-"I, for one, am willing to take my chances. Bring it on with your threats to force plain-vanilla investments on consumers. Wall Street, if you really want to frighten us, you need to do better than that."
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601039&sid=afCVGLt3daN8
Wall Street Cries âFeed Meâ or World Will End: Susan Antilla
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Commentary by Susan Antilla
Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) -- In the musical comedy âLittle Shop of Horrors,â a dangerous and gluttonous plant dubbed âAudrey IIâ signals its insatiable appetite for human blood with a baritone demand, âfeed me.â
In the real-life Shop of Horrors, the evil plant is gone. In its place is our voracious financial industry, which has been partaking in menacing feedings while stirring up fear of the havoc to come if it doesnât keep getting what it wants.
A year after the worldâs banking system almost collapsed, you might think financial bosses would be agonizing over how they would be depicted in history books, and anyone with a job would be offering to stick around and clean up the mess for a pittance.
Youâd be both silly and wrong, as we all know by now. Financeâs version of Audrey II is thrashing about with threats that, crisis or not, theyâd better get their extravagant pay and light-touch regulation. Anything less and -- real horrors -- financial innovation will decline and the world as we know it will end.
Weâll get to that financial innovation silliness in a minute.
A poll of Bloomberg customers released last week revealed that 21 percent of traders, analysts and fund managers polled in the U.S. expect their 2009 bonuses to be bigger than last year. Another 24 percent expect their bonuses to be about the same, which is pretty good when you consider the employment woes of the rest of the nation. Frustrated taxpayers wonder how they got into a mess where $700 billion of their money went to bailing out people who today are poised to pocket record amounts in some cases (9 percent in the Bloomberg survey).
Argument Trumped
In the financial industry, though, the attitude of entitlement trumps any argument that there would be no job, no employer and no paycheck without the bailouts.
In fact, those Bloomberg customers said any limits on pay will boomerang. Asked âDo you think limits on executive compensation in the financial industry will do more to control excessive risk-taking or more to discourage useful innovation?â 65 percent of the ones working in the U.S. said limits on pay would choke innovation.
Knowing what we do about innovation in finance, we wouldnât want that to happen.
Are there actually credible people worried that capitalism will be brought to its knees if restrictions on pay, and related reforms in regulation, are imposed on Wall Street?
Easing the Rules
NYSE Euronext Chief Executive Officer Duncan Niederauer, who is either tone deaf to the publicâs disgust or secure in the belief that the publicâs anger doesnât matter, told the Wall Street Journal last week that heâs worried that regulatory changes in the works in Washington will determine whether New York City can compete in the world. Iâm having a déjà vu moment. Didnât we try, and fail, at the idea of ratcheting down our rules to the levels of competing countries?
The high standards of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act give âthe perception of heavy regulationâ on the NYSE, he said, and a proposed tax on securities transactions (intended in one bill to be used to refill the coffers Wall Street depleted) could have âdisastrous consequencesâ for entrepreneurs trying to tap into the U.S. equity markets.
Iâm glad Niederauer brought that up, because the notion of a smart person having a great idea and building a business to the point where it goes public is just what I think of when I hear the word âinnovation.â
Talk of Innovation
Iâm perplexed, though, when I ponder what Wall Street means when talking about innovation. Thatâs not for any lack of examples, but for an understanding of what Wall Street adds to the goal of smart allocation of capital when it does its innovating.
I get it when the tech geek huddles in a garage for three years with a couple of pals and comes up with a blockbuster idea that brings pleasure to consumers or profits to companies, and then takes the company public. But why am I supposed to be losing sleep that new rules might impede the creation of the new, new thing in tax evasion? Or high-frequency trading? Maybe a new flavor of collateralized-debt obligation bearing a delusional AAA rating?
If you sift through position papers of financial trade groups, thereâs a lot of noise about the need for regulation. But read far enough and you hit that paragraph that explains why the writerâs constituents donât need to be overseen with serious diligence.
