|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
US financial system faced collapse, bank regulators tell Senate
hearing on Bear Stearns bailout
By Barry Grey
4 April 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
At a hearing of the Senate Banking Committee on Thursday, top
financial regulators said the unprecedented actions by the Federal
Reserve Board last month to prevent the failure of investment
bank Bear Stearns were taken to avert a collapse of the entire
US financial system.
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke, New York Federal
Reserve Bank President Timothy Geithner, Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) Chairman Christopher Cox and Under Secretary
for Domestic Finance Robert K. Steel defended the government bailout
of Bear Stearns and the decision to lend Federal Reserve funds
to all of the major US investment banks as emergency measures
necessitated by a mounting panic on Wall Street that reached a
crescendo in the days preceding the government-engineered takeover
of Bear Stearns by JPMorgan Chase.
While the regulators had a vested interest in justifying the
allocation of tens of billions of taxpayer dollars to prop up
giant Wall Street firms by portraying the immediate crisis they
confronted in dire terms, there is no doubt that the disaster
scenario over the weekend of March 14-17 which they described
was very real. The very fact of their admission of a financial
emergency of historic proportions is an extraordinary testament
to the profound and systemic nature of an economic crisis that
only a few weeks ago President George W. Bush called a rough
patch.
What none of the officials, and none of the senators on the
Banking Committee, broached was what the development of such a
potentially catastrophic crisis says about the nature and condition
of American capitalism and the responsibility of the CEOs on Wall
Street who justify their multi-million-dollar salaries by their
supposedly irreplaceable expertise.
Far from the crisis having been resolved by the rescue of Bear
Stearns and the associated steps taken by the Fed, when asked
by the ranking Republican on the committee, Richard Shelby of
Alabama, what were the chances that another emergency bailout
would occur, Under Secretary Steel said that he couldnt
say there will not be another problem.
The deprecatory demeanor of the senators, led by the senior
Democrats on the committee, left no doubt as to who wields the
real power in the United States. Sitting across from officials
who have overseen and facilitated financial abuses, speculation
and gambling with borrowed money on an unprecedented scale, resulting
in a social catastrophe for millions of American families, most
of the senators went out of their way to commend the assembled
regulators and demonstrate their deference to the financial elite.
Democratic Senator Christopher Dodd of Connecticut, the chairman
of the committee, reiterated several times in his opening remarks
that the bailout of Bear Stearns and the financial markets was
the right decision. He effusively thanked Bernanke
and the other officials for their patience in putting
up with questions from Congress.
His only criticism was that the Fed should have opened the
spigot of cash from its discount window to Wall Street investment
banks sooner.
Charles Schumer, Democrat of New York, said, Everyone
agrees that the Fed had no choice and it had to be done.
Tom Carper, Democrat of Delaware, said that at the end of
the day, what the Fed did passes muster. Evan Bayh of Indiana
declared, You made the right decision. Jack Reed,
Democrat of Rhode Island, said, Thank you for steering us
through a crisis that could have had catastrophic consequences.
The only discordant note was struck by Jim Bunning of Kentucky,
a right-wing Republican, who denounced the bailout of Bear Stearns
as an affront to the free market and a form of socialism.
Fed Chairman Bernanke opened the testimony with a grim picture
of the current financial situation. Although the situation
has recently improved somewhat, he said, financial
markets remain under considerable stress. Pressures in short-term
funding markets, which had abated somewhat beginning late last
year, have increased once again.
Many lenders have been reluctant to provide credit to
counterparties, especially leveraged investors, and increased
the amount of collateral they required to back short-term security
financing agreements. To meet those demands, investors have reduced
their leverage and liquidated holdings of securities, putting
further downward pressure on security prices.
Credit availability has also been restricted because
some large financial institutions, including some commercial and
investment banks and the government-sponsored enterprises, have
reported substantial losses and write-downs, reducing their capital
available to support increased lending. Some key securitization
markets, including those for nonconforming mortgages, continued
to function poorly, if at all.
He outlined the massive injection of funds into the financial
markets and steep cuts in interest rates carried out by the Fed
in an attempt to counter the housing and credit market crises.
This, he said, was the context in which the Fed was advised by
Bear Stearns on March 13 that it would have to file for bankruptcy
the next day unless the government intervened.
The prospect of a collapse of Bear Stearns, he continued, raised
issues that extended well beyond the fate of one company.
He then outlined its likely impact: The sudden failure of
Bear Stearns likely would have led to a chaotic unwinding of positions
in those markets and could have severely shaken confidence. The
companys failure could also have cast doubt on the financial
positions of some of Bear Stearns thousands of counterparties
and perhaps of companies with similar businesses.
Given the exceptional pressures on the global economy
and financial system, the damage caused by a default by Bear Stearns
could have been severe and extremely difficult to contain. Moreover,
the adverse impact of a default would not have been confined to
the financial system but would have been felt broadly in the real
economy through its effects on asset values and credit availability.
In the question-and-answer period, Bernanke objected to characterizations
of the Feds action as a bailout of Bear Stearns, saying
that the firms shareholders had suffered massive losses.
The issue, he insisted, was the broader threat to the financial
system. Saying he was concerned about other institutions
and markets, he added, If you want to say we bailed
out markets in general, I guess thats true.
In response to a question as to how the failure of a single
investment bank could bring down the entire financial system,
Bernanke said the crisis was the outcome of a credit boom
which saw a massive growth of debt, excess risk-taking
and a deterioration in underwriting standards.
None of the senators suggested that the heads of major Wall
Street firms should be held accountable for, in effect, using
the banking system as a giant casino.
The same theme of impending catastrophe was sounded by the
other witnesses. SEC Chairman Cox said, In the cauldron
of these events, the actions that the Federal Reserve tookin
particular, extending access to the discount window not only the
Bear Stearns, but also to the major investment bankswere
addressed to preventing future occurrences of the run-on-the-bank
phenomenon that Bear endured.
He noted that the crisis of confidence in financial markets
had reached such an extreme point that by March 13, Bear Stearns
was unable to borrow against high-quality collateral,
calling this an unprecedented occurrence.
New York Federal Reserve Bank President Geithner outlined in
some detail the round-the-clock meetings and negotiations involving
the Fed, the Treasury Department, the SEC, Bear Stearns and JPMorgan
Chase that occurred during the 96 hours between Bear Stearns
warning that it was about to declare bankruptcy and the announcement
late on March 16 of the investment banks takeover by JPMorgan
Chase.
He made clear that federal regulators believed they had to
reach an agreement before Asian markets opened Sunday night, US
time, in order to avoid a full-scale panic. No less significant
was his revelation that regulators feared, even after the Bear
Stearns takeover had been announced, that other investment banks
might fail when markets opened Monday morning. That, according
to Geithner, prompted the Fed to announce that it was opening
up its discount window to all major investment bankssomething
that had not occurred since the Great Depression.
He then gave a decidedly somber prognosis for the future. By
reducing the probability of a systemic financial crisis,
he said, the actions taken by the Fed on and after March
14 have helped avert substantial damage to the economy, and they
have brought a measure of tentative calm to global financial markets...
Nevertheless, liquidity conditions in markets are still substantially
impaired and the process of de-leveraging remains underway. And
this will amplify the headwinds facing the US and global economy.
See Also:
Congressional Democrats defer to Fed
Chairman Bernanke on Wall Street bailout
[3 April 2008]
US Treasury plan shields Wall Street
speculators
[1 April 2008]
Clinton, Obama, McCain defer
to Wall Street
[29 March 2008]
Shades of 1929: Bear Stearns
collapse signals deepest crisis since Great Depression
[18 March 2008]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |