Lawmakers on the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations directed withering criticism at officials from the Office of Thrift Supervision, the main regulator of Washington Mutual Inc. They demanded to know why OTS leaders gave executives at WaMu years to correct glaring problems.
The executives never addressed regulators' concerns about risky lending and weak management, but the regulators took no formal action until the global financial crisis already was taking shape, documents show.
"It is not only feeble enforcement, it is pitiful enforcement," said panel chair Sen. Carl Levin.
OTS "was more of a spectator on the sidelines, a watchdog with no bite, noting problems and making recommendations, but not trying to correct the flaws and failures it saw," Levin said.
Levin charged that OTS officials handled WaMu with kid gloves because the agency relied for its budget on fees collected from banks. Fees from WaMu made up about 15 percent of OTS' budget
- more than any other bank's.
The Michigan Democrat pointed an e-mail in which then-OTS chief John Reich called WaMu CEO Kerry Killenger "my largest constituent assetwise." He said that and other e-mails showed the agency's submissive attitude toward the banks it was supposed to regulate.
Reich replied that he picked up the word "constituent" while working on Capitol Hill, and said it did not "reflect any sort of sinister or inappropriate relationship."
"I am by nature a humble person, I am a casual person and an informal person," Reich said. "It is not at all unusual that I address people ... by their first name, particularly if I am 10 years older than they are."
Reich ran the OTS during the mortgage boom and the bust that destroyed several large companies it oversaw
- including IndyMac, American International Group Inc., WaMu and Countrywide Financial Corp. Companies regulated by OTS must keep at least 65 percent of their assets in mortgages and other consumer loans.
Fueled by the housing boom, Washington Mutual's sales to investors of subprime mortgage securities leapt from $2.5 billion in 2000 to $29 billion in 2006. The 119-year-old thrift, with $307 billion in assets, was sold for $1.9 billion to JPMorgan in a deal brokered by the FDIC.
The OTS is slated for elimination under a proposed overhaul of financial regulation being championed by the Obama administration. That overhaul saw a major setback Friday as all 41 Senate Republicans signed a letter opposing the bill.
There has been wide bipartisan agreement about eliminating OTS, which has become a symbol of regulators' incompetence since revelations that it wooed banks by offering them easier examinations and less red tape.
But some observers said the hearing still gave some answers about how failures like WaMu's might be prevented in the future.