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Category Archives: financial reform

Houston, We Have Bi-Partisanship…

29 Thursday Apr 2010

Posted by Craig in bailout, Congress, economy, financial reform, financial regulation, Politics, too big to fail, Wall Street

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Alan Grayson, audit, Bernie Sanders, Federal Reserve, GAO, Ron Paul, TARP

…at least on the need to audit the Fed:

“As unusual a coalition as can be crafted in the Senate plans to fight for an amendment to the Wall Street reform bill that would open the Federal Reserve to a serious audit by the Government Accountability Office. Sponsored by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), the language is modeled after an amendment that passed the House, sponsored by Reps. Alan Grayson (D-Fla.) and Ron Paul (R-Texas).

Sanders is joined by four Republicans of varying politics: John McCain (Ariz.), Jim DeMint (S.C.), David Vitter (La.) and Sam Brownback (Kan.). If Democrats in the Senate back the measure, it would have at least 63 votes…The chairman of the Judiciary Committee, Sen. Pat Leahy (D-Vt.), is also a cosponsor, as is Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wisc.).”

A letter by Sen. Sanders reads, in part:

“The American people have a right to know who received over $2 Trillion in financial assistance from the Federal Reserve.

Since the beginning of the financial crisis, the Federal Reserve has provided over $2 trillion in taxpayer-backed loans and other financial assistance to some of the largest financial institutions and corporations in the world. Unfortunately, the Fed is still refusing to tell the American people or the Congress who received most of this assistance, how much they received or what they are doing with this money. This money does not belong to the Federal Reserve, it belongs to the American people, and the American people have a right to know where their taxpayer dollars are going.

[…]

While the Senate financial reform bill attempts to address the lack of transparency at the Fed, as currently drafted, much of the information regarding the details of who received this financial assistance could be kept secret forever.

As long as the Federal Reserve is allowed to keep the information on their loans secret, we may never know the true financial condition of the banking system. The lack of transparency at the Fed could lead to an even bigger crisis in the future.

[…]

For nearly nine decades, the GAO has a proven track record of conducting objective, fact-based, nonpartisan, non-ideological, fair, and balanced audits. Through these audits, the GAO helped save the American taxpayers $50 billion last year alone by rooting out waste, fraud, and abuse in the federal government.

Let’s not equate independence with secrecy. We cannot let the Fed operate in secrecy any longer. There is simply too much money at stake.”

Hear, hear.

Bobbing and Weaving at the Senate Hearings

28 Wednesday Apr 2010

Posted by Craig in economy, financial reform, financial regulation, Goldman Sachs, Politics, Wall Street

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Carl Levin, Daniel Sparks, Goldman Sachs, shitty deal

Former Goldman Sachs executive Daniel Sparks put on a demonstration of bobbing, weaving, ducking, and dodging yesterday in response to Sen. Carl Levin’s questioning about Goldman’s “shitty deal” the likes of which I haven’t seen since Muhammad Ali was in his prime. Take a look:

Kudos to Sen. Levin, but it can’t stop with the theatrics of a televised hearing. Refer this to the DOJ and let the indictments begin. Those responsible must be held accountable.

Blankfein Supports Financial Reform?

28 Wednesday Apr 2010

Posted by Craig in economy, financial reform, financial regulation, Goldman Sachs, lobbyists, Politics, special interests, Wall Street

≈ 1 Comment

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Br'er Rabbit, campaign donations, financial reform, Goldman, Lloyd Blankfein, Republicans, Wall Street

OK, now I’m suspicious. Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein says Wall Street will be the “biggest beneficiary” of financial reform:

“A financial regulatory reform bill has at least one supporter outside of Congressional Democrats, Lloyd Blankfein, the head of investment bank Goldman Sachs. “I’m generally supportive,” Blankfein told the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations. Wall Street will benefit from the bill because it will make the market safer, Blankfein said.

“The biggest beneficiary of reform is Wall Street itself,” he said.

I think one of the commenters at The Hill has the right analogy. “Oh please don’t throw me in the briar patch, said Br’er Rabbit.”

Or it could be that Blankfein and his fellow banksters are anticipating a favorable return on their investment:

“For the first time since 2004, the biggest Wall Street firms are now giving most of their campaign donations to Republicans.

A Wall Street Journal analysis of 12 large financial services companies, including J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. shows that they have collectively made $1.4 million in political donations, with 52% going to Republicans so far this year.”

The Orifice of Omaha and His Errand Boy Benny

27 Tuesday Apr 2010

Posted by Craig in Congress, economy, financial reform, financial regulation, Politics, special interests, Wall Street

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Ben Nelson, Berkshire Hathaway, derivatives, filibuster, Senate Agriculture Committee, Warren Buffett

“Financial weapons of mass destruction” eh, Warren? What’s up with this ? (emphasis added) :

“The Senate Agriculture Committee inserted language into its derivatives bill last week [a provision pushed by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc] at the request of Sen. Ben Nelson (D., Neb.) that would have exempted any existing derivatives contracts from new collateral requirements—the money set aside to cover potential losses…a change one analyst predicted could force the Nebraska company to set aside up to $8 billion.

Berkshire has $63 billion in derivatives contracts, and Mr. Buffett has boasted he holds very little collateral against these products.”

Then after that was taken out of the legislation, lo and behold Buffett’s boy Benny:

“…did an abrupt about-face and became the only Democrat to help filibuster legislation to revamp Wall Street regulations…”He was on board until today and the only thing that changed was the removal of that provision,” said one Democratic aide, who definitively said Nelson changed his vote because the Buffett carveout was removed.”

Yes boys and girls and sports fans everywhere, the Orifice of Omaha is just another member of the oligarchy, gaming the system for his own personal gain. And Benny Nelson is nothing more than his errand boy.

Typhoid Lloyd (Blankfein) Spread the Goldman “Poison”

27 Tuesday Apr 2010

Posted by Craig in economy, Financial Crisis, financial reform, financial regulation, Goldman Sachs, Politics, Wall Street

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Carl Levin, Goldman Sachs, Lloyd Blankfein, mortgage securities, Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, shorting the market, subprime

By the summer of 2006, Goldman Sachs executives realized that the subprime mortgage market and its related securities were headed for a fall, “a very unhappy ending” as senior trader Michael Swenson wrote in a 2007 memo. They also knew their firm was heavily invested in this ticking time bomb.

What to do? The solution from Typhoid Lloyd (Blankfein) and the Goldman gang? Let’s find some suckers to dump this trash on, tell them it’s treasure, bet on it to fail, and rake in the dough.

And rake it in they did.

“The firm, which had profited handsomely off packaging and selling securitized subprime home mortgages to investors during the housing boom, switched directions in early 2007, furiously shedding its home mortgage-linked risk and buying as much insurance as it could, effectively shorting the market throughout the year — a move that netted the firm “billions and billions” at the expense of its clients, according to the documents released by the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations.

The firm was “spreading the poison throughout the system,” Levin charged.

“Goldman Sachs made billions of dollars from betting against the housing market, and it placed those bets in some cases at the same time it was selling mortgage-related securities to its clients,” said the committee’s chairman, Carl Levin (D-Mich.).”

Poison is the sanitized version. Goldman exec Tom Montag put the appropriate tag on it:

“One particular security, named Timberwolf I, a collateralized debt obligation of other collateralized debt obligations that were based not on actual home mortgage bonds but instead on those bonds’ movements, lost 80 percent of its value within five months of issuance. A senior executive…remarked in a June 22, 2007, email, “Boy, that timberwolf was one shi**y deal.”

Which is precisely what Goldman’s clients got—one shi**y deal.

A Crucial Week for Financial Reform

26 Monday Apr 2010

Posted by Craig in bailout, Congress, economy, Financial Crisis, financial reform, financial regulation, Obama, Politics, Republicans, too big to fail, Wall Street

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Blanche Lincoln, Bob Corker, Chris Dodd, claw back, derivative legislation, financial reform, Goldman Sachs, great vampire squid, Harry Reid, letter, Mitch McConnell, Olympia Snowe, President Obama, Richard Shelby, Scott Brown, This Week

In what’s shaping up as a crucial week in the quest for financial reform there are some encouraging signs, some not so encouraging, and a demonstration by the executives at “the great vampire squid” (aka Goldman Sachs) give us an example of why meaningful reform is necessary.

