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http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2010-01-21/obamas-half-baked-bank-reform/p/

Obama's Half-Baked Bank Reform
by Nomi Prins
January 21, 2010 | 10:40pm

Barack Obama Charles Dharapak / AP Photo Wall Street has already 
figured out how to game the president’s proposal to reform the 
banking system. Former Goldman executive Nomi Prins on how to stop 
the trickery.

Seeing Paul Volcker, former Fed Chair and chairman of the Economic 
Recovery Advisory Board, lord over President Obama yesterday as he 
made his proposal to limit the scope and size of financial 
institutions, it was easy to imagine him saying “I told you so.” 
Volcker, after all, has been a long time advocate of slicing up 
banks and prohibiting them from the majority of speculative 
activities.

But as I called around New York and Washington yesterday, it 
already seems that Wall Street has figured out ways to circumvent 
the administration’s plan, which centers on “proprietary 
trading”—risky bets the banks make for their own accounts.

These merged institutions will continue to divert their 
capital—given to it by mom-and-pop depositors and cheap government 
money—to trade, before using it to lend.

The cliff notes from the President’s Economic Recovery Advisory 
Board chief economist Austan Goolsbee on yesterday’s press call 
were: A mandatory ban to prohibit proprietary trading (but not all 
trading) by firms that own banks. Regulators would prevent 
commercial banks from owning hedge or private equity funds, and 
limit non-client related trading. There would remain no limit on 
investment banks not designated bank or financial holding 
companies. Regulators could constrain the size of banks, but not 
break them up. Most important, there would be no return to 
Glass-Steagall, which divided commercial and investment banks.

The importance of the latter became clear to me as I talked to DC 
policy advisers yesterday, who had already gotten an earful from 
Wall Street lobbyists—touch proprietary trading if you must, and 
leave everything else alone (i.e., no Glass-Steagall). Prop 
trading, in other words, would be Wall Street’s sacrificial lamb. 
For a simple reason: They can get around it.

Banks have mucked up their financial disclosures so much that it’s 
already near impossible to tell how much banks are making from 
risky trading, much less how much trading is uniquely 
“proprietary,” versus how much can be classified as 
customer-driven or used for hedging purposes, which Obama’s rules 
would allow. Bank of America, for example, has its fixed income, 
currency and commodities trading figures merged together, making 
it impossible to see the contribution of Merrill Lynch’s sizeable 
trading activities, as well as the line between proprietary and 
possibly customer-oriented trading. Other banks are even more 
Byzantine. You can’t limit something that isn’t fully disclosed or 
can be camouflaged on the books.

Plus, in a crisis, it’s hard enough to price securities, let alone 
figure out which trading distinction they possess. At last week’s 
Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, JPM Chase CEO, Jamie Dimon 
said, “It’s not always possible to evaluate positions…Although we 
are a proponent of fair value accounting in trading books, we also 
recognize that market levels resulting from large levels of forced 
liquidations may not reflect underlying values.”

If “it’s not always possible to evaluate positions,” the notion of 
evaluating which ones are customer-driven and which are 
proprietary goes out the window. These firms will just call 
everything customer driven and alter book distinctions accordingly.

Bringing back Glass-Steagall would force a distinction of 
commercial banks with access to federal support from those that 
just call themselves banks, but are in reality Wall Street 
gambling parlors. Done right, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley 
would have to give up their commercial bank status to continue 
doing the trading-oriented business they do. Bank of America might 
be forced to spin off Merrill and JPM Chase may have to chuck the 
Bear business and part of its “leading global” investment bank 
business to adhere to new restrictions.

Without such a move, these merged institutions will continue to 
divert their capital—given to it by mom-and-pop depositors and 
cheap government money—to trade, before using it to lend. When the 
markets go up, trading is more profitable and as we’ve seen in 
bank earnings reports this year, banks beef up trading activities 
where they can, to offset consumer and commercial credit losses. 
And it works in reverse: If their commercial and investment 
businesses remain intertwined, banks will extract costs, such as 
the $90 billion over-10-year tax Obama proposed last week, from 
the customers’ pockets. Banks would still be inclined to use their 
capital to trade (which is a more capital-intensive endeavor than 
deposits and lending).

Risk is risk whether it's called propriety trading or comes from 
the customer-trading business. True systemic risk reduction 
requires dividing out all trading activities from within a firm 
that also does deposits and lending. That requires a resurrection 
of a true Glass-Steagall barrier, not a bunch of stuff that sounds 
like it gets partly there.

Nomi Prins is author of It Takes a Pillage: Behind the Bonuses, 
Bailouts, and Backroom Deals from Washington to Wall Street 
(Wiley, September, 2009). Before becoming a journalist, she worked 
on Wall Street as a managing director at Goldman Sachs, and 
running the international analytics group at Bear Stearns in London.

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