Ocnus.Net
The Root of Madoff's Evil
By Robert Scheer, Nation 1/7/09
Jul 2, 2009 - 9:33:20 AM
Madoff, sentenced Monday to 150 years in prison for bilking investors
of billions, should be exhibit A in why the dark world of totally
unregulated private money managers and hedge funds should be opened to
the light of systematic government supervision. Instead, he is being
treated as an aberrant menace, with the danger removed once the devil
incarnate, as his victims describe him, is locked up and the key thrown
away.
For goodness' sake this was not some sort of weird outsider who flipped
out, but rather a key developer of the modern system of electronic
trading and a founder and chairman of Nasdaq. Madoff often was called
upon to help write the rules on financial regulation and therefore
became quite expert at subverting them.
As Securities and Exchange Commission Inspector General H. David Kotz
testified before Congress, the inspector general's office is looking
into "[t]he extent to which the reputation and status of Bernard
Madoff, and the fact that he served on SEC Advisory Committees,
participated on securities industry boards and panels, and had social
and professional relationships with SEC officials, may have affected
commission decisions regarding investigations, examinations and
inspections of his firm."
Those relationships were close (the personal ties included the marriage
of one of Madoff's nieces to an SEC official) and stretched out over
the decades during which Madoff was a major player on Wall Street. At
the very time back in 1999 when the SEC was being formally warned that
a Madoff scam was under way, Madoff was consulting with then-SEC
Chairman Arthur Levitt Jr. on regulatory matters. When Levitt retired a
year later, Madoff was quoted in the trades as paying tribute to him:
"He brought all of us to the negotiating table time and time again, on
a whole host of issues, and to a greater extent than any other SEC
chairman."
Levitt wrote in a January 2009 opinion article in The Wall Street
Journal, "I knew Bernie Madoff and had no reason to believe he was not
a legitimate market maker, nor did anyone at that time know he was
acting as an adviser to outside investors."
Nor was he required to tell anyone. And even if he had been, it's
unlikely that part of Madoff's business would have been looked into. In
the deregulatory mania of the preceding two decades, it had been
assumed that such managers did not need regulating, and funding for the
SEC kept getting cut. As Levitt noted in the article, it would only get
worse:
"Since 2002, the number of investment advisers--such as Madoff
Securities--has increased by 50 percent. Yet enforcement resources have
been flat or even reduced....As a result, only about 10% of investment
advisers can expect to be examined every three years, and the goal of
inspecting every adviser once every five years--laughably light
oversight in its own right--has been abandoned."
Money for proper oversight was not allocated because the prevailing
ideology regarding private investment firms--embraced by President Bill
Clinton ever as fervently as President George W. Bush would later--was
the gospel of radical financial deregulation, a practice that has
landed us in the larger banking mess. As with the trading in
unregulated derivatives, all of the operations of private investor
groups, such as hedge funds, were thought not to require government
supervision because these were conducted by professional financiers
dealing with sophisticated investors who knew what they were doing. If
the investment went south, it was on their dime and there would be no
innocent victims.
As we saw with the collapse of AIG and now Madoff, that notion is false
because private investment contracts can involve the resources of
charitable organizations and pension funds and can end up costing the
homes, savings and jobs of ordinary citizens who have no idea of which
end of this arcane stuff is up.
When Levitt worked for Clinton as head of the SEC, he teamed up with
Alan Greenspan, Robert Rubin and Lawrence Summers to destroy what
remained of financial service industry regulation imposed by President
Franklin Roosevelt in response to the Great Depression. In recent years
Levitt, alone among that gang of four, has criticized that action and
accepted some personal responsibility for the subsequent financial
meltdown.
He was right again when he stated in his January article: "The Madoff
scandal should be a wake-up call for more consistent, uniform, and
rigorous regulation of investment advising...the final prod for a
fundamental reform of the financial regulatory structure...."
He gets it. Let's hope that Congress does too and is not fooled by the
argument of Wall Street lobbyists that Madoff was a lone rotten apple
now safely discarded.
Source: Ocnus.net 2009