Prieur du Plessis

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Over the past few days I conducted a snap poll on the performance of Messrs Bernanke and Paulson over the past year, i.e. the first year of the credit crisis. The poll was devised in order broadly to gauge (on a scale of 1 to 10) readers’ sentiments regarding the gentlemen’s actions during testing times.

In total about 400 people participated in the poll and responded as follows:

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Bernanke’s grades were all over the show, with about 42.4% of the participants rating his performance above average and 57.6% expressing the opinion that he performed in the bottom half of the grading card.

Paulson, however, had the bulk of his grades in the low numbers, with as many as 30.1% of the participants giving him the lowest grade of 1. (Bernanke also had the majority of his grades in the lowest category - 18.0%.)

A particularly succinct comment on the “management” of the credit crisis was received from a reader, Wendy, neatly summarizing the actions (or lack thereof) involved in the whole debacle. As I by and large concur with her thoughts, I have decided to republish her paragraphs below.The performance of Bernanke and Paulson over the past year is a different question than their performance over their entire tenure.

The Fed deserves low pre-crisis marks for not using its regulatory authority to put a stop to egregious lending practices. Treasury -- and the SEC, OFHEO and FDIC, which you left out -- didn’t use their authority to try to bring state-chartered banks into compliance with national bank standards. They also didn’t make any attempt to force securitizers (banks, the GSEs, the ratings agencies and the investment community) to force mortgage brokers to meet realistic lending and rating standards before the loans were bought, securitized, and sold to investors. They didn’t (and still haven’t) forced banks to put risky SIVs (structured investment vehicles) onto their balance sheets. They allowed (and still allow) banks and investment banks to use internal models to “mark to fantasy” (Level 3) and allow the enormous market for credit default swaps to be unregulated, opaque, and the recordkeeping not current.

By ignoring the foundations of the crisis, even as the cracks were forming and propagating, the Fed, the Treasury, the SEC, the FDIC, OFHEO and the bond rating companies all deserve an F.

However, since the crisis broke, a year ago, their performance has been much better.

Bernanke and Paulson have both been very active. Importantly, they have collaborated more than any Fed and Treasury heads that I can remember.

They have both actively tried to prevent a panic, by jawboning constantly in a clear and balanced way. Without their involvement, the financial structure would have shuddered, and possibly crumbled, several times in the past year.

I give Bernanke high marks for using unconventional moves, such as lending Treasuries with Level 3 securities as collateral to unregulated investment banks (possibly illegal, but it’s easier to ask for forgiveness than permission). Such moves increase liquidity and keep the financial system from seizing up, without the knock-on effects that the Fed’s previous tool — the Fed funds rate — would have (most notably, by impacting the dollar).

I give Paulson medium marks for trying his darnest to talk the dollar up, giving the Fed’s medicine of interest rate cuts time to work through the economy. Also, I give Paulson high marks for trying so hard to alleviate the SIV crisis (although it didn’t work).

However, I downgraded Paulson’s mark because I think his proposal to make the US taxpayer the bagholder for the GSEs is a terrible mistake and a very bad precedent.

Ultimately, I gave Bernanke a high grade and Paulson an average grade, although these certainly aren’t average times.

The entire regulatory regime of the US financial community requires the largest overhaul since the Great Depression. Regulations that have been gradually repealed need to be put back into place. However, since so many new financial tools have been developed, the whole system needs to be rethought. This must include the Fed, Treasury, SEC, FDIC, the GSEs, and the governmental housing agencies (GNMA, the FHA). The state regulators must also be involved, since many of the most egregious practices happened on the state level, not regulated by any federal agency.

To accomplish this while preventing an outright financial crisis is like trying to repair an aircraft that is sporadically losing aileron control while trying to set up final approach in turbulence.

Not to mention that the US is in the middle of a Presidential election. Whichever side wins, there will be a big change in the cast of characters, especially the Agency heads (Treasury, SEC, FDIC, and FHFA, which is the new agency that will be doing OFHEO’s job to regulate the GSEs) during these unsettled times.

