Gary Gensler will head the Commodity Futures Trading Commission in 2009.

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Barack Obama has named Gary Gensler, a former Treasury official under President Bill Clinton, to take over the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).

New York Times:

Mr. Obama has vowed to reverse the deregulatory stance of the Bush administration and overhaul the entire system of financial supervision. Though Mr. Obama’s team has not mapped a specific plan, advisers on his transition team said reining in derivatives would be one of the biggest and most complicated parts of that effort.

gary-gensler

Wall Street Journal:

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Is deregulation to blame? – by Reason Magazine

2) The Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 guaranteed that high-risk tools such as credit default swaps remained unregulated, opting instead to encourage a “self-regulation” that neverhappened.

In late September, Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chairman Christopher Cox estimated the worldwide market in credit default swaps —pieces of paper insuring against the default of various financial instruments, especially mortgage securities— at $58 trillion, compared with $600 billion in the first half of 2001. This is a notional value- only a small fraction of that amount has actually changed hands in the market. But the astounding growth of these instruments contributed to the over-leveraging of nearly all financial institutions.

In the late 1990s, the fight over these and other exotic new derivatives pitted a committed regulator named Brooksley E. Born, head of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, against the powerhouse triumvirate of Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, Treasury Secretary Robert E. Rubin, and Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Arthur Levitt Jr. Unsurprisingly, Greenspan, Rubin, and Levitt won. The result was the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000, which gave the SEC only limited anti-fraud oversight of swaps and otherwise relied on industry self-regulation. The Washington Post has closely chronicled the clash, concluding that “derivatives did not trigger what has erupted into the biggest economic crisis since the Great Depression. But their proliferation, and the uncertainty about their real values, accelerated the recent collapses of the nation’s venerable investment houses and magnified the panic that has since crippled the global financial system.” In other words: The absence of a regulation didn’t cause the crisis, but it may have exacerbated it.

Part of the problem was a technicality. Instruments such as credit default swaps aren’t quite the same thing as futures, and therefore do not fall under the Commodity Commission’s purview. But the real issue was that Greenspan, Rubin, and Levitt were concerned that the sight of important figures in the financial world publicly warring over the legality and appropriate uses of the derivatives could itself create dangerous instability. The 2000 law left clearing-house and insurance roles to self-regulation. Without a clearinghouse, the market for credit default swaps was opaque, and no one ever really knew how extensive or how worthless the derivatives were.

In congressional testimony on October 23, Greenspan seems to have admitted error: “Those of us who have looked to the self-interest of lending institutions to protect shareholders’ equity, myself included, are in a state of shocked disbelief,” he told the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. But Greenspan still wasn’t convinced that regulation is the solution: “Whatever regulatory changes are made, they will pale in comparison to the change already evident in today’s markets,” he said at the same event. “Those markets for an indefinite future will be far more restrained than would any currently contemplated new regulatory regime.”

Previously: New SEC Chief

BACKGROUND INFO:

CFTC’s Concept Release on the Appropriate Regulatory Treatment of Event Contracts&#8230- notably how they define &#8220-event markets&#8221-, how they are going to extend their &#8220-exemption&#8221- to other IEM-like prediction exchanges, and how they framed their questions to the public.

– American Enterprise Institute’s proposals to legalize the real-money prediction markets in the United States of America

Barack Obama has chosen Mary Schapiro, chief executive of a non-governmental regulator for securities firms (Financial Industry Regulatory Authority), to chair the Securities and Exchange Commission.

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What a great pick.

Out of the gate, Ms. Schapiro faces potential controversy. In 2001 she appointed Mark Madoff, son of disgraced financier Bernard Madoff, to the board of the National Adjudicatory Council, the national committee that reviews initial decisions rendered in Finra disciplinary and membership proceedings. Both sons of Mr. Madoff have denied any involvement in the massive Ponzi scheme their father has been accused of running.

What a visionary regulator: inviting the fox inside the chicken house, that&#8217-s clever, indeed.

Jason Ruspini, will Barack Obama replace the CFTC head, too?

Our Embargo Policy

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There are scores of reactions out there about Michael Arrington&#8217-s decision to &#8220-break every embargo we agree to.&#8221-

#1. I WILL RESPECT YOUR EMBARGO.

