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Iceland Alone in Bank Criminality?

Wednesday, April 14, 2010 – by Staff Report

Henry Paulson

Iceland's banks gave "excessive" loans to a handful of powerful billionaires, including Robert Tchenguiz, the property entrepreneur, Jon Asgeir Johannesson, the retail tycoon, and Bjorgolfur Gudmundsson, the former owner of West Ham FC, according to a damning inquiry. Its parliamentary investigation – The Truth Report – found numerous potential cases of illegality, including possible share price manipulation and exaggeration of asset values, within the island nation's three banks – Kaupthing, Glitnir and Landsbanki. The long-awaited report also suggests that the banks were effectively controlled by five investors wielding "unlimited influence", with some acting as shadow directors. The report accuses the bank's owners of pressuring management into awarding loans to their companies and friendly clients, with little or no collateral. ... It emerged in the report that companies connected to Mr. Gudmundsson, whose family owned 40pc of Landsbanki, had borrowed almost as much as the entire £2.3bn Icesave debt to finance their own private investments. The loans amount to 140pc of the bank's equity. The report quotes Sigurjon Arnason, ex-chief executive of Landsbanki, as saying: "Resisting the requests from the owners of the banks would have equalled quitting from my position." The report also criticises Kaupthing's loans to London-based property entrepreneur Mr Tchenguiz, whose companies received £1.4bn. ... The report adds that it is "difficult to see how loans of this magnitude were taken with the bank's interests in mind." – UK Telegraph

Dominant Social Theme: About time the evil in Iceland was exposed.

Free-Market Analysis: We are not surprised that financial clout as regards Iceland's major banks was concentrated in only a few hands. We were fairly sure this would be the case, just as we were sure that Iceland's central bank itself would be found wanting. The Telegraph reports that, "former central bank manager David Oddsson turned down help from his UK counterpart Mervyn King." We'd probably turn down that "help" as well, but the inquiry seems to find it damning.

Probably everyone involved in the inquiry knew that significant manipulation would be exposed. But the idea that these sorts of activities are restricted to Iceland is questionable. We are sure that whatever went on regarding Iceland's banks is also present elsewhere in the West. The financial system under which the West operates places banks at the pinnacle of financial activity and enshrines their power via regulatory fiat. This sort of mercantilism – where money power is concentrated within the banking industry and organized by central banks that have direct relationships with the government involved – is bound to generate corruption.

In America, there is a continued movement to audit the mercantilist (public/private) central bank – and no doubt the same sort of difficulties would be found in the case of American audit as there have been in Iceland. While the American audit, initially sponsored by libertarian/Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul (R-Tex) has momentum, the prospects are not realizable. However, the push has numerous sponsors in both the House and Senate and pressure remains. The movement has also attracted various outside spokespeople including most recently economist Robert Reich, as MoneyNews reports:

Economist Robert Reich claims that the secretiveness of the Federal Reserve means it has no place in a democracy. "The Fed is not part of the legislative branch," Reich recently wrote in his blog. "Its secret deals ... violate the democratic process, if not the Constitution itself."

Reich, who served in three national administrations and was a secretary of labor under President Bill Clinton, says that "Thomas Jefferson put a stop to Alexander Hamilton's idea of a powerful central bank out of fear it would be unaccountable to the public. The Fed has just proven Jefferson's point."

As long as it's merely setting interest rates, Fed secrecy and political independence can be justified, says Reich, now a professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley. But once it departs from that role and begins putting billions of dollars of taxpayer money at risk –choosing winners and losers in the capitalist system – its legitimacy is questionable.

The Fed now admits it bailed out Bear Stearns – taking on tens of billions of dollars of the bank's bad loans – in order to smooth Bear Stearns' takeover by JPMorgan Chase, Reich notes. ... "The Fed also took on billions of dollars worth of AIG securities, also before the official government-sanctioned bailout." The Bear Stearns deal marked a turning point in the financial crisis for the Fed, Bloomberg reports. By putting taxpayers at risk in financing the rescue, the central bank was engaging in fiscal policy, normally the domain of Congress and the U.S. Treasury.

