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.
Read more about: Andrew Hall, Barack Obama, Business, Credit Suisse, Economy, Finance, Ken Feinberg, Ken Lewis, Lamar Alexander, Liz Peek, Morgan Stanley, News, Politics, Rahm Emanuel, Richard Nixon, Wall Street Weekly























384 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
Don’t worry, Scarlett, it got plenty of play in the media. But that was two years ago, when it actually happened. Since then, everyone involved has faced re-election. The voters have spoken, the issue dealt with.
House Forms Special Panel Over Alleged Stolen Vote
If the good Lord himself or herself had walked into the White House on January 20th, they could not have cleaned up the mess in the nine months since then. The financial melt-down alone requires some permanent measures - but try and get that. Try to get some control measures legislated. Too often the Republicans seem to have become the Lunatic Fringe - assigning all kinds of future disasters to the smallest changes that Obama proposes. As for health programs, the Republicans want to take our 44-year old system - faulty though it is, but working - and go back to Square 1. Picture that. We’d still be debating in 2050. Maybe 3000.
Yes, it is unpleasant. Yes, it is worrisome. But I don’t think it’s Obama’s fault. I’m not sure that a country of 300 million people can be managed. Too many diverse interests.
Elinor
Elinor - in their haste to point the finger of blame for Obama’s "inherited problems" at Bush, many forget that the Congress was under Democratic rule the last two years of his term. It might be noted that they, in now almost three years, have done absolutely nothing but worsen the economic distress.
While that is historical FACT, it seems to remain buried when blame is assessed.
As for future disasters, that’s just what we have is this out-of-control spending isn’t halted.
Obama is not the reason for any rise in the stock market. He promised 3 to 4 million jobs with his stimulus. He said in his own words, that people need jobs immediately.
This country needs work, not cap and trade, or health-care reform. Get people back to work before these are tackled.
Obama is the worse president this country has ever had.
Callie: The reason people would agree is because its the truth. If anyone on here can tell me what Obama has accomplished in 10 months, I’d love to hear about it.
He’s attacking our free market system. Why? He’s determining how much money people should earn. Why? He wants to determine if I’m authorized for a medical test. Why? Is this the hope and change people voted for? I think not.
Ky dear, It tooks years to make some of this mess and a few short months for Barry to add to it and go on a spending spree amassing a deficit that has nothing to do with jobs in India. Obama isn’t interested in fixing anything. He’s doing just what he promised and the Americans were too stupid to comprehend…reshaping America.
Ky: What mess? This is the job growth and decrease for five years starting with Bush in 2004. http://tipstrategies.com/archive/geography-of-jobs/
This is now Obamas boat. He promised 3 to 4 million jobs, where are they? You’re giving Obama a full term pass? Why? This could be turned around in one month, not ten years.
Give the American people and business owners the confidence they need to hear from their president, not apologizing for them.
Your first sentence was correct when you said, "The problem with America is that we are a "microwave" society…everything done in seconds".
In just a few short months, Obama has ruined this country. Even this young man knows what to ask the president at one of his speeches two weeks ago. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b422crc-0-8
Frank,
Good points. Thank you.