This article has 18 comments:

  •  
    Wendy's comments are good. I only comment on the last year, since it is apparent by 2006 definitive action should have been taken then and wasn't. Bernanke gets a C- on this crisis and Paulson gets D- . The D standing for Dishonesty and ill advising the President. Other comment:

    Did you insert these pictures into the poll Mr. Du Plessis? If you did, your research result is completely meaningless.
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    Aug 22 07:52 PM
    i do not give the federal reserve, treasury, FDIC or anyone associated with this debacle high marks. they're all cut of the same cloth....saving wall street's ass from themselves.

    it doesn't take genius to slash interest rates rates into negative territory and leave them there. neither is it smart. exactly what have low rates done for us except destroyed returns for safety-minded investors. it hasn't spurred lending...it hasn't decreased mortage rates, which are higher than when the crisis began. as for the lending facilities, why should anyone consider it an accomplishment to foist bad paper onto the taxpayers and in return for good paper to the morons who nearly brought down the financial system with their greed.

    we'd have better off to let it burn. we'd have hit bottom faster and recovered faster than will now be possible with their endless bandages applied to a terminal ill patient...the system of cheap and plentiful credit to which our economy has become beholden.

    all these morons have done is bought time. the outcome remains uncertain.
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  •  
    Aug 22 09:50 PM
    Bernanke is a monetarist and he's getting a chance to show monetarist theories to be an essential part of central bank policy when the system is stressed.

    I think the Treasury could have enforced existing standards and regulation more strictly -- just the same as they could have identified the excesses in Enron and others.

    Problem is no one really knows the next big thing until it becomes the next big mistake (same goes for bubbles). I don't think anyone wants the govt to get into that business because the certain result is lost opportunity.

    Therefore the govt has to play cleanup when these things happen. And they are doing a decent job of it. Hopefully things won't get too far into the blame cycle, but it's an election year so it's hard to predict.

    It is interesting to see the automotives start to come hat-in-hand to the govt. The thing is, that's missing the point. According to his operating beliefs, Bernanke needed to bolster the financials to stop a collapse in money supply (it remains to be seen if he has yet done enough). The govt doesn't have to save industry X versus industry Y. That's the market's job.
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  •  
    Aug 22 11:43 PM
    I give them all a big fat A+. Then again, my wealth is all in precious metals. Why should I care that they're destroying what's left of the middle class and vapourising the savings of the working man and woman? The lesson is clear: don't work, don't save, and don't trust anyone. If they think they can build a society on that, good luck to them. Anyone who participates does so only out of avarice; I know that can't work, but I don't need anyone but me so who cares? When the time comes, my metal goes on my back and I hightail it north to take up my next career as a heavily armed, well-capitalised subsistence farmer. Please don't visit; you won't be welcome.
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  •  
    Aug 23 08:50 AM
    LMAO..who is Wendy ? Someone we should get advice from in the future perhaps ? Lower interest rates, Wendy ? LOL. The only accurate commentary including Mssr. du Plessis, comes from bearfund. When will all of you learn ?
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  •  
    Aug 23 08:58 AM
    Mr. du Plessis, you open with:

    "Over the past few days I conducted a snap poll on the performance of Messrs Bernanke and Paulson over the past year, i.e. the first year of the credit crisis."

    Firstly, it should be properly described as the credit FRAUD crises.

    Your whole question as to how well Bernanke and Paulson handled the crises, which they and their greedy banking friends created in the first place, is stupid and irrelevent.

    You are like the talking heads of CNBC who refuse to use the word fraud and who never call for any meaningful investigation into fraudulent behavior of the mortgage and banking industry. You, like the media talking heads, are towing the industry's line by publishing meaningless polls giving credibility to those most responsible for the crises.

    Since you have the bully pulpit available to you, you should be expressing your outrage and you should be calling for the prosecution of the criminals responsible for the theft of billions of dollars from investors and pensioners.

    Reasonable thinking people know that this crises could not have occured without a concerted effort to mislead and hide material facts by loan originators, mortgage companies, investment banks, rating agencies and investment brokers. More importantly, we need need to know which politicians had their backs scratched by the "forty thieves".

    Please, get a life and don't waste our time with this kind of drivel.
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  •  
    Aug 23 09:34 AM
    chiotlune,you are so wrong about Ben Bernanke .He is the furthest from monetarism that it is possible to be.Hence the financial crisis although Alan Greenspan and some before him must shoulder some of the responsibility also.I recommend you read FREE TO CHOOSE by MILTON and ROSE FRIEDMAN>They are monetarists and monetarists are usually called in to rectify the mess the inflaters cause and to restore the western economies back to financial health.
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  •  
    Aug 23 10:53 AM
    I totally agree with icandoitdon, these guys, plus SEC commissioner Cox (who all of a sudden has had an epiphany and decided that naked shorting - very very very selectively- should be stopped now that its HIS friends who are on the receiving end after having spent the past decade doing the vast majority of the naked shorting via their hedge funds). These bums are trying to do one thing, and one thing only... save the cretins on Wall Street from the financial comeuppance they so richly deserve, while shoving the bad paper up John Q's keister one more time, because we're evidently too stupid to know better.

