington, or any place else. And I have a few ideas about Washington in particular. (...)" On May 15, McCain gave a speech on his vision for America four years from now. The section on the economy focussed entirely on tax cuts, eliminating earmarks, trade agreements, and employee retraining. As he imagined himself looking back over four years of his Presidency, the housing crisis and the reform of financial institutions didn't even rate a mention.

On May 19th he gave another economic address in which the housing and financial crisis is not mentioned. One paragraph starts out promisingly enough, but doesn't follow through:

"Serious reform is also needed to help American companies compete in the world economy. I have proposed a reduction in the corporate tax rate (...)"

On June 10, McCain actually mentioned the need for corporate reform. Unfortunately, the only specifics he gave concerned executive compensation and the need for vigorous prosecution of existing laws:

"In times of hardship and distress, we should be more vigilant than ever in holding corporate abuses to account, as in the case of the housing market. Americans are right to be offended when the extravagant salaries and severance deals of CEO's -- in some cases, the very same CEO's who helped to bring on these market troubles -- bear no relation to the success of the company or the wishes of shareholders. Something is seriously wrong when the American people are left to bear the consequences of reckless corporate conduct, while the offenders themselves are packed off with another forty - or fifty million for the road.

If I am elected president, I intend to see that wrongdoing of this kind is called to account by federal prosecutors. And under my reforms, all aspects of a CEO's pay, including any severance arrangements, must be approved by shareholders"

McCain's July 7 speech on job creation didn't mention the subprime crisis or the need to reform Wall Street. Likewise, in a speech on July 9 that was largely devoted to the economy, McCain didn't mention the subprime crisis at all.

Last Friday, McCain finally got around to giving a speech about the need to reform financial institutions, and offered some actual specifics. I encourage you to read it.

I'd also encourage you to read several speeches by Barack Obama, for the sake of comparison. First, there's his NASDAQ speech from September 2007, in which he addresses the subprime crisis, and explains, a full year before McCain got around to it, what happened, why we need reforms not just in the mortgage industry but in financial institution, and what they should be. A prescient bit from that speech:

"Markets can't thrive without the trust of investors and the public. At a most basic level, capital markets work by steering capital to the place where it is most productive. Without transparency, that cannot happen. If the information is flawed, if there is fraud, or if the risks facing financial institutions are not fully disclosed, people stop investing because they fear they're being had. When the public trust is abused badly enough, it can bring financial markets to their knees."

Second, there's Obama's speech from March 27, 2008, in which, at a time when John McCain was still calling for financial deregulation, he was not only proposing new regulations to prevent the abuses that led to the present crisis, but laying out six guiding principles that he would follow in creating them. (I've put them below the fold.) To this day, John McCain has not gotten nearly that specific.

Obama has many more speeches on the economy. I haven't bothered to go through them all, as I did with McCain's, since the two I've mentioned are more specific, and much earlier, than anything McCain has offered.

Why do I bother? Because lies annoy me. And the idea that John McCain is some kind of Wall Street reformer is a lie.

Obama's principles for regulatory reform, from his March 27, 2008 speech on the economy:

"Our capital markets have helped us build the strongest economy in the world. They are a source of competitive advantage for our country. But they cannot succeed without the public's trust. The details of regulatory reform should be developed through sound analysis and public debate. But there are several core principles for reform that I will pursue as President.

First, if you can borrow from the government, you should be subject to government oversight and supervision. Secretary Paulson admitted this in his remarks yesterday. The Federal Reserve should have basic supervisory authority over any institution to which it may make credit available as a lender of last resort. When the Fed steps in, it is providing lenders an insurance policy underwritten by the American taxpayer. In return, taxpayers have every right to expect that these institutions are not taking excessive risks. The nature of regulation should depend on the degree and extent of the Fed's exposure. But at the very least, these new regulations should include liquidity and capital requirements.

Second, there needs to be general reform of the requirements to which all regulated financial institutions are subjected. Capital requirements should be strengthened, particularly for complex financial instruments like some of the mortgage securities that led to our current crisis. We must develop and rigorously manage liquidity risk. We must investigate rating agencies and potential conflicts of interest with the people they are rating. And transparency requirements must demand full disclosure by financial institutions to shareholders and counterparties.

