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[18 Apr 2010 | No Comment | ]
A Wall Street Invention Let the Crisis Mutate

Can it get any worse?

Every time you pick up another rock along the winding path that led to the financial crisis, something else crawls out. Subprime mortgages were sold as a way to give low-income people a chance at homeownership and the American Dream. Instead, the mortgages turned out to be an excuse for predatory lending and fraud, enriching the lenders and Wall Street at the expense of subprime borrowers, many of whom ended up in foreclosure.
The ratings agencies, which rated the complex investments that were built with subprime …

Business, Featured »

[13 Dec 2009 | No Comment | ]
The fight for WaMu documents

The Puget Sound Business Journal for months has asked the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS), the federal agency that regulated Washington Mutual, to release internal communications between WaMu’s regulators.
The newspaper made its requests under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act, the decades-old law that requires federal agencies to disclose public documents.
Of particular interest were internal emails, which could help explain why regulators seized the bank in September 2008 even though WaMu appeared to meet regulatory standards for operating banks, despite its burden of bad loans. (You can read the …

Business, Life »

[13 Dec 2009 | No Comment | ]
Drug money saved banks in global crisis, claims UN advisor

Drugs and crime chief says $352bn in criminal proceeds was effectively laundered by financial institutions

Drugs money worth billions of dollars kept the financial system afloat at the height of the global crisis, the United Nations‘ drugs and crime tsar has told the Observer.
Antonio Maria Costa, head of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, said he has seen evidence that the proceeds of organised crime were “the only liquid investment capital” available to some banks on the brink of collapse last year. He said that a majority of the …

Business, Featured »

[22 Nov 2009 | No Comment | ]
Electric carmaker Tesla preparing IPO: sources

U.S. electric sports car maker Tesla Motors plans to go public soon, two sources familiar with the matter said, amid growing interest in green technology and battery-powered vehicles.

An IPO filing from the six-year-old start-up, best known for its $109,000 all-electric Roadster, is expected any day, said one of the sources. The person did not give a specific time frame, although IPOs typically take several months.

Tesla spokesman Ricardo Reyes declined to comment on what he called “rumor or speculation.”

Tesla would mark the first public offering from a U.S. automaker since …

Business, Headline »

[3 Aug 2009 | No Comment | ]
Ben Bernanke Was Incredibly, Uncannily Wrong

We now have the diametrical opposite of the famous “Peter Schiff Was Right” video (a compilation of 2006 and 2007 clips in which Schiff, a financial expert who subscribes to Austrian economics, predicted the deep recession that would follow the bursting of the housing bubble).
The new, opposite video is a compilation of the 2005–2007 prognostications of Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke. In it, Bernanke is shown to have been just as embarrassingly wrong as Schiff was uncannily right.
Could their differences in economic understanding have anything …

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[28 Jul 2009 | No Comment | ]
Bashing Goldman Sachs Is Simply a Game for Fools: Michael Lewis

From the moment I left Yale and started working for Goldman Sachs, I’ve felt uneasy interacting with those who don’t.
It’s not that I think less of Goldman outsiders than I did while I remained among you. It’s just that I feel your envy, and know that nothing I can do or say will ever persuade you that I am no more than human.
Thus, like many of my colleagues, I have adopted a strategy of never leaving Goldman Sachs, apart from a few brief, spasmodic attempts to make what you …

Business »

[23 Jul 2009 | No Comment | ]
Lime Brokerage: “The Next ‘Long Term Capital’ Meltdown Will Happen In A Five-Minute Time Period.”

A recent Bloomberg piece that for some reason was made available only to terminal subscribers, provides a very interesting discussion on the dangers of sponsored access, how the associated pre-trade vs post-trade monitoring deliberations by “regulators” will influence short selling curbs, and not surprisingly, the desire by Goldman to not only dominate this yet another aspect of high-frequency trading, but to dictate market policy at will.
What is sponsored access:

In sponsored access, a broker-dealer lends its market participation identification (MPID) number to clients for them to trade on exchanges without …

Business, Featured, Headline »

[20 Jul 2009 | No Comment | ]
Going overboard

Are investment banks run for employees or shareholders?

IT WAS once famously asked of Wall Street: “Where are the customers’ yachts?” Shareholders of investment banks have not seen much of the spoils either, given the events of the past two years. As business booms once more, rather than reward their owners with an extra big chunk of profits, most investment banks seem likely to favour their employees again. In the case of Goldman Sachs, shareholders received $4.4 billion of profits during the first half of this year while staff were …

Business »

[18 Jul 2009 | No Comment | ]
$47 Trillion Toxic Derivatives the Banks/FED Are Hiding

There’s this nagging question that just keeps coming back to me about the bailouts to all the ‘surviving’ Banks and especially Goldman Sachs, since they haven’t missed a beat. I keep asking, how the hell did they do this? Most of the increase in our federal deficit this past year is specifically due to bailing out all the banks and their Wall Street pals, (with our money)while trying to save what is left of our tanking economy that they nearly destroyed.
So when I think about Goldman Sachs raking in …

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[17 Jul 2009 | No Comment | ]
The Joy of Sachs

. . . Over the past generation — ever since the banking deregulation of the Reagan years — the U.S. economy has been “financialized.” The business of moving money around, of slicing, dicing and repackaging financial claims, has soared in importance compared with the actual production of useful stuff. The sector officially labeled “securities, commodity contracts and investments” has grown especially fast, from only 0.3 percent of G.D.P. in the late 1970s to 1.7 percent of G.D.P. in 2007.
Such growth would be fine if financialization really delivered on its …

Business »

[8 Jul 2009 | No Comment | ]
How Long Before the Fed’s Days Are Numbered?

