GoldmanSachs666 Message Board

Fraud*
According to the Collins English Dictionary 10th Edition fraud can be defined as: "deceit, trickery, sharp practice, or breach of confidence, perpetrated for profit or to gain some unfair or dishonest advantage".[1] In the broadest sense, a fraud is an intentional deception made for personal gain or to damage another individual; the related adjective is fraudulent. The specific legal definition varies by legal jurisdiction. Fraud is a crime, and also a civil law violation. Defrauding people or entities of money or valuables is a common purpose of fraud, but there have also been fraudulent "discoveries", e.g. in science, to gain prestige rather than immediate monetary gain
*As defined in Wikipedia

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Goldman Sachs Links and News - April 29, 2010

Criminal Probe into Goldman Sachs | The Big Picture
By Barry Ritholtz
Goldman Sachs: SEC sends case to prosecutors
By Barry Secrest 

Goldman Scrutinized by Prosecutors Reviewing SEC Case
BusinessWeek

The devil in Goldman Sachs
Christian Science Monitor

Goldman Sachs fraud, how they cheated investors with exploding ...
By Report Fraud 

Daniel Sparks, Goldman Sachs Exec: Did He Lie Under Oath?
Huffington Post (blog)

Kendall Law Group Plans Class Action on Behalf of Goldman Sachs Group, Inc ...
MarketWatch (press release)

More tsuris for Goldman Sachs (and others) -- to the Bay Area's benefit
San Francisco Chronicle (blog)

In Goldman's Defiance, a Hint of Truce
BusinessWeek

What's Next for Goldman Sachs? - DealBook Blog - NYTimes.com
By By PETER J. HENNING 


Goldman Sachs fraud banker Fabrice Tourre bags share of £3.2bn ...
dailymail.co.uk/...
What's Next for Goldman Sachs?
New York Times (blog)Bloomberg Scoop Has Implications for Geithner, Ex-Goldman Chair : CJR
Goldman Sachs Said to Meet UK FSA Today Over Probe
BusinessWeek
Goldman Death Fight May Explain Lloyd's Words: Jonathan Weil
BusinessWeekDead money lives: Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein gets $2.8M richer - by ...
New York Daily News
Legislators suggest fraud, request Goldman inquiry
Philadelphia Inquirer
Goldman in Talks Over Fund Settlement: Report
ABC News
Mortgage Grapevine: piece from Bloomberg // Goldman Sachs pile-on ...
piece from Bloomberg
Goldman Sachs adds to its ranks of lobbyists
Washington Post
Whitman Flips on Goldman Sachs
NBC Bay Area
Goldman Armed Salespeople to Dump Bonds, E-mails Show
By Joshua Gallu and Jesse Westbrook April 28 (Bloomberg)
RealClearPolitics - Dems Use Goldman to Push Dodd Bill
By Carl Hulse, New York TimesGORDON DUFF: THE GOP AND GOLDMAN SACHS, ECONOMIC TERRORISM ...
By Gordon Duff 

The Real Issues Concerning Goldman Sachs

I finished yesterdays piece with,
My next post will be on the real issues and questions  Goldman Sachs should be asked.  What was their  real role in the economic crisis.  Who is responsible and Why?  Who should be accountable to the millions and millions devastated?
 There seems to be quite a bit of elation and hoopla over the recent SEC charges of fraud against Goldman Sachs as well as that new reality TV show - 10 - the real time Senate sub committee hearings starring Goldman Sachs.  Both events, the more I think about them are just PR events.  For the SEC action, the PR is to let Americans know that "our" government is on our side working hard to protect us from evil wrongdoers.  (insert laugh track).  As to the Senate Hearings, the PR effort is to ram through some sort of financial regulation to fool the people into thinking "our" governmnet is on our side working hard to protect us from evil wrongdoers.  (insert laugh track).

As I was composing my thoughts on this post, Bnet, a CBS affiliate, published a post of their own which closly resembled some of myl very own thought for this column.  As such, I felt it would be appropriate to share it with you before expanding on my thoughts.

