Posts Tagged ‘Super Thieves’

Goldman Charges Tip of Iceberg?

Posted by admin on April 15th, 2010

SEC’s Goldman charges may be just the beginning

By Greg Gordon
McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON — Goldman Sachs, whose tactics exiting the collapsing subprime mortgage market have been under government scrutiny for months, now faces federal fraud charges that it duped investors into losing $1 billion on a rigged offshore deal pegged to dicey home loans.

The suit, brought Friday by the Securities and Exchange Commission, accuses Goldman and one of its vice presidents, 31-year-old Fabrice Tourre, of allowing a Wall Street hedge fund to secretly select many of the securities in the deal.

greatWhiteShark250The hedge fund, Paulson & Co., then bet that those subprime mortgage securities would fail. When they did, Paulson made a $1 billion profit and investors lost more than $1 billion, nearly all their money, the complaint charges.

In an e-mail to a friend in January 2007, the complaint says, Tourre remarked that, “The whole building is about to collapse anytime now” — an apparent allusion to a plunge in the housing market that would depress the value of the mortgage securities.

The case suggests that a reinvigorated SEC, after a long lull, is pressing to hold Wall Street accountable for its role in the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. People familiar with the SEC investigation of Goldman said it could expand, and a special Senate investigations panel is preparing to hold a hearing that will put Goldman under yet another magnifying glass.

Elizabeth Nowicki, a former SEC attorney who’s a visiting law professor at Boston University, called the SEC’s fraud suit “a political case as much as it is a case that they needed to bring to stop this sort of favoritism.”

“The SEC wanted to convey the message that no, they’re not sitting back on their heels,” she said. “This is going after Goldman Sachs. You can’t really go after anybody bigger than that . . . . The SEC has the stomach to follow this out, absolutely, and they’ve got a bigger incentive now that they are clearly perceived as shamed and disempowered.”

It’s still unclear whether Goldman also could face legal exposure for failing to disclose to investors in 2006 and 2007 that it had secretly bet that the housing market would collapse when it sold off more than $40 billion in securities backed by subprime mortgages. McClatchy Newspapers described those dealings in a series of articles in November and December 2009, including Goldman’s role in betting on a housing downtown in at least a dozen offshore deals that it marketed.

The company, in a terse statement, denounced the charges as “completely unfounded in law and fact,” and vowed to “vigorously contest them and defend the firm and its reputation.”

Underscoring Goldman’s stature as the world’s most prestigious investment bank, the enforcement action triggered a 126-point drop in the Dow Jones index on Wall Street. Shares of Goldman led the way, plummeting nearly 13 percent.

After the market closed, Goldman issued a second statement, saying that it lost $90 million on the transaction and that all of the involved parties were “sophisticated” investors that were well aware of the risks.

Goldman said the largest investor, ACA Capital Management, selected the securities “after a series discussions, including with Paulson & Co.” Goldman called the exchange “entirely typical.”

Sylvain Raynes, a New York expert in structured securities of the type described in the SEC charges, said the stakes are huge for Goldman.

“To lose its reputation,” he said, “Goldman does not need to be found guilty many times. They only need one instance.”

Besides naming the company as a defendant, the civil complaint accuses Tourre of concealing Paulson’s role from investors in a synthetic securities deal known as ABACUS, 2007-AC1 — one in which investors didn’t actually buy any securities.

Instead, they effectively bet that a specified bundle of home loans to marginally qualified borrowers would perform well, while Paulson took “short” positions, meaning it bet that those bonds would founder.

Paulson profited grandly from the nation’s economic collapse, taking in a total of $3.7 billion from its bets. The SEC complaint says the firm paid Goldman $15 million to assemble the deal, which Tourre was principally responsible for structuring.

The marketing materials for the investment, known as a collateralized debt obligation, told investors that ACA Management LLC, an independent third party, selected the mortgage-backed securities. The Paulson firm wasn’t mentioned.

“The product was new and complex, but the deception and conflicts are old and simple,” SEC enforcement chief Robert Khuzami said in a statement. “Goldman wrongly permitted a client that was betting against the mortgage market to heavily influence which mortgage securities to include in an investment portfolio, while telling other investors that the securities were selected by an independent, objective third party.”

