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September 24, 2008 5:54 PM

Congress Doing More Damage than Good, Says Former SEC Lawyer

Posted by Brian Baxter

Despite a temporary ban on short-selling and a $700 billion rescue package snaking its way through Congress, a quick fix to our current economic malaise doesn't appear to be in the offing. That's partly due, says Bruce Hiler, head of the securities group at Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft and a former associate director of enforcement at the SEC, to the posturing by congressmen looking for a sound bite moment to slam Wall Street.

We talked to Hiler about about short sales and the asset-backed securities bailout plan. The onetime defense lawyer for former Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling didn't hold back.

Short-selling: problem or panacea?
Short-selling definitely serves a purpose and the SEC has said this. In the early nineties the SEC testified during congressional hearings on short-selling, because corporations and Congress were concerned about these so-called bear raids by people trying to knock down their stock prices. And the SEC said that [short-selling] performs a valuable function for the markets. On the other hand, there can be abusive short-selling, just like there can be manipulative long-buying.

Seems like a catch-22.
I think the debate that's going on now--and we have clients on both sides of the issue--is over regulating how the markets trade and function. There have always been some restrictions on short-selling, just like there are restrictions on purchasing long. So there are things that can be done on either side, and sometimes irrational exuberance on the upside or downside can be problematic.

What we've seen recently is shorts coming in the market as a result of smelling blood in the water because of all the real estate debt issues. With all of the fear out there, it's clear that people going long have been very tentative. That creates an environment for short sellers to have more of an effect than they usually would. Clearly if there were unfounded rumors or collusion, that's a problem, but I'm not aware of any cases that the SEC has ever been able to make on that.

And the current short-selling ban is only until the first week of October, correct?
Yeah, and they can extend it. But the other thing the [SEC] can do--and I've seen so many people question why they're not considering it if they really want to deal with the potential effect of some of this unbridled short-selling--is put the Uptick Rule back in place. A day or two ago, when they put these emergency rules in place banning naked short-selling, they put this order out stopping short-selling on 789 financial institution stocks but did nothing on the Uptick Rule. So I'm not sure why that's not another arrow in the quiver.

[Editor's note: The Uptick Rule, eliminated by the SEC on July 6, 2007, requires that every short sale be entered at a price higher than the price of a previous trade. Says Hiler: "In times where there is panic or fear, there is no breathing room for people seeing a stock to know that that stock might be going down just because of the work of a few traders. So the Uptick Rule is sort of a built-in regulator."]

At least Congress is on the case.
I'm always absolutely amazed and appalled that we Americans repeatedly vote some of these people into office and allow them to speak to us the way that they do. They create the environment in which they play and then they play to that environment. So many of the people running for office say that this is a bailout of Wall Street by Main Street. They've rattled that sword so much that I bet if you interviewed people on Main Street, half of them would think that this bill was to give $700 billion to Wall Street executives when the actual problem itself started on Main Street.

The debt that was wrapped in these ABSs, which Wall Street probably misjudged was not going to default as readily as it did, came out of Main Street people getting loans that they shouldn't have gotten. It's frustrating to watch the posturing of Congress and the people that are sort of running the show up there. Paulson has done a great job of explaining it, as have some other senators, but some of the rhetoric coming out of there is just appalling.

But it does make for great political theater.
(Laughing, then sighing.) This is about all of us and hopefully they get this thing done soon before it seizes up even more. Every day that they wait is another day that it will take to get through the system. They've already caused more damage than they have good, as though there's some horrible, terrible problem in having the $700 billion out there for Treasury to buy up assets. As if Congress can't watch over that? We need to pass some language saying they're going to look over it now? Hell, they can pass a bill a month from now that says, "Hey, remember that $700 billion we gave you? We want you to come up here and show us every penny of it while we create an organization that appraises and reviews every thing that we buy." Or they can just pass something that says, "with appropriate regulatory oversight to come."

Now they want to eke this out in $150 billion portions, so they can roll the cameras in a few months from now, see what the atmosphere is like, and see if they can get in a few more sound bites pounding on Wall Street or the rich versus the poor. Paulson, in my view, is just trying to do the right thing for all parts of America, and these [politicians] act like they're the saviors.

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Sounds like Bruce has bought into the Bush Doctrine on economics: this thing is all the fault of you fraudster- homeowners out there; you're hurting my rich buddies and it has to stop!

The Wall Street/Main Street struggle being highlighted in congress is not completely without merit. It's true that a person taking loans that they couldn’t pay off is irresponsible; however, all of the blame on this situation should not be centered on the somewhat simple home buyer. Wall Street exploded the mortgage issue by bundling securities and selling/holding the debt. Both Wall Street and Main Street should have taken the time to really review what their friends offering the loans were doing. The home buyer's motivation was to buy more home; Wall Street’s motivation was to profit off of the mortgage debt. Both parties had a strong interest is really reviewing the loan terms being handed out and how the loans are to be paid out. I realize that it is more the individual home buyers job to review their own loan term, but when a bank is betting so much on one type of investment it seems reasonable for the bankers involved to do some investigation rather than charge full steam ahead. For the past several years the real-estate market was almost a way to print money, and now we are paying the price for that.
On a separate note, everyone please stop talking about the so called "Bush Doctrine." That phrase is so 5 minutes ago. The only reason anyone says that is because of that silly interview with Palin. The phrase is tossed around like there is some kind of official doctrinal body of knowledge called the Bush Doctrine. Basically the "Bush Doctrine" is the latest catch phrase for people who want to try to sum up all the failures of the present administration. Just discuss the failures, don't say "Bush Doctrine."

Greenspan's low interest rates and the warring and spending of this administration have been to the detriment of Main Street. The roll of Wall Street: brokers, rating agencies, law and accounting firms packaging loans, and parts of loans, of all types which surely they, at some point, knew were unlikely to pay off should be rigorously examined. I suspect that the declining dollar also exacerbated the problem. Why was the dollar falling? Paulson, Bernacke, Bush & his apologists are the sound-biters peddling fear to get their way. This would be somewhat amusing if the next step in this dance wasn’t to have our young men and women marching off to WWIII.
I say lets analyze the transactions that created this caustic debt. Who were the issuers; which lawyers put them together; what were the guarantees, etc. Let’s find the real culprits and hang’m high!
It seems that we have a couple of stock jockeys putting this socialist/fascist scheme together and trying to cram it down our throats. Goodbye America, it was a great ride.

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