Dick
Shelby and the Shelby-Corker Bill?
The headline font diminution was intentional, because SBC
Chairman Dick Shelby (R-Ala.) lists only himself as the sponsor of his major
banking “reform” proposal—issued last week--yet everyone knows the additional
lacerating GSE language was supplied by, Shhh, Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.).
So, did Shelby get Corkered? Only Chairman Shelby can answer.
(Read
Josh Rosner scathing review of Chairman Shelby’s notions below in the “What Others Are Saying” segment.)
Shelby
“knows his onions”
I don’t blame Shelby for not wanting Corker as an early
named co-sponsor, let the Tennessean slither in later. But just what is Dick
Shelby up to?
With Shelby, it’s easy to suggest, whatever it is you think
you see, in mini-this omnibus package, you don’t see at all; too many hot
buttons and unearned benefits, he’s more stealth than this.
The senior Alabama Senator is one of the shrewdest, most cautious,
smartest vote counters and pols I’ve seen (did I mention prodigious
fundraiser), with a war chest estimated 2 years ago at @$18 Million. Senator
Shelby is up in 2016 for re-election.
It’s clear on the surface: his discussion draft appeals to
small and community banks (small cha-ching); will make the TBTF institutions
ecstatically happy (big time cha-ching); screws the Federal Reserve Board (more
bank and Conservative cha-chings) by diluting its power and spreading it to
other reserve banks, and likely repulses many F&F supporters, by prohibiting
steps that this or future administrations might take to free F&F from some
of “conservatorship’s” indentured servitude dictates.
There also is the major sop to some of the MBA, TBTF and Financial
Services Roundtable guys (Dick, tsk, tsk,
the friends you maintain), that unnecessarily legislates schemes to turn
the GSE’s “Common Securitization Platform (CSP)” project into a pig trough for the large bank community
making them CSP board members.
So does this all just mean continued great fundraising for
a guy who doesn’t need that much help and seldom faces tough Democrat
opposition?
Certainly, but Shelby’s more than a grand fundraiser, he’s
a smart legislator. So, I am looking forward to the continued evolutions of
this script—publicly and behind the scenes--and the inevitable changes when
Democrats and other stakeholders divine what the Chairman is really doing and
raise their voices?
Shelby’s
(Corker’s) GSE-CSP Proposals
Let’s step back a moment and go to 30,000 feet for a “big picture.”
Like most things involving major mortgage moves, this set of ideas when/if it becomes
a numbered Senate bill--assuming the GSE stuff stays in—is all about who will control
the nation’s mortgage markets.
GSEs Versus
the Big Banks?
Someone needs to explain to “America” why these ideas are
the very “camel’s nose under the tent” I labeled them last week.
When they ponder it, do people living in those reliable GOP
“red states” really will trust large commercial banks-- either on their own or
controlling the nation’s mortgage finance system--to give consumers a better
deal than they now get from local, regional, and national lenders working
through the Fannie and Freddie systems?
Besides the Congress (but, illogically, not their own Senator
or local Congressman), the banks rank high in those institutions least liked or least respected by consumers.
(Latest Gallup poll I could find.)
Shelby-Corker’s
CSP step is totally gratuitous because there is no hurdle stopping the major
banks—or subset thereof, like the fat cat Financial Services Roundtable (FSR)—from
putting together their own CSP project, funding it, producing a broadly accepted common security,
and letting it compete for the US mortgage backed securities market.
It could be the GOP dream of a “private security,” created
by the best non-government minds money can buy, right?
Ooops, but the flaw--as we all know--is that those bonds
will be guaranteed by those same financial institutions which most investors
don’t trust as far as they can bench-press the bank’s CEOs. (Hmm, you don’t think anyone is thinking of
extending federal guarantees to those private label securities, do you?)
It was these same “Bigs” who totally soured the non-F&F
mortgage backed securities punch bowl in 2005-2007, with their version of private
label securities (PLS) which the world still is cleaning up. (Ooops, see Nomura and Royal Bank of Scotland last week.)
Why do
the banks want in?
But there is
something near term attractive for the banks, Senator Corker (and Shelby?)
getting their grips on FHFA’s CSP and trying to position themselves to get back
in the MBS game, from which their own systemic shortcomings have barred them.
Sweet,
Because it’s Taxpayers’ Money
I suspect part of it is because all CSP work is funded by
F&F and paid for by the taxpayers, since those F&F revenues if not
used for GSE business needs go right to/come from the Treasury’s general fund.
It looks like Senator Bob still wants to crush F&F, but
before doing so he wants them to pay his big bank buddies to dine at the GSE common
platform table. His next step will be to let the banks take over that government funded platform and then turn
it into the CSP into a “non-profit,” whatever the Hell that is?
And that’s fine with the banks, why should they pay
anything—or even repay F&F for what they’ve already invested in the CSP--if
Uncle Sam (thanks to Senator Corker) will pick up the tab for them? And they get the red-white-and blue patina for whatever they would do.