In Defense of Goldman (Kind Of)   By Cait Murphy  click here to view

Okay, it’s easy and fun and often appropriate to dish - or in Senator Carl Levin’s (D-MI) mellifluous phrasing, “crap” — on the fat-cat bankers. Believe me, I have no sympathy for the people, flush with fabulous paychecks and an inflated sense of entitlement, who did so much to destroy the nation’s wealth, housing market and self-confidence.
My sentiments exactly.  But the real key words and what I feel very strongly about is when he says, "who did so much to destroy the nation's wealth, hosing market and self-confidence".  This is what I talk about when I say "The Real Issues".
But there are good reasons to crap on the financial industry, and bad ones. And what we have been seeing in the hearings by the Permanent Sub-Committee on Investigations is a lot of emphasis on the latter.
Again, my sentiments and feelings exactly.  What we are seeing and hearing are all the wrong or as Carl puts it, "bad" reasons to "crap" on the financial industry and Goldman in particular.
This matters for two reasons. One, if you do not identify the right problems, you are not going to come up with the right solutions. And two, the ignorance betrayed in so many of the questions and commentary has to give pause.
Once again, I whole heartedly agree with Carl.  "If you do not identify the right problems, you are not going to come up withthe right solutions" nor will you ever have justice served which will in turn act as a deterrent for future actions of wrongdoing.

Carl's article continues by talking about needing "new forms of regulation".  He talks about financial institutions and mortgage brokers being mandated to keep a piece of each mortgage they sell.  Financial institutions should as this is a partial return to the way mortgage lending was always done which worked.  Brokers on the otherhand, are just a sales and marketing force with no decision making powers as to who does and does not get a loan nor do they fund them.

Carl does say that "hedging" is OK, which it is but you should only be able to hedge on something yo actually own or control not something you have fabricated 0 synthesized - on paper only.  In other words things that do't really exist should not be bet on or against.
And I don’t think any of this needs to be complicated. It’s not a matter necessarily of more rules, but of smarter, more consistent ones. Given the spectacle on Capitol Hill, I am not confident that this crew can deliver them.
No new rules need not be complicated nor shoulld there necessarily be more new rules.  I believe that enforcing rules we have now and perhaps bringing back Glass-Steagal could put us all back on track.  Enforcement of rules however, must contain a consequence factor - some form of punishemnt other then monetary.  "More consistant ones" (rules) are definitely needed and I am not too sure that "this crew" can deliver - period.

Skipping down, Carl now gets to where I want to be:
It wasn’t just the bankers. If our esteemed members of Congress would yield the microphone for a moment and look in the mirror — in other words, if pigs flew — they would recognize their own culpability. Senator Levin has compiled a litany of blame derived from the committee’s hearings so far; Congress does not appear on the list. And I don’t see anyone giving back Goldman’s generous campaign contributions, either.
No, for this whole economic crisis to have happened, we first needed to create a bubble.  And as with other bubbles  of the past, to have grown it required the assistance - direct or indirect - of various elements of our government.
Congress failed to provide oversight to Fannie and Freddie; and it created a regulatory spaghetti that made effective supervision impossible.
Corruption ran wild in both GSE's.  The books were cooked - a felony in most courts - but only a slap on the wrist offense for the very high paid execs of both firms.

Underwriting guidelines relaxed through an automated underwriting system that could be tweaked to accept unqualified borrowers.  And they said it was a sub prime problem at first.

Yes, Congress has a part in the evolution of the crisis as do the many regulators, SEC, FDIC, FTC, AG and other lettered agencies in addition to our executive branch going back to the days of Bill Clinton forward.

Having said that, the real issues are how did we (government's regulators) allow the creation of mortgage products that would entice buyers to buy more then they should have or bought at all.  How, as Carl points out as well, did the Federal Reserve keep interest rates artificialy low further enabling free and affordable looking credit.  Then how was Wall Street allowed to slice, dice, package and pool, mortgages with false Triple A ratings.  How did the SEC not investigate further the securities that were being created and sold to investors?  A very basic function of the SEC.

Even more interesting and not questioned at all is how these derivatives were created that further enticed investors to form long lines to purchase not only AAA rated bonds but bonds that were even insured against failure.  An insurance program with no regulation because it was called something else.

So what caused the economic crisis?  Wall Street with the help of Uncle Sam.  Were it not for Wall Street creating "toxic" mortgage programs, loosley underwriting them, funding them for the sole purpose of creating the RMBS's the bubble could never have happened.