First, the reasons to be hopeful. There appear to be some cracks in the Republican wall of solidarity. Sen. Olympia Snowe endorsed Sen. Blanche Lincoln’s tough stance toward derivative trading passed last week by the Agriculture Committee. (Sen. Grassley, another possible defector, was the lone Republican on the committee who voted for Lincoln’s proposal). In a letter to Majority Leader Harry Reid, Snowe wrote:

“I believe that strong derivatives regulation goes to the heart of an effective financial reform bill and that Chairman Lincoln’s legislation is a strong step towards realizing this fundamental component to financial reform……I believe that we should err on the side of caution and finally bring full transparency to these markets once and for all and allow regulators to preemptively identify these damaged firms.

“Accordingly, I believe the Senate should start with a comprehensive, strong derivatives reform proposal and defend attempts to weaken it, not the other way around and the legislation produced by the Senate Agriculture Committee includes the strongest safeguards and most robust transparency provisions on our expansive derivatives market.

I urge the Majority Leader to incorporate these provisions into the regulatory reform bill.”

On Friday, Sen. Chris Dodd, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, “agreed to replace his proposed restrictions on derivatives with those of the Senate Agriculture Committee, chaired by Arkansas Democrat Blanche Lincoln.”

On This Week yesterday, Sen. Bob Corker said he intended to propose an amendment containing a “claw back” provision to the legislation “which would take away the personal earnings for the past five years of the corporate officers of failed institutions that fall under the government’s resolution authority.”

Another possible Republican defector might be the newly-elected senator from Massachusetts, Scott Brown. Will someone who was elected as a sort of “man of the people” want to be painted as a defender of Wall Street? Especially when he faces re-election in 2 years? Maybe not.

Also on the positive side, “President Obama and House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank have personally urged Dodd not to cut a deal with Republicans…This is a welcome sign that Obama realizes that public opinion is moving in the direction of tougher banking reform, and that he learned from the health debate that bipartisan compromise on key reform issues is a snare and a delusion.”

Sen. Dodd has shown signs of weakening the legislation in order to compromise with Republicans leaders in the Senate, Mitch McConnell and Richard Shelby, who want to use the same tactics Republicans used on health care reform—stall and delay as long as possible. Hopefully, Dodd will be emboldened by support from President Obama and not dilute reform to try and pacify those whose intentions are to maintain the status quo.

Now to the crooks at Goldman. What were they doing as the housing market was collapsing and threatening to take the entire economy with it? Having a party:

“As the U.S. housing market began its epic fall nearly three years ago, top executives at Wall Street powerhouse Goldman Sachs cheered the large financial gains the firm stood to make on certain bets it had placed, according to newly released documents.

The documents show that the firm’s executives were celebrating earlier investments calculated to benefit if housing prices fell, a Senate investigative committee found. In an e-mail sent in the fall of 2007, for example, Goldman executive Donald Mullen predicted a windfall because credit-rating companies had downgraded mortgage-related investments, which caused losses for investors.

“Sounds like we will make some serious money,” Mullen wrote.”

To somewhat defend Goldman, what they were doing, “selling short,” (betting against certain investments) is something that happens on Wall Street every day. But, betting against instruments that they designed to fail, and which were sold to investors as AAA investments allowing Goldman to profit from on both ends, may not be illegal (although it should be) but it certainly shows that the execs at the “great vampire squid” have no interest in what’s best for the country. They have one party’s interests in mind—-their own.

William Black on Lehman Fraud

22 Thursday Apr 2010

Posted by Craig in economy, Financial Crisis, financial reform, financial regulation, too big to fail, Wall Street

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fraud, House Financial Services Committee, Lehman Brothers, William Black

William Black, testifying before the House Financial Services Committee, on the fraud at Lehman Brothers. From Jesse’s Café Americain via Firedoglake:

Simon Johnson and James Kwak on Bill Moyers Journal

22 Thursday Apr 2010

Posted by Craig in bailout, Financial Crisis, financial reform, financial regulation, Politics, too big to fail, Wall Street

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13 Bankers, Baseline Scenario, Bill Moyers Journal, Financial Crisis, James Kwak, Simon Johnson

Simon Johnson and James Kwak, co-authors of 13 Bankers and co-founders of Baseline Scenario discuss the financial crisis and the need to reform the system. From Crooks and Liars: Vodpod videos no longer available.

