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Politics : American Presidential Politics and foreign affairs

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To: TimF who wrote (40429)1/13/2010 11:00:44 AM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Read Replies (1) of 71588
 
Bank CEOs see need for regulation

By Jennifer Liberto, senior writer
January 13, 2010: 9:20 AM ET
money.cnn.com

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Four top bank chief executives began testifying in Washington on Wednesday about their role in the financial crisis, telling a panel appointed by Congress that regulatory reform is needed to help prevent future crises.

"I believe it is useful, in light of the lessons we take away from this crisis, to consider important principles for our industry, for policymakers and for regulators as we move towards reform," Lloyd Blankfein, Goldman Sachs' CEO, said in prepared testimony before the commission.

The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, a 10-member panel appointed last summer by Congress, is holding its first public hearing. First up were the heads of some of the best-known and largest banks: Goldman Sachs (GS, Fortune 500), Morgan Stanley (MS, Fortune 500), J.P. Morgan Chase (JPM, Fortune 500) and Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500).

The panel's chairman, Philip Angelides, has said that he's interested in hearing about the banks' role in creating the crisis, as well as finding out how they became "too big to fail."

The federal government stepped in to prop up the banks in fall 2008, creating the Troubled Asset Relief Program to help provide them with liquidity.

"We're after the truth, the hard facts, because it's our job to provide an unbiased accounting of financial crisis," Angelides said at the start of the hearing. "This forum may be our last best chance to stake stock of what really happened."

The commissioners told CNN on Monday they don't expect any big revelations or "gotcha" moments with the bank chief executives, and view the hearing as a fact-finding mission.

The chief executives -- Lloyd Blankfein of Goldman Sachs, Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan Chase, John Mack of Morgan Stanley and Brian Moynihan of Bank of America -- will be testifying under oath.

In written testimony, the bank chiefs said they didn't expect the financial crisis and especially its magnitude.

"After the fact, it is easy to be convinced that the signs were visible and compelling," Blankfein said in his written statement. "In hindsight, events not only look predictable, but look like they were obvious or known. But none of us know what is going to happen."

So far, the commission has already talked to Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke, but that testimony isn't being made public yet.

Lawmakers say the commission was modeled after the Pecora Commission, a panel that was convened after the 1929 Wall Street crash and other events leading to the Great Depression.

The Pecora panel's findings led to an overhaul of federal banking laws, including the creation of the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933. Glass-Steagall divided investment banking from government-insured commercial banking; ending that separation in the 1990s was seen by some critics as contributing to the current crisis.

Slow start

The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission has taken a while to get up on its feet.

The panel was appointed last July and held its first meeting in September. It has only started getting staffed up over the past few months.

It has new offices in downtown Washington, a few blocks northwest of the White House. Funded to the tune of $8 million, it aims to employ between 40 and 50 investigators and other staffers.

The crisis panel's one big goal is to complete a final report, sort of like the final 9/11 Commission report that found federal agencies missed signs of the impending terrorist attacks in 2001. The financial crisis report is due Dec. 15.

Critics have noted the panel's impact may be blunted by timing, as the House has already passed a bill to overhaul regulations and the Senate is deep in negotiations on similar proposals.

But panel members have consistently pledged their work will serve as more than window dressing for politicians worried about the appearance that they allowed the financial crisis to happen.

The panel, which has subpoena power, plans to issue interim reports as it collects data, Angelides has said.

The panel's second-in-command is Bill Thomas, a retired California Republican congressman described as strong-willed during his tenure running the powerful Ways and Means Committee.

Other key panel members include: Keith Hennessey, an economic adviser under President George W. Bush; former Sen. Bob Graham, a Florida Democrat; and Brooksley Born, a past chairwoman of the Commodities Futures Trading Commission, who called for stronger regulation of complex financial products such as derivatives in the 1990s.

The panel didn't invite Citigroup (C, Fortune 500) CEO Vikram Pandit this go round, said panel spokesman Tucker Warren. "That doesn't mean we won't be talking with Citigroup, either publicly or privately, in the course of our investigation," he added.

The chief executives are no strangers to Washington hearings. Blankfein, Dimon and Mack were seated together last February when a House Financial Services pelted them with questions about the TARP program.

This time around, Angelides said he expects the tone to be "professional" but also "tough, thorough and fair."

"There's a real hunger among the people of this country to know what happened," Angelides said. "We're not out to get anyone. We're out to get to the bottom of what happened as best we can." To top of page
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