So I had the chance to finally listen to the episode.
Honestly, I know people are like "OMG! How could the fed be so bad?!!!"
But really, this is going to always be the case so long as money is involved. This is the default setting for all regulation. I mean you can just tell that they're thinking "Well, if we hammer them home on this they'll make less money for their shareholders and average investors could lose a ton of money simply because we're being asses. So maybe it's not that big a deal" Or at the very least they're thinking "This CEO is going to complain to the administration and maybe withhold political donations from them if we keep hammering on this."
I know, I know, people would like to think if the Fed just had some cajones this would be better, but it doesn't work like that. Sure some people are going to be sticklers on stuff but there is a huge amount of inertia and incentive to overcome. I think that believing that regulation will keep this stuff from happening is a bit of a pipe dream. That's not to say we don't need regulation, regulation catches the stupid criminals but so long as money is our motivating factor in society this will continue.
That all being said I was utterly flabbergasted that they didn't even have a conflict of interest policy.
I mean on several clients I've had to put my name on the list of people who are not allowed to make stock trades during certain times because I have inside knowledge of stuff that would give me an insider trading advantage or I've been taken off projects where it could've been construed that I'd have a conflict of interest. And that's little old me, with an investment power of essentially nil compared to these institutions. It's beyond the pale that they don't even have policy. Really astounding.