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
Once again, Helen, I’ll have to disagree with you that "everyone deserves health care." There are, in my estimation, a large number of people in the United States that deserve nothing but a pair of handcuffs and an escort back to the border.
It bothers me that now 1 in 12 rapes are committed by illegal aliens in the United States. Tell those young women their tax money should be paying for their attackers’ health care.
It bothers me a LOT that so-called sanctuary cities allow criminal aliens to roam free. And it bothers me even more when I hear that this administration’s policies have resulted in ordering Sheriff Joe Aipaio in Arizona to stop arresting illegals. (To his credit, he told them to mind their own business).
I have had a deep split with the Catholic church, in which I was raised, regarding their assistance to illegals. It is ironic to note that this week a Catholic priest was stabbed to death by a Mexican illegal the church had employed.
So, yes. I say they DON’T deserve one thin dime of my tax money for their healthcare….whether they have a heart attack, or a bullet wound. If that’s callous, then so be it. I just think it’s time to draw the line somewhere.
I should have said "convicted" rapists. Those are the only ones they can count apparently. There are likely many more. (Just google it)
And frankly, my dear, I’d be glad not to pay for ALL serious criminals’ medical care. I haven’t the sympathy for criminals that many have, and would be glad if there were some kind of isolated farms where all of them could live, grow their own food, and take care of themselves.
I can’t think it’s any kind of benefit to have so many illegals in our country adding to the problem
Callie O, where I live there are several "inner city" areas that have serious illegal gang issues. The crime rate in certain parts of Maryland and in DC are more than remarkable. America needs to wake up to the "cost" of these illegals and do something about it. I know we can’t bus them all up and send them back. However, what each state can do is create their own "surge" to get them legal. If they are going to live among us they need to pay their taxes to be a part of the American system.
I know I am generalizing, and I’ll probably get criticism for this comment, but the illegals I have met are very proud, hardworking people. Their quality of work is commendable. I believe they want to become legal citizens of the United States. We need to escalate our efforts state by state to make this happen.
I’ve got another story to tell. In my little town we have an area of townhouses that are government subsidized. The democrats appropriated money to build a state of the art community center across the street with the intention of getting the young minority children into structured sports activities, etc. To get to my house, I had to drive by this construction sight. The workers, and there were many, were ALL Latino. Across the street one could not help but notice the young black men standing around in groups in the middle of the day….not in school….not at work….just hanging out with each other every single day. Each time this thought came to me…"why aren’t these young men being hired to do this work?" It was simple…they didn’t apply for the jobs. So, as they continue to live on government assistance, generation after generation, the need for legal immigrants is great because Americans do not want these jobs.
I am guessing, but today 90% of the cleaning services in America seem to be done by Latinos residential and commercial. When I had my decorating business a few years back my preferred workroom had mostly Latino’s employed to sew. It was the best quality of work I had ever seen. Not only was the work perfect but it was always delivered as promised.
My point, since I have obviously strayed from the topic, is that there are good and bad people of all nationalities. I like what Sheriff Joe Aipaio is doing for the citizens of Arizona. The crime rate there is through the roof. I agree that something needs to be done. As you have done,Callie O, we ALL need to speak out about what matters to us and why.
Joe Biden’s popularity is lower than Dick Cheney’s was after his first year.
The Washington Examiner reported: