https://wallstreetonparade.com/2024/09/everything-this-book-predicted-on-wall-street-megabanks-ruling-their-regulators-is-now-unfolding/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: September 16, 2024 ~

Taming the Megabanks, Book JacketIt is rare for a book to be so
comprehensive and insightful that it provides a roadmap for the future –
especially when its cast of characters are the lawyered-up megabanks on
Wall Street and their legions of lobbyists and public relations flacks.
We’re referring to Taming the Megabanks: Why We Need a New Glass-Steagall
Act by Arthur E. Wilmarth, Professor Emeritus of Law at George Washington
University.

Last Tuesday, the Federal Reserve completely capitulated to the demands of
the Wall Street megabanks on its plan to dramatically raise capital levels
at the megabanks — the so-called Basel III Endgame. The Fed, via its Vice
Chair for Supervision, Michael Barr, announced it was cutting the required
capital it had formally proposed in July of 2023 by more than half and will
continue to allow the megabanks to use their own dodgy internal models to
assess market risk.

How did the megabanks achieve such a quick victory on such a critical
matter? They threatened to tie the Fed up in court for years and hired a
Big Law operative to drive home the point.

Wilmarth’s book presciently saw that occurring – because the megabanks have
been gaming and bucking and beating meaningful financial reform since
President Obama signed into law the easily manipulated Dodd-Frank financial
reform legislation in 2010.

Chapter 12 in Taming the Megabanks is titled “Unfinished Business.” It
walks readers through each of the much-touted financial reforms that
Obama’s minions told the American people they could count on following the
worst megabank-induced financial crisis since the Great Depression. But
many of Dodd-Frank’s promised key reforms never happened, as Wilmarth
details by naming names and pulling back layers of dark curtains.

Instead of Dodd-Frank’s Volcker Rule ending the megabanks’ ability to bet
the house via hedge funds, the rule was stonewalled for years, then
ignored, then it essentially disappeared. As we reported earlier this
month, the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Financial Research (OFR) revealed that
as of March 31, 2024, Global Systemically Important Banks in the U.S.
(G-SIBs/megabanks) had loaned out $2.348 trillion to hedge funds. Foreign
Global Systemically Important Banks had loaned out another $1.628 trillion
to hedge funds; and “Other Lenders” had loaned out an additional $566
billion to hedge funds. That brought the total of margin loans to just
hedge funds on March 31, 2024 to a total of $4.542 trillion. (Put your
cursor on the graph lines here.)

And remember all that talk about the push-out rule for derivatives? That
illusion bit the dust in 2014, thanks to Citigroup and two former cronies
in Congress. As of December 31, 2023, Goldman Sachs Bank USA, JPMorgan
Chase Bank N.A., Citigroup’s Citibank and Bank of America held a staggering
total of $168.26 trillion in derivatives out of a total of $192.46 trillion
at all federally-insured U.S. banks, savings associations and trust
companies. That’s just four banks holding 87 percent of all derivatives at
all 4,587 federally-insured financial institutions in the U.S. that existed
as of December 31, 2023. This data comes from the quarterly report at the
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), another of the federal
regulators that says it’s going along with the Fed’s plan to scale back
capital requirements at the megabanks.

In response to our query last week as to whether the OCC was on board with
the Fed’s scaled back capital requirements, the OCC gave us this statement
from Acting Comptroller Michael Hsu:

“The changes outlined by Vice Chair Barr reflect the work the three
agencies undertook together. To ensure that the capital requirements for
the nation’s largest banks are modernized and strengthened, I am committed
to working with my peers on next steps to drive the Basel 3 endgame to
closure.”

The FDIC is the third federal agency involved in setting the capital levels
for the megabanks. It gave us this statement last week from FDIC Chair
Martin Gruenberg:

“The Federal Reserve, OCC, and the FDIC have worked cooperatively on the
Basel III proposal, including the changes outlined in Vice Chairman Barr’s
remarks. I look forward to the agencies working together to bring Basel III
to a conclusion that will strengthen bank capital and bolster financial
system resilience and stability.”

In July, Wilmarth revealed the illusory nature of yet another promised
reform from Dodd-Frank in an opinion piece at the American Banker (paywall)
titled: “The FDIC’s resolution plan for failed megabanks is an empty
promise.”

Wilmarth explains in the American Banker piece that one of Dodd-Frank’s
primary goals was to prevent taxpayers from having to rescue megabanks, as
occurred in 2008. A key component of that goal is Title II of Dodd-Frank,
which provides an Orderly Resolution Plan to unwind failing megabanks
without the need for taxpayer or Federal Reserve bailouts. That Plan, in
turn, requires a giant pool of instantly available cash, which Dodd-Frank
calls the Orderly Liquidation Fund or OLF. Shockingly, Wilmarth reveals
that there hasn’t been a dime in the OLF since its creation in 2010.
Wilmarth explains:

“…the FDIC’s sole source of funding for a Title II receivership is the
Orderly Liquidation Fund, or OLF, which the Treasury administers. When
Congress passed the Dodd-Frank Act, the big-bank lobby defeated proposals
that would have required megabanks to pay risk-based premiums to prefund
the OLF. As a result, the OLF has a zero balance. The FDIC must therefore
borrow from the Treasury to pay the costs of a Title II receivership that
cannot be covered by wiping out the holding company’s shareholders and
debt-holders.”

Wilmarth correctly concludes in Taming the Megabanks that there is only one
way to protect the U.S. economy and the financial stability of the nation’s
banking system and that is to break up the megabanks by restoring the
Glass-Steagall Act, which would separate Wall Street’s global trading
houses from federally-insured banks. Otherwise, the megabanks will continue
to dictate government policy, regulate their own regulators, and set the
stage for the next destabilizing Wall Street and banking collapse.

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