The JPMorgan Chase debacle is ample reminder that banks are  dangerously risking money on dubious bets with dire consequences if they  are not stopped. US giant financial services group JPMorgan  Chases trading debacle which has already lost US$2bil and which  threatens to raise losses to double that, will likely put pressure for  greater regulation of the banking industry, not just in the 
United  States but around the world.
That is as it should be for despite  the 2008 financial crisis which resulted from bankers structuring  complex and questionable credit derivatives which few understood but  many bought because they believed the rating assigned them by  unknowledgeable credit rating agencies, the lessons dont appear to have  been learnt.
With massive US government help, many banks which  were on the brink of failure were rescued and the memories of those  tempestuous times when the future of not just the banks but the worlds  financial system was in jeopardy seems to have faded away from public  consciousness.
Until now that is.
JPMorgans debacle is but  a stark reminder that little has changed since the 2008 
world financial  crisis in terms of how banks operate and that the world is still held  to ransom by rogue traders and others who risk shareholders funds and  depositors money as easily and as nonchalantly as spinning the dice on a  gambling table for a few dollars.
The sad truth is that little  has been done despite all the rhetoric to ensure that the predatory  chase for profits by banks does not involve gambling with shareholders  equity and deposits. Players still get away with massive profits and  bonuses when they succeed and little more than slap on the wrist when  things go wrong.
It is an indication of a financial world that  has gone awry as players such as hedge funds effectively search for new  games to play in a massive, borderless casino where the uninitiated are  quickly gobbled up and the others play high-stakes games in which some  must become major losers.
This comment by Mark Williams, a  professor of finance at Boston University, who has also served as a  
Federal Reserve Board examiner quoted in the 
New York Times aptly  sums up JPMorgans mistake:
JPMorgan Chase has a big hedge fund inside a  commercial bank. They should be taking in deposits and making loans,  not taking large speculative bets.
The trades by JPMorgan are complex to say the least and no one really seems to understand them. The 
New York Times reported  that the complex position built by the bank included a bullish bet on  an index of investment-grade corporate debt and was later paired with a  bearish bet on high-yield securities.
The report further said  that the trading losses suffered by JPMorgan have accelerated in recent  days and have surpassed the banks initial estimate of US$2bil by at  least US$1bil. Part of the reason for this is that hedge funds already  know JPMorgans position is under pressure and are piling in on the  opposite trade. That means the US$4bil losses anticipated may  materialise sooner rather than later.
While the US$4bil loss wont  threaten JP Morgans capital base, the question that must arise is what  if the losses were much bigger and they could well have been. JPMorgan  would most likely be considered one of those banks that cant fail and  would have been rescued by the US government.
To stop exactly such situations, the Obama administration had put up the 
Volcker Rule named after former Federal Reserve 
chairman Paul Volcker who helped formulate it but the legislation is still being hammered  out. The rule basically seeks to prohibit banks from trading for their  own account.
But there are exceptions and these allow banks to  aggregate their positions and offset their exposures in a single hedge.  Some feel that JPMorgans so-called hedge an oxymoron in this instance as  it hedged nothing falls into that category but others dont.
For  most of us, the solution is quite simple and straightforward if you are a  bank and you take depositors money, you got no business speculating  using that money, especially since you also have access to low-cost  funds from the Fed and elsewhere by virtue of being a bank.
But it is an election year in the US and the silly season of course, much like it is here.
Remember,  free enterprise and the capitalist system on which the US is built. You  cant restrict free enterprise, the reasoning goes, even if it is your  money the bank is using.
Big business has big money and they are  using that to try and put 
Mitt Romney into the White House. If that  happens, then it may well be bye-bye to banking sector reform which  would be bad for the United States and the world.
New York Times columnist and renowned economist 
Paul Krugman was very blunt in his  analysis of the JPMorgan debacle at the end of which he basically  thanked JPMorgan Chases 
chief executive Jamie Dimon for confirming that the banking sector needs greater regulation.
Krugman,  an unashamed and unabashed Democrat, has been one of those opinion  makers who has been consistently calling for greater regulation of the  US financial sector in the wake of world financial crisis.
JPMorgan,  relatively unscathed by the world financial crisis sparked off by the  subprime crisis but now in trouble through a trade engineered by a  trader in London known as The Whale, is a timely reminder that little  has been done to stop the recurrence of another world financial crisis.
Let us take heed before it is too late.
A
 QUESTION OF BUSINESS By P. GUNASEGARAM starbiz@thestar.com.myIndependent consultant and writer P Gunasegaram sometimes thinks that  the financial world is just one whole, big, casino of unimagined  proportions. The trouble is no one knows who owns it. Related posts:How will JPMorgan's $2 billion loss affect American banking rules? Senior executives to leave!  May 16, 2012
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