https://wallstreetonparade.com/2024/06/french-fears-ignite-selloff-in-u-s-megabanks-and-foreign-peers/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: June 12, 2024 ~

Taming the Megabanks, Book JacketYesterday, The Hill published an OpEd by
the man who, literally, wrote the book on the megabanks: Arthur E.
Wilmarth, Jr., Professor Emeritus of Law at George Washington University
Law School. Wilmarth raised critical points on why these megabanks continue
to pose unacceptable levels of risk to U.S. financial stability and need to
dramatically boost their equity capital – notwithstanding their fierce
lobbying and propaganda battle to overturn the proposed new capital rules
by bank regulators.

The forces of the universe seemed to align with Wilmarth’s gutsy OpEd
yesterday. In a display of just how dangerously interconnected with
derivatives these megabanks remain, their share prices tanked in tandem
yesterday despite the S&P 500 and Nasdaq indexes each setting a new record
high.

The contagion among the megabanks spread after French President Emmanuel
Macron called snap parliamentary elections for June 30 and July 7 following
far-right advances in the weekend’s elections to the European Parliament.

The mega French bank, Société Générale, lost 5.52 percent in New York
trading while the largest French bank, BNP Paribas, lost 4.72 percent. That
set in motion a tumble in megabanks in general with Citigroup leading the
U.S. losers with a decline of 3.73 percent. JPMorgan Chase, whose Chairman
and CEO Jamie Dimon is leading the lobbying push against higher capital
rules, tumbled 2.63 percent. (See chart above for more of the contagion.)

Wilmarth makes the following critical points in yesterday’s OpEd:

On a percentage basis, megabanks are holding far less capital than
community banks, even though they pose exponentially greater risks and
receive serial bailouts. Wilmarth also highlights the under-appreciated
reality of how the megabanks have contributed to exploding national debt
levels in the U.S. He writes:

“Total federal debt nearly quadrupled from $9 trillion to $34 trillion
between 2007 and 2023, due in substantial part to huge expenditures for
combating financial crises. It is doubtful whether the federal government
could shoulder comparable debt burdens during future crises without
undermining the credibility of Treasury bonds and the U.S. dollar.”

Wilmarth also addresses the core incentive that motivates the megabanks’
top executives to rail against higher capital rules, writing as follows:

“Big banks vehemently oppose higher equity capital requirements because
they reduce payouts to megabank executives. Much of the executive
compensation paid by megabanks is linked to their return on equity (ROE).
Adding more equity increases the denominator for calculating ROE, making it
harder for executives to hit their ROE targets. Big-bank executives
therefore have powerful motives to fund their banks’ operations with less
equity and more debt.”

Wilmarth also links to two heart-stopping studies showing that “larger U.S.
banks incur more severe losses from operational risk, and past losses from
operational risk are good predictors of future losses at the same banks.”

Let that last sentence sink in carefully for a moment; then reflect on
this. The largest bank in the U.S., JPMorgan Chase, gambled in derivatives
in London in 2012, using depositors’ money at its federally-insured bank,
and lost $6.2 billion of depositors’ money. JPMorgan Chase also held the
business bank account for Bernie Madoff as he ran the largest Ponzi scheme
in U.S. history out of the account. According to a report by the Government
Accountability Office, the bank’s own customers lost $5.4 billion to the
Madoff fraud. Then there were the revelations last year, brought in a
federal lawsuit by the Attorney General for the U.S. Virgin Islands, that
JPMorgan Chase had “actively participated” in Jeffrey Epstein’s sex
trafficking of underage girls by providing tens of thousands of dollars in
hard cash to him monthly for more than a decade without filing the legally
mandated Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) with the Financial Crimes
Enforcement Network (FinCEN).

And yet, JPMorgan Chase is allowed by its regulators to hold a lower
percentage of equity capital to assets than a sleepy little community bank.

If you agree that the current banking structure in the U.S. represents a
threat to national security and economic stability, please contact your
U.S. Senators today via the U.S. Capitol switchboard by dialing (202)
224-3121. Tell your Senators to hold immediate hearings on the dangerous
structure of the U.S. banking system since the repeal of the Glass-Steagall
Act in 1999, which has allowed giant federally-insured banks to be turned
into derivative trading casinos.

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