Friday, January 25, 2008

Le Rogue Trader: Financial world left stunned by £3.7bn fraud


By John Lichfield in Paris
Friday, 25 January 2008

The world of high finance, already shaken by the imprudent greed of some of its biggest corporate names, was stunned yesterday by the largest ever fraud by an individual "rogue" trader.

Jérôme Kerviel, a Frenchman aged 31, working for Société Gé*érale, one of the world's most reputable banks, lost almost €5bn (£3.7bn) in a series of complex, concealed deals on European stock derivatives.

The relatively junior bank employee, who earned less than €100,000 a year, managed to evade supposedly fraud-proof safeguards to stake an estimated €50bn – which is more than the GDP of Slovenia, Uganda or Cuba – on the future direction of European stock markets. France's second largest bank had to scramble desperately to abandon his concealed trades on Monday and Tuesday, against the calamitous background of sharply falling European stock exchanges.

According to one, unconfirmed, report, M. Kerviel was on the run last night after admitting his actions last weekend. Senior officials of SocGen said they "knew nothing" about his whereabouts. They admitted they had let him "go home" last Saturday and had kept the fraud secret until they had closed down his illegal deals. Officials said M. Kerviel was in a "fragile" mental state after family problems and had possibly acted out of "malevolence".

The massive fraud came at the worst possible time for the global finance industry. It will renew doubts about the stability, and ruling morality, of leading banks in the wake of the global recession threatened by the sub-prime crisis in the United States and beyond.

The French bank's president and chief executive Daniel Bouton, described the trader's behaviour yesterday as "totally irrational". He said there was no evidence of self-enrichment through embezzlement of funds.

M. Kerviel was an expert on the bank's computerised, anti-fraud protections from his previous work in another, junior managerial post. He was promoted to the bank's financial futures desk, Delta One, in the La Défense business district, west of Paris, two years ago.

In the space of the past year, he is believed to have set up an independent, "virtual" company at the heart of SocGen. He created a morass of larger and larger, unauthorised trades. He disguised them by seeming to cancel them on the computer and replacing them with, other, more reasonable but fictitious deals.

Unnoticed by his superiors, M. Kerviel bet huge sums – much larger than he was authorised to commit – on stock market "futures". He is also suspected of hacking into the bank's computers to alter data and cover his tracks.

The scale of M. Kerviel's losses dwarfs any previous fraud by any individual "rogue" trader. Société Gé*érale, a pillar of the French financial establishment since the 19th century, estimates its losses as €4.9bn or $7.2bn. That is almost five times as much as the $1.38bn blown by the British trader Nick Leeson on the Asian futures market in 1995: losses that destroyed the British merchant bank Barings. The money lost by the French bank approaches in dollar terms the $10bn wiped out by the world's biggest banking scandal, the collapse of the fraudulent Bank of Credit and Commerce International in 1991.

Société Gé*érale, the French government and the banking world sought yesterday to portray the disaster as the results of the deranged and inexplicable behaviour of a single individual. However, the calamity generated awkward new questions on the reliability of the anti-fraud defences erected by banks since the Leeson affair and similar rogue trading scandals in the US and Japan,

"We get the feeling that the financial markets have become a big casino which has lost control. It seems incredible that Société Gé*érale can lose €5bn through one operator," said Alain Crouzat, a portfolio manager at Montsegur Finance in Paris.

Centre-left French politicians asked if there was any moral difference between a single employee carried away with a desire to make a financial killing and the large US, and other, banks who had been swept along by the profiteering craze for "sub-prime" or unsound loans.

François Hollande, leader of the Parti Socialiste, called for new legislation to enforce more "transparency" in large transactions by French banks.

France has, until now, been relatively sheltered from the sub-prime crisis. Société Gé*érale had been a European leader in investing in new forms of financial instruments. It admitted yesterday, it had also lost €2.2bn on bad US investments, infected by the sub-prime virus. The bank, nonetheless, managed to record a profit of €800m in 2007 (compared to €5bn in 2006).

Unlike Barings, SocGen, the 13th largest bank in Europe, is not in danger of collapse. It has already raised over €5bn on the markets to help replace its losses.

The bank's shares were at first suspended yesterday but then fell more than 4 per cent when trading resumed. A group of 100 shareholders in SocGen then began a civil lawsuit against unnamed bank officials for "fraud, breach of trust, use of forged documents, complicity and receipt of stolen goods".

M. Kerviel also faces criminal action. The bank has begun legal proceedings against him for "forgery" and "intruding" into its computer hard disks. He and all the managers responsible for him have been fired. M. Bouton, offered to resign earlier this week but was asked to carry on by his board.

M. Kerviel worked for a division of the bank that traded in stock exchange "futures". More specifically, he worked on so-called "plain vanilla" futures – bets on the direction of European share prices.

Plain vanilla futures are relatively simple financial instruments that take out a position on the upwards or downwards direction of stock exchanges and can be cancelled up to an agreed date.

SocGen said yesterday it had uncovered the fraud in a routine inspection last weekend. M. Kerviel had evaded detection because he knew when the inspections took place. Finally, he made a mistake.

He admitted his actions last weekend and was allowed by the bank to go home. Senior bank officials admitted yesterday it might have been a "mistake" but they were anxious to conceal the fraud until they had taken action to abandon M. Kerviel's massive cat's cradle of illegal trades.

When the full extent of the fraud was uncovered – amounting to an "accumulator" bet of more than €50bn on rising share prices – European stock exchanges were in freefall on Monday. A taskforce of the bank's most senior officials – sworn to secrecy – scrambled to sell off the futures and save as much of the money as possible. "It was the worst two days of my life," one bank official told Le Monde.

M. Bouton told a press conference that initial investigations suggest the trader was acting alone: "It was an extremely sophisticated fraud in the way it was concealed." But he said the trader's actions were "totally irrational". There was no sign that the dealer had sought to make personal gains.

"From his trading position, he created his own clandestine business within our trading floor ... He managed to hide each position he took by taking other positions."

Another SocGen official described M. Kervile as "relatively junior, not one of our stars." Small wonder, if the trader was working, not for SogGen, but on his own, mysterious network of trades.

The man who broke a bank – and other trading disasters

Yasuo Hamanaka

Sumitomo; Lost £1.3bn in 1996

Hamanaka, a chief copper trader at Sumitomo Corporation – one of the largest trading companies in Japan – was jailed for eight years in 1998 after it emerged he had conducted off-the-book and bogus trades for more than 10 years. At first, Hamanaka's fraudulent activity, driving up the price of copper, had made Sumitomo huge profits, but eventually cost the corporation £1.3bn.

Nick Leeson

Barings; Lost £827m in 1995

Leeson, who worked in Barings' Singapore office, at first made great profits for the bank through unauthorised speculative trades in derivatives and futures. His efforts added £10m to Barings' annual income and earned Leeson a bonus of £130,000. However, his luck turned and he began hiding his trading losses in one of the bank's error accounts. The losses grew to £208m by the end of 1994 as he made more desperate attempts to recoup the money. Leeson fled in February 1995 after taking a final gamble that the Toyko Stock Exchange would not move significantly overnight. It would have been a pretty safe bet, had the Kobe earthquake not struck, sending Asia's markets into a frenzy. Leeson left a note saying "I'm sorry". The bank's losses at this stage were £827m, twice the bank's trading capital. After a failed bail-out attempt, Barings was declared insolvent, after more than two centuries of trading, on 26 February. In December 1995, Leeson was jailed for six years Singapore, and was released in 1999. He is now the commercial director of Galway United FC.

Toshihide Iguchi

Daiwa Bank; Lost £557m in 1995

Iguchi, a former car salesman who rose to become one of Daiwa's senior US executives, confessed in 1995 that he had lost £557m through unauthorised bond trading. Hiding his losses from his bosses while he tried to trade back to a profit, Iguchi sometimes traded as much as £250m worth of US Treasury securities in a day. It emerged he had falsified more than 30,000 trading slips over a decade. He was jailed for four years for fraud and falsifying documents, and had to pay £1.3m in fines.

John Rusnak

Allied Irish Bank (AIB); Lost £350m in 2002

Rusnak was a Baltimore-based currency trader for Allfirst bank, which had been part of the AIB Group. Betting mainly on the Japanese yen, Rusnak used fictitious options contracts to hide his trading losses of more than £350m over several years. By 2002, when checks revealed the bank's exposure, Rusnak had secretly bet £3.8bn of AIB's money on the yen rising against the dollar – a good deal more than his trading limit of £1.25m. Rusnak faced a jail sentence of 30 years, but achieved a 7.5-year term after a plea bargain with US prosecutors. He will have to pay £500 a month when he is released, and is still liable to pay back all of the £350m he lost.



