
The End of too Big to Fail?
If this turns out to be true, it could be vey encouraging:
“They are the biggest of the big — the Citigroups, the Goldman Sachses, the AIGs and other financial behemoths. The Obama administration doesn’t want so many around anymore. Financial regulations proposed by the president would result in leaner and simpler institutions that don’t carry the weight of the system on their marble columns.
Around Washington and Wall Street they have come to be known as TBTF — too …
If this turns out to be true, it could be vey encouraging:
“They are the biggest of the big — the Citigroups, the Goldman Sachses, the AIGs and other financial behemoths. The Obama administration doesn’t want so many around anymore. Financial regulations proposed by the president would result in leaner and simpler institutions that don’t carry the weight of the system on their marble columns.
Around Washington and Wall Street they have come to be known as TBTF — too big to fail. It’s not just size, though. These companies are so far-flung, so intertwined and so precariously leveraged that a single one’s collapse can create systemwide tremors that imperil the finances of millions of Americans.
With that fear in mind, the government stepped in to bail out Citigroup Inc., Bank of America Corp. and American International Group Inc. with tens of billions of public money last year. Looking to avoid such a costly intervention, President Barack Obama’s regulatory plan calls for large, interconnected companies to pay a heavy price for the systemwide risk they pose.”
I’ll believe it when I see it . . .










July 10, 2009
It`s now a truism that the crisis arose from “Too much greed, not enough fear”…neither emotions are calculated to advance human civilisation (that is if you have kids and ergo ought to give a toss) . Why can`t we all just get round a table and thrash out a sane rational alternative to the worship of bits of paper and metal ?