2012-02-29 "Allow Failure To Fail: Bank of America teetering on the edge of collapse" by Matt Taibbi of Occupy Wall Street
[http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article30717.htm]
There are two things every American needs to know about Bank of America.
The
first is that it’s corrupt. This bank has systematically defrauded
almost everyone with whom it has a significant business relationship,
cheating investors, insurers, homeowners, shareholders, depositors, and
the state. It is a giant, raging hurricane of theft and fraud, spinning
its way through America and leaving a massive trail of wiped-out
retirees and foreclosed-upon families in its wake.
The second is
that all of us, as taxpayers, are keeping that hurricane raging. Bank of
America is not just a private company that systematically steals from
American citizens: it’s a de facto ward of the state that depends
heavily upon public support to stay in business. In fact, without the
continued generosity of us taxpayers, and the extraordinary indulgence
of our regulators and elected officials, this company long ago would
have been swallowed up by scandal, mismanagement, prosecution and
litigation, and gone out of business. It would have been liquidated and
its component parts sold off, perhaps into a series of smaller regional
businesses that would have more respect for the law, and be more
responsive to their customers.
But Bank of America hasn’t gone
out of business, for the simple reason that our government has decided
to make it the poster child for the “Too Big To Fail” concept. Because
it is considered a “systemically important institution” whose collapse
would have a major, Lehman-Brothers-style impact on the economy, two
consecutive presidential administrations have taken extraordinary
measures to keep Bank of America in business, despite a staggering
recent legacy of corruption schemes, many of which were simply
overlooked by regulators.
This is why the question of whether or
not Bank of America should remain on public life support is so critical
to all Americans, and not just those millions who have the misfortune to
be customers of the bank, or own shares in the firm, or hold mortgages
serviced by the company. This gigantic financial institution is the
ultimate symbol of a new kind of corruption at the highest levels of
American society: a tendency to marry the near-limitless power of the
federal government with increasingly concentrated, increasingly
unaccountable private financial interests.
The inevitable result
of that new form of corruption is this bank, whose continued,
state-supported existence should naturally outrage all Americans, be
they conservative or progressive.
Conservatives should be
outraged by Bank of America because it is perhaps the biggest welfare
dependent in American history, with the $45 billion in bailout money and
the $118 billion in state guarantees it’s received since 2008
representing just the crest of a veritable mountain of federal bailout
support, most of it doled out by the Obama administration.
For
instance, with its own credit rating hovering just above junk status,
Bank of America has been allowed to borrow tens of billions of dollars
against the government’s credit rating using little-known bailout
programs with names like the Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program.
Since the crash of 2008, it’s also borrowed billions if not trillions in
emergency, near-zero interest rate loans from the Federal Reserve – it
took out $91 million in rolling low-interest financing from the Fed on
just one day in January, 2009.
Conservatives believe that a
commitment to free market principles and limited government will lead us
out of our economic troubles, but Bank of America represents the
opposite dynamic: a company that is kept protected from the judgments of
the free market, and forces the state to expand to take on its debts.
Last
summer, for instance, the Bank – in order to satisfy creditors who were
nervous about the enormous quantity of risky assets on its balance
sheet – decided to move some $73 trillion (that’s trillion, with a T) in
exotic derivative bets from one end of the company into the
federally-insured, depository side of the bank.
This move,
encouraged by the Obama administration, put the American taxpayer on the
hook for an entire generation of irresponsible gambles made by another
failed investment firm that should have gone out of business, but was
instead acquired by Bank of America with $25 billion in taxpayer help –
Merrill Lynch.
When did we make it the job of the taxpayer to buy
failed companies, and rescue companies from their own bad decisions?
How is that conservative?
Meanwhile, if you’re a progressive,
Bank of America is the ultimate symbol of modern predatory capitalism.
This company has knowingly sold hundreds of billions of worthless
securities to unions and pension funds (New York state filed two
different lawsuits against Bank of America and its subsidiaries on
behalf of its pension fund, one of which was settled for $624 million)
brazenly overcharged its depositors (it was forced to pay customers $410
million in restitution for bogus overdraft charges), and repeatedly
lied to its shareholders (most notoriously, it lied about billions in
losses on Merrill Lynch’s books before asking shareholders to approve
its merger with the firm).
Moreover, Bank of America has
ruthlessly preyed upon millions of homeowners, throwing them out on the
street on the strength of doctored, “robosigned” paperwork created
through brazenly illegal practices they helped pioneer — the firm sped
struggling families to foreclosure court using perjured affidavits
produced in factory-like fashion by the hundreds or thousands every day,
with full knowledge of management. Through the firm’s improper use of
an unaccountable private electronic mortgage registry system called
MERS, it also systematically evaded millions of dollars in local fees,
forcing some communities to cut services and raise property taxes.
