Too Big to Fail
- TV-MA
- Year:
- 2011
- 99 min
- 3,247 Views
We have no intention of dismantling
the regulatory agencies.
However, we must come to grips
with inefficient and burdensome regulations.
We will eliminate those that are
unproductive and unnecessary.
Tearing down these antiquated walls and
granting banks significant new authority.
In a victory for the banking industry,
Congress has approved legislation
which will allow commercial
and investment banks
to merge and form institutions
of unprecedented size and global reach.
I think it's very important for us not to
introduce regulation for regulation's sake.
I do believe in the American dream.
Owning a home is a part of that dream.
We are taking action to bring many thousands
of Americans closer to owning a home.
This project not only is good
for the soul of the country,
it's good for the pocketbook
of the country as well.
The housing market has reached
frantic proportions.
It seems that everybody is building,
buying or selling.
The Dow and the S&P both breaking records.
Profits soared 93%
at Goldman Sachs this year.
Hotshot traders and bankers
can expect to take home 10, 25,
and in some cases, $50 million.
Things that are too good to be true, are.
When you see something coming...
The real estate bubble...
- Housing bubble...
- Bubble...
... don't put it off.
Take action immediately.
Will there be a soft landing,
or will the bubble burst?
A new story, the mortgage meltdown.
This morning in the mortgage meltdown,
new numbers showing
that a record number of Americans
are losing their homes.
More than 70 mortgage companies have failed
in the last few months in America,
and now the biggest of the big companies,
the Bear Stearns, the big banks,
are caught holding the bag.
The fifth largest investment bank
in the country, Bear Stearns,
is being sold
for just $2 a share to JPMorgan.
It's being assisted by the government,
which is stepping in to guarantee
some $30 billion
in Bear's toxic real estate assets.
You've got to imagine that Hank Paulson
didn't think he signed up for this
when President Bush picked him
to become Treasury secretary.
Hank Paulson may now have to undo
some of the deregulation measures
that he and his peers on Wall Street
pushed through when he ran Goldman.
Treasury secretary Hank Paulson
telling Matt Lauer this morning,
"We're all over it.
I've got great confidence in our markets.
"They're resilient. They're flexible."
Ali, the truth is that Bear Stearns is only
a very small fraction of this story.
Our economy could face far worse
than a recession.
In the wake of Bear's collapse,
Lehman Brothers is scrambling
to reassure investors about the impact
of the mortgage crisis on its own assets.
Insurers of the firm under a great deal
of pressure this morning.
Dick Fuld, a 39-year veteran of Lehman
and the longest-running CEO
of a major investment bank on Wall Street,
has pulled the firm back
from the brink during other crises,
but today, for the first time that I'm hearing it,
investors are questioning his leadership.
- Motherf***er.
- One key question
investors have for Lehman Brothers,
"What's the true earnings power
of this investment bank's business?"
- Hey.
- Get up here.
We gotta start stacking sand bags.
What are you talking about?
We're down 21%. On paper, I just
lost $90 million, personally.
With investors pummeling Lehman shares,
the big question this morning is,
"What options does Fuld have?"
So far, he has failed to raise new capital
while virtually all of his rivals
have already done so.
And now, hedge fund manager David Einhorn
is publicly questioning the accuracy of...
Anything good?
It's a red-tailed hawk, first one this year.
Dick Fuld's on one.
... to provide credible answers.
So let's go through a couple of those,
what you call discrepancies, because...
- Tough morning?
- We show top-quality earnings,
- we beat every prediction.
- Yeah.
It's the damn short-sellers.
You know the game, short and distort.
They're rumormongers
and they're making a killing.
What are your plans for a capital raise?
We're way ahead of you.
Now, let me be clear,
we don't need the cash.
It's about perception.
Buffett, Buffett.
We're thinking of reaching out
to Warren Buffett.
Great.
You and Buffett go back, right?
Do me a favor and call him.
Tell him Lehman is rock solid.
As Treasury secretary,
I can't advocate for a specific investment.
Hank, you want me to raise capital or not?
Lehman Brothers is a hell of a lot bigger
than Bear Stearns.
The market is terrified.
When I was running Goldman,
I never even conceived
of asking the Treasury secretary
to cut a deal for me.
Yeah, but the Bear bailout created...
Please don't call it a bailout.
Okay, the very large Bear Stearns
purchase assistance package
created an expectation.
Fuld's counting on
direct intervention from you.
Buffett's a simple solution.
I think you make the call.
As what? Warren's friend? His former banker?
The Treasury secretary?
No. Fuld's calling him.
Hopefully he'll jump
in and we can all relax.
Relax? We just buried one investment bank,
we got another one that's barely breathing.
This is a confidence game.
People lose faith in Lehman,
these banks are gonna drop like dominoes
and I don't have the authority
to do a thing about it.
We're late. We've been late on everything.
Neel's team is working on
some kind of a disaster scenario.
We're calling it the "Break the Glass" plan,
what to ask Congress for
if your back's against the wall.
Money.
Is what you ask them for.
The problem is, Congress won't move
until we've already hit the iceberg,
and at that point, it may be too late.
So you're saying, with the full weight
of the United States Treasury behind me,
all I can do is call Warren Buffett?
Hi, Warren. It's Hank.
I understand you've been talking to Dick Fuld.
You know my misgivings, Hank,
about investment banks.
As soon as they started
trading for themselves,
the risk managers lost control.
I had a very unpleasant time
with Salomon Brothers.
That's fair enough.
But we both know that investment banking
is a profitable business.
I figure it made you a billion or so, huh?
I gotta believe that if the price was right,
you wouldn't just walk away.
You know a good deal when you see one.
What say you?
I gotta leave that to your judgment.
People act like we're crack dealers.
Nobody put a gun
to anybody's head and said,
"Hey, nimrod, buy a house you can't afford.
And you know what? While you're at it,
"put a line of credit on that baby
and buy yourself a boat."
You heard anything from Buffett?
He's asking for preferred shares at 40
with a dividend of 9%.
We were just at 66. What the f***?
Maybe it's just an opening gambit, Dick.
Sounds more like a goddamn insult.
- Let me get that, Dick.
- Thank you.
We're at 36 right now.
We haven't been anywhere near 66 in months.
The markets like Buffett.
- His name will push the price up overnight.
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