Posts Tagged ‘Goldman Sachs’

Goldman Secretly Bet on US Housing Crash McClatchy Finds

Sunday, November 1st, 2009

Still not sure about bank fraud? This is the latest in the breaking story of how Goldman raked in billions as they destroyed their own clients and investors…

How Goldman secretly bet on the U.S. housing crash

The mainstream media finally reports something that is about 1 year old and manny of us knew since 2005

C-J
By Greg Gordon | McClatchy Newspapers
WASHINGTON — In 2006 and 2007, Goldman Sachs Group peddled more than $40 billion in securities backed by at least 200,000 risky home mortgages, but never told the buyers it was secretly betting that a sharp drop in U.S. housing prices would send the value of those securities plummeting.

Goldman’s sales and its clandestine wagers, completed at the brink of the housing market meltdown, enabled the nation’s premier investment bank to pass most of its potential losses to others before a flood of mortgage defaults staggered the U.S. and global economies.

Only later did investors discover that what Goldman had promoted as triple-A rated investments were closer to junk.

Now, pension funds, insurance companies, labor unions and foreign financial institutions that bought those dicey mortgage securities are facing large losses, and a five-month McClatchy investigation has found that Goldman’s failure to disclose that it made secret, exotic bets on an imminent housing crash may have violated securities laws.

“The Securities and Exchange Commission should be very interested in any financial company that secretly decides a financial product is a loser and then goes out and actively markets that product or very similar products to unsuspecting customers without disclosing its true opinion,” said Laurence Kotlikoff, a Boston University economics professor who’s proposed a massive overhaul of the nation’s banks. “This is fraud and should be prosecuted.”

John Coffee, a Columbia University law professor who served on an advisory committee to the New York Stock Exchange, said that investment banks have wide latitude to manage their assets, and so the legality of Goldman’s maneuvers depends on what its executives knew at the time.

“It would look much more damaging,” Coffee said, “if it appeared that the firm was dumping these investments because it saw them as toxic waste and virtually worthless.”

Lloyd Blankfein, Goldman’s chairman and chief executive, declined to be interviewed for this article.

A Goldman spokesman, Michael DuVally, said that the firm decided in December 2006 to reduce its mortgage risks and did so by selling off subprime-related securities and making myriad insurance-like bets, called credit-default swaps, to “hedge” against a housing downturn.

DuVally told McClatchy that Goldman “had no obligation to disclose how it was managing its risk, nor would investors have expected us to do so … other market participants had access to the same information we did.”

For the past year, Goldman has been on the defensive over its Washington connections and the billions in federal bailout funds it received. Scant attention has been paid, however, to how it became the only major Wall Street player to extricate itself from the subprime securities market before the housing bubble burst.

Goldman remains, along with Morgan Stanley, one of two venerable Wall Street investment banks still standing. Their grievously wounded peers Bear Stearns and Merrill Lynch fell into the arms of retail banks, while another, Lehman Brothers, folded.

To piece together Goldman’s role in the subprime meltdown, McClatchy reviewed hundreds of documents, SEC filings, copies of secret investment circulars, lawsuits and interviewed numerous people familiar with the firm’s activities.

McClatchy’s inquiry found that Goldman Sachs:

Bought and converted into high-yield bonds tens of thousands of mortgages from subprime lenders that became the subjects of FBI investigations into whether they’d misled borrowers or exaggerated applicants’ incomes to justify making hefty loans.

Used offshore tax havens to shuffle its mortgage-backed securities to institutions worldwide, including European and Asian banks, often in secret deals run through the Cayman Islands, a British territory in the Caribbean that companies use to bypass U.S. disclosure requirements.

Has dispatched lawyers across the country to repossess homes from bankrupt or financially struggling individuals, many of whom lacked sufficient credit or income but got subprime mortgages anyway because Wall Street made it easy for them to qualify.

Was buoyed last fall by key federal bailout decisions, at least two of which involved then-Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, a former Goldman chief executive whose staff at Treasury included several other Goldman alumni.

The firm benefited when Paulson elected not to save rival Lehman Brothers from collapse, and when he organized a massive rescue of tottering global insurer American International Group while in constant telephone contact with Goldman chief Blankfein. With the Federal Reserve Board’s blessing, AIG later used $12.9 billion in taxpayers’ dollars to pay off every penny it owed Goldman.

These decisions preserved billions of dollars in value for Goldman’s executives and shareholders. For example, Blankfein held 1.6 million shares in the company in September 2008, and he could have lost more than $150 million if his firm had gone bankrupt.

Read the Entire Story Here

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Speaking of Change… Or Not

Saturday, October 17th, 2009

Seems some year and some ago, there was a great energy of change which was moving across this land.

But that change has come to a stand still. It’s as if someone turned back the clocks and threw us back in time.

Nothing seems to have “Changed” at all. We have had a war over health care in the streets as the Media has pitted those who need care against those who do not want anyone including government to control their access to what they believe keeps them healthy – which mostly is NOT the medical establishment – and we have had no movement of any substance on any major issue facing us.