It’s no stretch to say the Federal Reserve is garnering a lot of attention these days.

On Wall Street, there’s a big debate over whether the Fed’s next big move will come too soon or too late. In Washington, the Administration is promoting a plan to give the central bank new powers to oversee systemic risks. Over in the House of Representatives, maverick Republican Ron Paul has gathered more than 245 co-sponsors for a bill requiring an audit of the Fed. In the media, there are questions about whether President …

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[7 Jul 2009 | No Comment | ]
Taibbi: NYSE ends transparency to protect Goldman Sachs

The New York Stock Exchange quietly announced last week that it would end its practice of requiring companies to report all their program trading — a move that helps shield large investment banks, particularly Goldman Sachs, from public scrutiny.
The new rule means the public will no longer be able to tell if large investment banks are manipulating the stock market for their own gain, says Matt Taibbi, the journalist whose Rolling Stone article on Goldman Sachs’ role in asset bubbles over the past century has rocked the financial world. …

Business »

[6 Jul 2009 | No Comment | ]
The Worst Is Yet to Come for Real Estate

You know the economy is in trouble when the good news is unemployment increased at a slower rate and pending home sales stood basically still all month. Brace yourself because it looks like the “good news” is going to get much worse, too.
Home prices appear to be approaching a valley, though no one can know for sure if they are near a bottom or if they have further to drop. However, credit is still hard to come by, and it is becoming more expensive as interest rates rise on …

Business, Featured, Headline »

[6 Jul 2009 | No Comment | ]
Breaking: FBI Arrest Opens Goldman-Sachs’ Pandora’s Box

Up until about two weeks ago, Matt Taibbi’s favorite Goldman Sachs’ market observers, the folks over at the Zero Hedge blog, had been continually commenting over the past six-plus months about how Goldman had all but cornered the market on program trading within the NY Stock Exchange. (Program trading is the automated stock trading via computers by firms specially authorized by the NYSE to facilitate same.) Clearly, according to Zero Hedge publisher Tyler Durden, something was up.
A couple of months ago, we also learned through Zero Hedge that Goldman …

Business »

[5 Jul 2009 | No Comment | ]
Is a China Stock Bubble Forming?

When the outlandish stock-market events of 2009 are tallied up, the initial public offering (IPO) in Hong Kong of Chinese herbal shampoo maker Bawang International will be a standout. Within 10 minutes of the June 22 opening of the subscription period for shares, one local brokerage, Bright Smart Securities, was swamped with the equivalent of $129 million in orders. In all, the shampoo company received more than $9 billion in orders from Hong Kong retail investors for an IPO that initially sought to raise just $215 million.
Such examples of …

Business »

[5 Jul 2009 | No Comment | ]
India Joins Russia, China in Questioning U.S. Dollar Dominance

Suresh Tendulkar, an economic adviser to Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, said he is urging the government to diversify its $264.6 billion foreign-exchange reserves and hold fewer dollars.
“The major part of Indian reserves is in dollars — that is something that’s a problem for us,” Tendulkar, chairman of the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council, said in an interview yesterday in Aix-en-Provence, France, where he was attending an economic conference.
Singh is preparing to join leaders from the Group of Eight industrialized nations — the U.S., Japan, Germany, Britain, France, Italy, …

Business »

[2 Jul 2009 | No Comment | ]
Banks own the US government

There are smart ways to raise money and regulate the market, but Wall Street is working to kill any meaningful financial reform

Last month, when the US Congress failed to pass a bankruptcy reform measure that would have allowed home mortgages to be modified in bankruptcy, senator Dick Durbin succinctly commented: “The banks own the place.” That seems pretty clear.
After all, it was the banks’ greed that fed the housing bubble with loony loans that were guaranteed to go bad. Of course the finance guys also made a fortune guaranteeing …

Business »

[19 Jun 2009 | No Comment | ]
Google’s Options Odyssey

A Cal State professor thinks Google’s stock is a pawn for options market manipulators.

Is Google’s stock a pawn for options market manipulators? That’s a common refrain on Internet message boards, and now an academic is lending some credence to the conspiracy theories.
Jerry W. Liu, a finance professor at California State University, East Bay, studied the market for options written to buy or sell Google ( GOOG – news – people ) stock near earnings release dates for the first 34 months of its publicly traded life. He came away …

Business »

[10 Jun 2009 | No Comment | ]
Zipcar Seeks IPO as Once ‘Wacky’ Car-Sharing Gains

Zipcar Inc., the world’s largest car-sharing company, is gearing up to publicly sell shares in 2010 as it fends off rivals such as Hertz Global Holdings Inc.
The company, which has grown from a single lime-green VW Bug to a fleet of 6,500 autos, will post its first profit in the third quarter, Chief Executive Officer Scott Griffith said. Zipcar’s success has prompted Hertz to announce its own sharing service with 1,000 vehicles in New York City by year’s end, up from 100 in May.
Zipcar, conceived nine years ago at …

Business »

[8 Jun 2009 | No Comment | ]
The End of the Financial World as We Know It

AMERICANS enter the New Year in a strange new role: financial lunatics. We’ve been viewed by the wider world with mistrust and suspicion on other matters, but on the subject of money even our harshest critics have been inclined to believe that we knew what we were doing. They watched our investment bankers and emulated them: for a long time now half the planet’s college graduates seemed to want nothing more out of life than a job on Wall Street.
This is one reason the collapse of our financial system …