Originally posted by amateur51
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I wouldn't bank on it
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostEr, I don't thing that is what Lat is actually saying, ahinton. As I read him, he is arguing that young people with the potential of bringing radical new perspectives to solving the banking problem are prematurely being slotted into a loaded agenda by virtue of having to make decisions based on that agenda.
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostAlso, why always do you have to draw a doom-laden picture of insurmountable problems? Nobody is arguing that banks would have to be regulated out of business. Where do you get that impression from? The banks?
Just as Goebbels is credited with that statement about telling lies, it's a relatively small step from the recent history of "too big to fail" that we've all seen in the banking industry to a "too big to over-regulate" scenario; in other words, if you're going to screw things up for hundreds of millions of people in order to line your own pockets, it's important to do it so effectively that any serious atempt to stop it might risk falling flat on its face. These people may be profoundly immoral, but they're not so stupid as to be incapable of working that one out!
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amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View PostSo, to you, what IS it down to, then? - and what would you wish to see done about it?
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amateur51
David Cameron's response to today's Barclay's Libor fixing scandal
Prime minister David Cameron says Barclays' management face "serious questions" about their role in allegations that bank lending rates were manipulated for financial gain.
Note that a) he puts the blame on the Brown government and seeks to distance his goverment from it; and that
b) the word 'police' does not pass his lips
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI was referring to the recreational drug culture within gambling of most sorts, from blackjack and chemin de fer and roulette to investment banking and stock market dealing, with champagne and cocaine being the drugs of choice
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...rculation.html
To be serious, however, whatever the outcomes of the already ongoing and forthcoming investigations into investment banks' interest fixing activities, especially if they branch out (as I expect them eventually to do) into the matter of their likely currency value and exchange rate fixing (and I suspect that these will run and run to an extent that might even put the Leveson saga into the shade), it is difficult to see how those who have been adversely affected by those activities can possibly be compensated to the extent of being put back into the position in which they might have been had they not been victims of those activities; we've already seen how the sub-prime scam affected hundreds of thousands of Americans and how and to what extent its effects have spread to other parts of the world since it broke, but this, whilst not unconnected with it, is clearly on a far vaster scale, so how would it ever be possible to trace everyone affected by it, calculate and reach mutual agreement on the precise value of their losses and compensate them accordingly, with (hopefully uncontaminated) interest - and from what funding source/s?
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amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View PostAh, I see - yes (although it might be worth being careful what you refer to when citing the egregious Daily Wail as your evidential source!); I have to admit, however, that it's what these bankers get up to when they're stone cold sober and not subject to the effects of recreational substances that tends to bother me rather more than what they do when they're getting blotto on Roederer and high on coke between bouts of interest fixing.
Is this a more impressive source of comment re the banknote phenomenon, ahinton?
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostDavid Cameron's response to today's Barclay's Libor fixing scandal
Prime minister David Cameron says Barclays' management face "serious questions" about their role in allegations that bank lending rates were manipulated for financial gain.
Note that a) he puts the blame on the Brown government and seeks to distance his goverment from it; and that
b) the word 'police' does not pass his lips
Having said that, however, it is important to note from the article the sentgence that runs
"Currently fines paid by banks help to bring down the levy other financial firms pay to run the regulator".
This is indeed true; FSA is not taxpayer funded - it is a quango funded solely by the financial services industry and operating under the terms of Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (FSMA2000, as amended); it has no fuinds of its own and, whilst it retains extensive fining powers, it is obliged by law to distribute any fines that it receives to reduce the annual fees that it charges to those individuals and organisations whom it regulates, including the banks, so, broadly speaking, the more that they fine the banks, the less those banks have subsequently to pay FSA in regulatory fees. If ever there was a contemporary equivalent of the Chaucerian physic and apothecary arrangement, this must surely be it.
In addition, however, as I mentioned previously, many of FSA's senior officers have come from the banking industry, so the idea that FSA knew nothing about these goings-on until relatively recently when it commenced its investigations into them seems not so much dubious as risible; whilst FSA is indeed charged with a duty to investigate, it should also be held accountable for its own actions and inactions where this and other banking woes are concerned, but that, I fear, has to date proved to be a far harder nut to crack, especially as FSMA2000 grants to FSA statutory immunity from prosecution, a privilege unique among UK industry regulators and certainly not one enjoyed by the banks and other financial institutions.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostWhat makes you think that they're not coincidental? Seriously.
Is this a more impressive source of comment re the banknote phenomenon, ahinton?
http://forensicscientist.wordpress.c...-on-banknotes/
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amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View PostBut Am, I'm not doubting you, or indeed the sources that you cite on this (even the Daily Wail, about whom my off-the-cuff remark was intentionally frivolous); this, however, is not my point, which was instead that what these guys get up to when they're "at their exercise" (see Peter Grimes) and not wallowing in fizz and coke is what we really need to be worrying about - wouldn't you agree?
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Originally posted by amateur51 View Post
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostAnd my point is that they're often off their tits (not Grimes but Boys in The Band) at work - I have only anecdotal evidence
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amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View PostOK - and thanks for admitting that your evidence is no more than merely anecdotal - but, on the basis of that evidence, do you deduce that these grave misdemeanours are carried out BECAUSE those who do so are off their tits whilst ostensibly being on duty?
EDIT: I have read City Boy: Beer and Loathing in the Square Mile by Geraint Andrerson, the prologue of which starts:
to give you a flavourLast edited by Guest; 28-06-12, 15:13.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostBecause of, in spite of, who knows?!
Nevertheless, your doubt hasn't quite failed to pique my curiousity, so I'll call my personal banker at Coutts & Co and ask her, as a professional banker, for her considered thoughts on this (provided that she's not tiddly on Taittinger when I phone)...
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amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View PostWell, whilst we do not and perhaps cannot necessarily "know" in terms of being able to prove or disprove it either way, it seems less than unreasonable to conclude that, in order to invent and implement these kinds of elaborate shady dealings and keep them under wraps for as long as seems to have been the case in this instance, those doing so will have needed to keep their wits well and truly about them at all times when engaged in such activities; the notion that any particular instance of interest fixing occurred while - let alone because - those arranging it were blotto on Bolly or high as kites on coke seems at best somewhat implausible, wouldn't you say?
Nevertheless, your doubt hasn't quite failed to pique my curiousity, so I'll call my personal banker at Coutts & Co and ask her, as a professional banker, for her considered thoughts on this (provided that she's not tiddly on Taittinger when I phone)...
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