REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Banks: Dear Feds, Thanks for nothing

POSTED BY: NIKI2
UPDATED: Saturday, April 24, 2010 07:35
SHORT URL:
VIEWED: 564
PAGE 1 of 1

Saturday, April 24, 2010 7:35 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


They've got balls, you gotta give 'em that, not to mention an overwhelming sense of entitlement!
Quote:

During the financial crisis of 2008 and 2009 when the government stepped in to save the U.S. banking system, no big institution more defiantly thumbed its nose at Uncle Sam than Wells Fargo.

"Asinine" was the word the San Francisco bank's chairman at the time, Richard Kovacevich, chose to describe Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner's plan to stress-test all big banks. CEO John Stumpf published an open letter to employees bemoaning Wells Fargo's (WFC, Fortune 500) being pressured to cancel a Las Vegas reward trip after receiving a $25 billion investment from TARP.

These one-sided stories lead you to believe every employee-recognition event is a junket, a boondoggle, a waste," he fulminated. "Nonsense!"

Wells Fargo could go it alone, thank you very much.

A year later, Wells Fargo is doing great. Earnings are robust and its stock price has doubled. Yet it's impossible not to wonder how the maverick bank would have fared had it, in fact, been forced to fend for itself. Program after program has benefited Wells -- and its fellow banks.

For starters, the TARP money and those "asinine" stress tests indisputably steadied a shaky financial system. Trillion-dollar-plus purchases of mortgage-backed securities by the Federal Reserve kept interest rates low, facilitating mortgage activity. Ditto for Washington's $8,000 first-time homebuyer's program, a gift for a leading mortgage originator like Wells as much as for borrowers.

Add in that there basically wouldn't have been a mortgage market for the past 18 months without government-backed loans from Fannie Mae (FNM, Fortune 500) and Freddie Mac (FRE, Fortune 500) (both wards of the state) and other government groups, and it's hard to imagine a Wells recovery without the public sector.

Unsurprisingly, Stumpf, who earned $21.3 million last year, is also skeptical about the financial-reform legislation now in Congress. Though a fan of extending regulation to all financial players, banks and nonbanks alike, he warns of "unintended consequences" from "well-intended people."

Wells' new chief might have learned to avoid using inflammatory language, but he isn't ready to play nice just yet.

http://money.cnn.com/2010/04/23/news/companies/wells_fargo.fortune/ind
ex.htm?source=cnn_bin&hpt=Sbin


My response: Quote Jon Stewart.




"I'm just right. Kinda like the sun rising in the east and the world being round...its not a need its just the way it is." The Delusional "Hero", 3/1/10

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

YOUR OPTIONS

NEW POSTS TODAY

USERPOST DATE

OTHER TOPICS

DISCUSSIONS
Music 4
Tue, April 14, 2026 10:03 - 25 posts
Science given the boot at White House
Tue, April 14, 2026 09:35 - 264 posts
Eric Swalwell...
Tue, April 14, 2026 09:15 - 16 posts
Putin's Legacy
Tue, April 14, 2026 08:57 - 172 posts
Read a Book...
Tue, April 14, 2026 08:54 - 14 posts
Hollywood exposes themselves as the phony whores they are
Tue, April 14, 2026 08:39 - 252 posts
Russia Invades Ukraine. Again
Tue, April 14, 2026 08:03 - 10003 posts
Khamenei, One of Most Evil People in History, is Dead
Tue, April 14, 2026 07:52 - 300 posts
human actions, global climate change, global human solutions
Tue, April 14, 2026 07:46 - 1090 posts
Do you feel like the winds of change are blowing today too?
Tue, April 14, 2026 07:38 - 4511 posts
What kind of superpower could China be?
Tue, April 14, 2026 06:44 - 119 posts
Can we learn from history JUST ONCE??
Tue, April 14, 2026 06:41 - 37 posts

FFF.NET SOCIAL