Posts Tagged ‘financial market’

Fed Proposing to Take a Hard Line on Bank Executive Pay

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Fed Proposing to Take a Hard Line on Bank Executive PayThe Federal Reserve is considering regulating banks’ pay policies to make certain they discourage employees from making the irresponsible gambles that led to 2008′s financial meltdown.  The Fed’s proposal would apply to thousands of banks, including some that did not receive bailouts.

Under the Fed’s proposal, the central bank would review – and could say “no” – to pay policies that might result in excessive risk-taking by executives, traders or loan officers.  The move marks the Fed’s most recent response to critics who say it didn’t crack down on lax lending, reckless risk taking and other practices that led to the great recession.  If the proposal is adopted, the 28 largest banks would develop internal plans to assure that compensation doesn’t start a new round of disproportionate risk taking.  Although the Fed declined to identify which banks would be required to submit plans, it’s safe to say that Citigroup, Inc., Bank of America Corporation and Wells Fargo & Company will be on that list.

“Compensation practices at some banking organizations have led to misaligned incentives and excessive risk-taking, contributing to bank losses and financial instability,” says Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke.  “The Federal Reserve is working to ensure that compensation packages appropriately tie rewards to longer-term performance and do not create undue risk for the firm or the financial system.”

The key concept here is that of moral hazard – creating a correlation between performance and remuneration so that people are always compelled to act in the general interest.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke Likely to Keep His Job

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Federal Reserve chairman and Great Depression scholar Ben Bernanke will stay in his job for another four years if President Barack Obama gets his way.  There likely will be some contentious moments during the reconfirmation hearings as Senators grill him about bailing out Wall Street institutions deemed too big to fail.  He is expected to stay on.bernanke__150184gm-a

Former Fed governor Randall Kroszner, who resigned his post to return to the University of Chicago, believes that the president has made the right choice and that Bernanke’s “amazing and steady” leadership rescued the nation from a second Great Depression.  Mark Calabria, a policy scholar at the libertarian Cato Institute, disagrees and opines that Bernanke’s renomination “sends the worst possible message”.  Still, most experts think that retaining Bernanke is a smart move, especially now that the economy and financial markets are stabilizing.  “Love him or hate him, there’s strength in continuity,” says money manager Douglas Nardi of Legg Mason Investment Counsel.  “Things are going pretty well, and you don’t want to rock the boat.”

Bernanke faces some rough months ahead.  He will have to start pulling money out of the system that he flooded with cash last fall.  This is a judgment call full of political peril, because it could mean slowing economic growth to control inflation – even if unemployment is still hovering around the 10 percent mark.  In Kroszner’s opinion, Bernanke is significantly farther along in this process than the general public realizes.  The Fed provided approximately $1.5 trillion in short-term loans as of the end of last year, which helped keep swaps, commercial paper and other institutional markets from shutting down completely.