As we reform our regulatory system at home, we must work with international arrangements like the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, the International Accounting Standards Board, and the Financial Stability Forum to address the same problems abroad. The goal must be ensuring that financial institutions around the world are subject to similar rules of the road - both to make the system stable, and to keep our financial institutions competitive.

Third, we need to streamline a framework of overlapping and competing regulatory agencies. Reshuffling bureaucracies should not be an end in itself. But the large, complex institutions that dominate the financial landscape do not fit into categories created decades ago. Different institutions compete in multiple markets - our regulatory system should not pretend otherwise. A streamlined system will provide better oversight, and be less costly for regulated institutions.

Fourth, we need to regulate institutions for what they do, not what they are. Over the last few years, commercial banks and thrift institutions were subject to guidelines on subprime mortgages that did not apply to mortgage brokers and companies. It makes no sense for the Fed to tighten mortgage guidelines for banks when two-thirds of subprime mortgages don't originate from banks. This regulatory framework has failed to protect homeowners, and it is now clear that it made no sense for our financial system. When it comes to protecting the American people, it should make no difference what kind of institution they are dealing with.

Fifth, we must remain vigilant and crack down on trading activity that crosses the line to market manipulation. Reports have circulated in recent days that some traders may have intentionally spread rumors that Bear Stearns was in financial distress while making market bets against the company. The SEC should investigate and punish this kind of market manipulation, and report its conclusions to Congress.

Sixth, we need a process that identifies systemic risks to the financial system. Too often, we deal with threats to the financial system that weren't anticipated by regulators. That's why we should create a financial market oversight commission, which would meet regularly and provide advice to the President, Congress, and regulators on the state of our financial markets and the risks that face them. These expert views could help anticipate risks before they erupt into a crisis. "

Hilzoy 2:04 PM Permalink | Trackbacks | Comments (21)

Bookmark and Share
 
Comments

"An immediate DOJ task force to aggressively investigate potential criminal wrongdoing in the mortgage lending and securitization industry"???

There is plenty of wrongdoing to be found but no criminal wrongdoing. They decriminalized ("deregulated") what was formerly criminal behavior in the banking industry.

Posted by: MillionthMonkey on September 21, 2008 at 2:35 PM | PERMALINK

What McCain @Friends really mean by deregulation is to remove all impediments in the way of us giving all our money directly to them.

Posted by: gorp on September 21, 2008 at 2:50 PM | PERMALINK

Passive Pelosi™ and Land-Swap Harry Reid will bit a bit, then roll over and play dead.

Andy, you know what?

So will about 98 percent of you posting here in these comment sections.

Even where you have Green (or Socialist/Social Democratic) alternatives on the ballot for president, or even local Congressional races, you'll listen to Democrats' fear-mongering.

"What's the Matter with Kansas" has nothing on this.

Posted by: SocraticGadfly on September 21, 2008 at 2:58 PM | PERMALINK

Food stamp application

Posted by: alex on September 21, 2008 at 3:06 PM | PERMALINK

Another very nice piece of investigative research, Hilzoy. Thank you.

I hope the MSM pays attention....oh, sigh, I guess THAT isn't going to happen? but at least your readers can appreciate the truthiness of John McCain's claim to be a Wall Street Reformer.

Posted by: PTate in MN on September 21, 2008 at 3:08 PM | PERMALINK

Did America go from the “Bridge To No Where”.

To the “Wall To No Where”. The “Trillion dollar Wall To No Where” is currently in progress. No wonder they did not build the Mexican Boarder Wall. Here, America this looks more like a gift than a loan, THEY MUST PAY IT BACK, but that would be a bitch wouldn’t it.

Yep, in out of the blue, and in one step America went from Al Qaeda terrorism to Economic terrorism, Bush and Company with the aid of Mainstream Media do what they do best. Scare the zonkers out of America with 24X7 economic drama played out with confusion and uncertainty. Here, many warn our whole system is going to clam up, zip freeze, but it is resilient. America we got lip stick all over the place, Sarah please help us out of this mess, hey, give Russia a big smile and wave at them maybe they will build you nice big pipe line across the straights to your porch, sure would help things out, wow Sarah your winner. Sheesh then we don’t have to beg bush and Company to kiss

“Ali Baba and in the Bin Laden” to keep gas prices low. A very LOL.