This is an important point and one that we have not seen made in the mainstream press with any degree of detail. The Fed's role in America has changed under Ben Bernanke – and previous Treasury Secretary and former Goldman Chairman & CEO, Henry Paulson (pictured above left) – as a result of the financial crisis. While the Fed indeed may have been far more active prior to the financial crisis than anyone knows (outside of the Fed and related counter-parties), the public stance of the Fed has shifted markedly along with its self-arrogated powers. Bernanke himself has launched a spirited defense of the Fed's actions of late but Reich's point is well taken nonetheless. The Fed has actively involved itself in matters far beyond the setting of interest rates – and in a very public way.

Of course, we don't agree with Reich regarding interest rates anyhow. It is stupefying how academically trained economists can continue to endorse the charade that the Fed, by controlling interest rates, is not essentially fixing the price of money. It is. And price-fixing is always distortive and eventually ends up by ruining the economies to which it is affixed. There is no great mystery regarding the world's financial crisis – it is a direct result of mercantilist central banking in which a small group of private individuals (we call them a power elite) manages and controls the world's money on behalf of governments.

Truly public and transparent central banking – the kind that Ellen Brown and others have called for – would likely be a step up from what we have now. But statist ("democratic") central banking would eventually fall prey to the same manipulative pressures from which the current system has suffered, as government sponsored monopolies always do. Ultimately, if one wishes to have a "central bank" it would have to be entirely private and derive no authority or advantage from government. Of course, in such a situation, central banking as we know it would not exist. No one in the private sector would tolerate giving a single entity so much power. It would be diffused. In fact the entire banking industry would be a lot less powerful were it fully privatized.

We have noticed of late that the powers-that-be are far more assertive – even in the US – about using the levers of government for obviously anti-democratic and agenda-specific purposes. The re-launch in the United States Senate of cap-and-trade (global warming) legislation is a good example. As is the ferocity with which the Democrats rammed through a nationalization of health care. In Britain, various anti-freedom measures are regularly proposed and acted on. And of course the EU is a virtual authoritarian factory.

Conclusion: One can interpret such actions in two ways. Either the power elite is increasingly confident of its position and authority and is moving quickly to consolidate gains – or it is desperate and resorting to the brute force of the legislative process to pursue an agenda that has foundered thanks to its exposure on the Internet and elsewhere. We would tend to think the latter – and also that sooner or later the elite's central banking system itself will come under sustained attack. We would not be surprised if continued revelations from Iceland only generate more controversy about a mechanism that inevitably results in the ruination of the middle class and the destruction, over time, of whole economies.




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Effective April 25, 2012, the Daily Bell will discontinue allowing feedback comments. We have left in place the large body of responses posted in the past, as we appreciate the valuable contributions made by some of our readers.
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  Posted by 1776again on 04/16/10 12:50 AM

Maybe the volcanic eruption is a portent of things to come...

  Posted by AmanfromMars on 04/14/10 10:01 PM

"Reply from the Daily Bell:Excellent summary. But how about free-banking? See this weekend's interview. Stay tuned!"

Now should that also be about free money "paid" to customer agents to spend through the System in order for the System's customers to be delivered of the wealth facility to generate industry and product and growth and greater intelligence for human consumption and future development?

Which the Daily Bell may like to consider is a Digitally Active Real Program Already running as a Live Operational Virtual Environment beta project ....... and AI @ ITs Work in Progress for Advanced Intelligence Servers........ for that is exactly what it is, and more.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Thanks for the kind words.

  Posted by Clayton on 04/14/10 06:30 PM

Only a Gold Coin Standard will fill the proper role as both a media of exchange and a store of value.

A bi-metalic one may work also, with Silver and Gold in a float against one another, but not if an attempt is made to preordain a fixed rate of conversion of one to the other.