The seldom GSE-helpful MBA executive,
David Stevens was quoted this weekend
saying—he has been lobbying for the Shelby proposal and hoped that the housing finance provisions would gain support once Senators
grasped what was being proposed. "I think it's fairly well understood that
not all of this can go through," Stevens said of Shelby's overall package,
"but the question is there enough to agree on."
Come on Dave, poll
your members and see if they really want F&F to disappear. Don’t forget to
share those results. Word is your smaller guys like the GSEs (as do some of the
larger ones, too), but why listen to them, right?
Other
Shelby Propositions
There
are Too Big to Fail (TBTFs) instituions and G-SIFIs. Give those G-SIFI’s some room, boys. From
Wikipedia, “A systemically
important financial institution (SIFI) is a bank, insurance company, or other financial institution whose
failure might trigger a financial crisis.”
SIFIs are almost always
bank holding companies, sometimes with dozens or more subsidiary companies.
They’ve always been ad hoc monitored by the US and international financial
regulatory authorities, with the Fed formally proposing rules for the US SIFIs
last year.
Some Senators don’t like
those rules and believe they are constraints.
Afraid that these big financial institutions might get too
closely watched, Dick and Bob also want to force the Fed and the Financial
Stability Oversight Council (FSOC)—made up of other federal regulatory heads—to
individually review certain
financial conglomerates worth up to $500 Billion in assets, with an eye toward
reducing their regulatory burden rather than automatically categorize them based
on size ($50 Billion) as now is the Fed’s intent.
The Senators’ goal is to remove as much “government
regulation” from a few multi-hundred billion dollar financial institutions, which
complain they are creaking under Uncle’s tough thumb?
The duo gets there when they would raising the current SIFI
regulatory threshold from the piddly $50 Billion of assets to $500
Billion; any holding company in the middle—with size of $51 Billion to
$499 Billion--are those Senators want the federal financial regulators to back
off a bit.
No risk there in principle or fact, right guys?
Needless to say, those likely are many of the same
financial giants which have violated a bevy of federal laws and regulations, paying
fines in the billions to Uncle Sam.
Those hardly are the people who need more help from the GOP;
haven’t they filled their relief quota a few times over? Yep, those are just
the people who need more help form the GOP.
Anyone else see really undesirable patterns here?
Smalls
Banks and Shelby Legislation
A few words to my friends—and they are my friends—
representing the US community banks and who may be mesmerized by the “reg
reform” features Chairman Shelby is huckstering.
There is no free lunch in DC; be careful for what you sign
up because there will be a reciprocal “ask.”
My own
message to the ICBA
Cam Fine, there’s a reason why your members fear the big
guys, don’t forget it when appraising this plan.
As mentioned, there’s a review below of the Shelby proposal
by Graham Fisher’s Josh Rosner. I urge you to play particular attention to what
he sees major bad for the smaller
depositories.
Let me add some thoughts from very wise former colleague of
mine, who has a gut feel for all issues banking, big versus small institutions,
mortgage finance, and the salubrious impact of US financial regulatory regime.
I share your sentiment that the beneficial effects of regulatory
relief are muted if the broader support structure for community banks and
their customers are eroded.
Included in such an erosion would be legislative
proposals weakening the Federal Reserve, including its vital lender
of last resort functions.
Or proposals inflicting further existential
damage on Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac leading to greater financial
concentration.
And its evil twin-- greater systemic risk.
If Fannie and Freddie are even more severely handcuffed or
taken out can the third housing GSE, the Federal Home Loan Bank System, survive
over the longer term?.
As regards the Federal Reserve I support former Fed Vice Chairman
Don Kohn's position as told to the Financial Times, " I want the
Fed to be able to do what it was founded to do in 1913, which is liquefy
illiquid assets for solvent institutions that are suffering a loss of
confidence because of fire sales and panics that threaten real economic
activity.”
This current Shelby bundle makes that desired/necessary Kohn position much tougher.
Shelby’s Fed attack and loosening the not very tight SIFI reins
doesn’t make a hell of lot of political tactical/strategic sense to me, going
into mid-term and presidential elections next year.
As noted, I feel very comfortable saying the public
dislikes and doesn’t trust the TBTF banks, whether they are HQ’d in NYC,
Charlotte, San Francisco, or Wilmington, Delaware.
It could backfire on the Chairman and the Republican party.
And everyone needs to realize “TBTF” doesn’t just apply to
a half dozen behemoth financial institutions.
In a “government bailout” context, TBTF is an existential term, which at the time bad things
hit, gets applied to dozens of major US
firms, all designated at the time by a combination of the
Fed, Treasury, and White House (with some in Congress trying to butt in and get
their constituent companies serviced similarly).
If you don’t agree, look recently at F&F, GM, Chrysler and
dozens of major banks not in the top 20, and before 2008, federal bailouts of
Penn Central Railroad, Chrysler (again), Lockheed, and New York City.