You know what is criminal about all this is the IRS tax implications had to be setting alarms off all over the Internal Revenue Service. And nada, zip, nothing is talked about who, what, where, and why’s that should be forthcoming from the IRS. Ha yes la Media, as Chris Mathews would say “Tell me something I don’t Know” well Chris there is something tingling up your leg its called deep shit economics.

You know there was one time when I owed about eight hundred dollars to the IRS. They were all over me with letters and reasons to take legal action. So, is this the same action IRS takes to big guys like this? Probably after they bullshit away eight five billion dollars in screw ups. Wow, Sheesh what a bunch of jerks.

Fire the IRS. No this is way past a simple resignation or termination this is the highest criminal action and should involve the highest legal action. Our news should huge news breaks with arrests and admissions. This is what America gets for letting Karol Rove avoid legal action from Congress. America we have no government. No free market, a war in chaos, an economy in shambles, a broken military, Wall street taking dive and the electorate has to pay for it for the next couple of generations. Then they say your Social Security is kaput. Sheesh. America we want to spread this around the world. The world looks at us thinking

“Are Americans Crazy or what”?

Posted by: Megalomania on September 21, 2008 at 3:29 PM | PERMALINK

Even where you have Green (or Socialist/Social Democratic) alternatives on the ballot for president

Get real. It will be Obama or McCain. It isn't just a matter of voting your conscience; neither of your alternatives has any meaningful level of support.

Posted by: AJB on September 21, 2008 at 3:38 PM | PERMALINK

So this bailout is interesting. A company owns some bad investments that they can't get rid of. They also own other assets, which must be worth more than the bad investments, otherwise the company would go into bankruptcy.

What they want is a liquid asset for the less liquid one. In this case they want cash from the government. The question is why the government should buy the bad asset instead of the good one.

The current solution is probably views by those holding the bad debt as killing two birds with one stone: they get cash and they get rid of risk.

But it is the public which should be killing two birds: more oversight and transparency of companies which are better capitalized, and a valuable asset in return for cash.

Posted by: tomj on September 21, 2008 at 3:43 PM | PERMALINK

PLEASE... everybody... take a minute and click on the McCain/Palin link on the right of your screen.

That way Washington Monthly collects some advertising money from the McCain campaign, and it gives you an opportunity to check out McCain's website.

I'm seriously considering attending one of the McCain House parties advertised in my neighborhood. I'll bring plenty of information to dispel all the crap she's going to talk about.

I wonder how long it would take before I'm asked to leave?

Posted by: bruno on September 21, 2008 at 3:47 PM | PERMALINK

McCain's website really has no substance anywhere. It's all a bunch of fluff and whoee.

I can't even make sense of most of it.

When you look at "healthcare" you scroll down to HSA.

If someone doesn't have healthcare, how on earth are they going to open up an HSA?

McCain has always been for deregulation.

Now it's time for him to explain Wealthcare to his constituents.

Wealthcare: The single most important thing you as taxpayer are doing for your country. Without it, banks will fail and our economy will crumble.
I'm John McCain and I approve of Wealthcare.

Posted by: Tom Nicholson on September 21, 2008 at 3:51 PM | PERMALINK

why look anything up? you apparently forgot this:

"Addressing the nation’s economic crisis, Holtz-Eakin told reporters traveling with the campaign “there’s no magic solution. And I don’t think that it’s at this moment imperative to write down exactly what the plan has to be.”

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2008/09/16/mccain-adviser-blackberry-a-%E2%80%98miracle%E2%80%99-he-%E2%80%98helped-create%E2%80%99/

Posted by: karen marie on September 21, 2008 at 4:09 PM | PERMALINK

All the Republicans still believe in deregulation, which is why the bailout doesn't include any regulations to make sure it doesn't happen again. As soon as the election is over they can go back to telling people how they're going to deregulate the health insurance industry. Voting for John McCain is like giving a lockpick set as a Christmas gift to someone who has already burglarized your house 3 times.

Posted by: Shalimar on September 21, 2008 at 4:20 PM | PERMALINK

In the speech that Hilzoy encouraged us to read, McCain said, "Another CEO for Fannie Mae, Mr. Raines, has been advising Senator Obama on housing policy."

