THe New York FED

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<a href="http://www.slate.com/id/2217811/">The New York Fed is the most powerful financial institution you've never heard of. Look who's running it.</a>



The kerfuffle about current New York Federal Reserve Bank Chairman Stephen Friedman's purchase of some Goldman stock while the Fed was involved in reviewing major decisions about Goldman's future?well-covered by the Wall Street Journal here and here?raises a fundamental question about Wall Street's corruption. Just as the millions in AIG bonuses obscured the much more significant issue of the $70 billion-plus in conduit payments authorized by the N.Y. Fed to AIG's counterparties, the small issue of Friedman's stock purchase raises very serious issues about the competence and composition of the Federal Reserve of New York, which is the most powerful financial institution most Americans know nothing about.



A quasi-independent, public-private body, the New York Fed is the first among equals of the 12 regional Fed branches. Unlike the Washington Federal Reserve Board of Governors, or the other regional fed branches, the N.Y. Fed is active in the markets virtually every day, changing the critical interest rates that determine the liquidity of the markets and the profitability of banks. And, like the other regional branches, it has boundless power to examine, at will, the books of virtually any banking institution and require that wide-ranging actions be taken?from raising capital to stopping lending?to ensure the stability and soundness of the bank. Over the past year, the New York Fed has been responsible for committing trillions of dollars of taxpayer money to resuscitate the coffers of the banks it oversees.



Given the power of the N.Y. Fed, it is time to ask some very hard questions about its recent performance. The first question to ask is: Who is the New York Fed? Who exactly has been running the show? Yes, we all know that Tim Geithner was the president and CEO of the N.Y. Fed from 2003 until his ascension as treasury secretary. But who chose him for that position, and to whom did he report? The N.Y. Fed president reports to, and is chosen by, the Fed board of directors.



So who selected Geithner back in 2003? Well, the Fed board created a select committee to pick the CEO. This committee included none other than Hank Greenberg, then the chairman of AIG; John Whitehead, a former chairman of Goldman Sachs; Walter Shipley, a former chairman of Chase Manhattan Bank, now JPMorgan Chase; and Pete Peterson, a former chairman of Lehman Bros. It was not a group of typical depositors worried about the security of their savings accounts but rather one whose interest was in preserving a capital structure and way of doing business that cried out for?but did not receive?harsh examination from the N.Y. Fed.



The composition of the New York Fed's board, which supervises the organization and current Chairman Friedman, is equally troubling. The board consists of nine individuals, three chosen by the N.Y. Fed member banks as their own representatives, three chosen by the member banks to represent the public, and three chosen by the national Fed Board of Governors to represent the public. In theory this sounds great: Six board members are "public" representatives.



So whom have the banks chosen to be the public representatives on the board during the past decade, as the crisis developed and unfolded? Dick Fuld, the former chairman of Lehman; Jeff Immelt, the chairman of GE; Gene McGrath, the chairman of Con Edison; Ronay Menschel, the chairwoman of Phipps Houses and also, not insignificantly, the wife of Richard Menschel, a former senior partner at Goldman. Whom did the Board of Governors choose as its public representatives? Steve Friedman, the former chairman of Goldman; Pete Peterson; Jerry Speyer, CEO of real estate giant Tishman Speyer; and Jerry Levin, the former chairman of Time Warner. These were the people who were supposedly representing our interests!



Of course, there have been the occasional nonfinance representatives from academia and labor. But they have been so outnumbered that their presence has done little to alter the direction of the board.



So is it any wonder that the N.Y. Fed has been complicit in the single greatest bailout of poorly managed banks in history? Any wonder that it has given?with virtually no strings attached?practically the entire contents of the Treasury to the very banks whose inability to manage risk has brought our economy to its knees? Any wonder that not a single CEO or senior executive of a major bank has been removed as a condition of hundreds of billions of direct cash and guarantees? Any wonder that, despite its fundamental responsibility to preserve the integrity of the banking system, it sat quietly on the sidelines as the leverage beneath the banks exploded and the capital underlying their investments shrank?



I do not mean to suggest that any of these board members intentionally discharged their duties with the specific goal of benefitting themselves. Rather, what we have seen is disastrous groupthink, a way of looking at the world from the perspective of Wall Street and Wall Street alone. That failure has brought the world economy to the edge of unraveling. And some of Geithner's early missteps betrayed an inability to get beyond this tunnel vision, such as the idea that the banks need to be first in line to be paid and to be paid in full. We can only hope that Geithner, who, to his credit, did try to raise some of the regulatory issues that mattered while he was at the Fed, is no longer in the mental prison of Lower Manhattan and will have more success now that he has a board of one?President Obama.



Perhaps it is time to calculate what these board members have been paid by their banks in salary and bonuses over the years and seek to have them return it to the public as small compensation for their failed oversight of the N.Y. Fed. And more fundamentally, perhaps it is time to take a hard look at the governing structure and supposed independence of this institution that actually controls the use of our tax dollars and, heaven help us, the fate of our economy.
 
[quote author="acpme" date=1241758434]in the news just minutes ago, friedman stepped down.</blockquote>


Hopefully we will get someone who never worked for Goldman Sachs.
 
[quote author="MoneyNing" date=1241830819][quote author="acpme" date=1241758434]in the news just minutes ago, friedman stepped down.</blockquote>


Hopefully we will get someone who never worked for Goldman Sachs.</blockquote>
When pigs fly. Don't you know that you are required to have Goldman Sachs experience to work at the FED?
 
The Federal Reserve is a private bank. It is not a government organization and is not accountable to any branch of the government.