more about “Simon Johnson and James Kwak on Bill …“, posted with vodpod

The Most Dangerous Man in the World

20 Tuesday Apr 2010

Posted by Craig in bailout, economy, financial reform, financial regulation, Obama, Politics, too big to fail, Wall Street

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Baseline Scenario, blackmail, German newspaper, interview, Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan Chase, Simon Johnson, The Most Dangerous Man in America, White House visitor log

In an April 3 post at Baseline Scenario, Simon Johnson called JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon “The Most Dangerous Man in America.” Johnson wrote:

“There are two kinds of bankers to fear.  The first is incompetent and runs a big bank.  This includes such people as Chuck Prince (formerly of Citigroup) and Ken Lewis (Bank of America).  These people run their banks onto the rocks – and end up costing the taxpayer a great deal of money.  But, on the other hand, you can see them coming and, if we ever get the politics of bank regulation straightened out again, work hard to contain the problems they present.

The second type of banker is much more dangerous.  This person understands how to control risk within a massive organization, manage political relationships across the political spectrum, and generate the right kind of public relations.  When all is said and done, this banker runs a big bank and – here’s the danger – makes it even bigger.

Jamie Dimon is by far the most dangerous American banker of this or any other recent generation.”

Following an interview with German newspaper Welt am Sonntag on Sunday, that should be amended to read “the most dangerous man in the world” as Dimon issued this not-so-veiled threat on the possibility of stricter bank regulations:

“When profits fall too sharply then capital will move somewhere else, where there is more money to be earned, for example non-regulated markets. The question is, is that what regulators want?”

Blackmail, anyone?

“[Dimon] also said the banking industry could do with more influence on politicians.”

More influence? According to the White House log, since October 30, 2009 Mr. Dimon has made 8, count ‘em 8, visits. What do you want to do, Jamie? Move in?

Are Goldman Charges the Tip of the Iceberg?

19 Monday Apr 2010

Posted by Craig in bailout, economy, Financial Crisis, financial reform, financial regulation, Goldman Sachs, Politics, too big to fail, Wall Street

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Countrywide, Dylan Ratigan, fraud, German government, Goldman Sachs, Gordon Brown, Lloyd Blankfein, Robert Khuzami, Securities and Exchange Commission

Could Friday’s news that the Securities and Exchange Commission is bringing civil charges of fraud against Goldman Sachs be the tip of the iceberg? Consider what has happened since then.

The German government is considering legal action against Goldman.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown called for investigations into the bank’s role in the mortgage market.

“The SEC is investigating whether other mortgage deals arranged by some of Wall Street’s biggest firms may have crossed the line into misleading investors.

S.E.C. Enforcement Director Robert Khuzami told CNBC, “We have brought and will continue to pursue cases involving the products and practices related to the financial crisis.” … a wide range of cases are currently being investigated.”

Subprime mortgage king Countrywide is also in the crosshairs:

“Federal criminal investigators looking into the collapse of Countrywide Financial Corp. have been calling witnesses before a grand jury, say people familiar with the matter.”

Former Goldman employees are starting to talk, implicating company execs up to and including CEO Lloyd Blankfein in Goldman’s profiting from the housing market collapse.

Dylan Ratigan has a basic explanation of what Goldman and others were doing. The analogy goes like this—they were selling cars with faulty brakes and then taking out life insurance policies on the people to whom those cars were sold.

But it was even more sinister than that. Goldman not only sold the car with faulty brakes, while telling the buyers that the brakes were good, they designed the car to have faulty brakes, knowing that it was going to crash at some point. So they profited on both ends, selling the car they knew would crash and then collecting the life insurance when it crashed.

Those who are quick to dismiss the charges against Goldman as a tempest in a teapot, something that will quickly blow over after the firm pays a small (relative to their size) fine and goes on their merry way should remember this. It was a night watchman who found a piece of tape on a lock on a door at the Watergate Hotel which led to an investigation which culminated in the resignation of a president.

The question now is do we have a modern-day Woodward and Bernstein? Do we have a modern-day Ben Bradlee who will defy the powers that be and publish the information those reporters uncover in spite of the possible repercussions that those powers may bring to bear? Do we have a modern-day Sam Ervin in Congress? Is there a modern-day John Dean? An ethical person with inside knowledge of the activities at Goldman and other Wall Street giants who is willing to talk?

Time will tell.

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