The deal, one of about two dozen similar bundles in the ABACUS series, closed on April 26, 2007. Within six months, 83 percent of the mortgage-backed securities in the bundle had been downgraded and 27 percent were placed on negative watch by Wall Street ratings agencies, the complaint says.

By the following Jan. 29, it says, 99 percent of the portfolio had been downgraded, costing investors more than $1 billion.

Khuzami said that the Paulson firm, which isn’t affiliated with former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, wasn’t charged because it didn’t mislead investors.

However, the complaint charges that Goldman and Tourre “knew that it would be difficult, if not impossible,” to find investors for a synthetic CDO if they disclosed that a short player, such as Paulson, had a significant role in selecting the securities. Thus, they sought a third party for that role and approached ACA, calling it “important that we can use ACA’s branding” in an internal e-mail.

The complaint quoted Tourre, then 28, as saying in a Jan. 27, 2007 e-mail to a friend that was written in French and English: “More and more leverage in the system, The whole building is about to collapse anytime now . . . . Only potential survivor, the fabulous Fab(rice Tourre) . . . standing in the middle of all of these complex, highly leveraged, exotic trades he created without necessarily understanding all of the implications of those monstruosities (sic)!!!”

A Feb. 11, 2007 e-mail to Tourre from the unidentified head of Goldman’s structured product correlation trading desk said, “the cdo biz is dead we don’t have a lot of time left,” according to the complaint.

Paulson said in a statement that, while it bought credit protection from Goldman via the ABACUS deals, “We were not involved in the marketing of any ABACUS products.”

It said that ACA “had sole authority over the selection” of all securities in the deal, noting that two Wall Street ratings agencies — Moody’s Investors Service and Standard & Poor’s — gave them Triple A grades, the highest investment rating.

Both Moody’s and S&P have suffered tremendous damage to their reputations as a result of issuing favorable ratings to pools of U.S. mortgages that turned out to be junk.

The SEC said the only other investor in the ABACUS deal, IKB, a commercial bank in Dusseldorf, Germany, lost nearly all of the $150 million it invested. Goldman said the largest investor, ACA Capital Management, put up $951 million. ACA lost nearly all the money.

Friday’s charges were the first to be filed by the SEC’s Structured and New Products Unit, formed to pursue abuses in highly sophisticated deals.

Many of these deals are sliced according to risk, with investors who take the greatest risk receiving the highest yield. In deals that were partially or entirely synthetic, Goldman or some of its clients would profit if the securities soured.

Gary Kopff, an expert in mortgage securities who’s studied Goldman’s role in betting against investors in deals it marketed though the Cayman Islands, said that, “They manifest, in my opinion, the same misconduct that the SEC asserts occurred in the ABACUS deal.”

Goldman created a structured product correlation trading desk in late 2004 or early 2005. A memo describing the ABACUS 2007-AC1 transaction to the company’s Mortgage Capital Committee on March 12, 2007, said that the “ability to structure and execute complicated transactions to meet multiple clients’ needs and objectives is key for our franchise,” the SEC complaint says.

Executing the deal “and others like it helps position Goldman to compete more aggressively in the growing market for synthetics written on structured products,” the e-mail said.

According to the complaint, Paulson came to believe that the underlying securities in the ABACUS 2007-AC1 deal “would become worthless.”

In late 2006 and early 2007, it charges, Paulson identified more than 100 mortgage bonds that it expected to collapse, favoring those backed by loans to borrowers with low credit scores, adjustable rate mortgages and located in overheated real estate markets such as Arizona, California, Florida and Nevada.

In early January, Tourre forwarded a list of 123 mortgage-backed bonds under the heading “Paulson Portfolio,” leading to negotiations among Paulson, Goldman and ACA over the final portfolio, which included a sizable number of those selected by Paulson.

Read more: Read More . . .

robber barons

Posted by admin on January 4th, 2010


A Selection of Books on Robber Barons

folsomRobberBarons

  • The Robber Barons: Great American Capitalists 1861-1901
  • Dark Genius of Wall Street: Jay Gould, King of the Robber Barons
  • In Their Own Words: Robber Barons and Radicals
  • Andrew Carnegia: Robber Baron as American Hero
  • The Age of the Moguls: Robber Barons and Great Tycoons
  • House of Morgan
  • The Man Who Robbed the Robber Barons
  • bakerAndrewCarnegie
    “The Myth of the Robber Barons” by Folsom describes the role of key entrepreneurs in the economic growth of the United States from 1850 to 1910.