And then, inevitably, you will meet with that foreboding warning that regulation will threaten innovation. In a âDear Senatorâ letter published by the Financial Services Roundtable on July 8, politicians were warned that a proposed agency to protect consumers would âjeopardize the safety and soundness of many firms and stifle innovation by requiring firms to offer âplain vanillaâ products.â
I, for one, am willing to take my chances. Bring it on with your threats to force plain-vanilla investments on consumers. Wall Street, if you really want to frighten us, you need to do better than that.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601039&sid=afCVGLt3daN8
Wall Street Cries âFeed Meâ or World Will End: Susan Antilla
Share Business ExchangeTwitterFacebook| Email | Print | A A A
Commentary by Susan Antilla
Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) -- In the musical comedy âLittle Shop of Horrors,â a dangerous and gluttonous plant dubbed âAudrey IIâ signals its insatiable appetite for human blood with a baritone demand, âfeed me.â
In the real-life Shop of Horrors, the evil plant is gone. In its place is our voracious financial industry, which has been partaking in menacing feedings while stirring up fear of the havoc to come if it doesnât keep getting what it wants.
A year after the worldâs banking system almost collapsed, you might think financial bosses would be agonizing over how they would be depicted in history books, and anyone with a job would be offering to stick around and clean up the mess for a pittance.
Youâd be both silly and wrong, as we all know by now. Financeâs version of Audrey II is thrashing about with threats that, crisis or not, theyâd better get their extravagant pay and light-touch regulation. Anything less and -- real horrors -- financial innovation will decline and the world as we know it will end.
Weâll get to that financial innovation silliness in a minute.
A poll of Bloomberg customers released last week revealed that 21 percent of traders, analysts and fund managers polled in the U.S. expect their 2009 bonuses to be bigger than last year. Another 24 percent expect their bonuses to be about the same, which is pretty good when you consider the employment woes of the rest of the nation. Frustrated taxpayers wonder how they got into a mess where $700 billion of their money went to bailing out people who today are poised to pocket record amounts in some cases (9 percent in the Bloomberg survey).
Argument Trumped
In the financial industry, though, the attitude of entitlement trumps any argument that there would be no job, no employer and no paycheck without the bailouts.
In fact, those Bloomberg customers said any limits on pay will boomerang. Asked âDo you think limits on executive compensation in the financial industry will do more to control excessive risk-taking or more to discourage useful innovation?â 65 percent of the ones working in the U.S. said limits on pay would choke innovation.
Knowing what we do about innovation in finance, we wouldnât want that to happen.
Are there actually credible people worried that capitalism will be brought to its knees if restrictions on pay, and related reforms in regulation, are imposed on Wall Street?
Easing the Rules
NYSE Euronext Chief Executive Officer Duncan Niederauer, who is either tone deaf to the publicâs disgust or secure in the belief that the publicâs anger doesnât matter, told the Wall Street Journal last week that heâs worried that regulatory changes in the works in Washington will determine whether New York City can compete in the world. Iâm having a déjà vu moment. Didnât we try, and fail, at the idea of ratcheting down our rules to the levels of competing countries?
The high standards of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act give âthe perception of heavy regulationâ on the NYSE, he said, and a proposed tax on securities transactions (intended in one bill to be used to refill the coffers Wall Street depleted) could have âdisastrous consequencesâ for entrepreneurs trying to tap into the U.S. equity markets.
Iâm glad Niederauer brought that up, because the notion of a smart person having a great idea and building a business to the point where it goes public is just what I think of when I hear the word âinnovation.â
Talk of Innovation
Iâm perplexed, though, when I ponder what Wall Street means when talking about innovation. Thatâs not for any lack of examples, but for an understanding of what Wall Street adds to the goal of smart allocation of capital when it does its innovating.
I get it when the tech geek huddles in a garage for three years with a couple of pals and comes up with a blockbuster idea that brings pleasure to consumers or profits to companies, and then takes the company public. But why am I supposed to be losing sleep that new rules might impede the creation of the new, new thing in tax evasion? Or high-frequency trading? Maybe a new flavor of collateralized-debt obligation bearing a delusional AAA rating?
If you sift through position papers of financial trade groups, thereâs a lot of noise about the need for regulation. But read far enough and you hit that paragraph that explains why the writerâs constituents donât need to be overseen with serious diligence.
And then, inevitably, you will meet with that foreboding warning that regulation will threaten innovation. In a âDear Senatorâ letter published by the Financial Services Roundtable on July 8, politicians were warned that a proposed agency to protect consumers would âjeopardize the safety and soundness of many firms and stifle innovation by requiring firms to offer âplain vanillaâ products.â
I, for one, am willing to take my chances. Bring it on with your threats to force plain-vanilla investments on consumers. Wall Street, if you really want to frighten us, you need to do better than that.
