Wednesday 22nd of February 2012
| Why it's time to break up the 'too big to fail' banks |
|
|
|
|
Former FDIC Chair Sheila Bair America is downsizing. Whether it's the food we eat, the cars we drive, or the houses we live in, Americans are concluding that smaller is better. Even U.S. corporations are starting to see the benefit of more Lilliputian institutions; the impending --and widely hailed -- breakups of McGraw-Hill and Kraft are two examples. So what about banks? It would surely be in the government's interest to downsize megabanks. Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) continues to push his bill to split apart the largest institutions. Regulators have new authority to order divestitures under the Dodd-Frank financial reform law. From a shareholder standpoint, government breakups have a pretty good outcome. It worked out well for John D. Rockefeller, whose shares in Standard Oil doubled after it was ordered to break up. Ditto for those who owned stock in AT&T. |
Latest News
- HUD boss Donovan jumps into Obama mortgage melee
- Attorney General Holder: Countrywide Chief's Most Valuable Friend
- U.S. drops criminal probe of former Countrywide chief Angelo Mozilo
- Congress Eyes New Rules For Inherited IRAs
- States Negotiate $26 Billion Deal for Homeowners
- David Stockman: It's True. The BLS Data Is Made Up
- Deal Is Closer for a U.S. Plan on Mortgage Relief
- Checkmate For Japanese Sovereign Debt
- Cutoff Looms On Loan Accord
- Roubini: We will see a Greece credit event, regardless of deal
- Why it's time to break up the 'too big to fail' banks
- More failed HAMP trials end in foreclosure
- FHA's total delinquency rate nears 18% in December
- Capitalism (That's What I Want)
- FHA Wants Lenders to Relax Credit Scores
Web Site Development by Dark Twin Marketing Web Site Design and Graphics by Cassie Designs