    The entrepreneurs studied in many “robber baron” books are Cornelius Vanderbilt, John D. Rockefeller, James J. Hill, Andrew Mellon, Charles Schwab, and the Scranton family. Most historians argue that these men, and others like them, were Robber Barons.

    The story, however, is more complicated. Burton Folsom, in his book, divides the entrepreneurs into two groups market entrepreneurs and political entrepreneurs. Market entrepreneurs, such as Hill, Vanderbilt, and Rockefeller, succeeded by producing a quality product at a competitive price. Political entrepreneurs such as Edward Collins in steamships and in railroads the leaders of the Union Pacific Railroad were men who used government to succeed. They tried to gain subsidies, or in some way use government to stop competitors. The market entrepreneurs helped lead to the rise of the U. S. as a major economic power. By 1910, the U. S. dominated the world in oil, steel, and railroads led by Rockefeller, Schwab (and Carnegie), and Hill.

    Reading today’s news brings home the fact that few of us know much about the history of the world. Many of us are rightfully upset, but Robber Barons ARE the people who develop all countries while amassing fortunes at the expense of others under the guise of conquest, development, “you need this or that.” Think about all that you have in your home that you absolutely do NOT need at all for any reason. If you never saw this or that widget, it would not matter.

    Think about all the foodstuffs that we consume that are actually harmful; food and drug industries are rife with Robber Barons . . . and with the help of government. Think about cigarettes; beyond a shadow of a doubt, they main and kill. Executives and shareholders of Philip Morris, R.J. Reynolds, etc., ARE robber barons. They are making fortunes while individuals die (or, perhaps worse, live and drain taxdollars to help them stay alive — while continuing to smoke).

    Our friends, The Robber Barons (aka Super Thieves) have been with us since the dawn of time. As soon as someone decides they want something you have, and the second the desire outstrips their ethics, the game starts. During extensive historical research for a maritime site, I’ve repeatedly been appalled at the machinations of man as I read about who took over what nation and under what circumstances.

    Don’t you find it appalling that the British, French, Spanish, Dutch, et. al. sat around divving up countries willy nilly in order to secure spices for England or gold for Queen Isabella of Spain or diamonds for Holland? These countries were already inhabited and some quite developed when Europeans arrived, claimed to have “discovered the land,” and proceeded to invade, rape, pillage, rob, burn . . . They want what they want and they take it.

    It seems the only reason so many more of us are aware of international wheeling and dealing is because of the Internet and cellphones; the people have a voice like never before. Little can be hidden.

    cellRobbery While government representatives, for example, insist there is no strife in their country, a student or tourist with a cellphone snaps that telling shot . . . the one that shows a different story; one that shows the truth to the world. (Left is a robbery of a jewelry store captured on someone’s cell phone — this was found on the internet!)

    This, while I agree, I find this article from the Sovereign Society newsletter quite narrow in scope:

    Lies and irresponsibility have become the hallmark of both Wall Street and now Washington are threatening the life savings of individuals.

    Noted author and economic analyst John Pugsley was quoted as saying, “Hard working Americans, trying to do everything right, are now at the mercy of the fallout from these lies. And there are three in particular that pose devastating threats. But investors today can protect themselves if they quickly take the appropriate steps…”

    For all of us to decide, perhaps, is how much is enough? How much is too much? Do we need all of these developments at the cost of everything else on earth?

    In the event you have note wrestled with that one (or have without a satisfactory answer), you might want to see the movie “Avatar,” which addresses some of these issues.

    super thieves

    Posted by admin on December 13th, 2009

    America has Super Man, Super Woman, Super Bowl . . . and we have Super Thieves. Actually, the world has always had Super Thieves from pre-Crusades to Bernie Madoff and Hank Paulson (reportedly Paulson managed to heist $700 billion for his Wall Street cronies).

