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To: ajtj99 who wrote (244263)4/15/2010 9:29:33 AM
From: ChanceIsRead Replies (3) | Respond to of 306849
 
Brooksley Born was the only hero since bubble blowing became the recreational drug of choice amongst the political elite and intellectually challenged economist sub-species. Oh, I think that you forgot Bubba, Hillary and "W." Arthur Leavitt actually got Bubba to shake out a few more dollars and federal employees to transform the SEC from a complete laughing stock to a mere joke. "W" reversed all of that. Oh again. You forgot our courageous former SEC Chair Chris Cox - hero of the ban on shorting banks from the summer of '08. Also all of the bank and mortgage company CEOs.

Per Wiki:

Born and the OTC Derivatives Market

Born was appointed to the CFTC on April 15, 1994 by President Bill Clinton. Due to litigation against a company called Bankers Trust by major corporate clients, Born and her team at the CFTC sought comments on the regulation of derivatives,[3] a first step in the process of writing comprehensive regulations. Born was particularly concerned about swaps, financial instruments that are traded over the counter between banks, insurance companies or other funds or companies, and thus have no transparency except to the two counterparties and the counterparties' regulators, if any. CFTC regulation was strenuously opposed by Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan, Treasury Secretaries Robert Rubin and Lawrence Summers.[4] On May 7, 1998, former SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt joined Rubin and Greenspan in objecting to the issuance of the CFTC’s concept release. Their response dismissed Born's concerns off-hand and focused on the possibility that CFTC regulation of swaps and other OTC derivative instruments would increase legal uncertainty of such instruments, potentially creating turmoil in the markets, and reducing the value of the instruments. Further concerns voiced were that the imposition of new regulatory costs would stifle innovation and push transactions offshore.[7]

An economic and financial crisis affected US and world markets in 2008. As it gained momentum, newspapers began reporting on some of its possible causes, including the rejection of the CFTC's proposals and the adversarial relationship Greenspan, Rubin and Levitt had with Born.[8][4] The disagreement has been described not only as a classic Washington turf war,[6] but also as a war of ideologies as Greenspan and highly placed Clinton administration officials believed that, in large measure, the capital markets could be trusted to regulate themselves.[9]

Born declined to publicly comment on the unfolding 2008 crisis until March 2009 when she said: "The market grew so enormously, with so little oversight and regulation, that it made the financial crisis much deeper and more pervasive than it otherwise would have been."[6] She also lamented the influence of Wall Street lobbyists on the process and the refusal of regulators to discuss even modest reforms.[6]

An October 2009 Frontline documentary titled "The Warning" described Born's failed efforts to control regulation of and bring transparency to the derivatives market, and noted the continuing resistance thereto. The program concluded with Born sounding another warning: "I think we will have continuing danger from these markets and that we will have repeats of the financial crisis -- may differ in details but there will be significant financial downturns and disasters attributed to this regulatory gap, over and over, until we learn from experience."[9]

In 2009 Born, along with Sheila Bair of the FDIC, was awarded the John F. Kennedy Profiles in Courage Award in recognition of the "political courage she demonstrated in sounding early warnings about conditions that contributed to the current global financial crisis". According to Caroline Kennedy, "...Brooksley Born recognized that the financial security of all Americans was being put at risk by the greed, negligence and opposition of powerful and well connected interests... The catastrophic financial events of recent months have proved them [Born and Sheila Bair] right. Although their warnings were ignored at the time, the American people should be reassured that there are far-sighted public servants at all levels of government who act on principle to protect the people’s interests."[10]

Edit: I was nice - and appropriate that Bair and Born received this award (although personally I wouldn't anything with the name Kennedy associated with my resume). The American people should not be assured because her common sense continues to be ignorewd and those who stuffed her back then are at the levers of power once again!!!!



To: ajtj99 who wrote (244263)4/15/2010 10:56:31 PM
From: James HuttonRespond to of 306849
 
The guys in this photo from CR's blog today would do well to share a cell at Gitmo with your other nominees. Add David Lereah too.

calculatedriskblog.com