UK: Foxes Guarding The Banking Hen House
By Markham Lee on February 13, 2009 | More Posts By Markham Lee | Author's Website
Apparently our cousins across the pond (well my cousins at least) have their own problems around foxes guarding regulatory hen houses, and government officials living in glass houses:
From the WSJ:
LONDON — A Parliamentary committee examining the banking crisis claimed its first victim Wednesday, as the deputy chairman of the U.K.’s financial watchdog agency stepped down amid allegations he silenced the risk director at one of the UK’s troubled banks several years ago.
Sir James Crosby, deputy chairman of the Financial Services Authority, had been the chief executive of HBOS PLC during the tenure of Paul Moore, who was head of regulatory risk at the bank. Mr. Moore claims his warnings that the bank was growing too rapidly went unheeded and resulted in his dismissal in 2005.
Mr. Moore’s allegations surfaced prominently on Tuesday during the first of two hearings before the Parliamentary Select Committee that is scrutinizing the banking crisis. By mid-day Wednesday, Sir James — an adviser to Prime Minister Gordon Brown — had submitted his resignation after an onslaught of negative publicity.
Reading this I can’t help but to fantasize about a world where Barney Frank and his ilk are forced to resign from Congress, due to the hypocrisy of heaping derision on the CEOs of major banks when they’re responsible for similar behavior related to their oversight of the mortgage GSEs.
But perhaps I’m asking for too much.
But perhaps the more important point is that many people in economic policy positions are in fact co-conspirators in terms of having helped create the economic crisis, how can we expect things to improve until we get all of the Sr. James Crosbys, Barney Franks, et al of the world out of policy making positions?
You can read more here, and read the FSA statement on the HBOS situation here.
Source:
The Wall St. Journal: “Under Fire, a Top U.K. Watchdog Quits Post” — Sara Schaefer Munoz, February 12, 2009.
Disclosure: at the time of publishing the author didn’t own a position in any of the companies mentioned in this article; the ideas expressed are solely the opinions of the author and shouldn’t be viewed as financial or investment advice
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