Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 4-Weill changes mind, calls for big banks to break up

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 4-Weill changes mind, calls for big banks to break up
Jul 25th 2012, 23:48

Wed Jul 25, 2012 7:48pm EDT

  By Jed Horowitz and David Henry      July 25 (Reuters) - Sanford "Sandy" Weill, the tycoon who  built financial conglomerate Citigroup Inc into a massive  U.S. commercial and investment bank, said it is time to split up  the biggest banks so they can go back to growing again.       The comments were an astonishing about-face for Weill, who  in the late 1990s smashed the U.S. law known as "Glass-Steagall"  that divided commercial and investment banking. Riskier  investment banking should be separated from safer commercial  banking and the government should only have to insure the  latter, Weill said.            "The world changes and the world that we live in is  different from the one that we lived in 10 years ago," Weill  said in an interview with television network CNBC.      Other long-time Wall Street players were quick to applaud  Weill and the shares of the biggest banks rallied.      Said Arthur Levitt, Weill's former business partner in the  1960s and a chairman of the Securities Exchange Commission in  the 1990s: "It's a very difficult statement for him to make  since he was largely responsible for the repeal of  Glass-Steagall and he's absolutely right. This is a very  significant statement."       But even if a growing number of former bank executives are  calling for break-ups, there is little evidence that current  bank executives or regulators are listening. Big banks are  dieting instead of amputating. They are selling smaller units  and laying off staff without completely dismantling themselves.      The closest any banks have come so far is in shrinking their  balance sheets. Morgan Stanley, for example, said last week  that, by the end of 2014, it plans to reduce fixed-income  trading assets by about 30 percent from third-quarter 2011  levels, on a risk-weighted basis. Citigroup has reduced its Citi  Holdings unit, which holds assets the bank hopes to shed, to  $191 billion from about $650 billion in 2009.        Regulators are putting some limits on big banks, lawyers  said. They are blocking them from making big acquisitions and  demanding that "too big to fail" banks fund themselves with more  equity capital.       U.S. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner said on Wednesday that  these steps and others the United States has already taken are  serious.        "Congress put in place limits on how large they can get and  deprived government of the ability to come in and rescue them  from their mistakes," he told lawmakers at the House Financial  Services Committee hearing.      Breaking up big banks is logistically difficult, given the  thousands of legal entities involved and thorny questions about  how to allocate existing debt across the different businesses,  for example.                 A "CREATIVE' INVESTMENT BANKING SECTOR      But Weill called for far deeper changes among the major  banks, noting that when investment banks are no longer eligible  to be bailed out by the U.S. Federal Reserve, they can go back  to innovating and growing fast.       "Let's have a creative investment banking system like we  have always had, so that the financial industry can once again  attract the best and the brightest like they are doing in  Silicon Valley," Weill said, referring to the region near San  Francisco often seen as the epicenter of the technology sector.      The Glass-Steagall law, known as "The Banking Act of 1933,"  was passed during the Great Depression to help restore faith in  banks. It revamped the financial system, creating, for example,  deposit insurance, in addition to separating commercial and  investment banking.       Looser regulations in the 1980s and 1990s chipped away at  Glass-Steagall. But when Weill's Travelers Group, which included  an insurer and the Salomon Brothers investment bank, took over  Citicorp in 1998, it needed a special temporary regulatory  exemption to operate those businesses together.       Weill lobbied heavily for key provisions of Glass-Steagall  to be repealed, a change he won in 1999. Since then, the biggest  U.S. banks have grown even bigger compared to the overall  economy, a trend only accelerated by the financial crisis.       Bigger is not necessarily better, though. For the past two  years, Duke University law professor Lawrence Baxter has  researched the value of big banks.       In a forthcoming journal article, he concludes that large  banks have not proven to be more efficient, especially in light  of the government subsidies they receive. But he did note that  they have some advantages such as the ability to serve large  global customers.       "Our own study indicates no clear advantages for universal  banks at this stage," Baxter wrote.                         A GROWING CHORUS       Other major former bank executives have also called for  banks to be split up. Phil Purcell, the former chairman and  chief executive officer of Morgan Stanley,  wrote in an  opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal last month that  shareholders would benefit.       Breaking up the biggest banks could double or triple the  value of the companies, Purcell wrote. Purcell long argued for  "financial supermarkets" starting with his work at McKinsey in  the 1970s, before he changed his mind.       John Reed, the former chief executive of Citicorp who worked  with Weill on the 1997 merger with Travelers, said in March that  he regrets his role and is astounded at the way banks continue  to fight regulations to rein in risky activities.        "It wasn't that there was one or two or institutions that,  you know, got carried away and did stupid things. It was, we all  did ... and then the whole system came down," Reed said on Bill  Moyers' public television show.           Former regulators have also argued for break-ups. Sheila  Bair, chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp until last  year, wrote in a January column in Fortune that shareholders  should press for banks to break themselves up, and that banks'  customers would benefit.       Soon after JPMorgan Chase's Chief Executive Jamie Dimon said  the bank could lose billions from bad credit derivatives trades  in May, Bair wrote another column calling for big banks to be  broken up because they are too big to manage effectively.      There is some limited support for breaking up banks in  Washington. Senator Sherrod Brown has introduced a law that  would limit how big banks can get, for example through limiting  how much they can borrow and how big they can be relative to the  overall economy.       The Ohio Senator, a Democrat, said in a statement on  Wednesday: "Allowing Wall Street megabanks to grow so large and  over-leveraged ... isn't fair to taxpayers."       Elizabeth Warren, an outspoken consumer advocate and Harvard  law professor who is running for U.S. Senate, believes the  Senate ought to consider a return of Glass-Steagall.       But Brown's bill is seen as a long-shot and Bair noted in  her May column that "in Washington, no one is seriously  discussing breaking up the big banks."      Many on Wall Street were flabbergasted by Weill's comments.      "I think it was a guy with a mask on who looked like Sandy  Weill," said Alan "Ace" Greenberg, the former chairman and chief  executive of Bear Stearns Cos, who is now an adviser with  JPMorgan Chase & Co.       "I've known Sandy for a long time and it didn't sound like  him to me."  
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