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Wall Street Weekly | 10/23/2009 12:30 pm

Brittle Obama Thrashes Wall Street: All Form, No Substance, by Liz Peek

What do we need right now? Soothing and encouraging leadership …
Image: Pete Souza/WhiteHouse.gov

Bears, Bulls, Chickens and Pigs: wOw’s Wall Street Weekly with Liz Peek (Week of 10/19) 

Editor’s Note: Liz Peek is a financial columnist.

Green shoots – economic or otherwise – need tender loving care to become young saplings. For the fragile sprouts that appeared last spring to bloom into a full-blown recovery, we need capital, demand and encouragement. While we have made some progress on funding and consumption, we are woefully lacking positive leadership. Instead, we have an administration that sows discord on every front, prompting Lamar Alexander – that most mild-mannered of senators – to liken President Obama to Richard Nixon, and not in a good way.

The Paulson-Geithner-Bernanke tag team did an admirable job fending off the collapse of the capital markets that loomed a year ago. (Remember when Treasury yields turned negative?) Sound companies are able to raise money and the steep yield curve promises a slow but steady recovery of banking profitability. The stock market has staged a convincing rally off the March lows with corporate profits beating the most pessimistic forecasts forged during last spring’s meltdown. Businesses, faced with an unprecedented slide in demand, slashed inventories and headcounts, effectively protecting their bottom line.

This is where we stand, and it is shaky ground. An enduring upturn in consumer confidence (which surprisingly slipped in October) and spending remains elusive. While business confidence is on the rise in Germany, France, China and elsewhere, expectations in the United States are wavering. Private equity managers tell me that only 30% or so of their companies are seeing any top-line growth, which is consistent with still-depressed consumer spending. Most are comfortable that the economy will grow at around 3% in the fourth quarter, as businesses stop running down inventories. Next year, though, growth may again falter if Americans can’t find jobs.

Unemployment is a threat not only to renewed spending, but to our country’s stability. Americans are angry – angry at Wall Street, angry at China, angry at Congress and anyone else thought responsible for the millions of jobs and homes lost. The most recent tally puts some 26 million people looking for full-time work, unemployment among teens is 26%, and among African American teens it’s 41%. How long before all that anger erupts?

We need soothing and encouraging leadership. Instead, we have an administration that has proven itself thin-skinned and vindictive, reminding many (including Mr. Alexander) of the paranoia of Richard Nixon. The attacks on insurers, on the Chamber of Commerce, on Fox News, on drug companies, on greedy bankers, on the poor schlub at the CBO whose estimates set back health-care legislation – on anyone and everyone who opposes Obama’s policies – are shocking and unsettling. Where is Obama the campaigner, who promised to bring the country together?

The administration has decided that it is politically expedient to fan the populist rage against Wall Street. To score points with Main Street, they have proposed to slash bankers’ pay, rather than undertake more meaningful but less splashy measures. Pay Czar Ken Feinberg’s draconian cuts in compensation for workers at the seven largest TARP recipients make for good headlines, but are of questionable value. Does anyone really think that preventing Bank of America from paying its top people competitively will strengthen the firm’s prospects? Instead of weathering the outcry that would have greeted paying Andrew Hall an agreed-upon bonus of $100 million, the administration pressed Citicorp to sell the extremely profitable trading operation that Hall worked for. Does lopping off a stellar unit benefit taxpayers, who now own 34% of Citigroup? Feinberg knows better; word on the Street is that Rahm Emanuel is directing this play, and it’s all about politics. Unfortunately, taxpayers will be the losers.

384 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Mahulda Fite
I have not seen one poll that substantiates your claim.  All polls on this topic show support for reform but not a public option. And a majority are not in favor of the dems health care plan.
By Mahulda Fite on 10/24/2009 3:00 pm
Helen Moran
try factcheck.org
By Helen Moran on 10/24/2009 4:29 pm
Leigh Hart
She can’t substantiate it or she would. Typical liberal…make a statement, fail to back it up with facts, attack anyone who challenges it. So sad, isn’t it?
By Leigh Hart on 10/24/2009 5:54 pm
deber B
 October 23, 2009

Forty-nine percent (49%) of voters nationwide say that passing no health care reform bill this year would be better than passing the plan currently working its way through Congress.