Worst of all, as our nation has gone into this crisis led by the same Paulson, Geithner and Bernanke; so we still are being led down the garden path by the very people who created the debacle. The same who led us here are still leading us further astray. This is not change.

We simply keep falling for the rhetoric and not asking the real questions. Why? Because the guys we hired to do that job up in Washington are still all owned by the guys we need them to regulate.

The change that we came to the table for is not here, and it is time to talk about it honestly and directly.

The United States of Goldman Sachs is still running this nation. and so are the Bandits of America and CountryFine. Homeowners and good people all across the nation are eating dirt because the banks decided to go on a joy ride with credit at everyone’s expense and to their enrichment.

What I don’t get, excuse me, pardon me, is that while the blogs online are talking about it, NO ONE is doing anything about it except the same damn guy who has ALWAYS been doing something about it and that is Ron Paul.

I have watched this country sink into an ever deeper miasma of self doubt and fear and loathing and yet no one seems to be willing to stand up and ask the simple question. Where are the investigations of the fraud mongers? Which CEOs and “Federal Agents” have colluded to create this colossal financial catastrophe and who is on their way to jail?

Yet the land is dark and silent and the people keep taking their lashes and I wonder why they are so patient and so vigilant in a system that will trade their soul for a “loan mod” that will not reduce their principle balance nor their past dues but only trick them once again into an interest only cost inducing kick down the road…

A kick that will cost them only the waiving of all their rights as borrowers in ANY and ALL previous transactions; but which will leave them still completely burdened with the owing of the debt while the property which underlies it continues to fall.

This is like a death trap spiral in a cobra pit.

You cannot get out because you cannot qualify to get out and if you do qualify to get out the cost is everything plus waiving all your rights to any legal retribution to the lender for past wrong doing. Talk about the perfect con. They get you coming or going – with short sales with “borrower contributions required” on non recourse home owner loans (you know the kind of loans that the lender has to agree are limited to the real property for recourse – can’t ask for or seek funds from the borrower if those loans go bad… . – Well, not any more; the terms just changed.

Now they are going to take either a promissory note or cash from the seller losing their home in order to sell their home in a short sale and avoid foreclosure. So you either pay cash or promissory note or you lose your non recourse status, or to keep it you have to allow the house to go to foreclosure, not take the short sale and cost the taxpayer more money and put a foreclosure on your credit history.)

Or loan mods with increased monthly payments, no principle write downs and all the junk late fees and additional charges just thrown to the back of the loan for the borrower to pay later – while he pays off a loan worth twice what his house is now worth for the privilege of going broke trying – it’s all here. You have to try to qualify – to waive all your rights to ever hold them accountable for the fraud they just perpetrated on the entire economic system with their inflated bubble lending and MBS production mills.

MBS. I think that has to stand for More BS. MBS the truth is in the acronym. A pile of it too. They are now making all of us accountable for their fraudulent tactics against us!

MBS. I think that has to stand for More BS. MBS the truth is in the acronym. A pile of it too. They are now making all of us accountable for their fraudulent tactics against us!

This man who came in talking change is now telling us that he thinks the FED can deal with it?

This is bought, sold and paid for. Sorry but that is just a fact, so don’t talk rhetoric to me. The Goldmand Sachs of America still stands and he is their poster child. Change, my ass.

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Bernanke, Bailouts, Bank of America, And More…

Sunday, October 11th, 2009

Understanding the current economic climate, it’s causes and solutions for the average person is beyond possible.What with politics, partinsanship. mass media, news, infotainment and the growing white noice it has become next to impossible to discern what is truly going on in this financial debacle. This site is dedicated to turning that around, putting the sound voices of reason front and center and leaving the rhetoric behind.

From Goldman Sachs to CITIGROUP, JPMorgan Chase to Wells Fargo, Bank of America, Countrywide, Aurora, Litton, EMC, Indy Mac, One West, Capitol One, Wachovia, WAMU, Ameriquest, Downey Savings, Sun Trust, and a hundred more the lending “institutions” left realing by this control fraud debacle run by insiders, executives and spciulators has begun to bring home to roost the fruits of its malfeasance.

No longer a partisan issue, a politcal debate, or some other form of polite social discourse, the fruits of the lenders control fraud are now speading like a veritable cancer upon the land and spreading to infect nations and poeoples around the globe. Yet regulators, ratings company fraud, ongoing deception and mark to fantasy book keeping have left the vast majority completely in the dark as to what is truly going on.

This site is dedicated to spreading the teaching to tell anyone who cares to know just that: What is going on in the financial credit bubble meltdown of the world and why. And perhaps most to the point – who is behind it and what the potential solutions are, as well as what to watch out for next in the great unfolding of the economic system in this, teh end of the first decade of the new century.
Explore our resources, eduation and archives to learn the facts behond the propaganda of the greatest financial coup of all history.

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