Don’t Believe the Headlines, Big Banks are Still Screwing You
Politics / Banksters Feb 21, 2014 - 12:29 PM GMTBy: Money_Morning
 Shah Gilani writes:When it comes to big banks’ bad behavior and the fines they pay  to   settle “allegations” — which are actually civil charges and which would   be  criminal charges if applied to any other business or in any parallel   universe  — things aren’t even close to what they seem.
Shah Gilani writes:When it comes to big banks’ bad behavior and the fines they pay  to   settle “allegations” — which are actually civil charges and which would   be  criminal charges if applied to any other business or in any parallel   universe  — things aren’t even close to what they seem.
Sure the headlines scream victory, at least monetary victory, for some ripped-off consumers, some hard-charging regulators, and our vaunted (NOT) Justice Department.
We think we hear the ching-ching of the Treasury Department’s cash registers ringing as they collect billions of dollars from miscreant, monster banks.
We think we can hear victorious regulators popping champagne corks as they celebrate settlement money coming in to prop up their budgets so they can keep going after these lawbreakers.
We think we can hear the cling-clank of consumers — who’ve been set up like bowling pins to be knocked down until the change falls out of their pockets at the feet of slobbering banksters — getting some of their stolen money back.
If that is what you think you hear, you’re tone deaf.
Here’s what’s really going on…
The headlines, like the ones that screamed JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM) was paying a record $13 billion to settle misdeeds that may have accidentally contributed to the credit crisis and the Great Recession that maybe forever imposed on America’s middleclass and perennial underclass a new set of dream shackles, are BS. And I don’t mean back-stabbing.
Ripped-off consumers don’t get made whole. Regulators don’t keep a dime of what they extract. Only the U.S. Treasury rings its register on any regular basis… and you thought the deficit was declining on its own!
And the big banks? Not only aren’t they paying what the headlines trumpet, most of what they do pay, and far more disgustingly, a lot of what they say they are going to pay in restitution to consumers, they write off on their taxes!
That’s right, after they neither admit nor deny doing what they did, and settle on paying fines and other forms of remunerative compensation to prove they didn’t do anything wrong, they write most of those “expenses” off.
Of course those write-offs reduce their taxable income. So the public’s screwed again.
You didn’t know that? If not, don’t beat yourself up. Not a lot of people do.
But Congress does.
Some people in Congress actually want to do something about the games banks play with the settlements they negotiate with regulators, attorneys general, and the Justice Department.
But, of course, Congress being Congress, none of these “bills” have moved an inch.
Back on October 30, 2013, after JPM’s $13 billion settlement made headlines, House Democrats Peter Welch (VT) and Luis Gutierrez (IL) introduced the “Stop Deducting Damages Act of 2013.”
The bill as intended:
- 
  …amends  the Internal Revenue Code to: (1) deny a tax deduction   for any amount paid or  incurred for compensatory or punitive damages in   connection with any judgment  in, or settlement of, any action against a   government; and (2) include in gross  income any amount paid as   insurance or otherwise due to liability for punitive  damages.
Then on November 5, 2013, Senators Jack Reed (D-RI) and Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa) put forward their “Government Settlement Transparency and Reform Act.”
The bill as intended:
- 
  …amends  the Internal Revenue Code to expand provisions relating   to the non-deductibility  of fines and penalties, to prohibit a tax   deduction for any amount paid or  incurred to any governmental entity   relating to the violation of any law or the  investigation or inquiry   into a potential violation of law. Exempts from such  prohibition: (1)   restitution or amounts paid to come into compliance with any  law that   was violated or otherwise involved in the investigation or inquiry,  (2)   amounts paid pursuant to a court order in a suit in which the   governmental  entity was not a party, and (3) amounts paid or incurred   as taxes due. Imposes  new reporting requirements on governmental   entities relating to amounts paid as  fines or for restitution.
But neither of those “bills” came due.
Then on January 8, 2014, Senators Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and Tom Coburn (R-OK) introduced to the Senate their “Truth in Settlements Act of 2014.”
Senator Warren explained the bill:
- 
  When  government agencies reach settlements with companies that   break the law, they  should disclose the terms of those deals to the   public. Anytime an agency  decides that an enforcement action is needed,   but it is not willing to go to  court, that agency should be willing to   disclose the key terms and conditions  of the agreement. Increased   transparency will shut down backroom deal-making  and ensure that   Congress, citizens and watchdog groups can hold regulatory  agencies   accountable for strong and effective enforcement that benefits the    public interest.
Meanwhile, Senator Warren’s website tells us:
- 
  Under the Truth in  Settlements Act, all written public statements   that reference the dollar  amounts of settlements will be required to   include explanations of how those  settlements are categorized for tax   purposes and whether payments may be offset  by “credits” for particular   conduct. Companies that settle with  enforcement agencies will be   required to disclose in their Securities and  Exchange Commission (SEC)   filings whether they have deducted any or all of the  dollar amounts of   their settlements from their taxes; and federal agencies will  be   required to post basic information about settlements and provide copies   of  those agreements on their websites. To address concerns about   confidentiality,  the Truth in Settlements Act also requires agencies to   explain publicly why  confidentiality is justified in any particular   instance. The Act also directs  agencies to disclose basic information   about the number of settlements they  deem confidential each year and   directs the Government Accountability Office  (GAO) to conduct a study   of confidentiality procedures and to provide  additional recommendations   for increasing transparency. These and other  provisions of the Truth   in Settlements Act will increase the transparency of  government   settlements and permit greater public scrutiny.
Where are these bills?
They were all DOA, as in dead on arrival.
Don’t bother looking to see if they’ve made any progress. I’ll tell you now, if any of them ever happen it will probably be in February, because it will be a cold day in hell before any of the big banks’ profits are meaningfully haircut by any “law.”
You want to know more about how settlements work, how banks negotiate them, how headlines about big fines are misleading? Read Part III of my series on settlements in today’s MoneyMorning.
But read it on an empty stomach, otherwise you might get sick.
By the way, did you see what I put together especially for you?
Click here. As you’ll see, I’m finally blowing the lid on the most lucrative trade on the planet.
This is very unique trade… one that has created some of the biggest gains in history. Guys like Paulson, Paul Tudor Jones, Templeton… they’ve made unbelievable amounts of money using this trade. George Soros used it to make a billion dollars – in a single day!
This strategy has been hidden from you because the folks on Wall Street don’t want you to know how to land huge gains trading some of world’s biggest Blue Chips – without have to actually buy the stock.
But today I’m changing all of that. Just go here and I’ll show you exactly how to trade this trade for exceptionally large returns. Anyone can do it.
Shah
Money Morning/The Money Map Report
©2014 Monument Street Publishing. All Rights Reserved. Protected by copyright laws of the United States and international treaties. Any reproduction, copying, or redistribution (electronic or otherwise, including on the world wide web), of content from this website, in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of Monument Street Publishing. 105 West Monument Street, Baltimore MD 21201, Email: customerservice@moneymorning.com
Disclaimer: Nothing published by Money Morning should be considered personalized investment advice. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized investent advice. We expressly forbid our writers from having a financial interest in any security recommended to our readers. All of our employees and agents must wait 24 hours after on-line publication, or after the mailing of printed-only publication prior to following an initial recommendation. Any investments recommended by Money Morning should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company.
|  Money Morning Archive | 
© 2005-2022 http://www.MarketOracle.co.uk - The Market Oracle is a FREE Daily Financial Markets Analysis & Forecasting online publication.
	

 
  
 
	