Thursday, January 24, 2008

Lame duck citizens and the global economy



In regards to our global economy, one is better off reading Dostoevsky’s `The Gambler´ and saying to oneself, “at the present moment I must repair to the roulette-table,” than listening to George Bush deluding himself that “while there is some uncertainty, the financial markets are strong and solid.”

The truth is, our global markets have become a `lame duck´ and all we can do is wait for the next disaster to shake the corrupt foundation on which things have been run.

As Hugues Rialan, managing director in charge of discretionary asset management at Robeco France puts it, "if they [financial institutions] had a much more transparent communication, we would not have all the bombshells, or rumors of bombshells, that we're having today, with all the negative implications for the market.

The fact remains that people are reluctant to utter the word depression, and therefore all we are left with are the words of all those experts who created the mess in the first place. Just before ending 2007, York professor Peter Spencer, chief economist for the ITEM Club, warned; “I don't think the central banks are going to make a major policy error, but if they do, this could make 1929 look like a walk in the park." What has unraveled before our eyes since then, is a grim picture which threatens the very way in which we think of our wonderful `democratic societies’ and their ‘solid financial structures’.

We started 2008 with a series of announcements which should have shaken even the most faithful of believers in the goodness of our political and financial institutions. We recovered from our new year celebrations with legendary Wall Street guru and chief investment strategist of Pequot Capital Management, Byron Wien, telling us he expected oil to move between $80 and $115 a barrel, corn to rise to $6 a bushel, and gold to reach $1,000 an ounce. By the 7th of January, David Rosenberg, Merrill Lynch’s chief North American economist, was stating that “according to our analysis, this [recession] isn't even a forecast any more but is a present day reality."

The bad news kept rolling in; Goldman Sachs predicted that Japan was in danger of following the US into recession later in 2008, and The Bank of Japan announced that annual growth in bank loans was the slowest in nearly two years. Rolls Royce followed, informing us that 2,300 jobs would be cut as part of a cost reduction program.

By January 14th, recruitment companies Michael Page and Hays, were reporting hiring freezes in the City of London, and John Philpott, economist at the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development, was saying; "We expect this year to be the worst for job creation in a decade.” One day later, Goldman Sachs joined Morgan Stanley and Merrill Lynch in estimating that the US “may already be in a recession,” and Gerard Lyons, chief economist for Standard Chartered bank, followed by telling us “the US economy in our view is heading into a recession.”

On January 20th, Merrill Lynch published its worst quarter since its foundation almost 100 years ago, with a loss of $9.8 billion in the last three months of 2007.’ Citigroup followed suit, reporting a 40% cut in its dividend and an $18 billion write-down in its quarterly results.’ EMI (the world’s leading independent music company) used that day to warn it would cut one in three jobs.

By January 21st, Black Monday was upon us. The Spanish stock market registered its worst fall since 1987 with a drop of 7.54 percent, the Bombay stock exchange slid 7.41 percent, as brokers were unable to pay stock exchanges the money which they owed on the shares they had bought. Other stockmarkets were also down- Paris 5.48 percent, Frankfurt 7.16 percent, Milan 5.17 percent, the Swiss bourse 5.26 percent, Toronto 4.75 percent, Sao Paolo 6.6 percent, Buenos Aires 6.27 percent, Mexico 5.35 percent, Santiago 5.03 percent, Lima 8.35 percent, Tokyo 3.86 percent, Shanghai 5.14 percent, Hong Kong 5.49 percent and Seoul 2.95 percent.

Pedro Solbes, Spanish minister of economy and finance said, "there is no reason to exaggerate," Europe "is reasonably prepared" for a slowdown. He obviously forgot to acknowledge the fact that over 40,000 estate agents closed their doors in Spain in 2007.

Euro group president Jean-Claude Juncker commented: “We should not over-react to the events on the stock exchanges today,” although the economic and financial climate is “highly volatile and uncertain.”

That same day, S&P acknowledged that "the US housing market slump may last far longer than previously expected," and University of Maryland economist, Carmen Reinhart and Harvard University economist, Kenneth Rogoff, informed us that “the current crisis appears on track to be at least as bad as the five most catastrophic financial crises to hit industrialized countries since World War II.” Bank of America added: “The perfect storm took time to brew, but it hit hard and fast - much harder and faster than we expected.”

Discouraging news followed. Rumors came that Societe Generale which had repeatedly stated it didn’t have exposure to the troubled subprime mortgage market, could possibly unveil write-downs. Then Commerzbank’s chief executive acknowledged further write-downs on the value of its subprime linked investments, and rumors surfaced that Bank of China may become the latest banking casualty from the collapse of America's sub-prime mortgage market. According to the Financial Times, in a Chinese stock market crash “since most publicly listed companies are state-owned… Large-scale public protest is a possibility.”

By January 22nd, billionaire investor George Soros emphasized that the United States was facing a possible recession and that the world was eying the worst financial crisis since World War II. Paul Sheard, global chief economist at Lehman Brothers, warned: "at the moment we are seeing the global imbalances unwind -- so far it has been orderly, but there are signs that it could become a little more disorderly."

The truth remains that The Federal Home Loan Bank system has injected $750bn into mortgage banks since the beginning of the crunch, $210bn in November alone. In the past 10 days, Citigroup has cut 4200 positions after its biggest quarterly loss. Fourth-quarter earnings of Bank of America Corp. and Wachovia Corp., the second and fourth largest U.S. banks, have plummeted after more than $6 billion of combined mortgage related writedowns. Germany’s investor confidence has dropped to its lowest since 1992, and the first signs have emerged that China's economy may be slowing.

Worse still, this turbulence is far from over. According to former US treasury secretary Lawrence Summers, "there is the possibility, not yet at all the probability, that a recession could prove long and severe." From Bernard Connolly’s perspective, global strategist at Banque AIG, "the next really big shock to financial markets is likely to be the risk of collapse in the EMU [European Economic and Monetary Union] credit bubble: the private sector credit consequences are likely to be catastrophic.”

So although Josef Ackermann, chief executive of Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank AG says: "I hope that we don't swing to… an irrational depression," I am inclined to believe that rational thought will be the detonator of an acknowledged depression. The sooner the better, the more we hide things under the carpet, the more our global economy will look like a scaled-up version of the Enron scandal. I tend to agree with Klaus Schwab, the World Economic Forum's founder and chairman, when he states; "We have to pay for the sins of the past." The question I ask is: who will end up paying the price? It seems clear to me as this poker game unravels, that the true “lame duck” is going to be the taxpayer.

Pablo Ouziel is a sociologist and a freelance writer based in Spain.
From
January 24, 2008

Relax. Our economy isn’t manic depressive


At the beginning of this year I wrote that if the financial markets did not resolve the credit crisis by February, the governments of the world would have to come up with a Plan B. Central banks would slash interest rates or governments would cut taxes and offer guarantees or regulators would fudge accounting rules to ensure that banks could keep lending.

Events have moved faster than I expected. On Tuesday, the US Federal Reserve Board implemented its biggest rate cut since the early 1980s. Previously implacable enemies in the US political leadership have reached a bipartisan agreement on $150 billion of emergency tax cuts. In Britain, Gordon Brown has offered Northern Rock shareholders the biggest subsidy ever paid by any government to any private company.

Does this hyperactivity mean that the world economy is on the brink of catastrophe? Or does it suggest that the credit crunch is now almost over, and that the world economy faces only a moderate slowdown or, at worst, a mild recession?

The risks are certainly greater today than they have been since the 2001 US and European recession – and for Britain the prospects seem dimmer than at any time since 1992. But is this really, as George Soros proclaimed, in an article for the Financial Times, “the worst market crisis in 60 years”?

The claim is unequivocally wrong, since the 20 per cent fall in share prices and the US mortgage problem cannot remotely compare with the crises that racked the world economy in the 1970s and early 1980s, when inflation and interest rates soared to 20 per cent, stock markets plunged by 80 per cent in real terms, big banks fell like ninepins and unemployment was double or triple the present level.

Allowing for poetic licence, however, Mr Soros offers the most persuasive case for the prosecution. His argument rests on three assumptions, each of which offers important insights into how the global economy got into its present troubles, but which may nonetheless prove misleading in anticipating what happens next.

His first insight is that this crisis is more than just a typical boom-bust cycle. This cycle, he contends, marks the climax of a 60-year boom in consumer borrowing and credit growth. This has produced excesses in banking, asset values and financial innovation that will take years or decades to unwind. Economies addicted to easy credit will be devastated if their banking systems suffer a long-term decline, which is what Mr Soros’s “super-cycle” implies.

