by davidlosh@davidlosh.com » Sat Jan 10, 2009 7:00 am
Sorry, but what has gone on is perfectly legal.
Claiming legislation from 1933 had a bearing today in the technology age is a feel good response to what has become the main problem in banking.
Banks, in particular, have to answer to stock holders. They are the face we see day to day. Do you remember WaMu, the friend of the family, introducing Murphy Favre into bank branches? They were an investment arm of the company. I was surprised in my little research to find: Murphy Favre Housing Managers, Inc.
Murphy Favre Properties, Inc.
I'll check further but it seems these are Real Estate Holding Companies. It makes sense from the dealings I had with the Loss Mitigation Department about two years ago. The negotiator told me that it was WaMu policy to add foreclosed properties to the Property Management portfolio.
Stock Holders are demanding profits. The stock holders have made money, or should I say made money, by stock price appreciation. You can tie it to mortgages, but ultimately those mortgages at least have an asset. Consumer Credit is unsecured.
So when companies began selling secured debt it looked great on paper because the alternative was thin air. Regulators did their job by over seeing the transfer of unsecured debt into HELOCs and Mortgages. They were in fact working in the best interest of the Stock Holders.
Our government passed laws to allow 29% interest plus late fees on Consumer Credit. That's all profit. It's legal and looks very good on paper. That paper was transferred into secured mortgages, again legal, and good for investors.
The regulators did their jobs. There are more than enough laws on the books that we as tax payers have encouraged. Glass-Steagall had to go. Stock holder demanded it. The stock market was inflated to 14000 by the tech stock revolution. Pension Plans, IRAs, 401Ks were tied to it. The federal government had to sustain the "markets." It was and is still a mandate.
We all have an opportunity today to stop the stock market from acting foolishly. It's called Consumer Confidence, but I look at it as Consumer Spending. Rather than spend we can pay down debt. It's an individual choice not tied to what the government does.
The stock market has been a gamble since 1987. In the 1980s Mergers and Acquisitions gutted any and all viable companies. It's a long story, but technology took over. Microsoft, as a monopoly, by the way, made America Great once again.
In 1999 when the monopoly was broken it should have been a warning. Stock Holders ignored the warning and moved ahead based on Consumer Spending of new found wealth. In a way the stock market perpetuated itself.
It's all legal and demanded by the Stock Holders. Claiming the government was some how at fault is misleading. it has all worked perfectly. We are exactly were we wanted to be.