It has been long maintained at Deep Capture that Charlie
Gasparino is possibly the most insightful figure at CNBC.
Today, Mr. Gasparino underscored that status while on air with
Joe Grano, former CEO at UBS Financial Services and an early
predictor of the current financial crisis. Grano’s interview
was set to coincide with the upcoming first anniversary of the
bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers — commonly recognized as the
event that sparked the meltdown — and attempted to answer the
question, “what have we learned?”
Along the way, the following exchange took place:
(Video
here, starting at 00:55)
Co-Host:
…doesn’t that eliminate a lot of the need for all this
call for legislation?
Grano: A good part
of it. And as long as you limit to a degree some of the leverage. I
don’t believe in naked shorts, I don’t believe in naked
credit default swaps when there’s really not a counterparty
there because all you’re doing is levering into the sky. We
don’t need that and it has nothing to do with our…
Gasparino: Patrick
Byrne was right, all along…the Overstock guy…that
everybody made fun of and then every Wall Street CEO mimics him
right now.
Grano: In length of
speculative excess there’s no question.
For taking a position that is undoubtedly very unpopular at
CNBC, the Deep Capture
team salutes Charlie Gasparino.
By the way, the interview in its entirety is very interesting,
and can be seen here.