    From a blog: If our country ever collapses from all these politicians ripping us off, it will be like in the French Revolution, these people will be hunted down and executed by the angry mobs. Remember that lawyer several years ago who ripped his client off, hiding behind the tree and dodging bullets his client was trying to pump into him and caught on camera? Picture Paulson, Dodd or Reid or all the other thieves in our government in that scenario.

    and from another blog post:

    There are VERY few losers in this scheme. You know, most of the investors are in on the game. They will be leaving the country in a year or so and going to the middle east where they will build hotels, casinos and shopping malls with stores that make Harrod’s of London look like Walmart. They have stolen the gold and now they are taking off to steal from the Arabs. Little do they know that gold will not be the new form of money in United States. They will not be able to buy from us, so they will have to eat the gold that they stole from the American people.

    I don’t have time for this yet, but I reserved SuperThieves.com a in late 2009 as I am fascinated with these men and women who think they can get away with absolutely anything and who don’t care who gets harmed in the process. I like making money as much as the next person, but it is absolutely mandatory to screw everyone around you to do so?

    These pages are devoted to the Super Thieves . . . with quite a bit of fascination. Who do they think they are? Why do they think what they are doing is acceptable? Why/how do they get away with it? Do they sleep well after destroying a life for the sake of improving their bottom line?
    crusaders
    Years ago, during a long argument with a friend, he insisted that the Crusades were for religious purposes, whereas I took the stand that all “crusades” (then and now) are for acquisition of land, money, people, livestock, etc. Astrocities were committed by knights throughout the Middle Ages in foreign lands. The later middle ages saw a new kind of knight who was a professional adventurer, motivated by nothing higher than gain – a mercenary in fact. By the mid-fourteenth century there were large numbers of these men in Europe, with no place in society other than as soldiers of fortune.

    One of the greatest scandals resulted from the recruitment of such men in the “Crusade” against the city of Alexandria in 1365. The mercenaries sacked the city, slaughtered thousands of its inhabitants (including many Christians although they were purportedly rousting the “infidels”) stole as much loot as they could carry and then went home, with the result that the city fell back into the hands of “the Infidel” within days of its conquest.

    A successful knight could make an immense fortune, as can be seen from the example of William the Marshall and others,

    Veterans of various wars around the world do not sleep well. How do people who rob American citizens of everything in the name of commerce fare . . . can they sleep?

    This is beyond the current focus of America’s lenders; it will include the head of large corporations who poison us: i.e. Coca-Cola, cigarette manufacturers, unnecessary food dyes that are harmful . . .

    Obviously others have the idea. The following is from one of those sites and we will be adding to the list shortly . . .

    Editor’s Note: We are working on a project to identify where Goldman Sachs’ executives have gone after leaving the nest. We want to track where they have landed and what influence they have had on financial and political issues. When our research is complete, we will publish a FREE Internet version of our research.

    Here is just a taste:

  • Robert Rubin – Former United States Treasury Secretary, ex-Chairman of Citigroup
  • Henry Paulson – Former United States Treasury Secretary
  • Edward Lampert- Brought K-Mart out of Bankruptcy in 2003
  • Joshua Bolten – former White House Chief of Staff
  • Erin Burnett – CNBC Host
  • Jon Corzine – Governor of the State of New Jersey
  • Michael Cohrs – Head of Global Banking at Deutsche Bank
  • Jim “The Mouth” Cramer – In Cramer We Trust – Mad Money on CNBC – Ultimate Jackass
  • Abby Joseph Cohen – Perma-bull market forecaster formerly of Drexel Burnham Lambert
  • George Herbert Walker IV – member of the Bush family and current managing director at Neuberger Berman
  • Robert Zoellick – United States Trade Representative (2001-2005), Deputy Secretary of State (2005-2006), World Bank President
  • Mark Carney – Current Governor of the Bank of Canada
  • Michael D. Fascitelli- President & Trustee of Vornado Realty Trust
  • Neel Kashkari – Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Financial Stability
  • Malcolm Turnbull – Australian politician, currently the federal leader of the Liberal Party of Australia
  • John Thain – former Chairman and CEO, Merrill Lynch, and former chairman of the NYSE
  • Robert Steel – Chairman and President, Wachovia – Now with the boys and girls at Wells Fargo
  • Romano Prodi, Prime Minister of Italy twice (1996-1998 and 2006-2008) and President of the European Commission (1999-2004)
  • Mario Draghi, governor of the Bank of Italy (2006- )
  • Massimo Tononi, Italian deputy treasury chief (2006-2008)
  • Add your favorites to this list, if you please . . . from any time in the world’s history, but specifically now so we can expose these pathetic people for what they are.