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How Senator Schumer Caused The Second Largest Bank Failure In US History

Posted by Brian Fairbanks

 

If you had money in IndyMac, a Pasadena, CA-based bank that collapsed over the weekend, there's good news and bad news. Bad news is: it's gone, baby, gone. Good news: Your tax dollars, in the form of $4 to $8 billion, will take care of that little problem.

IndyMac's doom had been long in coming: the stock price was tanking, lately seen below the $1 mark, and investors were yanking more than a hundred million a day from the company, which had gotten carried away with the handing out of mortgages during the housing boom. But it was the work of one man, with one stroke of his pen, that ended up finishing the company off... and costing all some pretty pennies...

IndyMac, which once employed 10,000, fell prey to a classic run on the bank, and regulators singled out Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) as having helped to fuel massive withdrawals. On June 26, Schumer said in letters to the FDIC, the OTS and two other federal agencies that IndyMac might have "serious problems" with its loan holdings.

"I am concerned that IndyMac's financial deterioration poses significant risks to both taxpayers and borrowers," he wrote. The bank "could face a failure if prescriptive measures are not taken quickly."

That public warning prompted depositors to pull $1.3 billion out of accounts between June 27 and Thursday.

"This institution failed today due to a liquidity crisis," John M. Reich, director of the OTS, said at a news conference Friday afternoon. "Although this institution was already in distress, the deposit run pushed IndyMac over the edge."

Schumer said in a statement that the cause of IndyMac's failure was "poor and loose lending practices" that should have been prevented by more active regulation. Later, a Schumer spokesman said: "Mr. Reich, a political appointee, should be spending less time playing politics and more time doing his job."

Later in the statement, Schumer said: "I have no problem playing poltiics with enough money to feed every starving child in this country, or maybe about half of the fat people in Tennessee. Now just try and defeat me in an electoral contest!"

But he may have been misquoted. IndyMac's failure is the largest since 1984. You can read more about this sotry at the LA Times website.


Comments

godwal said:

Schumer's comments at best sped the failure up by a day or two, forcing the government to step in and take control.  I think the heading is misleading as the bank had already failed and FDIC was already planning to take control.  They just had to do so sooner.

July 14, 2008 2:49 PM

anthonycb said:

There are no tax-payer dollars used to cover losses as a result of a bank default.  FDIC insurance is actually insurance.  Each bank pays the FDIC fees based on assets under management and the risk that the bank is taking.  Please bother to do some minimal research before posting--I know it isn't usually a concern of yours.

July 14, 2008 2:50 PM

fitandfun71 said:

IndyMac's numbers were horrible MONTHS ago and the OTS should have had the FDIC take over around the first of the year.

Fact: IndyMac's net income for 2007 was -$564,548,000.

I could get into much more complicated numbers to explain why IndyMac should have been taken over earlier but why bother?

July 14, 2008 6:12 PM

About Brian Fairbanks

Brian Fairbanks, the Senior National Political Correspondent for Nerve, is a filmmaker living in the wilds of Brooklyn. He previously wrote for the Hartford Courant and Gawker/The Consumerist. He will be first against the wall, come the revolution.

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  • about the blogger

    Emily Farris writes about culture and food for numerous publications and websites you've probably never heard of, including her own blog eefers. Her first cookbook will be published in fall 2008. Emily lives in Greenpoint, Brooklyn with her cat, but just one . . . so far.

    Brian Fairbanks is a filmmaker living in the wilds of Brooklyn. He previously wrote for the Hartford Courant and Gawker. He won the Williamsburg Spelling Bee once. He loves cats, women with guns, and burning books.

    Nicole Pasulka is a Brooklyn writer and editor who's always on the lookout for the dirty. Her other virtual home is at The Morning News, where things are squeaky clean most of the time.

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