Fear & Loathing On Wall Street
Steve Ebels hasn’t been that hurt by the recent stock market
roller-coaster ride because he no longer has much to lose.
Ebels, who owns a heating business, said he already lost much
of his life savings when a general contractor he was doing work
for went belly up, leaving Ebels with a pile of bills for materials
and labor he had already invested in the project.
And that is perhaps the biggest reason why Ebels, 51, would like
to see the failed Wall Street titans pay for the actions that
have led to this crisis. If he has to start over because of a
soured business deal, he figures, so should they.
“I would just like to see some way that these people are held
personally accountable,” he said. “We’ve got to do more of that
in this country: personal responsibility and accountability.”
For Ebels, who lives in Falmouth, Mich., it’s also especially
galling that people like him, who are already suffering from
the weak economy, will now end up footing the bill for these
chief executives’ mistakes.
“All (the bailout has) done is transfer all the indiscretions
of all these people onto the shoulders of the taxpayers,” he
said.
As Americans digest a dizzying series of events that has left
Wall Street shaken to its core, the mood on Main Street
is shifting from fear to loathing. They are angry that government
regulators did not do enough to prevent this — and protect them
— in the first place. They are upset the government is proposing
billions of dollars in bailouts for Wall Street, even as many
regular Americans are struggling to hang onto their homes and
pay their bills.
They also are livid that massive financial firms in which they
trusted took wild risks and made incredibly bad decisions, in
turn impacting their personal finances. Some wonder why, in the
face of such a massive financial crisis, so few of these executives
have stepped up to apologize for, or even try to explain, their
actions.
Mostly, they think it’s despicable that many of these top executives
could walk away with millions of dollars in their bank accounts,
even as some average Americans see their retirement plans thrown
into chaos.
A series of congressional hearings on the bailout plan, beginning
Tuesday, will address some of the issues, such as executive compensation
and relief for regular homeowners, that has drawn some of the
outrage.
The one thing Susan Provencal, 63, knows is that her retirement
will not go as planned. First, Provencal was laid off from one,
then another, high-paying job training workers. Then, she had
to abandon a plan to live in her getaway home in the mountains
because she couldn’t find enough work there, either.
So, Provencal decided to sell that home and put all her equity
into a condo in the northern California city of Fairfield, where
she found clerical work. But in the year since she bought the
condo — and after staving off phone calls urging her
to take on the type of non-traditional home loans at the center
of this crisis — she has seen its value plummet.
Now, with her home equity wiped out, her regular income down
and her retirement investments suffering, Provencal figures there
will no way she will retire in three years as she had hoped.
Plus, she’s worried about her kids and grandkids, who she wouldn’t
be able to help if they lost their homes or their jobs.
As she struggles to figure out her drastically changed situation,
Provencal says it’s aggravating to think that Wall Street executives
aren’t suffering a similar financial fate.
“I would just like to see some way that these people are held
personally accountable,” he said. “We’ve got to do more of that
in this country: personal responsibility and accountability.”
For Ebels, who lives in Falmouth, Mich., it’s also especially
galling that people like him, who are already suffering from
the weak economy, will now end up footing the bill for these
chief executives’ mistakes. “All (the bailout has) done is transfer
all the indiscretions of all these people onto the shoulders
of the taxpayers,” he said.
As Americans digest a dizzying series of events that has left
Wall Street shaken to its core, the mood on Main Street
is shifting from fear to loathing. They are angry that government
regulators did not do enough to prevent this — and protect them
— in the first place. They are upset the government is proposing
billions of dollars in bailouts for Wall Street, even as many
regular Americans are struggling to hang onto their homes and
pay their bills.
They also are livid that massive financial firms in which they
trusted took wild risks and made incredibly bad decisions, in
turn impacting their personal finances. Some wonder why, in the
face of such a massive financial crisis, so few of these executives
have stepped up to apologize for, or even try to explain, their
actions.
Mostly, they think it’s despicable that many of these top executives
could walk away with millions of dollars in their bank accounts,
even as some average Americans see their retirement plans thrown
into chaos.
A series of congressional hearings on the bailout plan, beginning
Tuesday, will address some of the issues, such as executive compensation
and relief for regular homeowners, that has drawn some of the
outrage.
The one thing Susan Provencal, 63, knows is that her retirement
will not go as planned. First, Provencal was laid off from one,
then another, high-paying job training workers. Then, she had
to abandon a plan to live in her getaway home in the mountains
because she couldn’t find enough work there, either.
So, Provencal decided to sell that home and put all her equity
into a condo in the northern California city of Fairfield, where
she found clerical work. But in the year since she bought the
condo — and after staving off phone calls urging her
to take on the type of non-traditional home loans at the center
of this crisis — she has seen its value plummet.
Now, with her home equity wiped out, her regular income down
and her retirement investments suffering, Provencal figures there
will no way she will retire in three years as she had hoped.
Plus, she’s worried about her kids and grandkids, who she wouldn’t
be able to help if they lost their homes or their jobs.
As she struggles to figure out her drastically changed situation,
Provencal says it’s aggravating to think that Wall Street executives
aren’t suffering a similar financial fate.
“It’s like adding insult to injury to then see that the government
is going to step in, and these idiots that have done wrongdoing
for a long time are still going to retain big bonuses,” she said.
Provencal thinks the executives should have seen these problems
coming. And if they couldn’t foresee it, then she thinks safeguards
are needed to prevent the same thing from happening again.
“I hate to see too much regulation in place, but the bottom line
is, these institutions have not been self-regulating,” she said.