Friday, January 22, 2010

Barack to the drawing board

I have missed Barack Obama. I devoured his campaign coverage to levels of minor obsession and had grown used to seeing his face strewn over the covers of publications the world over. Recently though, it seems Obama has been hibernating. Maybe he has been finding it difficult to make it into the office due to all the snow? Or can that excuse really only apply to Londoners? Either way he has not exactly been marking his first year in office with the media frenzy many would have expected twelve months ago. But now he's back!

Obama has, some suggest, produced the sword to deliver a final blow to the Wall Street bull. Exhausted with the media frenzy over bankers' bonuses and deaf from the screams of the American public crying "kill" "kill", could this be the death of the big bank: 2010's Glass-Steagall finale?

I doubt it. It is important to remember these "Volcker Reforms" are just proposals. We are not about to see the end of proprietary banking on Monday. As with any American legislative proposal, and especially any introduced by the current president, it will be months before anything is actually set in stone and the big banks are forced into selling off their hedge funds and private equity groups. Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan can rest easy this weekend. What will no doubt follow will be months of lobbying. The Wall Street top dogs (what can I say I'm not a cat person) are getting quite used to spending time in Washington D.C. By now, they are probably thinking of the Holiday Inn on Capitol Hill as a second home (or fourth or fifth in many caes). While the rest of are still ploughing through the details of the proposals, lobbyists will be weaving loop holes that will ultimately produce very little (if any) changes to the too-big-to-fail banks. When tired of this we can watch bank share prices yoyo in front of our eyes.

This of all proposals comes at a terrible time for Obama: after weeks of laying low, he reared his head at the end of the week only to find that he has lost Teddy Kennedy's old Democratic seat in Massachusetts and thus the crucial 60th vote in the Senate that he needs to pass this or any other bill. And to really kick dirt in his face when he's down, the Supreme Court voted yesterday to lift the ban limiting banks and other powerful companies from funding and supporting political candidates. Banks don't take too kindly to their share prices falling by around 5% across the board; so although in the past Wall Street has been a major fundraiser for the Democrats (and Obama himself), I get the feeling that the millions of dollars of Wall Street's campaign donations might be up for grabs right now. Enter the Republicans with open hands…

And what will all this mean to us in the UK? Well, the BBC reports that Shadow chancellor George Osborne has come out in support of President Obama's proposals but has covered himself by assuring that there would have to be international compliance. Chances are nothing much will happen once the election is out of the way. I suggest we all take the weekend to turn our attention back to donating to the Haitian appeal. There will be all of Summer (and Autumn and Winter...) to follow the 'Obama takes on Banks' headlines.

RK

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