    And evidently we are too stupid, because we're letting them get away with it. Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me.

    Wall Street is an insider's game, and the FED, Treasury, SEC and all their assorted sycophants and minions are nothing more than shills and supporters of the cause, which is namely to quietly separate as much capital as possible from the little guy. Those guys got away with murder, and for their CRIMES they are being rewarded with a free trip to the discount window where they received hundreds of billions of dollars of taxpayer monopoly money that DOESN'T get lent overnight, DOESN'T shore up their depleted capital structure, DOESN'T go to any worthwhile economic purpose whatsoever.. instead it goes straight into their trading accounts, and the trading accounts of the hedge funds they spawned, and these guys have all now become the largest day traders on earth, adrenalin junkies whose sole purpose is to just whip these markets back and forth, back and forth, skimming a little on the way up, and a little on the way down, as the orchestra plays the last waltz and the fat lady applies her makeup.
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  •  
    Aug 23 10:57 AM
    The failure goes far beyond the management of Bernanke and Paulson. The efforts of the congress and executive leadership has for years focused on elimination of the regulatory process. We have an economic system that is in free fall which will only be brought back into balance with serious regulation.
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  •  
    Aug 23 11:53 AM
    yeah! what you said crookedwood.
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  •  
    Aug 23 12:58 PM
    All this technical analysis stuff is gobble-d-gook. The bottom line is they stole the life savings of Americans by taking the return on the aggretate savings (CD's, T-bills, bonds, etc) from a nominal to a negative value for the past 7 years. This confiscated purchasing power was passed to spenders and speculators and caused inflation and retirement wipe outs to those who worked for decades and saved for retirement. The entire economy is a giant ponzi scheme run by these people.
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  •  
    Aug 23 01:42 PM
    Who else would do their job better?
    Who would want their job?
    And finally what do you think you would have done differently?

    It is far easier to judge than to do something that you know you will be judged for the rest of their lives. They did and do their best as would be expected of them.

    It is amazing that no one really complained until they started to see their false wealth disappear when it was realized that the loans would have to be paid back.
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  •  
    Aug 23 01:59 PM
    I'm glad to see that most responders to this article can see through the BS that is being disseminated by the government and its minions. It is a tragedy that we are powerless to stop government bailouts and guarantees for the thieves that created this mess. American citizens need to wake up.

    John McCain has been rehabilitated after his involvement in the S&L failures that cost tax payers billions of dollars. Even though he received money from his very close criminal friend, Charles Keating, it seems that all is forgiven. America never ceases to amaze me!
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  •  
    Aug 23 03:09 PM
    In the future, please explain to your audience that when you take your non-random "snap polls", the results are NOT generalizable to greater population, but rather only your group of 400 biased traders. I suspect that your 400 sample is comprised of the last group with the ethical stance or objective position to rate these men.
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  •  
    Aug 23 03:43 PM
    BERNANKE is another Greenspan, both articulate but unsound economics. At the Fed retreaT B.B. spoke yesterday that the economy MAY experience inflation and the economy IS EXPERIENCING a credit crisis. B.B. is reading tea leaves, namely the Fed's phony COST OF LIVING index that excludes FOOD and FUEL purchases of consumers.
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  •  
    Aug 23 04:44 PM
    Wendy's comment's very good. I agree with its publication. But wpDragon's are eloquent enough also to be published
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  •  
    Aug 23 10:21 PM
    I wonder if anyone really understands the size of the mortgage default problem. The defaults are still growing each week, dumping hundreds of thousands of more people out of their homes. I would think some government people would worry that casting 8 million homeowners ( many intelligent college grads) onto the street with all their belongings and family might generate very hard feelings. Revolutions have been known to develop out of millions of people on the street who feel cheated. Let's see, there are 250 million handguns in the USA and many of those guns are no longer in the owners home as he recently lost it.
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  •  
    That's an important point Iowa515. I think we'll see voter registration in 2012 and that is the area I am personally assisting in. There are very specific non-violent ways of cleaning out the nasty little selfish knomes in Washington.
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