P
ProVobis
Guest
They didn’t but it was almost expected that Paulsen would bail them out after having done so for Bear Stearns. I will agree that the repeal of Glass-Steagal had something to do with the collapse of the 2008 bank crisis but it was perhaps more notable in 2001 as the banks were shorting the very stock of companies they had lent money to. Jim Cramer, not someone I admire very much, but he did make a point of it back in 2002 or so. Without the repeal of GS, banks would have not been allowed to do anything but lend money. No oil speculation, no shorting of stocks, none of those things. These types of regulations seem to be okay as the banks through the Fed et al, have a distinct advantage over the rest of the investment world. Different than say, you and me speculating in stocks and commodities.Also, the government had no role in Lehman Brothers going belly up either.