If the fraudulent representation, yes, I will call it fraudulent, of Mortgage Backed Securities didn't create a feeding frenzy of worldwide investors then the money never would have been there - recycled - to loan over and over again to anyone - ANYONE.

The real trigger was the sale of these RMBS bonds and who is the leading bond salesman on Wall Street?  Who seemed to survive and thrive as their competitors failed?  What company was our previous Secretary of the Treasury the CEO of?

How did the market for RMBS suddenly stop, thereby depleting the amount of cash availablel by the lenders to fund their loans which in effect started the economic collapse?  (This was answered during the hearings when GS said they were bidding so low for mortgages that no one would sell them.  If they started this then you know the others houses did as well and well, the mortgage meltdown began).

The real issues then are not the fraud alleged by the SEC nor the ethics questions raised by the Senate.  The real question is who orchestrated all the events that allowed the creation of fraudulent financial instruments that created the bubble that burst spilling toxic waste over entire countries.  And more important dumping all this toxic waste upon our own country leaving our own people in ruin.

Ask Goldman Sachs.

A Goldman pic worth a 1000 words

Kinda says it all, don't it?

No "Too Big To Jail" for Goldman petition

Letter from Rep. Kaptur to the DOJ demanding a requesting investigation of Goldman

Petition to Department of Justice: No "Too Big To Jail" for Goldman and others

Dear Attorney General Holder:

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced on Friday, April 16, 2010, that it had filed a securities fraud action against the Wall Street company Goldman Sachs & Co (GS & Co.) and one of its employees for making materially misleading statements and omissions in connection with a synthetic collateralized debt obligation (“CDO”) that GS & Co. structured and marketed to investors.

.....


Read the full request and petition here

Goldman Sachs NOT in Settlement Talks With SEC

Carles Gasparino of FOX Business News has just published a very interesting article, Goldman Not Talking Settlement, Yet..
Will Goldman Sachs (GS: 160.32, 4.9101, 3.16%) settle the now-famous civil fraud case over its disclosures (or lack thereof) to a German bank that bought from the firm a batch of toxic investments?
Yes, of course. There's not a person on Wall Street, including at the senior levels of Goldman, who isn't predicting a settlement.

But that doesn’t mean Goldman is now in settlement negotiations with the Securities and Exchange Commission in the case, as published reports have suggested. In fact, FOX Business Network has learned there are no settlement negotiations taking place and there probably won’t be anytime soon.
It is widely believed that civil suits like this one by the SEC are generally settled out of court with no admission of guilt or innocence.  This is going to play out for some time and could be even more politically motivated then some had originally thought.




Read Charlie Gasparino's article...click here

Goldman Sachs Videos




The Daily Show With Jon StewartMon - Thurs 11p / 10c
In Dodd We Trust
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show Full EpisodesPolitical HumorTea Party

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Goldman Sachs Links and News - April 28, 2010 - Featuring Larry's Corner

      Senate Hearings...have you heard?


The media and blogs were up late last night and it seems everybody is talking about the Senate hearings and Goldman Sachs.  Wow, news alerts were coming in steadily from the conclusion of the hearings straught through the night.  Again, the number of alerts I received doubled from their usual volume.  That's a lot of reading.  

What we are seeing is par for the course - a mixed bag of opinions and observations.  Some like it hot and some like it cold.  Almost no one sits in the middle and likes it warm.  So how does one analyze what some portray is a "circus"?  Simply, you don't.  Giving an analysis is largley based on one's personal feelings about Goldman Sachs.  To be somewhat accurate one would have to watch the ten plus hours of he hearing several more times and to be even more accurate in giving an evaluation one would have to actually read the trasnscript.  Whew, that would probably take as long to read as it does a Congressional Bill - and we all know most don't read those.


Those who support Goldman Sachs - like former President Bill Clinton - have said GS has done no wrong.
Former President Bill Clinton said he’s skeptical that Goldman Sachs Group Inc. broke the law...(click here to read Ex-President Clinton Says He's Skeptical That Gold,am Violated Any Law in Bloomberg BusinessWeek)
Some are saying that GS won a victory at the hearings.  I am not sure how one can be victorious at a Congressional hearing where you are sworn to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so help you God.  But of course, when you have a direct relationship with God and a mandate to do his work, what ever you say must be Gospel.  The truth according to the Lord (Blankfein).rules victorious above all.