US
Government Bailouts
The last thing Shelby item I will
note--having worked both at the Fed and on the Hill--is we don’t anyone, certainly
not the Congress or the Government Accountability Office (GAO, often called
Congress’s investigative arm), tampering with Federal Reserve monetary policy
functions which is what’s at stake in the Shelby plan.
What
Others Are Saying
The
Hill newspaper on the
Shelby package.
_________________________________________________________
Graham
Fisher’s Josh Rosner talks
about the Shelby legislative cache.
______________________________________________________
The NYT editorial board calls out SEC and DoJ. (C’mon government guys, you have to be able to find a few miscreants on
Wall Street, right?)
____________________________________________________________
Peter
Eavis--Nomura and RBS, Redux
JUDGE
RULES BANKS MISLED ON MBS —
NYT’s Peter Eavis: “Many on Wall Street have long argued that the banks did not
generally break the law when they packaged shoddy mortgages and sold them to
investors in the lead-up to the financial crisis of 2008. But on Monday, in the
starkest of terms, a federal judge dealt a strong blow to that version of
history. She ruled that two banks misled Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac in selling them mortgage bonds that contained numerous errors and
misrepresentations. ‘The magnitude of falsity, conservatively measured, is
enormous,’ Judge Denise L. Cote of Federal District Court in Manhattan wrote in
a scathing 361-page decision.
“The ruling came in a closely
watched case brought by the government against the Japanese bank Nomura
Holdings and Royal Bank of Scotland. They were the only two of 18 financial
firms that took their case to trial, arguing that it was the housing crash, and
not deceptive loan documents, that caused the bonds to collapse. The other
firms — including Goldman Sachs and Bank of America — settled, together paying
nearly $18 billion in penalties but avoiding a detailed public airing of their
conduct.”
Here
comes Bethany McLean, again
Good friend and previous GSE author, Bethany McLean (“All
the Devils are Here,” with co-author NYT’s Joe Nocera), is writing
another GSE book—solo this time, in conjunction with Columbia University--it
will be out this fall, according to Ms. McLean, one of our favorite
reporters/writers.
“Shaky Ground: The Strange Saga of the U.S. Mortgage
Giants” (Paperback)
She has promised me, if it goes to film production (rights to the last
one did), I can approach Antonio Banderas
to play me. (But first, he has to promise
to bring his former Desperado co-star Selma Hayek to rehearsals with him!!)
2014 List of G-SIFI’s
(A new list will be published in November, 2015)
____________________________________________________________
Washington Post, why Jeb
Bush had “the worst week in Washington.”
___________________________________________________________
Maloni, 5-18-2015
Bill, thanks for the Shelby (and corky) breakdown.
ReplyDeleteAs for Selma Hayek, I only have two words for you...Hubba Hubba!
I will gladly intern as a PA on set every day she's present, just let me know when and where. :)
GB--Careful, you may be get drowned in my drooling!
ReplyDeleteHere's a story about a letter to the SBC from 62 BHCs which get SIFI reg relief and are supporting the Shelby bill.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.politicopro.com/go/?wbid=53778
Bill, what's the latest word on David Fiderer’s “heat seeking missile" article, any takers yet? Print date?
ReplyDeleteAlso, I'm not sure what your relationship with the fake Tim Howard (TH717) is, if any, but be weary of him (if you aren't already), not sure I trust the guy. In the past he has posted a not so nice comment about you on his site, only to remove it later. His comments may not be a big deal at all, but I try to look out for those I trust and respect.
BWT, Steelers fans gotta love the downfall of the evil empire known as the NE Patriots "****"!
I last spoke with DF a week ago and he claimed he was making a final decision.
ReplyDeleteI have offered him this forum (having no idea what 10,000 words will do and even if I can handle it, but I would love to try--since I generally run about 1600-2000 words).
______________________________
Justice for Steelers fans for a number of reasons: Big Ben got six games with no "evidence" or charges just accusations about misogynist behavior. Le'Veon Bell gets three games for smoking grass, which seems to be a favorites NFL pass time.
So, Brady's four gamer--which likely gets reduced on appeal--when he is nailed in a primo NFL investigation and report seems weak.
Beyond that, the Steelers open with the Pats this year and with Brady out, for at least one game, it should matter.
But, the Pats--despite the disdain a lot of us feel toward their organization--always have a good team.
Thanks for the DF info. Look forward to reading it soon.
ReplyDelete_________________
As for the Steelers and Pats I could write forever. Ben got railroaded and imo it didn't help that his owner didn't have is back...like Brady does. The discipline rules that "God"ell had in place are crazy. Eight games for grass a couple of times and two games for knocking out your future wife in an elevator. I could go on and on.
While I agree that the Pats have been consistently good over the last 10-15 years, what has made them great has been their cheating/bending the rules (many of which we will never know) imo.
end rant... :)
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