Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) once asked Treasury Secretary Tim
Geithner why BlackRock Inc., a securities firm, received no-bid
contracts for work with the federal government. Geithner
answered, “They come with a world-class reputation.”
The question is: given that reputation, why aren’t U.S. taxpayers
more concerned about BlackRock’s activities with the Bush and
Obama Administrations. Now, according
to Time magazine, the Treasury Department has
selected nine large firms to operate funds to buy toxic
securities from troubled financial institutions. BlackRock is one
of those firms.
And here’s where the dubious rep comes in. BlackRock’s CEO
Laurence Fink is credited with being one of the first to trade
mortgage-backed securities, which are widely viewed as key
contributors to the market crash of 2008. Apparently, following
the same logic that has the chicken farmer hiring the fox to
identify the best way to protect the hen house, Fink is viewed as
the go-to guy for the Obama Administration to fix the
mortgage-backed security mess.
BlackRock claims to manage “hundreds of billions (of dollars) for
governments,” but Fink and other senior executives at the firm
will not disclose the governments for which BlackRock does
business.
Fink’s rise to prominence resulted from his previous work with
First Boston where he sold Freddie Mac on the idea of buying $1
billion in collateralized-mortgage obligations, e.g., slicing and
pooling mortgages and selling them as bonds. While Fink was paid
$21,000,000 in 2007 and $26,400,000 in 2008, entities dealing
with him have suffered huge losses.
Rounding out his résumé, Fink was also a large fundraiser for
Barack Obama. Given all of this, one has to wonder why Obama
couldn’t just do American investors and taxpayers a break and
give Fink an ambassadorship or something that gets him out of the
economy instead of giving him a role in the economy.