Do ya'all know who owns the Federal Reserve?
 
[quote author="awgee" date=1241835607]The Federal Reserve is a private bank. It is not a government organization and is not accountable to any branch of the government.

Do ya'all know who own the Federal Reserve?</blockquote>


bingo. the Fed is by the banks for the banks.
 
[quote author="ukyo116" date=1241865421]What are the positives to having a Federal Reserve?</blockquote>


The Federal Reserve was started in response to the numerous cycles of boom and bust the economy had gone through in the 19th Century. It was thought that the control of a central bank that acted as a lender of last resort would provide a place for banks to turn when they were in trouble.



The <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Reserve">Wikipedia entry on the Federal Reserve</a> provides a good synopsis. The Federal Reserve also has a great publication on is <a href="http://www.federalreserve.gov/pf/pf.htm">Purposes & Functions</a>.
 
[quote author="IrvineRenter" date=1241866766][quote author="ukyo116" date=1241865421]What are the positives to having a Federal Reserve?</blockquote>


The Federal Reserve was started in response to the numerous cycles of boom and bust the economy had gone through in the 19th Century. It was thought that the control of a central bank that acted as a lender of last resort would provide a place for banks to turn when they were in trouble.



The <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Reserve">Wikipedia entry on the Federal Reserve</a> provides a good synopsis. The Federal Reserve also has a great publication on is <a href="http://www.federalreserve.gov/pf/pf.htm">Purposes & Functions</a>.</blockquote>


May I respectfully disagree.

There are no positives to having a Federal Reserve. The aforementioned is the propaganda disseminated to appease and confuse the populace. The purpose of the Federal Reserve is to put money creating abilities in the hands of a few powerful bankers in order to increase their power and wealth. Booms and busts have not stopped or been lessened with the creation of the Federal Reserve and those cycles were used as scare tactics to usurp power. The facts of the Federal Reserve can be found in "The Creature from Jekyll Island: A Second Look at the Federal Reserve" by G. Edward Griffin.
 
[quote author="awgee" date=1241876372]The facts of the Federal Reserve can be found in "The Creature from Jekyll Island: A Second Look at the Federal Reserve" by G. Edward Griffin.</blockquote>


Seriously, can I borrow that book? <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Creature-Jekyll-Island-Federal-Reserve/dp/0912986395/">Amazon doesn't have a good deal on it</a>, even used, and even the <a href="http://orange.ebookman.com/">Bookman in Orange</a> doesn't have it.



BTW, who else is going to read <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Bailout-Nation-Corrupted-Street-Economy/dp/0470520388/">Bailout Nation</a>? Barry rocks!
 
[quote author="graphrix" date=1241886339][quote author="awgee" date=1241876372]The facts of the Federal Reserve can be found in "The Creature from Jekyll Island: A Second Look at the Federal Reserve" by G. Edward Griffin.</blockquote>


Seriously, can I borrow that book? <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Creature-Jekyll-Island-Federal-Reserve/dp/0912986395/">Amazon doesn't have a good deal on it</a>, even used, and even the <a href="http://orange.ebookman.com/">Bookman in Orange</a> doesn't have it.



BTW, who else is going to read <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Bailout-Nation-Corrupted-Street-Economy/dp/0470520388/">Bailout Nation</a>? Barry rocks!</blockquote>


Of course you can borrow it.
 
[quote author="IrvineRenter" date=1241866766][quote author="ukyo116" date=1241865421]What are the positives to having a Federal Reserve?</blockquote>


The Federal Reserve was started in response to the numerous cycles of boom and bust the economy had gone through in the 19th Century. It was thought that the control of a central bank that acted as a lender of last resort would provide a place for banks to turn when they were in trouble.



The <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Reserve">Wikipedia entry on the Federal Reserve</a> provides a good synopsis. The Federal Reserve also has a great publication on is <a href="http://www.federalreserve.gov/pf/pf.htm">Purposes & Functions</a>.</blockquote>




Despite their intentions, hasn't the boom-bust cycle been accelerated with the Fed's management of our monetary supply? I am trying to think of a better method of how to determine the supply of money in an economy.



I am thinking the best way is to choose the method that the banks and politicians do not like: namely, gold.
 
Rep. Grayson is "shocked." I don't know why. Listen to <a href="http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2009/05/federal-reserve-inspector-general.html">this interview</a> of the Federal Reserve Inspector General and ask yourself, "Why should the Fed know where the money is going?" and more importantly, "What are the consequences of the Federal Reserve not giving any information to Rep. Grayson?"
 
Wait. Huh? Why would we give more power to the people that caused this....?



<a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=email_en&sid=a7YbbxHUZRqg">U.S. May Strip SEC of Powers in Regulatory Overhaul </a>
 
[quote author="graphrix" date=1241886339][quote author="awgee" date=1241876372]The facts of the Federal Reserve can be found in "The Creature from Jekyll Island: A Second Look at the Federal Reserve" by G. Edward Griffin.</blockquote>


Seriously, can I borrow that book? <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Creature-Jekyll-Island-Federal-Reserve/dp/0912986395/">Amazon doesn't have a good deal on it</a>, even used, and even the <a href="http://orange.ebookman.com/">Bookman in Orange</a> doesn't have it.



BTW, who else is going to read <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Bailout-Nation-Corrupted-Street-Economy/dp/0470520388/">Bailout Nation</a>? Barry rocks!</blockquote>




Youtube version while you are waiting for awgee's copy



<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7auQEXTWomA&feature=PlayList&p=A9D574924465CC04&index=0&playnext=1[">Creature from Jekyll Island</a>
 
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