Thursday, November 3, 2011

Just How Trustworthy is that Trustworthy Guy in the Corner Office?

You know how, when someone is arrested for a truly heinous crime, there's always a neighbor interviewed who says something along the lines of, "But he was always so nice. Just a nice, quiet, ordinary guy."

A nice, quiet, ordinary guy with thirty-two bodies in the basement.

And then, bit by bit, the background stories emerge: the torturing of animals as a small child, the sociopathic behavior as an adolescent, the inability to control rage.

With heinous corporate crimes, it's the same. Enron gets extolled as a model ... until it isn't. Madoff's investment advice is utterly brilliant ... until it isn't. The headlines are shocking, but in the weeks and months that follow, more information comes out and the surprise ends up being that the shenanigans went on as long as they did. (Many people, for example, had tried to bring Madoff to the SEC's attention?)

Two days ago, I wrote a post about the fall of MF Global. As I noted then, it had seemed at first like a simple too-many-big-bets-that-turned-out-badly failure. And then the little matter of $600 million plus in missing customer funds turned up.

And today's New York Times carries a DealBook article by Susanne Craig, Ben Protess, and Michael J. De La Merced, that claims that while the firm fell apart astonishingly fast, "the collapse came after regulators raised warning flags for more than four months." Not exactly an overnight disaster. Jon Corzine, former Goldman partner, former US Senator from New Jersey, former Governor of New Jersey, had been chairman and chief executive officer of MF Global for less than two years.

The Times reporters note drily that "even when the watchdogs sound the alarm, it is not necessarily enough to save a firm." Regulatory agencies and the FBI are now looking into the matter, although no charges have been filed. So far.

And the authors also note that the resistance to regulators' insistence that the firm should raise more capital and provide more information about some risky transactions shows that "three years after the financial crisis, Wall Street executives are still fighting regulators' demands."

Over the course of the next several months, I expect to read reports of new banking bonuses, all in the name of "we have to keep the very best people." Me, I think these guys may be some of the very worst with whom to trust our hardly-earned cash.

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