A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that 39% disagree and say the current effort is better than doing nothing.

http://www.rasmussenreports.com/

 

 

By deber B on 10/25/2009 6:29 am
deber B
53 IRS employees illegally or inappropriately applied for the homebuyer credit and got it!!!   Of course, they will be prosecuted but does this tell you anything?   Cash for Clunkers literally ran out of money and didn’t reimburse the dealerships as promised!!
By deber B on 10/23/2009 3:29 pm
Helen Moran
deber, your so caooed info is so tiresome. 53 bad apples in the IRS. Wow, out of how many employees? Any large company or organization has its share of miscreants. As for Cash for Clunkers, I happen to be friends with a family that owns 3 dealerships, and you are right, to a point. The program was SO successful, beyond everyone’s expectations, that they are just now catching up. But, they will get their money. I would love to know why you are so vitriolic in your dislike of the President. It smells alot like a woman scorned. I know that’s not it, but, your need to right is out stripping to see what the President and his administration are trying to do. Time was, after an election, the winners went on to run the country, the other party stepped down and started laying plans for the next election. Did they critcize the powers that be? Sure, but there was some respect and civility in their criticism. I worry about the polarization of this country, and people who are becoming extremely intolerant of each others opinions. I am afraid you are one of those.
By Helen Moran on 10/23/2009 8:06 pm
deber B
Helen, again, it is simple.   If the government cannot police a small program like the mortgage credit…how in the name of Ned are they going to run the healthcare system?   Remember Cash for Clunkers?   It’s a trainwreck.
By deber B on 10/24/2009 5:58 am
American Patriot
And if Cash for Clunkers was so successful, ask most dealers now what there sales are.  All that happened, was they sold vehicles then that would have been sold later.  BIG FAILURE!!
By American Patriot on 10/26/2009 10:03 am
Kathy Lee

 53 bad apples in the IRS. Wow, out of how many employees?

Helen, One is too many!!!!

By Kathy Lee on 10/24/2009 2:06 pm
Helen Moran
you are right, one is too many. Please look at any large group, including Doctors and religious leaders, and you will find bad apples there. That is not excusing them, its just stating a fact of human nature.
By Helen Moran on 10/24/2009 4:31 pm
canuck canuck
I do not want the "Party of NO" in power - I do not want the "Old" Republican party in power no matter how badly I want Obama and his goons out …. No, I want a party in power that will walk the walk of fiscal responsibily, one who will put the constitution and protection of Americans first, one that will let the free market be free, one that will not interfere in the everyday decision making of the American people, I could go on but wait! THAT WOULD BE THE REPUBLICAN PARTY - at its best - back to the roots - the CONSERVATIVE end of that party …. and that is who will get my money and who I will work my fingers to the bone for next year and in 2012 ….
By canuck canuck on 10/23/2009 3:34 pm
deber B
Talk to me, canuck!!!
By deber B on 10/23/2009 7:17 pm
Glenda Glynn
Canuck — I’m right with you on that!  When anyone calls me asking for a donation for a campaign.  My answer -" I will give my money to the Conservative of my choice."
By Glenda Glynn on 10/23/2009 9:09 pm
Scarlett Ohara Mitchell

Huckabee. A true conservative.

By Scarlett Ohara Mitchell on 10/24/2009 2:15 pm
American Patriot
We need to look at cleaning house in DC period, getting the all of those of both parties out Now, as most have been there TOO LONG.  Replace them with people that are independent of the Washington Beltline Mentality, True independents that represent "WE THE PEOPLE"
By American Patriot on 10/26/2009 10:07 am