Dodd-Frank Act: The End of Banking

By PETER WALLISON From the American Enterprise Institute The dominant theme of the 2,300-page Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act is fear of instability and change, which the act suppresses by subjecting the largest financial firms to banklike regulation. The competitiveness, innovativeness, and risk taking that have always characterized U.S. financial firms will, under this new structure, inevitably be subordinated to supervisory judgments about what these firms can safely be allowed to do. But the worst element of this system is that the extraordinary power given to regulators–and particularly the Federal Reserve–is likely to change the nature of the U.S. financial system. Where financial firms once focused on beating their competitors, they will now focus on currying favor with their regulator, which will have the power to control their every move. What may ultimately emerge is a partnership between the largest financial firms and the Federal Reserve–a partnership in which the Fed protects them from failure and excessive competition and they in turn curb their competitive instincts to carry out the government’s policies and directions. In addition, with the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the act abandons a fundamental principle of the U.S. Constitution, in which Congress retains the power to control the agencies of the executive branch. These wholesale changes in traditional relationships are hard to explain except as the triumph of a fundamentally different view–a corporatist political model more characteristic of Europe–of the government’s role in the U.S. economy. Key points in this Outlook: …Continue Reading

Bank Regulation on Securitization

Due to the passing of the Dodd-Frank Bill it is clear that tighter rules for securitization are right around the corning. Many agencies are concerned an uneasy about this new legislation. At worst, government efforts to rein in issuers of asset-backed securities could produce three separate regulations, each with its own elements. While the three rules would all largely do the same thing — strengthening disclosure and requiring issuers to retain 5% of the credit risk from a securitization — they have significant differences. A 5% requirement will cause for Bank pricing to increase and will be passed on to the consumer as a trickle down effect. In an interview Cristeena Naser, a senior counsel for the American Bankers Association said, “When there are all these balls up in the air, you can’t expect businesses to make systems changes … until the dust settles. They need to be coordinated. Nobody is saying that we don’t need changes to the process, but we need a uniform change to allow businesses to make decisions.” Regulators have stated that there is coordination across agencies however each regulator the FDIC and SEC are pursuing separate paths because they each deal with specialized jurisdictions. “Every regulator has jurisdiction over certain areas, and we have jurisdiction over the receivership rules. The SEC has jurisdiction over the securities rules,” said Michael Krimminger, the deputy to the FDIC chairman for policy. “Just because someone comes out first with a rule and someone comes out second with a rule …Continue Reading

Obama Small Business Aid, Will It Work?

Today Obama adressed the nation and spoke about several aspects of the economy. Mistermoneyman paid attention to its viewers by reporting on the “small business aid” package that will be worked on once Congress comes back from their robust summer break. We dug deep to find the pros and cons on this potential aid. President Barack Obama is on the verge of creating as much as $300 billion in credit for small businesses as bankers raise doubt about whether there’s demand for new loans and how much will be repaid. The U.S. Senate may vote this week on a bill to funnel $30 billion of capital to community banks, whose business customers typically are small firms. Banks could leverage the sum to make $300 billion in loans that create jobs, according to a Senate summary. Let’s try and remember that the Senate is a group of politicians who are note Bankers and are not the Federal Reserve.  This capital could more than double the commercial and industrial loans at eligible banks as of the first quarter, according to data compiled by KBW Inc. Bankers say the problem isn’t scarce credit, it’s lack of demand from creditworthy firms in a weak economy. The result may be more loans given to distressed firms and higher losses. While bank regulators don’t compile default rates, the biggest lenders have charge-offs of 4 percent to 14 percent tied to small businesses. Eliot Stark, managing director at Capital Insight Partners Inc., said their credit record resembles “junk.” “The highest demand for loans is …Continue Reading

Run Down of the Economy and Real Estate

August 30, 2010 Uncategorized No Comments

Business Economics (NABE) of 242 economists finds 60% feel monetary policy is “appropriate” given current economic conditions; 45% say monetary policy risks are were skewed toward deflation and 89% think the Dodd-Frank Act will have only a modest effect in avoiding another crisis. The newest survey of the top 242 Economists finds 60% feel monetary policy is “appropriate” given current economic conditions. 45% of the Economists believe that policy risks are skewed toward deflation and 89% think the Dodd-Frank Act will have only a modest effect in avoiding another crisis. I guess it is to bad the economists were not consulted before the Act was executed. Dodd & Frank probably felt it necessary to include reform on the areas they believed caused the crisis. In more economic news the second quarter GDP rate represents a considerable deceleration from the 5% rate seen during Q409, when optimism was growing and job losses fading. That boost lasted though the winter, but turned into a 3.7% rate in the 1st quarter, and now has again settled back again. The decline in the economy has been tracked by the Chicago Federal Reserve’s National Activity Index, which sported a -0.7 figure in June, the end of the second quarter. However, the most recent report, covering July, found an improvement to a flat 0.0 figure, indicating that the economy likely returned closer to its natural annual growth rate of perhaps 2.7% or so. Of course, July’s meager improvement was just the first month of the third quarter, …Continue Reading

