Banks dictate conditions of US financial bailout
By Alex Lantier
14 October 2008

The 936 point rise on the US stock market yesterday was the American
ruling elite’s initial verdict on the extraordinarily favorable terms
the government is granting to financial firms in the $700 billion
bailout passed by Congress on October 3. Far from heralding improving
economic conditions for working people, the Wall Street surge reflects
the financial establishment’s success in extorting massive sums of
money from taxpayers.

Several factors played important roles in the market’s rise. A
technical correction was likely after the massive falls of last week,
when the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 2,236 points, or 21.33
percent, to 8451.19. The announcement of bank bailouts in Europe
totaling trillions of dollars—under conditions where national
governments are competing to rescue their respective banks—contributed
to expectations that Washington would continue to bail out its own
banks. Another major factor was undoubtedly a series of announcements
by US officials underscoring that US banks would essentially dictate
the terms of the bailout.

Late yesterday morning, news broke that the CEOs of the largest US
banks would meet with US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, the former
CEO of Goldman Sachs, to discuss the terms of the bailout. The Wall
Street Journal wrote, “Expected to attend were banking executives
including Ken Lewis, CEO of Bank of America; Jamie Dimon, CEO of
JPMorgan Chase; Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs Group; John
Mack, CEO of Morgan Stanley; and Robert P. Kelly, CEO of Bank of New
York Mellon.”

A Treasury spokeswoman said, “Treasury and [the Federal Reserve] are
meeting today with leading financial market participants to finalize
details on a financial market stabilization initiative.” The Journal
wrote, “One person familiar with the matter said Mr. Paulson is
expected to discuss details of his new plan to take equity stakes in
financial firms, among other points.”

The meeting’s roster underscores the social character of the bailout.
A handful of current and former top banking executives gathered for a
meeting, publicly announced a few hours before it took place and
closed to the public, to discuss the conditions under which they will
receive hundreds of billions of dollars in public funds. The fact
that, in a healthier political climate, these executives would face
investigation and prosecution for overseeing the predatory lending
practices that led to the housing and credit crises was simply
ignored.

In this meeting of the godfathers of American finance, no one was
present who represented the overwhelming majority of the American
population. Indeed, the participants live in a world of wealth and
power that has no resemblance to the existence of ordinary working
people.

One could start with Paulson himself, whose former bank stands to
benefit handsomely from the bailout which he has authored. While at
Goldman Sachs, Paulson amassed a personal fortune of $700 million.

The list continues:

According to Forbes magazine, Ken Lewis last year brought in a salary
of $20.13 million, and his holdings of Bank of America stock are worth
an estimated $112 million.

Jamie Dimon received a 2007 Christmas bonus of $14.5 million and holds
$190 million in JPMorgan stock.

Lloyd Blankfein received a Christmas bonus of $68 million and his
holdings of Goldman Sachs stock were worth $414.5 million last year.

Vikram Pandit received a $165 million signing bonus from Citigroup
last year, together with a $2.7 million salary for a few months of
work and $48 million in stock options.

John Mack received $41.8 million in compensation last year, and his
2007 holdings in Morgan Stanley stock were worth $220 million.

These firms’ stock, and particularly that of Goldman Sachs and Morgan
Stanley, rose rapidly on news of the meeting with Paulson. Goldman
stock rose 25 percent to $111 a share, and Morgan Stanley stock rose
87 percent to $18.10 per share.

Other financial stocks also rose significantly. Citigroup rose 13.25
percent to $15.98, Bank of New York Mellon rose 15.77 percent to
$30.68, and Bank of America rose 9.2 percent to $22.79. JPMorgan stock
fell in initial trading on fears of further write-downs, but after the
meeting announcement it rose from just over $40 per share to close at
$41.64.

Neel Kashkari, the assistant secretary of the treasury and ex-Goldman
Sachs executive who is overseeing the $700 billion bailout, confirmed
in a speech yesterday that his goal—in purchasing both equity (shares
of stock) and assets of financial corporations—is to concentrate money
in the hands of the biggest banks.

Kashkari told a Washington DC meeting of the Institute of
International Bankers: “We are designing a standardized program to
purchase equity in a broad array of financial institutions. As with
the other programs [in the bailout], the equity purchase program will
be voluntary and designed with attractive terms to encourage
participation from healthy institutions.”

This emphasis on bailing out supposedly “healthy” banks reflects the
increasingly shaky position of many of the major banks. They are
jockeying for influence over the government handouts that will
determine which banks profit, which suffer, and which close.

Writing 125 years ago in the third volume of his masterwork, Capital,
Marx noted, “So long as things go well, competition affects an
operating fraternity of the capitalist class... But as soon as it is
no longer a question of sharing profits, but of sharing losses,
everyone tries to reduce his own share to a minimum and to shove it
off upon another. The class, as such, must inevitably lose. How much
the individual capitalist must bear of the loss, i.e., to what extent
he must share it at all, is decided by strength and cunning, and
competition then becomes a fight among hostile brothers. The
antagonism between each individual capitalist’s interests and those of
the capitalist class as a whole then comes to the surface...”

This anti-social struggle between the various factions of the
bourgeoisie is expressed in the secretive and exclusive character of
the planning of the bailout.

The Treasury has set up the bailout’s asset purchases—which are to be
carried out by private firms—so that only the largest companies will
be able to participate and rake in the lucrative fees the government
will pay out. Kashkari said: “Our initial procurements set high
capability standards: for example, securities asset managers had to
have at least $100 billion of dollar-denominated fixed-income assets
under management. This is critical given the magnitude of the program—
up to $700 billion. Treasury believes it would not be fiscally prudent
to ask a firm that only had experience managing only a few billion to
manage $100 billion.”

The Treasury is reserving the other roles in the bailout for an elite
group of financial and legal firms. Kashkari stated that the Treasury
Department had considered only three candidates for the role of
“master custodian firm,” whose function, according to Kashkari, would
be to “hold and track the assets we purchase as well as run and report
on the auctions we use to buy the assets.” The Treasury also contacted
six law firms as potential consultants on the bailout’s stock-purchase
program. Kashkari added, “We received two proposals, and selected [top
New York law firm] Simpson Thatcher [& Bartlett] on Friday.”

The result of this bailout—a major consolidation and restructuring of
the US banking industry—will be quite harmful to the interests of the
population. The smaller number of surviving banks will have even more
market power to set interest rates and control access to credit for
working people, students and small businesses.

While the best-connected firms will profit immensely from the bailout,
the bourgeoisie and its political representatives insist there is no
money for elementary social needs of the working class, such as
foreclosure relief, universal health care and the right to a secure
retirement. The major presidential and vice presidential candidates
have uniformly called for cuts in existing, already inadequate,
programs such as Social Security and Medicare.

The stock market’s rise today is not the advent of a new era of
prosperity for the American people. Rather, the bourgeoisie is
celebrating the Great Heist of 2008.


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