Fmr. FDIC Chair warns of ‘moral hazard’ in bank regulation process
Following a tumultuous month for the banking sector, Sheila Bair, who was the FDIC Chair during the 2008 financial crisis, tells Ali Velshi that bank regulators need to be careful of a “moral hazard” because without market discipline as a driving force, some issues could get overlooked. Bair also notes a major shortcoming with banks currently is the fact getting federal help isn’t a luxury afforded to smaller banks, big banks fall to a point of needing a bailout and it’s a “problem we really need to deal with.”
UP NEXT
UP NEXT
-
Psaki calls 2024 GOP political strategy ‘based on getting likes,’ ‘disconnected from the country’
MSNBC -
Partner of fallen Capitol police officer 'was really shocked' by protest lionizing Jan. 6 rioters
MSNBC -
Ron Klain: Judge the president by the results he produces
MSNBC -
‘The ugly part’: Hayes on the debt deal expediting the Manchin-backed pipeline
MSNBC -
Grassley: GOP ‘not interested’ in whether Biden accusations are ‘accurate’
MSNBC -
What the actors behind Stewy and Gerri on “Succession” thought of the finale
MSNBC -
Should we ban Chinese-owned TikTok? An Actual Debate
MSNBC -
Why DeSantis’ threat to “destroy leftism” is so dangerous
MSNBC -
Lordy there’s a tape! Comey says secret Trump audio bombshell is ‘strongest case against Trump’
MSNBC -
‘Game over’: Trump caught on tape in classified docs probe as ex lawyer predicts ‘jail time’: Report
MSNBC -
Brianne Pfannenstiel gives inside look at the race for the GOP nomination in Iowa
MSNBC -
Trump caught on tape discussing sensitive document he kept after leaving office
MSNBC -
Advocacy group forms to support pilots who report UFOs
MSNBC -
DeSantis ramps up his attacks against Trump
MSNBC -
Bill Cosby hit with new sexual assault lawsuit
MSNBC -
GOP spending millions on flawed voter turnout operation
MSNBC