Meredith Whitney appeared on Bloomberg Surveillance with Tom Keene Tuesday morning and talked about Jamie Dimon's testimony before Congress last week, saying that "He is, like nobody else, the antithesis of [Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd] Blankfein. He charms. He's incredible. He gave the senators a massage and they gave him a massage back."
Whitney also said that, "I don't think this could have happened at a worse time for the banking industry."
Questioning over JPMorgan's $2 billion trading loss is expected to be tougher for Dimon from the House Financial Services Committee on Tuesday, in part as a response to what many observers saw as relatively light questioning from the Senate last week.
Whitney on Jamie Dimon's testimony before Congress last week:
"He had a couple tough questions, but he is, like nobody else, the antithesis of Blankfein. He charms. He's incredible. He gave the senators a massage and they gave him a massage back. You see a complete juxtaposition between the two, and it's theater…I think what you saw last week is everybody's trying to argue for, oh, JPMorgan, come rebuild your branches in our hometowns and create jobs. As we said, it's political theater."
"I don't think this could have happened at a worse time for the banking industry and I was surprised that things went as well as they did last week. I was very surprised because it's a very difficult trade to explain. I don't think it's been explained well at all…Hedging for credit and to take such a disproportionately weighted bet seems curious to me…What's clear in the last couple of months is that it's hard to argue that some of these transactions aren't proprietary trades."
On Dimon saying that increased regulation will stymie bank lending:
"I just don't think so. It stymied the velocity of money, the velocity of liquidity in the sytem because you have to hold more capital. It just slows down the system. But in terms of lending, absolutely not. The fact is, so much of the loan book is mispriced across the market. So you have to have re-pricing in the market. Banks have to figure out a basic way to make money again."
On whether banks are not lending to small business because of fear of increased regulation:
"This is the biggest misconception about small business. Small businesses fund themselves like consumers. So small businesses have funded themselves since the early '90s with home equity loans and credit card loans, and those are both contracting. So it's not that banks are not lending to small businesses. Banks aren't lending to consumers."