Monday, November 23, 2009

Warren Buffett, Stop Using My Credit Card!

By Janet Tavakoli

I like Warren Buffett. I even wrote a book about the financial crisis contrasting his principles of prudent finance with recent excessive leverage, bad lending, and malfeasance (Dear Mr. Buffett). Buffett is not a regulator, an altruist, a consumer advocate, or an elected official. As CEO and largest shareholder of Berkshire Hathaway, his goal is to maximize shareholder value.

U.S. capitalism has morphed into a financial oligarchy. If Buffett’s choice is between getting along in the financial community or the public interest, public interest loses. But he didn’t cause our financial crisis, and he spoke out in advance about excessive leverage and bad lending. The financial markets are now wildly distorted. Others have funding advantages Buffett can only dream about, so he exploits an advantage when it becomes available.

I have been a trenchant critic of rampant financial malfeasance, and Buffett has only wished me well and told me to “keep writing.” For my part, I try to keep in mind that we view the world through different lenses.

On October 25, 2009, when BBC’s Evan Davis interviewed him, Buffett surprised me : Click here to view the eight minute video. It started out so well, but after six minutes the interview went sideways. [Not shown in this clip Buffett said his $5 billion investment in Goldman Sachs’ preferred stock (plus free warrants) last year was, in part, a bet on a US government bailout.1 He thought the U.S. taxpayer got a good deal, but we got a worse deal than Buffett negotiated, and as I explain here, I feel taxpayers got chump change.]

@ 3:14 min: Buffett explains that if there were only 50 people on a fertile island, we wouldn’t take the five smartest people out of the 50 and give them the most money and tax breaks for trading rice futures and speculating: “Hell no! We’d get everybody producing rice. The idea that people that move money around are some favored class—and they are in this country, even in terms of taxes—strikes me as getting pretty far away from where we should be.”

@ 6:00 minutes: Buffett claims shareholder losses obviated moral hazard. Not true. In control frauds (first identified by William K. Black), financial institutions are destroyed, and shareholders lose. Only the agents: CEOs, CFOs, and highly paid employees are enriched. Unlike Buffett, these agents are “stewards,” not major owners. Moral hazard remains an intractable problem.
@ 6:25 minutes: Buffett claims taxpayers have not bailed out anybody, because tax rates have not gone up (yet), and “tax receipts are way down this year.” Chinese and Japanese buying U.S. government bonds have bailed out financial institutions. Not true unless we default or destructively print inflationary dollars. Tax receipts are down because of unemployment. U.S. taxpayer credit bailed out financial institutions, and we will have to pay back our debts.

Imagine this scenario: Warren grabs my credit card and charges twelve suits. When I object that I don’t want to bail out his wardrobe, he chuckles and says, don’t worry, you haven’t paid anything yet. The bank that issued the credit card bailed out my wardrobe, and it hasn’t even had time to charge you interest on my purchase.

When I protest that I’ll have to eventually pay off both the balance and accrued interest, he tries flattery. You are so productive that by the time you have to pay this off, you’ll have so much more wealth that you won’t even notice these charges. You’ve always been good for it before, and you’ll figure out how to pay!

Don’t fall for it.

Read the rest here.(PdF)

Janet Tavakoli is the president of Tavakoli Structured Finance, a Chicago-based consulting firm to financial institutions and institutional investors. She is the author of a book on the cause global financial meltdown: Dear Mr. Buffett: What an Investor Learns 1,269 Miles from Wall Street (Wiley, 2009), Structured Finance & Collateralized Debt Obligations (Wiley 2003, 2008), and Credit Derivatives & Synthetic Structures (Wiley 1999 and 2001).

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