The Borneo Post

Wall Street back in favour with Trump cabinet picks

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President-elect Trump is putting together an economic team with an impressive record of business accomplish­ment, a deep understand­ing of the US and global economy and a clear vision of how to help all Americans share in the nation’s success.

NEW YORK: The nomination­s of Steven Mnuchin and Wilbur Ross to the Trump cabinet, positions Wall Street to exert renewed influence over the US economy after retreating somewhat in the Obama years.

Mnuchin, 53, President- elect Donald Trump’s pick to head the Treasury Department, spent 17 years at Goldman Sachs, where he worked on complex financial derivative­s that were later at the heart of the 2008 financial crisis.

Wilbur Ross, 79, Trump’s designee for secretary of Commerce, was nicknamed the ‘king of bankruptcy’ for a record of profiting off of dying industries.

The picks drew quick praise in business circles, with Financial Services Roundtable chief executive Tim Pawlenty praising Mnuchin as a ‘ seasoned and results-oriented leader.’

A senior Wall Street banker praised as ‘thoughtful’ Mnuchin’s reservatio­ns about the Dodd-Frank banking regulation­s enacted after the 2008 crisis.

Business Roundtable President John Engler said, “Presidente­lect Trump is putting together an economic team with an impressive record of business accomplish­ment, a deep understand­ing of the US and global economy and a clear vision of how to help all Americans share in the nation’s success.”

But there also was plenty of criticism.

“We are witnessing the wholesale takeover of government by an extremist faction of the corporate class,” said Robert Weissman, president of public policy group Public Citizen.

Senate Democrats signaled they intend tough scrutiny for Mnuchin, who led an investment group that bought failing California bank IndyMac for US$1.55 billion in 2009, then sold the renamed OneWest five years later for US$3.4 billion.

Part of OneWest’s earnings came from driving homeowners into foreclosur­e in order to collect loss-sharing payments from the government.

“Steve Mnuchin is the Forrest Gump of the financial crisis – he managed to participat­e in all the worst practices on Wall Street,” said Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren, who sits on the Senate Banking Committee, which will question Mnuchin in confirmati­on hearings early next year.

“His selection as Treasury Secretary should send shivers down the spine of every American who got hit hard by the financial crisis, and is the latest sign that Donald Trump has no intention of draining the swamp and every intention of running Washington to benefit himself and his rich buddies.”

Senator Sherrod Brown, the top Democrat on the Senate Banking Committee was equally critical. “This isn’t draining the swamp – it’s stocking it with alligators.”

During the presidenti­al campaign, Trump attacked Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton over her close ties to Wall Street. Trump’s closing television campaign ad even included a shot of Goldman Sachs chief executive Lloyd Blankfein, part of a global financial and political elite that Trump depicted himself as challengin­g.

But since winning office, Trump has turned to several financial insiders. Stephen Bannon, who is slated to be a top White House advisor, worked at Goldman Sachs, as did Anthony Scaramucci, a member of Trump’s transition team.

Wall Street has spent much of the Obama years playing defense in the wake of the financial crisis, with the Justice Department undertakin­g myriad investigat­ions of unethical financial practices in the sale and packaging of securities linked to subprime mortgages.

The six largest US banks, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley have paid more than US$110 billion to turn the page on the debacle.

But the industry’s fortunes appear to be on upswing, as signaled by the stocks rally since the election which has pushed share prices to their highest level since 2009.

Since Trump’s election, Goldman Sachs has surged 20 per cent, Morgan Stanley 21 per cent, JPMorgan 14 per cent, Bank of America 23 per cent, Citigroup 15 per cent and Wells Fargo 16 per cent.

But Trump’s lurch back towards big finance could revive concerns about excessive coziness between the Treasury Department and Wall Street.

In the 1990s, then- President Bill Clinton, with backing from his Treasury Secretary Bob Rubin, a Wall Street veteran, repealed a bank law that separated investment banking from the retail side.

During the financial crisis of 2008, several large banks were saved from bankruptcy with public funds under a program overseen by President George W. Bush’s Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, former chief executive of Goldman Sachs. — AFP

John Engler, Business Roundtable President

 ??  ?? Two men in cowboy hats stand in the lobby at Trump Tower where US President-elect Donald Trump lives in New York. The nomination­s of Steven Mnuchin and Wilbur Ross to the Trump cabinet, positions Wall Street to exert renewed influence over the US...
Two men in cowboy hats stand in the lobby at Trump Tower where US President-elect Donald Trump lives in New York. The nomination­s of Steven Mnuchin and Wilbur Ross to the Trump cabinet, positions Wall Street to exert renewed influence over the US...
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