His second insight is that reversal of “the 60-year super-boom” will damage America most, ending the global dominance of the dollar and shifting the balance of power in the world economy to the creditor nations of Asia and the Middle East.

Both these points are absolutely valid. The reversal of credit growth, the slowdown in US consumption and the shift in economic power towards Asia will all undoubtedly happen, but there is no evidence that these shifts will be so abrupt as to cause a serious recession, still less the greatest economic crisis for 60 years.

Mr Soros’s third, and most important, insight is that the two super-cycles he describes – in global credit and in US consumption – were part of an even bigger super-cycle in politics. The excesses of financial innovation and consumer spending were encouraged by deregulation, based on a belief that the market was always right and could solve its own problems. This “market fundamentalism” ignored, in Mr Soros’s view, the driving force of all boom-bust cycles, which is what he calls “reflexivity”. As markets are driven not by reality but by investors’ often misguided views about reality, prices tend to overshoot on the way up (when everyone is too bullish) and also on the way down. As investors chase prices up or down, they change reality and justify their own expectations.

The collapse of confidence in the US banking system is changing reality and causing a recession that will justify investors’ fears of further catastrophic deterioration in the banks. But Mr Soros’s assumption ignores a powerful force in human nature: rationality. Businesses driven by the profit motive have a natural bias to try to create wealth, rather than destroy it – and they elect governments to support, rather than sabotage, this process.

Mr Soros is right that markets have a natural tendency to create reflexive boom-bust cycles. A world of pure market fundamentalism would degenerate into the madhouse of manic-depressive speculation that Mr Soros describes. That, however, is not the real world. Laissez-faire politicians constantly overrule market forces when they face serious crises.

Politicians are naturally less eager to limit excessive booms than devastating busts. There are, of course, times when governments fail to stimulate an economy enough to prevent a serious recession. There are also situations where governments and central banks have been constrained in providing stimulus, either by high inflation or ERM membership. In general, though, it is much more likely that politicians will err on the side of too much stimulus, rather than doing too little too late. This is the main reason why the world economy has a bias towards long booms and short, shallow slowdowns.

My hunch is that a combination of monetary and fiscal easing, along with some regulatory changes – the political Plan B – will lessen the credit crisis and prevent a world recession. So, will stabilising rationality or destabilising reflexivity emphasised by Mr Soros be the main force driving the economy this year? It is impossible to say for certain yet. But we will soon find out.

... He (Original rogue trader Mr Leeson) said: "What shocked me was the size. I never for one moment thought it would get to this degree of magnitude, this degree of loss."




4.15pm GMT update

Société Générale uncovers £3.7bn fraud by rogue trader


A rogue trader has cost French bank Société Générale €4.9bn (£3.7bn) in the biggest fraud in financial history.

News of the fraud, which will virtually wipe out 2007 profits at France's second-largest bank, sent shockwaves through European markets, already battered by the escalating credit crisis.

SocGen also revealed that it is being forced to make further write-downs of €2bn relating to the credit crisis and said it would have to raise €5.5bn in fresh capital to strengthen its balance sheet.

The bank gave few details about the trader, who has already been dubbed "the French Nick Leeson".

Leeson was the rogue trader who brought down Barings Bank in 1995, with losses of £800m. But the SocGen fraud is more than four times that figure.

By late afternoon SocGen had filed a formal complaint with the public prosecutor in Nanterre, on the outskirts of Paris, on three main charges: fraudulent falsification of banking records, use of such records and computer fraud.

The bank insisted that it had taken this measure to "contain the impact of the loss".

While the bank refused to name him, it is now known that he is 31-year-old Jerome Kerviel, who it worked in the bank's Delta One products team in Paris. SocGen's Delta One business includes programme trading, exchange traded funds (ETFs), swaps, index and quantitative trading.

Kerviel joined the bank in the summer of 2000.

SocGen, founded in 1864 and one of France's most prestigious companies, said the Paris-based trader had confessed to his actions, which involved "massive" fraudulent positions in 2007 and 2008, beyond his "limited authority". The trader has been responsible for "plain vanilla futures hedging on European equity market indices", the bank said.

It discovered the fraud last weekend and decided to close the positions as soon as possible. Their size, and the very unfavourable market conditions in which it was forced to unravel the trades, led to the €4.9bn hit.

"Aided by his in-depth knowledge of the control procedures resulting from his former employment in the middle-office, he managed to conceal these positions through a scheme of elaborate fictitious transactions," the bank said.

A "thorough analysis" of all positions in his department has been undertaken, which has confirmed the "isolated and exceptional nature of this fraud".

The trader has confessed to the fraud, SocGen said, and is in the process of being dismissed, as are his managers.

SocGen said chairman and chief executive Daniel Bouton had offered his resignation but this was rejected. The board reaffirmed its confidence in him and in the top management and said it has asked Bouton to "lead the group back on track for profitable growth".

Bouton said he and his deputy Philippe Citerne will both give up their salary until June 30 in the light of the losses.

Speaking at a hastily called press conference in Paris this morning, Bouton said the rogue trader was acting alone and does not appear to have gained personally from the unauthorised trading. He added: "I don't know the person and his motives are totally irrational."

SocGen executives refused to account for why the trader had been allowed to leave the building - and possibly flee the country - without yet being interviewed by police.

The French prime minister, François Fillon, speaking from the World Economic Forum in Davos, attempted to reassure markets, saying that while the SocGen situation was serious, it was not tied to the current turbulence.

The Bank of France has set up an inquiry and the French government was following the situation with "very, very great attention," Fillon told reporters.

"Société Générale has had to deal with a very major case of fraud. It is a serious case but at the same time it has nothing to do with the situation on the financial markets," he said.

"I note that (SocGen) has taken very significant measures to tackle this situation. I note that the Bank of France indicated that it wasn't worried about the solidity of this banking establishment. I am happy about that."Trading in the bank's shares was briefly suspended on the Paris market this morning. When dealing resumed, they fell just over 4% to €75.87, taking their loss since the start of the year to more than 20%.

News of the fraud and credit crunch write-downs sent shockwaves through the banking sector this morning. Rival French bank BNP Paribas rushed to reassure the market, saying it does not expect any exceptional losses in its 2007 accounts that would justify a profit warning.

"The process of closing the 2007 accounts of BNP Paribas is continuing in a satisfactory manner," it said in a statement. "It has not revealed any loss of item that would justify any particular warning to the market."

In an effort to allay fears over its figures, the bank said it would publish its preliminary results for 2007 next week.

Roger Steare, professor of organisational ethics at Cass Business School in London said the SocGen scandal was further evidence of a "systemic deficit in ethical values" in the banking industry.

He said: "This latest rogue trader scandal is yet more evidence that while rules-based regulation and controls work for kids in the playground, it won't stop adults doing the wrong thing.

"The banking industry used to have a reputation for honesty, trust and prudence. This latest scandal, on top of the massive losses in credit markets, and the ongoing incidence of mis-selling to retail customers, indicates that there is a systemic deficit in ethical values within the banking industry."

SocGen said chairman and chief executive Daniel Bouton had offered his resignation but this was rejected. The board reaffirmed its confidence in him and in the top management and said it has asked Bouton to "lead the group back on track for profitable growth".

Bouton said he and his deputy Philippe Citerne will both give up their salary until June 30 in the light of the losses.

Speaking at a hastily-called press conference in Paris this morning, Bouton said the rogue trader was acting alone and does not appear to have gained personally from the unauthorised trading. He added: "I don't know the person and his motives are totally irrational."

SocGen executives refused to account for why the trader had been allowed to leave the building - and possibly flee the country - without yet being interviewed by police.

The French prime minister, François Fillon, speaking from the World Economic Forum in Davos, attempted to reassure markets, saying that while the SocGen situation was serious, it was not tied to the current turbulence.

The Bank of France has set up an inquiry and the French government was following the situation with "very, very great attention," Fillon told reporters.

"Société Générale has had to deal with a very major case of fraud. It is a serious case but at the same time it has nothing to do with the situation on the financial markets," he said.

"I note that (SocGen) has taken very significant measures to tackle this situation. I note that the Bank of France indicated that it wasn't worried about the solidity of this banking establishment. I am happy about that," he added.

Trading in the bank's shares was briefly suspended on the Paris market this morning. When dealing resumed, they fell just over 4% to €75.87, taking their loss since the start of the year to more than 20%.

News of the fraud and credit crunch write-downs sent shockwaves through the banking sector this morning. Rival French bank BNP Paribas rushed to reassure the market, saying it does not expect any exceptional losses in its 2007 accounts that would justify a profit warning.

"The process of closing the 2007 accounts of BNP Paribas is continuing in a satisfactory manner," it said in a statement. "It has not revealed any loss of item that would justify any particular warning to the market."

