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Inefficient Wall Street Wastes $280 Billion A Year

Inefficient Wall Street Wastes $280 Billion A Year | Coffee Party News | Scoop.it

Wall Street seems to have learned a neat trick: how to make more money while producing less.


Between 1980 and 2010, the U.S. financial industry nearly doubled in size, relative to the overall economy. Yet in terms of what the financial industry actually produces -- liquidity, assets, anything of measurable benefit to society -- the sector appears to be doing less these days than it used to.


That, at least, is the contention of Thomas Philippon, an associate professor of finance at the New York University Stern School of Business whose 2011 paper -- "Has the U.S. Finance Industry Become Less Efficient?" -- is circulating the blogs this week.

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JP Morgan's $2 Billion Loss Was 4X the Alleged Cost of Financial Regulation

JP Morgan's $2 Billion Loss Was 4X the Alleged Cost of Financial Regulation | Coffee Party News | Scoop.it

DEREK THOMPSON, The Atlantic


Here is Barney Frank's statement on JP Morgan's of $2 billion loss in derivatives:

This regrettable news from JPMorgan Chase obviously goes counter to the bank's narrative blaming excessive regulation for the woes of financial institutions.  Interestingly, in the Economist's long attack on the financial reform bill, one of their leading examples of the harm the bill is doing was JPMorgan Chase's assertion that complying with the new rules will cost $400 to $600 million at the outset (a number which will obviously go down as compliance processes are set in place).  In other words, JP Morgan Chase, entirely without any help from the government has lost, in this one set of transactions, five times the amount they claim financial regulation is costing them."

Here is the quote Frank is referring to:


Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan Chase's boss, reckons the direct costs to his bank, America's largest, will be $400m-600m annually. "Additional regulations resulting from the Dodd-Frank act may materially adversely affect BB&T's business, financial condition or results of operations," said one regional bank in its recent annual filing to the SEC. Other institutions are said to be in the process of drafting similar statements, or, at the least, planning to acknowledge the costs in the conference calls that surround quarterly earnings.

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