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Robert Scheer
Truthdig / Truthdig Op-Ed
Published: Friday 15 June 2012
The Fed backed the bailout of Citigroup, the result of deals dreamed up by Dimon, who before his JPMorgan days had teamed with Sanford Weill to merge privately held investment firms with government-insured commercial banks, which would have been illegal under the Glass-Steagall law.

See You at the Club: Fed Fat Cats Dip Into the Till

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Statistics are boring, but it’s important to wrap your head around this latest one from the Federal Reserve as the definitive epitaph for the American dream. Wall Street’s financial shenanigans, the banking games that made some fat cats outrageously wealthy as they turned home mortgages into toxic securities, wiped out 20 years of growth in American families’ net worth.

“Americans saw wealth plummet 40% from 2007 to 2010, Federal Reserve says,” is how The Washington Post headlined the startling news that all of the economic gain of the past two decades had been destroyed by the banking meltdown. And with housing values—the bulk of middle-class savings—indefinitely moribund, the situation will not get better anytime soon.

“The recession caused the greatest upheaval among the middle class,” the Post noted. “... Their median net worth ... suffered the biggest drops. By contrast, the wealthiest families’ median net worth rose slightly.”

That outcome, disastrous to the American ideal of a nation of mostly middle-class stakeholders competing on a relatively equal economic playing field, was preordained. When tens of millions lost their jobs and homes as a result of financial swindles that the Federal Reserve failed to prevent, this ostensibly public agency, with strong bipartisan support in the White House and Congress, adroitly directed the flow of public funds to save the bankers while abandoning their victims.

On Tuesday, Sen. Bernie Sanders, acting under authority of the Dodd-Frank financial regulations, released the conclusions of a Government Accountability Office report showing that ” ... during the financial crisis, at least 18 former and current directors from Federal Reserve Banks worked in banks and corporations that collectively received over $4 trillion in low-interest loans from the Federal Reserve.”

One of those Fed directors, Jamie Dimon, chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase, who has been on the New York Fed board since 2007, testified before Congress on Wednesday that he was sorry his company lost billions in risky trading even after all of the warnings concerning too-big-to-fail banks.

Dimon—whose company last year paid him $24 million, compared to the $45,800 median U.S. family income—testified that the bank could manage its own affairs. But that is hardly reassuring given that the Fed provided JPMorgan Chase $391 billion in total assistance as well as paying the bank to administer the government’s emergency lending program. It was the Fed that back in March of 2008 made $29 billion available to Dimon’s bank so it could acquire beleaguered Bear Stearns; the Fed also agreed to purchase Bear Stearns’ most toxic assets before the merger.

Such sweetheart deals are the norm, and they are further illustrated by the case of Stephen Friedman, chairman of the New York Fed board, on which Dimon serves. Friedman simultaneously was a director at Goldman Sachs when the N.Y. Fed allowed Goldman to become a bank holding company and thereby become eligible for cheap Fed loans. Thanks to a plea by then-New York Fed President Timothy Geithner that Friedman be granted a waiver from conflict-of-interest rules, he continued to own and buy additional Goldman stock. Friedman ended up with $13 million in stock whose value was bolstered by Fed assistance to Goldman totaling $814 billion. And Geithner ended up becoming President Barack Obama’s treasury secretary.

The Fed backed the bailout of Citigroup, the result of deals dreamed up by Dimon, who before his JPMorgan days had teamed with Sanford Weill to merge privately held investment firms with government-insured commercial banks, which would have been illegal under the Glass-Steagall law. Weill succeeded in getting President Bill Clinton to back the reversal of Glass-Steagall, and as a consequence Citigroup soon became too big to fail. Weill was on the Fed board on the eve of a crisis that would lead to Citigroup receiving more than $2.5 trillion in Fed financial assistance.

The GAO list includes Jeffrey Immelt, the CEO of General Electric, who was on the N.Y. Fed board from 2006 to 2011, a period during which the Fed refused to even consider a moratorium on mortgage foreclosures or any other serious effort to help homeowners survive the mortgage crisis the banks had created.

One of those banks is GE Capital, which was started by GE and was a major contributor to the banking disaster. The government came to GE’s assistance by purchasing GE Capital and giving GE an additional $16 billion in low-cost financing. Immelt, whose company now has shipped two out of three of its jobs abroad, is the head of the President’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness.

