Berkshire's Munger: Fellow Republicans 'bonkers' on bank-regulation view

Charles Munger, the vice chairman at Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, said the leaders of his political party risk going too far in their efforts to reduce oversight of banks.

"My fellow Republicans — the ones taking away all this regulation of major finance — I think that's bonkers," Munger, 93, said Monday on CNBC.

Munger is known for his outspokenness, and some of his views contrast with those of Buffett, a Democrat. For instance, Munger supports a plan by President Donald Trump's administration to encourage companies to bring back funds that have been kept overseas where they avoid U.S. taxes. However, the Berkshire executives agreed in the televised joint interview Monday that the U.S. would benefit from a government system that offers health care for all.

Charles Munger, vice chairman of Berkshire Hathaway.
The Berkshire Hathaway legacy of Charlie Munger, Warren Buffett's longtime business partner, includes large checks written to national banks as well as curt remarks about the industry's shortcomings. Munger died on Tuesday, a few weeks before his 100th birthday.

Buffett and Munger have been saying for years that the financial system benefits when government oversight prevents excesses. The issue took on added urgency after the financial crisis prompted Congress to pass the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010, tightening regulation. Trump, a Republican, has called the legislation a " disaster," saying he believes it has made it extremely difficult for businesses to get loans.

Lenders that benefit from government backing of customer deposits should be obligated to "behave in a pretty careful, standardized way," according to Munger. He said he's OK if dealmakers have to look beyond the major banks for financing on potentially risky transactions.

"It is true that some of the new regulation has taken banks out of financing leveraged buyouts directly, and that we have shadow banking instead to do that," Munger said. "I think that's fine. What's wrong with the shadow banking?"

Trump has also said he's actively considering a breakup of giant Wall Street banks to separate consumer and investment banking. That possibility wasn't a focus of the CNBC interview.

Berkshire is among the largest investors in companies including Wells Fargo & Co., Bank of America Corp. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Still, Munger has long faulted Wall Street for taking on too much risk.

"We need to remove from the investment banking and the commercial banking industries a lot of the practices and prerogatives that they have so lovingly possessed," Munger said in 2009. "If they are too big to fail, they are too big to be allowed to be as gamey and venal as they've been — and as stupid as they've been."

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