Copper, which filled a minor role as a change maker when I was a child, could be included in its previous role, however, with the advent of electronic clearing it may not be necessary for there to be the need for anything to provide for small denominations.

Debt card swipes could be decimalized against either Gold or Silver, to provide the necessary exactness to any transaction.

Today, in the US pennies are only needed to make good on sales taxes, and have so little intrinsic value that I leave them behind rather than put a hole in my pocket.

The internet in combination with the low cost of computing have made the necessity of the central bank for the efficient clearing of transactions obsolete. In the absence of its monopoly position, competitive clearing organizations, which might be more regional in their focus, would likely arise and then inter-regional ones would quickly follow.

As a case in point, if FedEx can track millions of packages at any moment of any day, then tracking financial transactions with the same degree of exactness should not present much of a problem. This is particularly true of electronic transactions, which can be coded immediately at the point and moment of occurance in an almost infinite number of ways in order to facilitate their tracking. There could even be layers of trackability, depending on the wishes of the parties in the exchange, and bearing various predetermined costs. This is already done with credit card transactions and charge accounts.

From the above, it should be apparent that because of the monopolistic intrusiveness of the central bank structure and apparatus, the banking industry we have today is a real dinosaur relative to our overall technological advancements.

It is modeled on the need for obfuscation and control, which serve only to build in a higher than necessary price to banking, not on providing transactional completeness and efficiency. It is exactly the kind of system in which crooks thrive.

Knowing this we can be certain that the future will be more of the past, until the existing paradigm is overcome and entirely private banking has taken its place. The principle obstacle to this is getting agreement on the core issue of debate, which is fractional reserve banking.

Another is the idea of using the discounted present value of Real Bills as money substitutes. Both of these require a deep knowledge of the difference of Fiduciary Media(Claims against actual money) and money itself (Gold). This can be had in von Mises' book, "The Theory of Money and Credit." It is rather dry reading, but good for grounding the mind in those principles needed to discern falsity from truth.

Again, the goal is honest money for an honest economy. An economy in which honest people can prosper in freedonm and justice with one another.The Monetary Cannon lies at the heart of our revolution. If we error on this one, all is ultimately lost.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Excellent summary. But how about free-banking? See this weekend's interview. Stay tuned!

  Posted by Ryan on 04/14/10 02:42 PM

Maybe Iceland would be better off revisiting their medieval anarchocapitalistic order:

Click to view link

Reply from The Daily Bell

Thanks.

  Posted by AmanfromMars on 04/14/10 01:42 PM

"Posted by Dan on 4/14/2010 10:23:35 AM

Maybe Iceland could develop a "real" free enterprise economy from scratch, with sound money, no fractional reserve banking, no central bank, limited government, low taxes and a kick ass military because it will need it to fend off the "power elites".

If they did that, a lot of wealthy people would domicile there.

..... Reply from the Daily Bell:We've suggested that as well! Don't think the current government is up to it.

"Gentlemen, good governments are starting to slowly realize that the people have both the power to define and deliver the policies to be pursued on their behalf by governments, and the means to exercise that power remotely if governments would be foolish enough to ignore their wishes, with their use of the means by which we here share our views. ......... their Mastery of InterNetworking Communications.

And Iceland has a very active AIMMORPG Industry who would very easily be able to Create a Virtual Reality Great Game which would leave the Establishment World Order Players and Institutions dancing to their Tunes and following the Live Plots of their Games.

And that would reverse the present situation and have them in control of ... well, whatever sector they would care to share globally virtualised and championed by Novel Non State Actor Characters Leading a Collapsed Global System on a New Course into the Future.

And with the Binary Technology and Digital Programming skills which are available globally, and which speak to disparate nations in the one voice of Zero and Ones, would they be in a Field of their Own and the present Elitists would flounder and founder should they attempt to intervene in order to maintain a corrupt and perverse selfish Power Monopoly.