Geithner’s stewardship of the bailout of AIG is perhaps the most egregious example of the Fed’s preoccupation with the welfare of the banks as opposed to the well-being of the ordinary folk the Federal Reserve was created to protect.

The Fed has been run like an elite club, handsomely rewarding its banker directors while sacrificing the homeowners and families who most need safeguarding.

This article was originally posted on Truthdig.



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ABOUT Robert Scheer
Robert Scheer, editor in chief of Truthdig, has built a reputation for strong social and political writing over his 30 years as a journalist. His columns appear in newspapers across the country, and his in-depth interviews have made headlines. He conducted the famous Playboy magazine interview in which Jimmy Carter confessed to the lust in his heart and he went on to do many interviews for the Los Angeles Times with Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton and many other prominent political and cultural figures.

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5 comments on "See You at the Club: Fed Fat Cats Dip Into the Till"

Riconui

June 15, 2012 11:52pm

Interesting, huh? The meltdown in October of 1929, (driven in
large part by a meltdown of the mortgage market..... Deja vu anyone?), the Savings and loan meltdown, and the mortgage crisis in 2008, all happened while Wall St. was left to regulate itself. How much longer will Americans continue to buy the line that business is better left to REGULATE ITSELF. (Along with other lines of tripe like the wealthy are "job creators" and the "moral hazards"of government handouts).

Btrwy

June 15, 2012 4:51pm

Break up all those involved, reverse all the deals, confiscate all their money, put the dealers in prison, make the middle class whole again, raise minimum wage to $20 an hour, and reinstate all regulations that worked since the great depression. Sounds too easy and not all would work but makes a goal to achieve. There is no doubt much can be done to remedy the hole these thieves put America in.

ladypenelope

June 15, 2012 1:36pm

I find it interesting that when there are laws in place since 1930, like those under Glass-Steagall , a mechanism put in place to protect the consumer and the security of our banking system before the "too big to fail" banks were allowed to form; the laws are changed (some might say deregulated because the laws haven't been enforced anyway) to protect the fox guarding the henhouse!!! Disgusting!! Worse yet, when mistakes (such as deregulation of the banking industry) are recognized as having been made and rules are attempted to be strengthened again to protect the American People, the Republicans can only unfairly repeat words meant only to continually distract uneducated, ignorant-to-the-current-facts American People to misrepresent the fact that President Obama is putting in hundreds of new regulations that will continue to suppress job creation, while in fact Obama is only trying to revert to stronger banking regulations that if upheld, the tanking of the economy during the second term of Bush may have been more limited! Of course, Cheney and Bush telling us in January 2008 “that our economy is strong,” while real individuals knew otherwise as underemployment and unemployed began as far back as 2005...and were aware of the housing bubble getting ready to burst. Because if your neighbor with no health insurance, and few job skills is flipping houses for a living…an intelligent individual knows, something stinks!! Our country did not learn from the Savings and Loan Scandal...worse yet, bankers blamed everyone but themselves and no one has served time in the Big House! Now that is bi-partisanship at its finest!! Tell me, if cutting the taxes under Bush was to help stimulate job creation...where the hell are all of those jobs...looks like there might be a little trouble brewing for the top 1% !! Problem is that rather than being Public Servants, unfortunately (on both sides of the aisle) there are too many people getting into politics to make a buck off of the People of the United States of America, rather than helping our wonderful country prosper now and in the future...Sigh. Some things will never change!

michael nola

June 15, 2012 1:28pm

At some point, the bankers will collapse the economy again and then what will the excuse be this time, that the minorities made them do it again?

Right now, these bankers are making bets with regular depositors assets, funds that are insured by the FDIC and keeping the profits, but if their losses are larger than their capital reserves, the FDIC will come into to cover the remaining losses, and if that is not enough, then you and I, dear taxpayers will once again foot the bill. And somehow the American people seem to neither know nor care about any of this .

Hope you're enjoying reality TV, while be totally unaware of the actual reality happening before your very eyes.

Sageman69

June 15, 2012 9:04am

Sheer's hard-hitting prose strikes an important chord in the continuing saga of what went wrong in this, our latest, great depression. Unfortunately, until more citizens awaken to the implications of how the Fed supported the bankers, there will probably not be an uprising against these corrupt policies. How much documentation do we need to demand a complete overhaul of the financial system that rewards men like Daimon and Geither at the expense of ordinary Americans? We're long past due for a revolution at the polls and in public opinion to change the corruption we've tolerated.