Showing posts with label JOBS act. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JOBS act. Show all posts

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Still "Too Big to Fail"

The TBTF [Too Big To Fail] institutions that amplified and prolonged the recent financial crisis remain a hindrance to full economic recovery and to the very ideal of American capitalism. It is imperative that we end TBTF. In my view, downsizing the behemoths over time into institutions that can be prudently managed and regulated across borders is the appropriate policy response. Only then can the process of “creative destruction”— which America has perfected and practiced with such effectiveness that it led our country to unprecedented economic achievement— work its wonders in the financial sector, just as it does elsewhere in our economy. Only then will we have a financial system fit and proper for serving as the lubricant for an economy as dynamic as that of the United States.

Now that post-dot.com and post-Enron financial regulations have been rendered largely useless by passage of the so-called JOBS act, we really should see what we can do about salvaging what we can of Dodd-Frank before the Wall Street lobbyists decimate what little good it can do. As you may recall, its original intent was to end the threat of "too big to fail," but somehow the biggest banks remain TBTF and only continue to get larger.

Hence, it is interesting to note that the quotation above is from Richard W. Fischer, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas — considered among the most conservative of the Fed branches. It comes from his introduction to the Dallas Fed's 2011 annual report, most of which consists of an essay by Harvey Rosenblum entitled Choosing the Road to Prosperity: Why We Must End Too Big To Fail— Now.

Download it here. It's neither too long, nor too technical. It's definitely worth fifteen or twenty minutes of your time.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

He signed it, of course.

Amazing how far an attractive acronym can get you.

Today, Our President signed into law the duplicitously named JOBS (Jump-start Our Business Start-ups) act, which has absolutely nothing to do with creating jobs, and everything to do with deregulating the financial sector. If it had been called the SOBS (Stimulate Our Business Start-ups) act, at least it would have presented an accurate portrayal of the political weasels of both parties who pushed it through.

So now, IPOs for "small" businesses (up to one billion dollars of revenues per year) are no longer required to even tell investors what the hell the business is for five years. We're back to where we were during the internet bubble, when investors poured money into duds like pets.com. Hmmm... maybe somebody could bring back pets.com. "PETS" could stand for "Pickpocket Every Thick-brained Sucker."

Last month, I offered instructions for how you could use the provisions of the JOBS act to rip off random strangers on the internet. Wall Street firms don't need instructions from me. Now, in the case of "small" businesses, they can go back to having their analysts puff up a stock offering their finance arm is selling.

CRAP (Capitalists Rape the American People)!