https://wallstreetonparade.com/2025/01/wall-street-watchdog-warns-clock-is-ticking-on-a-coming-catastrophic-financial-crash/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: January 10, 2025 ~

Dennis Kelleher, Co-Founder, President and Chief Executive Officer of
Better Markets
Dennis Kelleher, Co-Founder and CEO, Better Markets

The indefatigable Dennis Kelleher, Co-Founder and CEO of the Wall Street
watchdog, Better Markets, has just released his organization’s monthly
newsletter for January 2025 and it’s a humdinger.

Kelleher warns that the financial deregulators that incoming President
Donald Trump has packed into his administration means “that the clock is
ticking on a coming catastrophic financial crash that will likely be much
worse than 2008.”

Kelleher adds that this “is not hyperbole.” He cites evidence from past
financial crashes, writing:

“…there is always a lag after deregulation and the creation of artificial
liquidity. That was true for ‘roaring ‘20s’ followed by the crash and Great
Depression; the ‘great moderation’ of the early 2000s followed by the crash
and Great Recession; the deregulation of the first Trump administration in
2017-2020 that led to the 2023 banking crisis when 3 of the 4 largest bank
failures in US history happened. Much worse is likely to happen next time.”

The potential for another great crash might explain why the Vice President
for Supervision at the Federal Reserve, Michael Barr, is abandoning the
ship and lowering the life raft.

Kelleher has a way with coining a phrase, writing that “Banks don’t neglect
their duties, act recklessly, engage in high-risk behavior, or break the
law – bankers do” – and he warns that this is going to persist “until
individual bankers are meaningfully and personally punished.”

Unfortunately, as Wall Street On Parade has documented time and again,
regardless of which political party holds the reins in Washington, Wall
Street has been able to draw a no-law zone around its activities with a
wink and a nod from the U.S. Department of Justice.

In 2016 we reported on what the PBS Program, Frontline, had revealed about
the Obama administration’s Department of Justice and its handling of the
investigations after Wall Street had crashed the U.S. economy and left
millions of Americans out of work with foreclosure notices nailed to their
front doors:

NARRATOR: Frontline spoke to two former high-level Justice Department
prosecutors who served in the Criminal Division under Lanny Breuer. In
their opinion, Breuer was overly fearful of losing.

FRONTLINE’S MARTIN SMITH: We spoke to a couple of sources from within the
Criminal Division, and they reported that when it came to Wall Street,
there were no investigations going on. There were no subpoenas, no document
reviews, no wiretaps.

LANNY BREUER: Well, I don’t know who you spoke with because we have looked
hard at the very types of matters that you’re talking about.

MARTIN SMITH: These sources said that at the weekly indictment approval
meetings that there was no case ever mentioned that was even close to
indicting Wall Street for financial crimes.

Following the 2008 crash, Congress passed legislation that created the
Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission (FCIC) to investigate and report on the
causes of the crash. In 2016, previously withheld documents from the FCIC’s
investigation were publicly released. Senator Elizabeth Warren was aghast
at what they showed.

In a 20-page letter to the Inspector General of the U.S. Department of
Justice, Senator Warren asked for an investigation into why the DOJ had
failed to indict any of the Wall Street executives that had been referred
to it by the FCIC for potential criminal prosecution. In a separate letter,
Warren asked then FBI Director James Comey for his related files.

The FCIC documents showed that it had made multiple criminal referrals of
Wall Street executives to the DOJ in 2010. Warren explained the referrals
as follows in her letter:

“A review of these documents conducted by my staff has identified 11
separate FCIC referrals of individuals or corporations to DOJ in cases
where the FCIC found ‘serious indications of violations[s]’ of federal
securities or other laws. Nine individuals were implicated in these
referrals (two were implicated twice). The DOJ has not filed any criminal
prosecutions against any of the nine individuals. Not one of the nine has
gone to prison or been convicted of a criminal offense. Not a single one
has even been indicted or brought to trial. Only one individual was fined,
in the amount of $100,000, and that was to settle a civil case brought by
the SEC.”

The two individuals Warren refers to who were “implicated twice” in the
FCIC’s criminal referrals are Robert Rubin, the former Treasury Secretary
in the administration of Bill Clinton, who in the lead up to the crash of
Citigroup in 2008 served as Executive Committee Chair of Citigroup’s Board
of Directors. (After advocating for the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act,
which allowed Citigroup to own both an insured depository bank, an
investment bank and brokerage firm, Rubin went straight from his post as
Treasury Secretary to the Board of Citigroup, where he collected $126
million in compensation over the next decade.)

The other individual whose name appears twice is Chuck Prince, the
Citigroup CEO during its implosion. A third Citigroup executive’s name
appears as well on the list: Gary Crittenden, the Chief Financial Officer
of Citigroup at the time of its crash. Crittenden was the individual that
was fined $100,000 by the SEC.

Not only were Citigroup’s top executives not prosecuted, but the bank was
secretly receiving cumulative revolving loans totaling $2.5 trillion from
the Federal Reserve from December 2007 to at least July of 2010. That
information was revealed in 2011 when the Government Accountability Office
(GAO) released its audit of the Fed’s bailout programs.

The Fed is not legally allowed to make loans to insolvent institutions. But
in the case of Citigroup, it appears that the Fed ignored its statutory
mandate. Sheila Bair, who was the Chair of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC) during the 2008 crisis, confirms this point in her book,
Bull by the Horns. Bair writes:

“By November [2008], the supposedly solvent Citi was back on the ropes, in
need of another government handout. The market didn’t buy the OCC’s [Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency that supervises national banks] and NY
Fed’s strategy of making it look as though Citi was as healthy as the other
commercial banks…Instead, the OCC and the NY Fed stood by as that sick bank
continued to pay major dividends and pretended that it was healthy.”

Actually, they weren’t standing by at all. The Fed was secretly propping up
Citigroup with $2.5 trillion in loans – many of which were made at a
fraction of one percent interest while Citigroup was charging double-digit
interest rates to its struggling credit card customers.

Better Market’s Kelleher, in the organization’s current newsletter, asks
and answers this question:

“How did we get here? The financial industry uses its economic power to buy
political power which it then uses to increase its economic power. That
just happened again in the November 2024 elections, and the financial
industry is about to reap the rewards. The Trump administration is going to
unleash a very dangerous juggernaut of deregulation of the financial
industry.”

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