In an effort to allay fears over its figures, the bank said it would publish its preliminary results for 2007 next week.

Roger Steare, professor of organisational ethics at Cass Business School in London said the SocGen scandal was further evidence of a "systemic deficit in ethical values" in the banking industry.

He said: "This latest rogue trader scandal is yet more evidence that while rules-based regulation and controls work for kids in the playground, it won't stop adults doing the wrong thing.

"The banking industry used to have a reputation for honesty, trust and prudence. This latest scandal, on top of the massive losses in credit markets, and the ongoing incidence of mis-selling to retail customers, indicates that there is a systemic deficit in ethical values within the banking industry."





Rogue trader: bank admits losing billions


By Holly Williams, PA
Thursday, 24 January 2008

The second biggest bank in France today admitted it had lost 4.9 billion euros (£3.7bn) at the hands of a rogue trader in one of the biggest banking frauds in history.

Societe Generale claimed it had been the victim of an elaborate deception by an "irrational" trader, reportedly 31-year-old Frenchman Jerome Kerviel, based in the group's Paris office.

The bank, which has not confirmed the trader's identity, said he racked up hefty losses after gambling away billions of pounds on the direction of stock markets in a series of secret transactions.

The near-five billion euro fraud dwarfs the losses involved in the infamous "rogue trader" case in 1995, when Nick Leeson caused the collapse of Barings bank after costing the group around £800 million.

The scale of the loss suffered by Societe Generale appears to have been exaggerated by the extreme volatility seen in financial markets in recent weeks.

Market experts have also suggested the bank's efforts to unravel the trades could have been behind some of the unusually dramatic turbulence seen this week.

Societe Generale described its losses as "colossal", but said the fraud would not bring the bank to its knees.

The group discovered late last week that one of its traders had set up unauthorised and hidden trading positions last year and early this year.

The trader used his knowledge of the group's back office and security systems, gained while in a previous position, according to the bank.

Societe Generale said the trader had confessed to the "exceptional fraud" and was in the process of being dismissed, along with four or five managers.

However, the group said it had rejected chairman and chief executive Daniel Bouton's offer of resignation.

According to the Financial Times, Mr Kerviel was a junior on Societe Generale's futures desk, having joined the bank in 2000.

He reportedly worked for the group's back office function before being promoted two years ago to Societe Generale's Delta One trading desk.

It is understood that Societe Generale is unsure of the trader's current whereabouts and that he has yet to be formerly fired despite confessing to the fraud over the weekend.

Societe Generale said its loss - combined with £1.53 billion in relation to losses and write-downs linked to the US sub-prime mortgage market - will force it into a 5.5 billion euros (£4.1 billion) capital raising to boost its balance sheet.

But Societe Generale stressed it would still make net income for 2007 of between 600 million and 800 million euros (£448m to £597m) despite the fraud.

Societe Generale boss Mr Bouton said he believed the trader was acting alone.

He said: "I don't know the person and his motives are totally irrational.

"It doesn't seem that he was able to benefit from these colossal trades and directly he did not, that is for sure, although investigations will have to be carried out."

The group confirmed that four or five of the trader's managers had resigned after the discovery at the weekend.

Societe Generale said it was just "bad luck" that the fraud was discovered amid this week's market turbulence.

The unauthorised trades may even have returned gains if it had not been for the market losses, according to the group.

Mr Bouton said: "This is just bad luck, it's Murphy's Law. We discovered it at the same time as the markets plummeted.

"US markets went up last night and we were really unlucky, but we had to settle these positions as fast as we could and we did so during the three-day market crisis."

Mr Bouton dismissed similarities between the fall of Barings and its own fraud case.

"The future of the bank's activities has not been affected and as a result there's no macro-economic impact," he said.

The group also claimed that its compliance procedures were not at fault, adding that it had increased its back office workforce by 50% to around 2,000 staff last year.

But original rogue trader Mr Leeson said, speaking on BBC News 24, that he was surprised the banking system was still vulnerable to these scandals.

He said: "What shocked me was the size. I never for one moment thought it would get to this degree of magnitude, this degree of loss."

Investment banking audit expert Sandy Kumar, a partner at accounting giant Grant Thornton, also raised questions over the internal checks in place, which should pick up on any unauthorised trades on a daily basis.

He said: "Most banks have cases where traders have been naughty, but in the majority of cases it is managed internally and kept quiet. It is the sheer scale of this which is unusual."

"It suggested that the independent checks just weren't picking up on the trades," added Mr Kumar.

The Bank of France said there would be an inquiry by the Banking Commission, but declined to comment further.

The case comes less than six months after fellow French bank Credit Agricole unearthed unauthorised trading at its New York subsidiary, which cost the group 250 million euros (£187 million).

Societe Generale was founded more than 140 years ago and is France's second largest bank by market value behind BNP Paribas.

It has a London office employing more than 2,000 staff.

Only this month, the bank was named Equity Derivatives House of the Year by Risk magazine.

Martin Slaney, head of derivatives at GFT Global Markets, said it was "staggering" that 4.9 billion euros worth of losses could be concealed.

"I've certainly never seen anything like this scandal before.

"The market is suspicious that such big trades could be hidden and potentially that there is something more sinister at play."

Shares in Societe Generale dived 6% today on news of the fraud and sub-prime write-downs.

The stock has been under pressure in recent months and analysts are reported to believe that the fraud revelation may weaken its position further making the bank a potential takeover target.



... a CUSTOMS broker.








Economics Journalist Robert Kuttner on the “Most Serious Financial Crisis Since the Great Depression”: “This is the Result of Rightwing Ideology and the Political Power of Wall Street”

Amid growing fears of a worldwide recession, the Federal Reserve slashed a key interest rate by three-quarters of a percentage point on Tuesday, the biggest single cut in nearly a quarter of a century. Meanwhile, President Bush and congressional leaders pledged to work together on a stimulus measure that would inject about $150 billion in additional money into the economy. But many economists are skeptical over whether any measures can turn around a severe slump in the housing market and the subprime mortgage crisis, signs of growing unemployment and weakening consumer spending and the added blow of record high oil prices. We speak to veteran economics journalist Robert Kuttner and Robert Weissman, co-director of the corporate accountability group Essential Action and editor of Multinational Monitor magazine. [includes rush transcript]


Guests:

Robert Kuttner, Veteran economics and financial journalist. He is a founder and co-editor of the American Prospect magazine and a former investigator for the Senate Banking Committee. He is the author of seven books, his latest is The Squandering of America: How the Failure of Our Politics Undermines Our Prosperity.

Robert Weissman, Co-director of Essential Action, a corporate accountability group based in Washington, D.C. He is also editor of Multinational Monitor magazine.

Rush Transcript

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AMY GOODMAN: Amid growing fears of a worldwide recession, the Federal Reserve slashed a key interest rate by three-quarters of a percentage point Tuesday, the biggest single cut in nearly a quarter of a century. The move marks only the fifth time in history the Fed has reduced the overnight federal funds rate outside of its scheduled policy meetings. The last time was after the 9/11 attacks, when the Fed cut rates by half a percentage point.

The Fed’s move was prompted in part by turmoil in global markets Monday with stock averages in Japan and Germany and elsewhere seeing some of their worst declines in decades. On Wall Street, stocks plunged at the opening of trading on Tuesday, propelling the Dow Jones Industrial Average down about 400 points before climbing back up to close down about one percent. The major US market indexes are down about ten percent so far in January.

Meanwhile, President Bush and congressional leaders pledged to work together on a bipartisan stimulus measure that would inject about $150 billion in additional money into the economy. Flanked by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, Bush told reporters he’s confident an agreement on a stimulus package could be reached.

    PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH: I believe we can find common ground to get something done that’s big enough and effective enough so that an economy that is inherently strong gets a boost to make sure that this uncertainty doesn’t translate into, you know, more economic woes for our workers and small-business people. And so, I really want to thank you all for coming, and I’m looking forward to our discussions.

    And—look, there’s a—everybody wants to get something done quickly, but we want to make sure it gets done right and make sure that we’re—everybody is realistic about a—the timetable. Legislative bodies don’t move as—you know, necessarily in an orderly, quick way. And therefore, these leaders are committed, and they want to get something done. But we want to make sure we’re realistic about how fast that can possibly happen. So when we say “as soon as possible,” that means within the—obviously within the ability of these bodies to effectively do their jobs. So I have got reasonable expectations about how fast something can happen, but I also am optimistic that something will happen. And I appreciate very much the leadership being here today.


AMY GOODMAN: But many economists are skeptical over whether any measures can turn around a severe slump in the housing market and the subprime mortgage crisis, signs of growing unemployment and weakening consumer spending and the added blow of record-high oil prices.

