by TJ_98370 » Thu Mar 20, 2008 4:00 pm
The market may have breathed a sigh of relief at the latest moves by the Federal Reserve. But a recent survey of chief financial officers gives the Fed failing grades for its oversight of the banks at the heart of the current credit crisis.
In a survey conducted at the CFO Rising conference in Orlando Fla., 69 percent of senior financial executives said the Fed and other regulators should have exercised tighter regulation over banks during the past four years. A similar number—68 percent—said that requiring greater transparency of structured banking products would have a positive effect on the U.S. economy going forward......
.......Overall, the mood at the conference was grim, with several speakers warning of serious economic woes ahead. Particularly striking was this characterization of the current state of affairs by Jerry York, the former finance chief of IBM and Chrysler Corp.: "It's going to be a very bad recession, perhaps the worst I've seen in the 46 years I've been working."
York said that a "perfect storm" of economic calamity has struck. The confluence of negative forces includes rising energy prices, rising commodity prices, credit markets in turmoil, credit losses in which "no one knows where the bottom is," and a housing market in crisis. "We have too many sectors going south all at once, he told the website. What's more, York can't find a silver lining: "I frankly don't see many positive signs right now, we are looking at a really nasty economic situation."
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