Even
when caught and punished for its crimes by the authorities, Bank of
America has repeatedly ignored court orders. It was one of five
companies identified in two separate investigations earlier this year
that were caught continuing the practice of robosigning, even after
promising to stop in a legally binding consent decree. Last summer, the
state of Nevada sought to terminate a settlement over mortgage abuses it
had entered into with Bank of America after it found the company was
brazenly violating the agreement, among other things raising payments
and interest rates on mortgage customers, despite the fact that the
settlement only allowed them to modify loans downward.
Over and
over again, we see that leveling fines and punishments at this bank is
not enough: it simply ignores them. It is the very definition of an
unaccountable corporate villain.
Companies like Bank of America
are a direct threat to national security, for many reasons. For one
thing, they drive smaller, more honest banks out of business: since the
market knows the federal government will never let Bank of America fail,
it charges less to lend the bank money. That gives Bank of America,
despite its near-junk credit rating, a competitive advantage over a
smaller, regional bank that might have a better credit rating, but
doesn’t have the implicit support of the federal government.
Worse
still, stock market investor dollars that normally would go to more
customer-friendly, more creative, and more commercially dependable firms
will instead continue to flow to Too-Big-To-Fail behemoths like Bank of
America, as buying stock in a company with implicit state support will
be considered almost a safe-haven investment, like buying gold or
Treasury bills.
This robs more deserving and ingenious
entrepreneurs of scarce capital, and also encourages existing companies
to pour resources not into better performance and increased
productivity, but into lobbying and government influence. The result
will be fewer Googles and Apples, more bad banks, and more campaign
contributions for politicians.
Moreover, we’ve seen throughout
our history that when criminal organizations are not punished, they tend
to be encouraged to commit more crimes. Five years from now, our
government’s decision to avoid jailing Bank of America executives for
their roles in the vast robosigning program may result in a situation
where no court document of any kind can be trusted, as companies will
realize that it is cheaper and easier to simply invent legal affidavits
than to draw them up properly and accurately.
What will your
defense be against a future lawsuit for a credit card debt or a
foreclosure, when your bank walks into court with a pile of invented
documents? Will you wish then that you’d fought harder for Bank of
America to be punished now?
And the state’s decision to allow
Bank of America to pay a middling, $137 million fine for the rigging of
bids for five years of municipal bond issues – a very serious crime that
robbed taxpayers of millions in revenue, and incidentally is exactly
the sort of thing we used to put mobsters in jail for, when the rigged
contracts were for cement instead of bonds – may mean that down the
road, all municipal bond issues will be rigged.
In recent years,
Too-Big-To-Fail banks like Bank of America and Chase and Wells Fargo
have been caught rigging the bids for financial services in dozens of
municipalities nationwide. Worse, these same banks have repeatedly been
let off the hook by regulators, who rarely seek jail sentences for the
offenders, and more often simply apply fractional fines to the companies
caught. This behavior, if left unchecked, will ultimately mean that we
will all have to pay more for our roads, our traffic lights, our sewers,
in fact all public services, as the banker’s secret bonus will soon
become an institutionalized part of the invoice. And it’ll be our fault,
because we didn’t do anything about it now.
The only way to
prevent this kind of slide to total lawlessness is to break this
unhealthy relationship between bank and government. It would be a great
sign of America’s return to healthier capitalism if we could allow one
of the worst of public-private monsters, Bank of America, to sink or
swim on its own, in the free market.
We don’t want Bank of
America to fail. Our position is, it already is insolvent, and already
has failed – and only our tax dollars, and our government’s continued
protection, is keeping that failure from becoming more common knowledge.
There are many opinions about the nature of modern American capitalism.
Some think the system is no longer able to meet the needs of ordinary
people and needs to be radically overhauled, while others like it just
the way it is.
But one thing that everyone on this spectrum of
beliefs can agree upon is that our system doesn’t work when corrupt
companies, companies that should fail in the free market, are kept alive
by the government. When we allow that, what we get is a system that is
neither capitalism nor socialist, but somewhere more miserably in
between – a bureaucratic state in which profit is not tied to
performance, but political power.
We have to break that cycle,
and we can. Even with the enormous levels of state support, Bank of
America has been teetering on the edge of collapse for years now. In
December of 2011, its share price briefly dipped below $5, a near-fatal
event in the firm’s history. The market has reacted violently to bad
news about the bank on multiple occasions in the last year – after news
of layoffs, after hints that the government might not bail the bank out
completely in the event of a collapse, and after significant new
lawsuits were filed. Each of these corrections nearly sent the company
into a tailspin, but it was always rescued in the end by the widespread
belief that Uncle Sam would bail it out in the event of a collapse.
We need to put a dent in that belief. We need to convince politicians and investors alike to allow failure to fail.
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