According to this article from the WSJ, Trump is considering a material shrinkage of agencies that regulate the country's financial system.
Exclusive | Trump Advisers Seek to Shrink or Eliminate Bank Regulators - WSJ
This is jaw-droppingly dangerous.
Without getting into the geeked-out accounting, banking is one of the few industries (maybe the only one) where you can lose many times your potential revenue, and 50 - 100 times your potential profit, on any given transaction.
With that level of downside (huge) and unusually limited upside, you have to be highly risk-averse to stay in business.
Regulators have rightfully earned a bad reputation for the way they've handled a lot of things. And generally speaking their reaction to botched performance has been to cry for more regulation.
The truth is they have the power to do their jobs properly, and have had it for decades. They should enforce the existing regulations more stringently. When they scream for yet more regulations to enforce, they're just passing the buck....essentially saying that the latest crisis wasn't their fault, and if only they'd had more regulations to help them do their jobs, the failure wouldn't have happened. But I digress.
Eliminating or neutering bank regulation will lead to nasty crises because the suits will pursue ever-riskier practices in the chase for more profit. The profit will be short-lived, the markets will correct the wretched excess, the ensuing collapse will cost many times more than the profit garnered, and the taxpayer will be left holding the bag.
This is coming from someone who spent a good deal of his banking career dealing with regulators. The fact that they're not perfect doesn't mean the industry doesn't need them.
Exclusive | Trump Advisers Seek to Shrink or Eliminate Bank Regulators - WSJ
This is jaw-droppingly dangerous.
Without getting into the geeked-out accounting, banking is one of the few industries (maybe the only one) where you can lose many times your potential revenue, and 50 - 100 times your potential profit, on any given transaction.
With that level of downside (huge) and unusually limited upside, you have to be highly risk-averse to stay in business.
Regulators have rightfully earned a bad reputation for the way they've handled a lot of things. And generally speaking their reaction to botched performance has been to cry for more regulation.
The truth is they have the power to do their jobs properly, and have had it for decades. They should enforce the existing regulations more stringently. When they scream for yet more regulations to enforce, they're just passing the buck....essentially saying that the latest crisis wasn't their fault, and if only they'd had more regulations to help them do their jobs, the failure wouldn't have happened. But I digress.
Eliminating or neutering bank regulation will lead to nasty crises because the suits will pursue ever-riskier practices in the chase for more profit. The profit will be short-lived, the markets will correct the wretched excess, the ensuing collapse will cost many times more than the profit garnered, and the taxpayer will be left holding the bag.
This is coming from someone who spent a good deal of his banking career dealing with regulators. The fact that they're not perfect doesn't mean the industry doesn't need them.
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