Investment Banks Revolution on Wall Street


Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, the two remaining independent U.S. investment banks following the collapse of Lehman Brothers and sale of Merrill Lynch, agreed to sweeping changes in how they are regulated in a move that promises to fundamentally alter the structure of the international financial sector.

The New York Times reports the banks will transform into bank holding companies, subject to greater government regulation. The paper says the banks requested the move themselves – a “radical move” and an “acknowledgment that their model of finance and investing had become too risky and that they needed the cushion of bank deposits,” like big commercial banks.

The move ends an era that lasted the better part of a century in which regulation of investment banks and commercial banks was kept separate – though this policy had already begun to erode, particularly with the takeover of Merrill Lynch by the commercial bank Bank of America. During much of the twentieth century, high-flying investment banks served as a motor for U.S. capitalism through their investments.

The Wall Street Journal summarizes: “Wall Street as it has long been known…will cease to exist.”

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