Really, please elaborate. If you don't actually have the ability to argue it, and are just going off of what you overheard in some conversation between bankers that you know, then you are simply talking about something that you have no understanding of.While they may not agree with the implementation of Dodd Frank, retail fees and the current oversight of regulatory compliances, the reality is that if they work for a major bank they owe their job to stimulus and tarp. Plain and simple. I urge you to prove me wrong on that.
Interesting question. If you listen to the clip (btw, that speech is cutoff to focus on the beginning of it in order to vilify him. That same speech he talks in depth about the importance of not letting speculation get out of hand) he is talking about home values, not banks issuing mortgages without regard to whether a person could pay for it or not. At that time, before the mortgage collapse, we needed people to continue buying houses. We needed demand to rise as well as interest rates. His point wasn't so much with deregulation, but rather incentivizing home building and purchase. He wasn't, nor were really any politicians, suggesting that banks should start making bets their asses couldn't cash. Again, while i'm not in residential mortgages, I am a banker. We saw this coming but it was like watching a car crash in slow motion.
Again... that sounds good in theory, but it's not reality. Our entire economic system depends on companies being able to borrow on lines of credit, utilize lease lines, run their business on operating lines of credit securitized by profit. Without the cost of funds available through the large depositories of major banks, small lenders could not offer rates less than what companies could create in revenue on their own. For instance, most companies borrow money not because they don't have it, but rather because they are looking at the time value of money. The old adage of, "a dollar today is worth more than a dollar tomorrow". So instead of using their own money, they make the bet that they can create more long term profit by borrowing money to grow their business. This is simply not possible without the low cost of funds that major banks with billions of dollars of depositories provide. Why would a company borrow a $1MM to purchase equipment at a 14% rate (just tossing that rate out there) if they don't think that investment will create 14% more profit? Even if the purchase was absolutely necessary to the survival of their company, the prudent thing to do at that point would be to use cash on hand for the purchase. That is why major banks are "too big too fail", because if companies suddenly had to choose between extremely high rates (caused by high cost of funds) or using cash, growth would die and companies that needed lines of credit to survive would simply fail. Thus taking our economy behind the woodshed and beating it with bricks until it stopped breathing.