In other words, McCain lied. Shocked? Me either.

Posted by: CJ on September 21, 2008 at 4:35 PM | PERMALINK

Wealthcare is being formed.

But it ain't the only bailout this year.

The economic stimulus was 168 billion (that money has been spent)

Bear Sterns: 29 billion (but if you adjust for inflationary pressures---290 billion)

FM2: Total cost to US taxpayers could be ~2 trillion dollars plus (we just don't know).

AIG bailout 80-100 billion.

Wealthcare: 700- 1,000 billion.

That's a sh*t load of money all since 2/08.

Who's next? GM? Boeing?

Ya can add in the Iraq war too.

Now do the math.

Posted by: Tom Nicholson on September 21, 2008 at 4:40 PM | PERMALINK

Steve/Hilzoy - As long as we're on the subject of taxpayer looting, how about a post on how McCain is ripping taxpayers off for 84 Million through public financing while laundering donations through the RNC, Victory 08 and other potitical groups. I'd bet that even Miss Concern Troll Palin would be outraged.

Posted by: Danp on September 21, 2008 at 4:43 PM | PERMALINK

Perhaps you should have looked harder:

McCain on reforming Fanny Mae, in 2006

May 25, 2006 Sen. John McCain [R-AZ]: Mr. President, this week Fannie Mae's regulator reported that the company's quarterly reports of profit growth over the past few years were "illusions deliberately and systematically created" by the company's senior management, which resulted in a $10.6 billion accounting scandal....

The bill died of course. Barack Obama who was in the senate for mere months and was the number 2 recipient of contributions from Fannie Mae, voted against the legislation.

By-the-way, where's Obama's plan for this meltdown? Clinton offered a solution
September 18, 2008
WASHINGTON, DC Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton today called for swift and strong action to stem the growing credit crisis on Wall Street. Assailing the Bush Administration for ignoring repeated warnings of the growing crisis and failing to provide adequate oversight of an increasingly complicated market, Senator Clinton offered a series of bold, specific proposals, including creating a new version of the Home Owners Loan Corporation (HOLC) to restore confidence in the market, curbing the most damaging and manipulative trading practices, providing relief to homeowners facing foreclosure, and reasserting competent federal oversight....

Is Obama waiting for someone to put something up on a teleprompter for him? The whole world is waiting....waiting...

Posted by: Paul on September 21, 2008 at 4:45 PM | PERMALINK

Paul@4:45---got any other sources on your allegations besides "gov-crack-dot-fairytale?" They always seem to suffer from server-failure-of-convenience....

Posted by: Steve on September 21, 2008 at 4:58 PM | PERMALINK

That's right: we need fewer regulations on financial institutions. How prescient!

Yes, McSame clearly anticipated this proposed "bailout," wherein the remedy for the horrible effects of insufficient regulation is a 700 billion dollar slush fund, to be used by and for the benefit of the people who created and hugely profited from the game that has gone so badly wrong, all with absolutely no regulation and, even better, no review by anyone.

The Republican cure for cancer would be a more aggressive form of the disease.

Posted by: on September 21, 2008 at 5:41 PM | PERMALINK

"Barack Obama who was in the senate for mere months and was the number 2 recipient of contributions from Fannie Mae, voted against the legislation."

Really? How did he manage to do that when the legislation never came up for a vote?

In any case, according to the actual record, as compared to the fairy tale in your own mind, the bill was killed by the Bush administration and by Alan Greenspan. Since this was a Republican-controlled Senate, you'll need to blame the Majority Leader for the fact that it never made it to a vote.

Posted by: PaulB on September 21, 2008 at 8:27 PM | PERMALINK

By the way, Paul, had you actually scrolled down a couple of posts, you'd have seen that Hilzoy already dealt with that bill you and McCain are so proud of.

Posted by: PaulB on September 21, 2008 at 8:30 PM | PERMALINK

Hilzoy,
Just thought I needed to say thanks for all your great writing. I certainly feel much better educated after reading your posts.

Posted by: manfred on September 21, 2008 at 11:04 PM | PERMALINK




 

 

Read Jonathan Rowe remembrance and articles
Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Sign up for Free News & Updates

Advertise in WM



buy from Amazon and
support the Monthly