If you give me and all the other media outlets a news ahead of its official unveiling, I will indeed publish after the date and time you mentioned.

#2. I WILL NOT PUBLISH YOUR TRADE SECRETS.

Period.

#3. I WILL NOT RECEIVE ORDERS FROM YOU.

If the news is public (say, published on an official governmental website), then I will go ahead informing the Midas Oracle readers about that public information.

#4. MIDAS ORACLE IS STRONG ENOUGH TO WEATHER ANY RETALIATION.

– Midas Oracle is the world&#8217-s #1 group blog on prediction markets.

– Our LinkedIn group is the world&#8217-s #1 social networking group on prediction markets (4 times bigger than the San Francisco bozo&#8217-s one).

– Our Open Institute Of Prediction Markets will be the world&#8217-s #1 institution on prediction markets, juicing out luminaries, prediction market companies, and other organizations.

See, life is too short to waste it with psychos who over-obsess with putting up their name in press releases. We are building for the long term, as for us.

#5. Here are our Terms Of Use.

Enough already with the prediction markets and Robin Hanson

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– NPR Music – Jazz &#8212- I like their show, &#8220-Piano Jazz&#8221-.

WWOZ – The official Radio of the New Orleans Jazz Festival. It is set up as a non-profit organization (a foundation).

– Jazz Radio

– Smooth Jazz

– Jazz FM

Obama and Jazz

The sounds of jazz music are set to return to the White House for incoming U.S President Elect Barack Obama&#8217-s administration.

Let&#8217-s hope so.

That way we will have both the Nanny State and the Jazz music for the price of one.

Commenting on Midas Oracle

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1. Some members noticed problems when they logged in in the comment area (at the bottom of a post). I have tested yesterday, and this problem seems gone. Let me know, otherwise. UPDATE: Oops, the problem remains. [Might be a cache problem.]

2. I have installed a new login area, on the top of the right-side sidebar. [It’s hand made, this time. The previous login area was generated by a plugin, which I have now deleted. I need to cut down on the use of plugins, generally. I use 32 plugins, as of today. Still too much, probably. Down from 60.]

You can right-click on the login link so as to open the login webpage in another tab &#8212-and then you come back to your first tab. Alternatively, you can bookmark the login link, and use that bookmark to login &#8212-before loading the frontpage.

login

2. You have to know that Internet Explorer has conflicted with the WordPress administration internal webpages. Do prefer Mozilla FireFox. (Or Opera, or Safari, or Chrome.)

3. As for the bug that prevents Midas Oracle to show the embedded YouTube videos in the feed, it is not yet resolved &#8212-but an engineer from Automattic (WordPress) is looking into it. :-D

4. Do become a Midas Oracle member. Here is how to comment. Here is how to publish.

5. I am going to send soon an e-mail to all Midas Oracle members about my attempt at creating an &#8220-Open Institute Of Prediction Markets&#8220-. See you soon in your inbox. I&#8217-ll tell you everything you need to know.

Prediction Market Journalism

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Here&#8217-s a new application of prediction markets now under review for a grant: Prediction Market Journalism.

Here&#8217-s how it works: a journalist in London wants to investigate government plans to fund long-acting reversible contraceptives (LARC) in schools.

The journalist opens an either/or real-money, public prediction market question: Will the government fund LARC for girls in school clinics?

The journalist is interested in questions like: How safe is LARC? What companies make LARC? Which company would supply school clinics with LARC, and why that particular company? Who would profit from LARC distribution in school clinics? What other contraceptives are currently government funded in schools? Both the journalist AND prediction market traders want these questions answered. The former, to publish. The later, to make better market predictions from.

So, in Prediction Market Journalism, traders can help answer these questions. Traders contribute documents, video, photos, tips, links- whatever helps the journalist do the burdensome investigative research. With sufficient vetting, User Generated Content (UGC) is posted for public viewing, thus helping everyone to make better predictions.

In short, PM traders can indirectly effect the market on which they make predictions. Journalists get both crowdsourced investigative research and a percentage of trading commissions.

That&#8217-s a new application of prediction markets.