Robert Kuttner joins us today, veteran economics and financial journalist, founder and co-editor of American Prospect magazine, former investigator for the Senate Banking Committee, author of seven books—his latest, The Squandering of America: How the Failure of Our Politics Undermines Our Prosperity. He is also former general manager of Pacifica station WBAI in New York, joining us here in our firehouse studio. Joining us in Washington, Robert Weissman, co-director of Essential Action, a corporate accountability group. He’s also editor of Multinational Monitor magazine.

We welcome you both to Democracy Now! The solutions now—the Fed interest-rate cut, the stimulus package—is this enough, Robert Kuttner?

ROBERT KUTTNER: No, it’s not the beginning of enough. And I think the place to start is to recognize why this recession is different from all other recessions. This began and is continuing with a collapse in credit markets, and the collapse in credit markets is, in turn, the result of deregulation gone nuts. And it’s a repeat of a lot of things that happened in the 1920s, where there was too much speculation with too much borrowed money and a complete lack of transparency. The regulators, the public had no idea of what these bonds that had been created out of subprime mortgages really contained, what they were worth. The people who packaged them were not subject to any kind of regulatory scrutiny.

And when it turned out that a lot of these loans were never going to be paid back, the layer upon layer upon layer of bonds and then securities based on the bonds—you know, if you can picture the World Trade Center collapsing floor by floor or you can picture the collapse of the Ponzi schemes of the 1920s, that’s a good—or horrible—analogy. And when you have a credit contraction, it means that banks have less capital against which to make loans, and lowering interest rates doesn’t fix that.

There are two other things that lowering interest rates and an ordinary stimulus package won’t fix. One, you alluded to in your opening comments, Amy, and that’s the collapse in housing prices. At the current rate of decline in housing values, American homeowners—and that’s about 70 percent of Americans—are going to lose $2.2 trillion of net worth this year alone. Well, when you lose $2.2 trillion of savings, you’re not inclined to rush out and do home improvements, you’re not inclined to rush out and buy durable goods. And again, compared to that kind of a loss, a stimulus—and they’re talking about $140–$145 billion, that’s one percent of GDP—that’s a drop in the bucket.

Lastly, this occurs on top of thirty years of increasing insecurity on a whole bunch of fronts: the greater risk of losing your job, the greater risk of having your paycheck not keep pace with inflation, rising energy costs, rising tuition costs, rising health insurance costs. All of the things that make you middle class have become more difficult to attain in the past thirty years. So you’ve got a three-layer cake here. You’ve got this thirty-year history of flat or declining living standards for most Americans, you’ve got this terrible weakness in financial markets, and you’ve got this housing collapse.

AMY GOODMAN: Thirty years would take us back to the beginning of Reagan.

ROBERT KUTTNER: A little bit before, actually. I mean, the great experiment in deregulation really started under Carter in the late 1970s. It was Carter who started the deregulation of trucking and natural gas and broadcasting. And the whole ideology of deregulation and the practice of deregulation was unfortunately bipartisan.

AMY GOODMAN: Rob Weissman, you talk about deregulation and the financial crisis, and you talk about at least five distinct regulatory failures that led to the current crisis. First, explain deregulation, and then go through what you think these failures are.

ROBERT WEISSMAN: Well, there’s both the actual rollback of regulation, is the ones were in place, that kind of deregulation. There’s also a kind of non-regulation, the failure of government agencies to exercise authority that they have, but just choose not to use or choose not—authority they choose not to assert. There are five that I laid out in a recent column, but there are many more, as Bob is referencing, including ones that led directly or indirectly to this crisis.

I think one big-picture deregulatory failure was the failure to manage the trade deficit. The US trade deficit led to this huge accumulation of capital in countries like China, and that capital had to find a place to go, and that ended up lowering interest rates and sort of chasing after all kinds of investments, including the mortgage investments that were the trigger for this crisis.

A second regulatory failure was the failure to address the housing bubble. Even if interest rates were low, there was a lot of ability for especially Federal Reserve Chair Alan Greenspan to pop the bubble before it reached the point that it got to. And this is not just a retrospective criticism. People at the time identified the housing bubble as taking place. And you had to believe that the rules of economy, as they have existed for the last hundred years, had been suspended to think that we didn’t have a housing bubble. But Greenspan let it go by.

A third failure was the broader financial deregulatory failure, which is both a specific rollback of prior financial regulations on Wall Street and on big banks and, more generally, a laissez-faire attitude about let finance do whatever it wants. And Wall Street has gone crazy over the last decade, and now we’re going to pay a very serious price for that.

With the government not acting, there were private actors that were supposed to regulate and provide important signals for high finance. Those are especially the credit rating agencies, like Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s. They failed totally, probably because of their own conflicts of interest, in part.

And finally, there was the failure to regulate in the housing market itself, with all the subprime mortgage lending abuses. Again, these were things that were identified not just in the last couple months, but five years ago. You’ve had guests on from ACORN and other organizations fighting against predatory lending. We’ve reported on it. This is something that people highlighted over the years, but was let to spin completely out of control by a federal government that didn’t care and by state governments that sometimes care, but were often lobbied against doing anything by the banking industry itself.

AMY GOODMAN: We’re talking to Robert Weissman, co-director of Essential Action, editor of Multinational Monitor magazine; and Robert Kuttner, veteran economic journalist, author of the book The Squandering of America. We’ll be back with both of them in a minute.

[break]

AMY GOODMAN: I’m Amy Goodman, as we talk about the crisis in the economy today with two experts. Robert Kuttner, veteran economic journalist, author of The Squandering of America: How the Failure of Our Politics Undermines Our Prosperity, he is the co-editor of American Prospect. Robert Weissman is with us in Washington. He is editor of Multinational Monitor magazine and co-director of Essential Action.

Robert Kuttner, that image that we have of President Bush flanked by Nancy Pelosi, the House Speaker, and Harry Reid, the Senate Majority Leader, either all of them—Bush, Pelosi and Reid, the images—going to solve this problem or all owning this problem. What is your response?

ROBERT KUTTNER: Well, let’s bring this back to politics. There’s a big risk that the Democrats, trying to be realists, trying to help out in a crisis, enact something that President Bush can sign, and then their fingerprints are on a piece of legislation that is obviously not going to solve the problem. There’s a time for bipartisanship, and there’s a time for a partisan difference. It seems to me the duty of an opposition party is to oppose, and this is one of those moments when the Democrats would be well-advised to really clarify the differences between themselves and President Bush.

But I want to bring it back to politics in a broader sense. Rob Weissman, I think very eloquently, ticked off all the multiple failures of deregulation. This did not just happen. This was not an accident. This was the agenda of business, particularly Wall Street, going back thirty years. And if you look at the history of this, the Great Depression discredited free-market ideology, because it was such a colossal practical failure. Nobody in the 1930s could argue with a straight face that free markets worked. And so, we had a whole mixed economy, a regulatory structure invented during the New Deal, that really lasted thirty or forty years. By the ’70s, for a variety of reasons, big business had recovered a lot of the political power that it had lost in the Depression. And both parties, beginning with Carter, continuing with Clinton, became enablers of the kind of deregulation that finally has come home to roost in this crisis.

So now we’re learning, painfully, for a second time a lesson that we never should have had to learn twice, that markets don’t regulate themselves. Markets, left to their own devices, create grotesque inequality, ruin the environment and ruin the economy. And we’re seeing that unfold.

AMY GOODMAN: And what could the Democrats do right now as an opposition party?

ROBERT KUTTNER: Well, I think there are three things they ought to be doing. First of all, there’s the housing mess. We need something like the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation of the 1930s, where a government agency, financed by government bonds, would buy these bonds back from Citigroup and Merrill and whoever at a steep discount, maybe thirty or forty cents on the dollar—they’ve already been written down to zero, because nobody wants to buy them—and turn them back into affordable mortgages, turn them into mortgages that would have a rate below market instead of the kind of predatory rate that subprime mortgages had. And you could then repopulate these houses. People on the brink of foreclosure would be able to keep their houses. Other people could become homeowners. So you need a much bolder approach to the housing crisis.

Secondly, I don’t even think “stimulus” is a good word. You need a recovery program. And a recovery program means not just a quick shot in the arm, it means reversing all of the things that make it harder to be middle class in this country. It means everything from a massive program of infrastructure repair to energy independence to good jobs in the service sector, reversing the whole thirty-year trajectory of ordinary people finding that their personal economic situation is insecure, they can’t keep up with the cost of living. And a “stimulus” implies a kind of a quick jolt to get us out of a temporary problem. This is not a temporary problem, this is a long-term problem. It’s going to require long-term solutions. And that doesn’t even get at some of the harder stuff, like the dependency on foreign borrowing that was caused by chronic trade deficits that in turn were the result of bad trade policies.