Making Money as Mortgage Lender Has Changed

WASHINGTON-The Federal Reserve’s new rules on loan officer compensation are expected to force mortgage companies to review the way they conduct business and compensate their employees. “It’s going to make a lot of people restructure their mortgage departments,” according to Elizabeth Deal, executive vice president of a mortgage subsidiary controlled by the Independent Community Bankers of America. Lenders will have to rewrite the job descriptions of their LOs and compensation packages, “which could really impact their way of life.” The Fed compensation rule allows lenders to pay a loan officer or mortgage broker a flat fee or a percentage of the loan amount. ICBA Mortgage provides community banks with access to the secondary market. Several community banks pay their loan officers a base salary with many LOs receiving a bonus at yearend based on their mortgage production volume. “Probably, this rule change doesn’t affect a majority of our members,” she said, “but it does affect some.” Scott Stern, CEO of Lenders One, a mortgage cooperative with 155 member firms, said there is much confusion about the Fed’s compensation rule among his affiliates. “They are concerned about possible limits on company compensation and loan officer compensation,” he said. The Lenders One CEO stressed that he supports one key objective of the Fed rule, which is to ban compensation practices that encourage LOs to steer borrowers into riskier and higher-priced loans, including nonprime mortgages that carry teaser rates and prepayment penalties. “However, the rule should empower LOs to earn a living based …Continue Reading

How to Outsource on the Web

August 26, 2010 Uncategorized No Comments

Have you ever thought about using a website to outsource services? Danny Guillory of San Francisco has used a company named Elance, to higher professional vendors through their online marketplace. Guillory is chief executive of Innovations International, a $750,000 human resources consulting firm with five employees. Through Elance, he has hired a graphic designer in Provo, Utah, to work on a client’s posters, and an administrative assistant in India to crunch numbers. Now he’s using the site to select a market researcher. To date, the outside help has cost a mere $1,500. Without Elance, says Guillory, “there’s no way I could have afforded to do [some of this work].” What is the difference between online marketplaces and and freelancers you ask? These sites are more than just job boards, these sites connect buyers with vendors, help manage projects, and deal with disputes and payments. The user does not need to have a large technological prowess but it is important to be specific in describing a project and to vet vendors properly. Several other sites that we recommend using is Guru.com, DoMyStuff.com, and RentaCoder (specifically about software development.) Mistermoneyman says give it a try!

Managing Rules for Success

August 25, 2010 Uncategorized No Comments

“Successful leaders empower their people to make decisions, share information, and take risks. Here are three ways to get out of your people’s way and let them take ownership: 1. Give responsibility and autonomy. Let those who demonstrate the capacity to handle responsibility take on new levels of accountability and have autonomy over their tasks and resources. 2. Focus on growth. Create an environment where people have the opportunity to expand their skills and are rewarded for doing so. 3. Don’t second-guess. Unless it is absolutely necessary, don’t doubt the decisions of others. This undermines their confidence and encourages them to hold back when they have ideas.” – Today’s Management Tip was adapted from “Empowering Your Employees to Empower Themselves” by Marshall Goldsmith.

California School District Problems

August 25, 2010 Uncategorized No Comments

State leaders on Monday used a recently passed law to delay payment of nearly $3 billion in funds to K-12 public education and a welfare program, a decision that officials acknowledged will exacerbate difficulties for school districts and counties that already have had to lay off workers. The move transfers part of the state’s money shortage crisis to counties, school districts and local officials, who will be left to decide how to bridge the gap to continue providing services to the public. “Essentially, this is … the state pushing its cash management to local districts,” said Jack O’Connell, the state superintendent of public instruction, adding that in the past few years, “schools have not only taken a hit, they’ve taken a massive hit.” Districts feel pressure What the decision means for schools, which will not receive scheduled payments from the state in September totaling $2.5 billion, will vary by district but many will have to borrow the money from the private market and pay it back with interest, O’Connell said. Troy Flint, spokesman for the Oakland Unified School District, said, “This wasn’t unexpected, given California’s budget woes, but as with most decisions coming from Sacramento recently, it puts more pressure on local districts to compensate for shortcomings at the state level.” Jean Hurst, a lobbyist for the California State Association of Counties said the delay in receiving $400 million in welfare dollars for counties will probably also result in counties having to borrow cash to make up the difference. She …Continue Reading

What your Entrepreneurial Mindset Should Be

August 25, 2010 Uncategorized No Comments

Although the video is aged, this is the mindset that you need when you start your own venture.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AFUOrw8AvEI

Entrepreneur Know Your Indicators Such as GDP!

August 25, 2010 Uncategorized No Comments

If you are an opportunist and an entrepreneur then you need to understand what GDP is.  The best way to understand the U.S. economy is by looking at Gross Domestic Product (GDP), which is the statistic used to measure the economy. In other words, the U.S. economy, as measured by GDP, is everything produced by all the people and all the companies in the U.S. In the first quarter 2010, it was $14.6 trillion. GDP is important for three reasons: Most importantly, it is used to determine if the U.S. economy is growing more quickly or more slowly than the quarter before, or the same quarter the year before. It is also used to compare the size of economies throughout the world. It is to compare the relative growth rate of economies throughout the world. Here is a graph depicting GDP over the last several months. As an entrepreneur starting a business when GDP has decreased may not necessarily be the smartest business move if your business will be trying to buy, sell, or exchange goods.

 

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