Albany Times Union

Why learn from history when you can repeat it?

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In 2017, when Congress and the Trump administra­tion were pushing a bill to weaken hard-fought banking regulation­s, we warned that they were playing with fire.

Barely a decade had passed since the 20072008 economic meltdown. Blatant abuses in the financial industry had more than merited the tough banking regulation­s that followed. Yet, now, Congress and the Trump administra­tion wanted to weaken regulation­s to placate the banking lobby. One of the key players doing the banks’ bidding was Rep. Ann Wagner, R-ballwin, who held (and still holds) a key seat on the House Financial Services Committee.

To recap how the meltdown happened: Reckless risk-taking by mortgage lenders brought major financial institutio­ns to the brink of collapse. The stock market tanked. Millions of Americans lost their homes, their jobs, their retirement accounts, or all three. Banks hated the tighter regulation­s imposed by the 2010 Dodd-frank banking reform act and unleashed their most powerful forces — gobs and gobs of money — to lobby for a rollback.

Money talked. With billionair­e Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin leading the charge on behalf of oppressed billionair­e bankers, Congress agreed to dramatical­ly loosen regulation thresholds so that smaller banks — those with less than $250 billion in assets — could take bigger risks again. Billionair­e President Donald Trump signed the bill. Billionair­e bankers cheered. Wagner’s campaign fund swelled. Also swept up in the fervor was former Rep. Barney Frank, D -Massachuse­tts, who found reason to push for reversal of his own banking restrictio­ns. Why? Perhaps because he now held a lucrative board position at one of those smaller institutio­ns: Signature Bank.

Last weekend, Signature Bank and Silicon Valley Bank became two of the three largest bank failures in U.S. history. Fears of a broader banking failure have sent U.S. stock markets plummeting again, while the Federal Reserve is scrambling to head off a depositor panic. Tech firms whose Silicon Valley Bank deposits exceeded the federal insurance coverage limits worried that they wouldn’t be able to make payroll unless the government stepped in.

The two banks failed for different reasons, but both were rooted in the 2018 legislatio­n that had allowed them to escape the federal stress-test regulation­s that had previously applied to them. They had placed too many of their assets in liquidityr­isky holdings that tighter federal regulation would likely have caught. Silicon Valley had placed more than half of its assets in low-yield, low-liquidity U.S. Treasury bonds, and Signature Bank had put far too much reliance on cryptocurr­ency transactio­ns.

The relaxed regulation­s provided Wagner and other Republican­s with a short-term political victory that oddly played well with Trump’s base of working-class non-billionair­es. Frank reportedly walked away with $2.4 million in compensati­on from Signature. But Americans last week once again are watching their 401(k)’s sink in value while wondering: Is this 2007 all over again?

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Getty Images

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