AMY GOODMAN: We’re going to turn to an excerpt of the Democratic debate now that took place in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. Senators Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, John Edwards sparred over the economy. This was the first question put on the issue of the economy, put by CNN moderator Joe Johns.

    JOE JOHNS: Senator Clinton, good evening. The number one issue for Americans of both parties is the economy, and today the news is simply not good. Markets around the world are in a tailspin because of fears of a US recession. So far this year, the Dow has lost nearly nine percent. How much money would your stimulus plan put in the pockets of the average South Carolinian?

    SEN. HILLARY CLINTON: Well, Joe, I’m glad you started with the economy, because that is the number one issue: what’s been happening in the markets, what’s been happening with the home mortgage crisis, $100-a-barrel oil, so many of the issues that are really at the kitchen tables of Americans today and what they’re talking to me about.

    We have to stimulate the economy. I began calling for some kind of economic action plan back at the beginning of December. I have a package of $110 billion. $70 billion of that would go toward dealing with the mortgage crisis, which, unfortunately, I don’t think that President Bush has really taken seriously enough.

    I would have a moratorium on home foreclosures for ninety days to try to help families work it out so that they don’t lose their homes. We’re in danger of seeing millions of Americans become basically, you know, homeless and losing the American dream.

    I want to have an interest rate freeze for five years, because these adjustable-rate mortgages, if they keep going up, the problem will just get compounded. And we need more transparency in the market. Then, I think we need to give people about $650, if they qualify, which will be millions of people, to help pay their energy bills this winter.

    SEN. BARACK OBAMA: It is absolutely critical right now to give a stimulus to the economy. And Senator Clinton mentioned tax rebates. That wasn’t the original focus of her plan. I think recently she has caught up with what I had originally said, which is we’ve got to get taxes into the—tax cuts into the pockets of hard-working Americans right away. And it is important for us to make sure that they are not just going to the wealthy. They should be going to folks who are making $75,000 a year or less, and they should be going to folks who only pay payroll tax, but typically are not paying income tax. If we do that, then not only can we stimulate the economy, those are the folks who are most likely to spend money right away.

    WOLF BLITZER: Do you agree with her, $650 is a good number for a tax rebate?

    SEN. BARACK OBAMA: Well, I think that we are going to have to get some immediate money. What I do is I say, for a typical family, $500 for a tax rebate per family. But also, for senior citizens, get a supplement to their Social Security check, because they get that every month. We know exactly how to do it. And that would provide seniors all across the country right away some money to help pay for their heating bills and other expenses that they’ve got right now.

    JOHN EDWARDS: Now, one difference between what I have proposed and what my two colleagues have proposed is I have done something that not only stimulates the economy, but creates long-term benefits: investment in green infrastructure, which creates jobs. Instead of just getting money out in the short term, this will actually create jobs over the long term, create green infrastructure. Yes, we need to do something about the mortgage crisis.

    I want to mention one last thing. There is one other issue that was mentioned in passing by the two of them, which is the issue of jobs. And there is a difference between myself and my colleagues on this issue of jobs, because they both supported the Peru trade deal. My view is the Peru trade deal was similar to NAFTA. And this is crucial to the state of South Carolina and—

    WOLF BLITZER: But—

    JOHN EDWARDS: No, no—crucial to the state of the South Carolina and jobs in South Carolina. South Carolina has been devastated by NAFTA and trade deals like NAFTA.

    WOLF BLITZER: But I just want to be precise. What you’re proposing are really long-term objectives. In terms of a short-term stimulus package, you disagree with them on an immediate tax rebate.

    JOHN EDWARDS: No, no. What I’m saying is, if we do what we should do to green the economy, if we change our unemployment insurance laws, modernize them to make them available to more people, to more Americans, if we in fact get help to the states, which gets money straight into the economy, and we deal with the mortgage crisis in a serious way with a home rescue fund to provide transitional financing for those people who are about to lose their homes, all those things will stimulate the economy.


AMY GOODMAN: Former Senator Edwards, Senator Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton debating in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. Robert Weissman, your assessment? Did they satisfactorily come up with proposals that will resolve this crisis?

ROBERT WEISSMAN: Well, everything they say isn’t bad, but of course the answer is no. And also, it’s interesting to hear the questioner, Wolf Blitzer, impose the conventional wisdom on presidential candidates. There is a need to take immediate action. And while I—my guess—and I don’t claim to be an expert in this area—is that Bob’s sense of how deep this problem is is right. There is a possibility that a short-term fix will paper it over for a while. We shouldn’t underestimate the adaptability of the global capitalist and financial capitalist system. It’s proven itself quite resilient in a lot of ways.

A huge danger is that a short-term response—and I think these are inadequate, but not trivial—will enable policymakers and the public to look away from the much deeper problems that Bob is talking about and that must be addressed, which include the excessive financialization of the economy, not just the deregulation, but the capture of political and economic power by Wall Street over the rest of the economy, its major control over what we do.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, let me put that question to Bob, to Robert Kuttner, editor of the American Prospect, author of Squandering of America. Do you think their answers were satisfactory?

ROBERT KUTTNER: I think Edwards came closest, because, first of all, what he was proposing was bolder and bigger, but also he was tying the need for short-term medicine to the need for longer-term structural change. And I liked the idea of putting money into green infrastructure that would promote energy independence, promote a cleaner economy and also create some good jobs. I think Rob Weissman is right that the conventional wisdom, as enforced by the usual media suspects, keeps this narrowly focused as a stimulus. And it’s really a down payment on a longer-term recovery strategy. So Edwards comes closest.

And I think even Edwards doesn’t go far enough, because if you think about 600 bucks a year, that’s twelve bucks a week, you know, in the face of a ten percent increase in health insurance premiums and a ten percent increase in gas at the pump and tuition costs. And now you’ve got rising food prices because of all the mistaken use of food production for energy and the assault on the environment. So you’re going to have a kind of ’70s stagflation on top of everything else, where you’ve got declining purchasing power and rising inflation. What even the Democrats are proposing doesn’t begin to come to terms with that. And they need to be saying so.

And finally, they need to hang this around the necks, not just of the Republican Party, not just around George W. Bush, but around the whole conservative ideology, because this economic mess is the gift that’s going to keep on giving, unfortunately, for years to come, of rightwing ideology put into practice in its most extreme form since Reagan. And that message, I think, has to keep getting out. This did not come out of thin air. This was not like a comet striking the earth. This was the result of rightwing ideology and the political power of Wall Street taking over the economy.

AMY GOODMAN: You’ve talked about a crash, like 1929. Is that what you see?

ROBERT KUTTNER: I think the Fed has some powers now that it didn’t have in 1929. The Fed is determined to try and get out ahead of this. Mercifully, all of the stabilizers of the New Deal were not repealed, even though a lot of Republicans wanted to. We still have unemployment comp, although it’s too weak. We still have Social Security; the Republicans didn’t manage to privatize that. We still have Federal Deposit Insurance, or we’d have runs on banks. So they didn’t repeal the entire New Deal, thank God.

On the other hand, the similarities—the weakness in credit markets, the assault on financial institutions, the hit that purchasing power has taken, the speculation with other people’s money and these pyramiding schemes—are all too familiar. So I can say flatly, this is the most serious financial crisis since the Great Depression, and we’ve only begun to see how bad it is.

AMY GOODMAN: What about specifically the role of the banks on Wall Street? You had Jesse Jackson leading a march on Wall Street with the subprime crimes, as he called them, the subprime crisis—

ROBERT KUTTNER: Yes.

AMY GOODMAN: —saying that they should give back their bonuses at Christmas to deal with this crisis.

ROBERT KUTTNER: Right.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you name the names of these companies and what they should be doing right now, or what should be done to them? And again the role of the opposition party here—we’re in an election year—they could be making a statement or join with the ruling party, with the Republicans, and support President Bush right now.

ROBERT KUTTNER: Well, you know, some people have this picture of subprime lenders as these neighborhood predators. They were put in business by Citigroup. They were put in business by Merrill Lynch. They were put in business by the bluest chip names on Wall Street.

The prime enabler under Clinton of deregulation was Robert Rubin, Secretary of the Treasury. And Rubin comes out of Goldman Sachs, then he goes to work as one of Clinton’s top guys. He presides over the repeal of the key piece of New Deal legislation designed to prevent conflicts of interest, the Glass-Steagall Act. And then he lets a short interval go by, and then he becomes chairman of the executive committee of Citigroup, which was only able to become the kind of conglomerate it did because of the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act. Now, that’s a flat-out conflict of interest.

