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Fri Sep 8, 2023, 08:44 PM

The Wasted Crisis



Today on TAP: What did we learn from the financial collapse of September 2008? Not enough.

https://prospect.org/blogs-and-newsletters/tap/2023-09-08-wasted-crisis-2008-financial-collapse/



Fifteen years ago this week, Wall Street was on the verge of the worst collapse since 1929. The cause was regulators’ indulgence of opaque securities that were highly leveraged and thinly capitalized, such as credit default swaps and bonds backed by high-risk subprime mortgages. When bankers’ bets started going bad in 2007, the initial response of the Fed and the Treasury was to prop up the system by merging failed banks into bigger banks or having the government cover losses. In March 2008, when the investment bank Bear Stearns became insolvent, the Federal Reserve guaranteed its bad loans to facilitate its acquisition by J.P. Morgan.

Exactly 15 years ago today, the government took over the biggest players in the secondary mortgage market, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which were underwater because the securities backing mortgages had plummeted in market value. But a week later, on September 15, the Fed and the Treasury decided that enough was enough. They decided not to bail out failing Lehman Brothers. And that collapse triggered a full-blown financial crisis. The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission later found that most money center banks were literally insolvent. Had government not come to the rescue with even more bailouts, the collapse would have triggered another Great Depression. Yet these bailouts left existing executives in place and did not break up a single large bank.

Presumably, Congress acted to head off another repeat of speculative meltdown when it passed the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010. But 13 years later, old abuses are repeating themselves in new forms. Dodd-Frank was supposed to put an end to banks that were “too big to fail.” But today the system is more highly concentrated than ever. The Treasury and the Fed were up to their old tricks when they encouraged the largest of the banks, JPMorgan Chase, to bail out the failed First Republic Bank, making JPMorgan even bigger. The latest banking crisis involves regional banks that are overexposed to commercial real estate that keeps losing value. The Wall Street Journal calls this a “doom loop.” As a recent Journal story explained, banks not only overinvested in real estate loans.

Between 2015 and 2022, banks’ direct lending to commercial real estate doubled, to $3.6 trillion, equal to 20 percent of their deposits. And banks more than doubled their indirect real estate exposure with loans to mortgage companies and to real estate investment trusts as well as mortgage-backed bonds. Now, with the property market in free fall, banks increasingly find that the collateral is worth less than the loans. If this crisis spreads, the cause will be exactly the same as the cause of the 2008 collapse: regulators and examiners failing to look closely at risky fads in bank portfolios and failing to demand that risky investments be backed by more capital. As long as regulators are more concerned about coddling bankers than protecting the public, these periodic financial meltdowns will keep recurring.

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Response to Celerity (Original post)

Fri Sep 8, 2023, 08:50 PM

1. Thanks for bringing this to our attention. However, I question how these topics are

rated as "Trending", "Greatest Threads", etc.

It seems like there may be a global reset of counts at midnight (somewhere) so threads added late in the evening don't get the same visibility in the counts as the ones very early in the morning.

If I'm right, this is a problem since many posters may live in any time-zone around the world.

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Response to erronis (Reply #1)

Fri Sep 8, 2023, 09:13 PM

2. regardless of when I post (it is 3 13 am on Saturday for me here in Sweden) very few of my

OPs get a lot of traction due to my choice choice of subjects and also, I assume, the likelihood that many people have me blocked, as I am not exactly the type who is going to be everybody's cuppa, lol.

I do not post for clicks, I have zero desire to clout chase.

I just post things I find relevant or interesting or appealling and hopefully a few here find some value in it.

It is also therapeutic for me and helps me to maintain a sense of 'now'.

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Response to Celerity (Reply #2)

Fri Sep 8, 2023, 10:18 PM

5. I really enjoy your posts!

You are interested in some very diverse and cool topics. When I see your name, I know you’re probably posting about something I find interesting too.

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Response to zuul (Reply #5)

Fri Sep 8, 2023, 10:19 PM

6. aww, thanks!

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Response to Celerity (Reply #2)

Sat Sep 9, 2023, 08:55 AM

8. I didn't think you were posting for clicks.

It's just that the DU3 home page has a couple of sections "Trending Now" and "Greatest Threads" that I keep an eye on. When I've made it through these posts I'll head over to "Latest Threads" in another page.

I, too, enjoy your posts - usually have some good meat on the bones.

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Response to Celerity (Original post)

Fri Sep 8, 2023, 09:18 PM

3. Thanks for posting this

I’m still angry about it. The US is clearly a government by the oligarchy for the oligarchy. I also like that source a lot. I used to buy the magazine back in the 90s.

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Response to LearnedHand (Reply #3)

Fri Sep 8, 2023, 09:32 PM

4. Great user name. Hand was one of the greatest jurists the US produced, one of the most influential

non SCOTUS judges in American history.

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Response to Celerity (Original post)

Fri Sep 8, 2023, 10:36 PM

7. Come back to the office! Because productivity!

Between 2015 and 2022, banks’ direct lending to commercial real estate doubled, to $3.6 trillion, equal to 20 percent of their deposits. And banks more than doubled their indirect real estate exposure with loans to mortgage companies and to real estate investment trusts as well as mortgage-backed bonds.


I'm sure that right there has absolutely nothing to do with the recent push to repack the corporate sardine can.

"We just want you to come to an environment where you can be your best working self!"

Tch, my best working self is in gym shorts, on my couch with a laptop, idly rolling my eyes at e-mails while I watch Ahsoka.

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