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The Greatest Depression | 12/08/2008 8:30 am

Four Financial Horsewomen Who Warned of the Apocalypse

How Sheila Bair, Brooksley Born, Meredith Whitney and a pseudonymous blogger named Tanta tried to warn the Big Boyz that economic doom was on the way
By Deborah Barrow, Editor-in-Chief

Readers, stop sharpening your pitchforks for a moment because here, just in time for your year-end 401K reports to arrive, is a little story about four women who not so very long ago caused eyeballs to roll and brows to knit among the Wall Street and Washington Testosterone Teams, but who, if they had been listened to by the reigning Masters of the Universe, might have either prevented the economic Armageddon we are in … or at least caught it in time to prevent some its more pernicious collateral damage.

Who are these women? Two accomplished regulators and two prescient financial industry employees who saw that the toxic brew of sub-prime mortgages, derivatives and lack of government oversight was bubbling up the greatest destruction of wealth in the history of the world. That they were ignored and in some cases ridiculed by the very perpetrators of this global White Shoe Financial Ponzi Scheme makes this a tediously familiar tale to many women who have worked in proximity of the polyglass ceiling, especially on Wall Street.

And here’s the remarkable news: some of the Big Boyz who ignored these women? They’re part of the new Obama financial team.

Horsewoman #1: Brooksley Born, chair of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission from 1996-99, a Federal agency that regulates commodity options and futures trading

What she said: Ten years before the collapse in the derivatives market became front-page news, and five years before Warren Buffett famously called them "weapons of financial mass destruction," Brooksley Born warned in Congressional testimony that these complex, opaque and unregulated financial instruments could “threaten our regulated markets or, indeed, our economy, without any federal agency knowing about it.” She wanted her commission to provide governmental oversight of the derivatives market.

Who tried to screw her: Claiming that she did not understand the markets, a triumvirate made up of former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, then-Treasury Secretary (and current controversial Citibank Director) Robert Rubin and his deputy and new Obama appointee Lawrence Summers (he late of the Harvard University dust-up where he claimed that women were intrinsically deficient in math) prevailed upon all who would listen to prevent Born’s agency from regulating the derivatives market. In their recent story on the Alan Greenspan legacy, The New York Times recounts the measures these three went to circumvent a woman who, if she had been listened to, could have prevented much of the current financial collapse.

The result: Derivatives remained unregulated, and Born left the CFTC in 1999. In the fall of 2007, the worst financial tsunami since the 1930s began to roil both Wall Street and Main Street, with derivatives based on now-failed sub-prime mortgages at its very core.

Quote to set your teeth on edge: “Brooksley was this woman who was not playing tennis with these guys and not having lunch with these guys. There was a little bit of the feeling that this woman was not of Wall Street.” —Michael Greenberger, a senior director at the Commission to The New York Times.

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

Diana T
Ah, well, do they ever listen to us? I used to say to Bill, “How many times did I tell you?” Reminds me of this Holiday saying that you can get on plaques: The Three Wise Women: They would have Asked Directions Arrived on time to help deliver the baby. And…they would have cleaned the stable.
By Diana T on 12/08/2008 9:30 am
phyllis Doyle Pepe
Diana: your guy and mine, Richard Holbrook, has come out with his book, “The Doves Were Right”–––it’s right up our alley.
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 12/08/2008 10:13 am
Diana T
Thank you so much, Phyllis! I did not know he had a new book. I will look for it immediately. That means he will probably be on Charlie Rose to promote it…
By Diana T on 12/08/2008 10:55 am
f p
Thanks Phyllis—need to get that one.
By f p on 12/08/2008 5:38 pm
Dutch 163
thanks for the info I am a fan of Richard Holbrooke too
By Dutch 163 on 12/09/2008 6:30 am
HA BIBI
One more time and reason, that perhaps women be given the opportunity to run this country. Women have been running the financial end of homes and buisness’ for quite some time. We are masters of finance, banking and balancing a checkbook. It’s such an apparent shame that once again, the voice of reason is overlooked and financial disasters such as the likes of sub prime mortgages, alongside a lack of Governmental oversight, was indeed a sunami waiting to happen.
By HA BIBI on 12/08/2008 9:39 am
James the Game
You could coach the 0-13 Detroit Lions better than the men have been, Elaine.
By James the Game on 12/08/2008 3:51 pm
HA BIBI
Hey my friend, Where’s the compliment in that? LOL. Ha! If I coached your Saints they’d be the winningest team in Pro ball. I saw my boys whup your boys, I could say I was sorry but then if they are playing against my Vikes I can’t possibly root for them. :(
By HA BIBI on 12/08/2008 4:46 pm
James the Game
To be honest, the Vikes were a bit lucky. The refs ruled Calvin Johnson trapped the ball on that one catch, when the replays clearly showed he did not. Even the TV commentators said so. That took away a vital Lions first down. But just as well, as we Michiganders wants the Lions to go 0-16, and owner William Clay Ford to turn the reins of the team over to his son, Bill Ford Jr. Speaking of Ford Jr., did you notice how he’s got Ford doing reasonably well financially, compared to Chrysler and G.M.? Ford CEO Allan Mulalley told Congress last week that Ford doesn’t urgently need the bailout money, so much as a line of credit in case GM goes belly-up.
By James the Game on 12/08/2008 7:00 pm
Suzanne Frazier
Oops here we go again. Men talking football, sports. A fine example why we are in all this financial mess. Lack of concentration. I thought this section was about our present financial concerns and what we are doing about it. When did football sneak in? Oh that’s right. James wrote something.
By Suzanne Frazier on 12/08/2008 7:10 pm
James the Game
Lighten up, Suzanne.
By James the Game on 12/08/2008 8:38 pm
HA BIBI
You know james, I thought the very same thing and that being that if the Lions go 0-16, they may have the grounds at that point, to bring in the talent that would provide a non repeat of this season. I’m glad that Ford is doing the better of the big 3, after all my new SUV is the highly fuel efficient decked out Ford escape, LOL :)
By HA BIBI on 12/08/2008 7:31 pm
Susan B
Happy Monday, James. I’m off-topic for this thread — well, not completely off-topic — but I wondered if you caught this discussion today on NPR’s Talk of the Nation. It’s about the US auto industry … As I was listening, I thought of you. www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=97960766
By Susan B on 12/08/2008 5:08 pm
James the Game
Thanks, Susan. Some informative material. It appears that a $15 billion stop-gap bailout will be approved this week, eh?
By James the Game on 12/08/2008 6:47 pm
Susan B
Elaine, don’t forget our famous gut instincts. I’m no financial expert, but I knew there’d be a terrible day of reckoning when anyone who could sign their name, could buy a house. I kept saying to myself, this is going to end badly …
By Susan B on 12/08/2008 5:00 pm