And so, what should the big banks do? Well, they should hang their heads in shame. But they’re not going to become converts to our view of the economy. We have to impose that on them as citizens through the democratic process of legislation and regulation. We have to fight the battle that we fought in the 1930s and onward and win it all over again, because, otherwise, if we don’t, the power of speculative finance is going to just wreck the economy for the rest of us.

AMY GOODMAN: And the stimulus package, who exactly does it help?

ROBERT KUTTNER: Well, it will put a little bit of money, hopefully, into the pockets of ordinary people rather than business, which is what Bush wants to use it for. I would like to see a much bigger program of aid to the states, because, you know, the states are required to have a balanced budget. So when a recession strikes, tax receipts to the states go down. States have to cut back services at exactly the moment when they should be increasing services. One way of making sure that the money is going to get spent is to prevent the states from cutting back services. You need to have a much stronger program of unemployment insurance. Most Americans aren’t even covered by unemployment insurance, because there are so many temp jobs and contract jobs now. That would help, but it would be like taking aspirin; it would be symptomatic relief; it will not cure the deeper problems of the economy.

AMY GOODMAN: I want to thank you, Robert Kuttner, for joining us, as well as Robert Weissman. Robert Kuttner, author of The Squandering of America: How the Failure of Our Politics Undermines Our Prosperity. Robert Weissman is editor of Multinational Monitor magazine in Washington, D.C., and co-director of Essential Action.




Rivals compete to show off economic nous


By Andrew Gumbel in Los Angeles
Thursday, 24 January 2008

It's the economy all over again, stupid. America's presidential candidates may have thought this election race was going to be about Iraq or terrorism or healthcare, but the US Federal Reserve's three-quarter point interest cut earlier this week has confirmed what was already becoming obvious: that the deepening economic crisis will dominate everything between now and November.

Republican and Democratic candidates are rushing to fill their speeches with proof of their bona fides as economic managers, with claims and counter-claims about tax cuts, rebates, stimulus packages and who was first to propose what. The latest opinion polls confirm that the economy has leapt into first place among voters' concerns, offering the most obvious immediate benefit to Hillary Clinton for the Democrats and Mitt Romney for the Republicans.

The latest survey taken in California – the state with single largest economy, whose primary takes place on Super Tuesday, 5 February – showed that voters prefer Senator Clinton over her nearest rival, Barack Obama, by a 2-1 margin on economic issues. Overall, she leads in the Golden State by 12 percentage points.

Mrs Clinton's dominance on the economy appears to derive from her White House experience and her political savvy in proposing a comprehensive economic stimulus package a week before Senator Obama. It was her husband who famously focused on "the economy, stupid" and denied George Bush Snr a second term in the middle of a recession.

Mr Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, derives his authority on economic issues from his long, lucrative experience in the private sector.

Polls show him very close to both John McCain and the former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani in Florida, and catching up fast with Senator McCain in California.

This week, Mr Romney issued a new economy-centred campaign advert, proclaiming: "I know how America works because I spent my life in the real economy. I ran a business, turned around the Olympics and led a state. My plan will make our economy strong. We need to invest in people and business with tax cuts."

Tax cuts are the predominant theme on the Republican side, with candidates falling over each other to proclaim that their tax cuts are the biggest.

Many candidates are pushing for big corporate tax breaks rather than relief for individuals. Many want to make President Bush's controversial tax-cut package – weighted heavily in favour of the richest 2 per cent of Americans – permanent. The former Arksansas governor Mike Huckabee wants to abolish income tax altogether. On the Democratic side, the emphasis has been more on tax rebates for ordinary working families and pensioners.

Senator Clinton did her best to sound authoritative on White House protocol by calling for a meeting of the President's working group on financial markets to address what she called a "global economic crisis".

John Edwards, the former North Carolina Senator now struggling to stay in contention, was bold enough to declare the economy was already in recession and, like his adversaries for the Democratic nomination, blamed the Bush White House for much of it. "The tragedy of all this is that this could have been largely avoided," he said.





Hopes of large cuts in interest rates dashed by bankers


By Nikhil Kumar
Thursday, 24 January 2008

Hopes for aggressive, American-style interest rate cuts in Britain faded yesterday while the turmoil in the global markets showed little sign of abating.

As the Office for National Statistics revealed that Britain's economy was growing at its slowest pace for more than a year, analysts were surprised to learn that members of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee had voted eight-to-one in favour of keeping interest rates on hold – at 5.5 per cent. The emphatic nature of the vote, revealed in the minutes of the MPC's last meeting, surprised analysts who had thought the decision rejecting calls for a second interest rate cut – after the 0.25 percentage point cut in December – had been finely balanced.

The minutes reveal the extent to which the committee is concerned about the need to keep control of inflation. As the cost of food and oil has spiralled – a situation made worse by a sharp fall in the value of sterling – the outlook for inflation was noted to have deteriorated "markedly". The committee was wary of cutting interest rates because of the risk of putting the Government's 2 per cent annual inflation targetunder "substantial upward pressure". David Blanchflower, known as the most "dovish" member of the MPC, was the only member to vote for a cut in January.

The MPC's report echoed earlier comments by the Bank's governor, Mervyn King, and disappointed those who were hoping the committee would follow the lead of policymakers in America and make a sizeable interest rate cut to stimulate the economy. On Tuesday, the US Federal Reserve slashed its interest rates by three-quarters of a percentage point.

The MPC's hawkish stance was one factor in another disappointing day for the markets yesterday, with the FTSE 100 index of leading British shares closing down 130.8 points at 5609.3. Hopes that the markets would rally after the Fed's emergency move soon faded after strong overnight performances by Asian markets failed to be imitated in Europe.

"After digesting the news, markets have come to the conclusion that it will not resolve problems in the US economy," said Niels From, an analyst at Dresdner Kleinwort.

Simon Ward, an economist at New Star Asset Management, maintained his forecast of a quarter-point cut but said that he wondered about the unanimity of MPC members.

He added: "If you look closely at the minutes, you can see that although one member voted for a cut, some of the others were probably waiting for February's inflation figures. If things get much worse, the stance may change. The Fed made the cuts it did because in the US there is a real risk of recession, but here its looks like we are only slowing down a bit."

Putin deploys a new weapon against hostile foreign press - his judo master



· Kremlin sets up 'open' media information centre
· Outgoing president tackles Russia's tarnished image


Luke Harding in Moscow
Wednesday January 23, 2008
The Guardian





He has been accused of bullying the neighbours, turning off Europe's gas supply and - as one outraged diplomat appalled by Russia's heavy-handed treatment of the British Council put it - "punching a librarian".

President Vladimir Putin has also received a regular battering from the foreign media over Russia's human rights record, not to mention last month's allegedly rigged parliamentary election.

But now Putin, apparently fed up with Russia's enduringly poor image abroad, has decided to do something about the bad publicity: he has sent for his old judo master.

Putin has asked his long-time friend and judo guru Vasily Shestakov to head the National Information Centre - a new press and information centre in Moscow.

Shestakov is currently an MP in the state Duma with the pro-Kremlin A Just Russia party. He once wrote a book with Putin entitled Judo, History, Theory and Practice, and apparently taught the future president some of his best throws.

Shestakov was yesterday unavailable for comment. "He's out and I'm not going to bother him," his secretary told the Guardian. But judging from a photo in Nezavisimaya Gazeta newspaper showing Shestakov's formidable neck, he is not someone to mess with.

The centre opens next month, in time for Russia's presidential election on March 2. It will host events for Russian and foreign journalists and also put them in touch with Kremlin officials, a state council spokesman, Ivan Makushok, told the agency Interfax.

The centre will be housed in a gigantic complex a short walk from the Kremlin. It will be next door to the current office of the presidential administration. Unlike in most government buildings, journalists will be encouraged to hang out there and use the internet cafe.

The initiative suggests that Putin, who is likely to become Russia's next prime minister when he steps down as president in May, is not totally indifferent to what the world thinks of him, despite a lot of evidence to the contrary.

Delinquency

It also follows a tumultuous year for Russia. The president has clashed bitterly with the west over a series of international issues. These have included Kosovo, Iran's nuclear programme, and the US administration's plans to put its missile defence system in central Europe.

The centre will open its doors at a time when Russia's relations with Britain are at rock bottom. Last week Russia forcibly closed the British Council's two regional offices, and yesterday workmen removed the neon "British Council" sign from the St Petersburg branch.

A foreign policy expert said he believed the Kremlin was still basically impervious to criticism from the west. "My deep conviction is that Russia hasn't cared about its international image for a long time," Fyodor Lukyanov, the editor-in-chief of the magazine Russia in Global Affairs, said yesterday. "Two years ago it did. Now it doesn't. It believes that the international environment is hostile and that it is impossible to change the negative attitude in the west and the western press."

According to Kommersant newspaper, Roman Abramovich, the billionaire owner of Chelsea football club, is one of several businessman backers of the new press and information centre, but a spokesman for Abramovich declined to comment.

Russia's media is almost entirely controlled by the Kremlin. Critics are blacklisted from state TV. Officials, however, said they had invited Alexei Venediktov, the head of the radio station Ekho Moskvy - one of the last sources of independent news in Russia - to join the centre's supervisory board.

Putin, meanwhile, has credited judo with rescuing him from a life of delinquency, when he was growing up in the grimy backstreets of Soviet-era Leningrad, Russia's second city, now St Petersburg.

Last year Shestakov said that he had been wrongly described as Putin's judo teacher. They merely trained together, he said. "I can't physically have been his trainer, because I'm younger than him. We train together, and practise together, but I've never been his teacher," he told the pro-Kremlin newspaper Izvestiya.

PR Headaches

· Persuading the British public of Russia's friendly intentions following the forcible closure of the British Council's offices in St Petersburg and Yekaterinburg last week, and the interrogation of staff by FSB agents.

· Assuring European consumers their gas supply is safe: Russia turned it off after disputes with Ukraine (in 2006) and Belarus (in 2007).

· Making friends with the Bush administration: last year in Munich, Vladimir Putin denounced US power. He has also criticised the Pentagon's plans to put its missile defence shield in central Europe.

· Assuaging criticism of Russia's record on human rights and democracy: last April, riot police beat up opposition demonstrators on the streets of Moscow, more recently arresting the opposition leader Gary Kasparov.

· Reaching agreement on Kosovo: Russia is bitterly opposed to the UN-drafted plan to grant Kosovo independence from Serbia.











Wednesday, January 23, 2008

5pm GMT update

Stocks hit by rate fears


The FTSE 100 deepened its losses today after hopes of hefty UK interest rate cuts were punctured by the latest news from the Bank of England.


At one stage, the FTSE was over 200 points down, but it recovered slightly after Wall Street's opening 2% fall was no worse than expected.


The index of leading London shares closed down 130.8 points at 5,609.3, a 2.3% fall. It has shed 5% this week.


The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 240 points in the first 20 minutes of trading but later pared losses to be down 150 points, or 1.3%, by 4.45pm GMT.


Financial markets are braced for more mayhem in the weeks ahead. Although an emergency interest rate cut from the US Federal Reserve yesterday provided some support, traders described it as little more than a stop-gap.


In London this morning the mood darkened after it emerged that the Bank was not as divided over holding interest rates this month as the market had thought - with just one policymaker voting for a cut.


There was disappointment that minutes from the Bank's January rate-setting meeting showed it is unlikely to follow America's lead by making big reductions to borrowing costs in the UK.


"The market was looking for a very close call, maybe five in favour of keeping rates on hold and four in favour of a cut, but 8-1 is a nasty shock," said Martin Slaney, head of derivatives at GFT Global Markets.


'Force 10 gale conditions'


The Bank's minutes added to volatility in an already jittery market, nervous about the prospects of a US recession.


After the Fed's emergency rate cut failed to lift US stock markets yesterday, doubts persisted today about the move's effectiveness.


"Everyone knows that the Fed's action is little more than a sticking plaster for the market," said one trader.


Market players predicted erratic trading would continue at least until the Fed's scheduled rate-setting meeting next week.


"Volatility is extremely high again," said another trader. "It could continue for the foreseeable future."


Although the markets are currently pricing in another 50 basis points of rate cuts from the Fed next week, those expectations could change depending on equity markets, he added.


Long-time City commmentator David Buik of Cantor Index spoke of previously unseen volatility, describing London's market as "bouncing around in choppy seas like a cork in a bath".


Markets in Germany and France have seen similarly erratic trading, ending sharply lower.


The Fed's unexpected decision to cut US interest rates by 75 basis points to 3.5% yesterday had turned sentiment around in Asia and Europe and saw the FTSE 100 index close up 161 points, or 2.9%.


However, the cut was also interpreted as a sign of deep concern about the world's biggest economy and reinforced fears of an impending recession. For US stock markets the prospect of lower borrowing costs was today again outweighed by such worries of slumping demand.


'Panicking in the face of market pessimism?'


Economists were split over the wisdom of the cut, and some expect further reductions.


"One could say the Fed has finally understood the magnitude of the problem faced by the US economy - either that, or they are panicking in the face of market pessimism," said Rob Carnell at ING Financial Markets.


"Clearly rates will fall further in the US. The markets expect 2.00% by October, it could be lower."


Many in the markets have been looking for similar action by the UK central bank, but today's voting pattern from its last meeting and comments from governor Mervyn King poured cold water on those hopes.


Minutes from the last meeting, when British interest rates were left at 5.5%, showed eight policymakers wanted to keep them steady while one, David Blanchflower, voted for a cut.


The minutes' focus on a worsening outlook for upward price pressures echoed comments last night from King, who said higher oil, gas and food prices could all push up inflation in the months ahead. He did warn that UK economic activity may slow "quite sharply" in the months ahead but also hinted that the Bank would shun the kind of drastic action taken by its US counterparts.





Bank dents interest cut hopes


By Holly Williams, PA
Wednesday, 23 January 2008

Hopes that the Bank of England will follow America's lead with dramatic interest rate cuts were dashed today after policymakers warned the UK's inflation outlook had "worsened markedly".

Minutes of the January rates meeting highlighted the dilemma faced by the Bank's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) after members raised concerns over a potent mix of slowing growth and rising inflation.

The minutes come amid growing calls for a 0.5 per cent cut in the cost of borrowing when the Bank next meets to discuss rates on February 6 and 7.

A shock decision yesterday by the US Federal Reserve to slash the cost of borrowing by 0.75 per cent has added to pressure on the Bank to lower rates.

But Bank Governor Mervyn King last night signalled that the UK would not follow America with similar emergency rate cuts to stabilise stock market and economic turmoil.

And today's minutes showed that the Bank was concerned that hasty rate cuts would suggest it was more concerned about preserving economic growth than keeping inflation under control.

Eight out of nine members of the MPC voted to keep rates on hold, with David Blanchflower the lone voice pressing for a reduction to 5.25 per cent.

The minutes showed the Bank's concerns that the short-term outlook for inflation had "worsened markedly" amid soaring oil and food costs and with energy price hikes on the horizon.

Mr King cautioned in a speech last night that inflation was set to continuing creeping up past the Government's 2 per cent target this year.

He told the Institute of Directors in Bristol that he may need to write one or possibly more open letters to the Chancellor - required when inflation hits more than 1 per cent above target.

But the minutes today showed the MPC's struggle to balance inflation with growth, as it said it there remained a "significant downside risk to UK activity".

It suggested it would rather digest next month's quarterly report on inflation before acting on rates.

The committee added that a cut immediately after the quarter point reduction in December might suggest the Bank was "focused more on stabilising demand than meeting the inflation target".

Jonathan Loynes, chief European economist at Capital Economics, said the minutes indicated that rates were set to come down, but perhaps less rapidly than expected.

He said: "It is quite clear that UK interest rates are heading lower in 2008, starting in February.

"The pace of monetary loosening will depend in part on conditions in the markets - if recent sharp falls in equity prices continue, the MPC may be forced to cut rates fairly quickly."

He added: "However, it looks likely that the committee will prefer to bring rates down at a relatively measured pace, perhaps one 25 basis points cut per quarter."

Mr King said in last night's speech that the UK economy faced its toughest challenge since 1997.

Inflation remained above target for the third successive month in December, at 2.1 per cent.

The committee said it believed inflation would rise "quite sharply" in the early part of 2008, with the latest round of energy bill increases adding to higher food and petrol costs.

Rates are widely expected to come down next month, in particular amid the stock market turmoil seen this week on fears of a US recession.

While a cut to 5.25 per cent is thought to be on the cards, the British Chamber of Commerce today urged the Bank to moves rates down by a half point to 5 per cent in the February vote.

The US Federal Reserve's surprise move to reduce rates caused a much-needed rebound in global markets.

London's FTSE 100 index soared 3 per cent yesterday after the US rates move, which came after a torrid start to the trading week.

On Monday, the Footsie suffered its worst one-day points fall since the September 11 terrorist attacks in 2001.

But more turbulence is expected, which may have a bearing on the Bank's February rates vote.

Howard Archer, chief economist at Global Insight, said: "We forecast rates to fall to 4.25 per cent by early 2009, however with the downside risks to the UK economy mounting, there is growing likelihood that rates will fall further and faster than this."