May 15, 2012, 2:16 p.m. EDT
Dimon may be ‘stupid,’ but he’s right on banks
Commentary: Regulation will never stop stupid trades and big losses
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By David Weidner, MarketWatch
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — Jamie Dimon is right: Regulation is making things worse on Wall Street.
The Dodd-Frank Act has cost banks hundreds of millions in profits and has done nothing to prevent:
• J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.’s big trading loss.
Reuters
• MF Global’s implosion and $1.6 billion in lost customer funds.
• Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’ s
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+0.10%
scandal-a-quarter pace.
Let’s stop the foolishness and let Wall Street be. Let the free markets be free. Let J.P. Morgan Chase
JPM
+1.26%
lose $2 billion on what Dimon has called a “stupid” trade. Let it make $2 billion on a good trade.
This, after all, is exactly what Wall Street wants. It wants a
supercharged high-risk/high-reward market system where banks can blow
billions in a morning trade and make it back in the afternoon.
There’s no point in fighting the powers that be. No matter how many
rules we slap on the industry, it will always find a way around them.
The incentive of greed, creating wealth without work, is just too
powerful.
Is Jamie Dimon too powerful?
A look at those calling for J.P. Morgan Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon's two jobs to be broken up. Also, is Yahoo's appointment of an interim CEO just the start of stabilizing the company?
So, rather than slap more ineffective and easily gamed rules into the
system, let’s just divide the system. We the people will keep our
traditional banking — the monetary and economic side of the equation.
We’ll let casino capitalism run wild on the other side.
Let’s bring back Glass-Steagall.
You remember Glass-Steagall. It was the Depression-era law that
separated investment banking and trading activities from retail and
commercial banking. It split, for example, J.P. Morgan’s empire into a
bank, J.P. Morgan & Co., and a brokerage, Morgan Stanley.
When the law was repealed in 1999, the brokerages and banks were allowed
to come together again.* And, of course, that’s when the problems
began, the biggest of which was the use of traditional banking assets as
chips in the casino, mortgages as mortgage-backed securities, for
instance.
* Actually by 1999, most traditional commercial banks were doing some
form of securities dealing through loopholes created in the 1990s. J.P.
Morgan, for instance, had actually migrated to an investment bank, and a
minority of its business was commercial banking.
After the financial crisis in 2008 and 2009, regulators and lawmakers
tried to scale back the free-for-all that “financial modernization” had
wrought. The Dodd-Frank Act clocked in at 849 pages in an effort to
basically regulate every little piece of the financial markets.
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end quote from:http://www.marketwatch.com/story/dimon-may-be-stupid-but-hes-right-on-banks-2012-05-15?link=MW_story_popular
I agree with this article. Let's Bring Back Glass-Steagall so " those banks too big to fail don't bring down the the whole U.S. economy one day in one fell swoop!"
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