Between a rock and a hard place and with nothing to lose and everything to gain, are those with everything to lose and nothing to gain catastrophically compromised and vulnerable to every move both made by themselves, in an attempted defence, and by others in their waves of attack.

In such circumstances, would the smarter compromised player invest in the Future Systems Programmers and to Hell with the Past and All of its Troubles.

However, the stupidity of supposedly smart men is something which apparently has no bounds and there appears to be no limits to the depths they will sink to, be thought of as uber-powerful and super-rich with their control of currency and/or numbers representing wealth, for of course, nowadays can one be instantly fabulously wealthy, and especially so as a champion white hatted knight quietly contracted in to save the Banking System with a Top Secret Great Game, with simple electronic Credit Transfer.

One doesn't actually need to move any physical money for all one is dealing with are Virtual Assets and Valuable Intellectual Property, which can very easily be Traded Anywhere with Anyone Interested in Over Powering Elitist Mechanisms with Remote Simple Control Levers.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Better. The capital letters detract from otherwise lucid perspectives.

  Posted by James Downey on 04/14/10 01:21 PM

As to the bankers in Iceland, may I suggest that a guy named Bernie may have room in his cell to accommodate these criminals.

I agree with the Bell that this is just the tip of the iceberg. The worst day in our history was December 22, 1913 when a fiat President, Wilson, signed the Federal Reserve Act.

I especially remember one term in that act that stated that the Fed was to provide an Elastic currency.

Looks as though they accomplished their mission. Now they have the world tied up and Stretched to the limit.

Unfortunately Ron Paul will not get his audit. The Federal Reserve cannot be audited. There are no audit trails, books or accountability. As a CPA, regardless of the billing rate, I would turn that assignment down. PS, I am a recovering CPA as our financial reporting is just as corrupt as the people who use the results for further manipulation.

  Posted by Dave Redick on 04/14/10 01:12 PM

All points well said as to harm by the Fed. I would add that a lot of gov't treachery is very personal, as in;

1, doing favors for friends, donors, source of a future job/re-election, fear of retribution (no Wallstreeter squealed on Maddoff because he could ruin their career; but many knew what he was doing, including Chris Cox),

2. guarding ones personal reputation/legacy (Nixon killed about 25,000 more US troops so as not to be the first Pres. to lose a war), etc '

See Click to view link

  Posted by Lance E. Schultz on 04/14/10 10:56 AM

The prophet Micah condemned the crooks and politicians of his day for devising schemes to scam and rob the people. Micah 2:12 says, "Woe to those who scheme iniquity, who work out evil on their beds! When morning comes, they do it, for it is in the power of their hands. They covet fields and then seize them, and houses, and take them away. They rob a man and his house, a man and his inheritance."

For as long as there has been man, there has been a man a scheming. Iceland is rubles compared to the universal systematic applied theft being waged against the people in the west.

  Posted by Dan on 04/14/10 10:23 AM

Maybe Iceland could develop a "real" free enterprise economy from scratch, with sound money, no fractional reserve banking, no central bank, limited government, low taxes and a kick ass military because it will need it to fend off the "power elites". If they did that, a lot of wealthy people would domicile there.

Reply from The Daily Bell

We've suggested that as well! Don't think the current government is up to it.

  Posted by Dogster on 04/14/10 08:54 AM

You should also point out that if Ellen Brown's public banking controlled by the people took hold, the systemic corruption of the American government would disappear quickly, which in itself would be a great benefit.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Well, you've just done that. We think new corruption would occur eventually though - as corruption is a manifestation of monopoly throughout history.

  Posted by Mike on 04/14/10 08:15 AM

Mr.Bubbles,

Sir Alan Greenspan,is one of those faces of the power elite.

Connect all the bubbles and they lead to his bubbly smile.

  Posted by John Acord on 04/14/10 06:53 AM

Perhaps, the Bell could put a face on the individuals it refers to as the "power elites." I would find that quite interesting.

Reply from The Daily Bell

There are so many sites that do. We try to concentrate on the mechanism.