Then there are those who do not like GS ( like us ) and would love to see their demise who even go as far as saying that their testimony at the hearings was their death bell.  (I personally don't think these hearings will lead to the end of GS...sadly). 
I saw something die today. It didn't die accidentally either. It was killed.
This was a very painful event to watch, not just because death is tragic and not because this death was intentional rather than accidental.   (see complete story in HuffPost by Steve G. Brant, The Death of Goldman Sachs)
 So what can we take away from spending over 10 hours of precious time watching this Washington drama, our eyes and ears glued to our TV screens or computer monitors, Ipods or other 3G devices?  Just some observations with no judgement of right or wrong.


The first panel of witnesses were all very guarded, some nervous and uncomfortable (understandable) and very evasive.  Very few questions were answered directly or even answered at all.  Of all the gentlemen on the first panel, I would have to say Fabrice Tourre was the most confident and eloquent, which for someone who is at the core of the SEC law suit, speaks highly of his strength of character.  (I am making no judgment as to his guilt or innocense nor his ethics.  I was just very impressed withthe way he spoke and handled himself.

Then came the second part of the hearing with GS CFO David A. Viniar.  If one were to form a first impression of the company from his presentation and demeanor, that impression would be very positive.  He handled himself with a lot of confidence, self esteem and knowledge. What was most impressive about him, as a colleague watching with me said, was that he spoke with respect even when disrespected.  He talked directly to the questioner, not above him/her as previous panelists did.  He did not represent himself as that typical arrogant - better then you - Goldmanite.  He was, I must say very eloquent.

Finally came panel 3 whose sole member was none other then GS CEO Lloyd (Lord of the Rings) Blankfein.  Wow, I found him to be embarrassing to say the least, evasive due to insecurity as well as lack of knowledge.  More over, if his constant lack of knowledge was due to plausible reliability, he should have been a little more convincing.  It was not very plausible..

He rarely finished a thought often changing direction in mid sentence.  He hemmed and hawed quite a bit obviously looking for ways not to step on his tongue and mis speak the truth.  I personally found him to not to be the buck stops here, I'm in control and have done nothing wrong top executive of the company.  I personally feel he will be a casualty if being thrown out with billions of dollars can be considered a casualty.

All in all, some valid and damaging information did come out mainly in the reading of the documents contained in that very thick loose leaf binder everyone had in front of them.  An interesting fact that was brought out is that the only emails released by Goldman Sachs were those of Fabrice Tourre.  When questioned why - there was - no answer.  It is obvious to all - at least to me - that they - GS - were throwing him to the wolves as a sacrificial lamb.

One other major point was made and that was ethics or lack thereof.  There did seem to be a great deal of conflict of interest and ethical violations in many GS transactions and business dealings.  I suppose the two combined can equal fraud but that is for a judge and jury to decide- not you, me or the Senate.  Those allegations should be brought by those directly or even indirectly impacted.  Apparently this is happening.  Other lawsuits are forthcoming and one - specifically  - coming from GS stockholders. 

Ladies and Gentlemen, Boys and Girls, Children of All Ages, Welcome to the Capitol Hill/Wall Street Circus.

Yes, this is a three ring circus..  In ring number 1, the Senators.  In ring number 2, the Goldmanites.  (Upcoming shows will feature other Wall Streeters in ring number 2).  In ring number 3 the SEC charge of fraud against one very small element of Goldman Sachs.  Send in the clowns.

As with those in the hot seat some of our Senators did not exhibit control or even what I would call professionalism.  Their function, if this were a true hearing, was to ask questions and get answers.  Too often they made comments and passed judgment. They brow beat the witnesses and sometimes told them what they wanted to hear from them.  Some Senators showed their anger - which as our representatives mirrors the anger of many of us.  But I personally don't believe that this was the forum to do so.  I think it simply added to the drama and entertainment value of what can be considered a reality TV program.

The committees job, I believe,  was to ask questions, get answers of those called to testify under oath.  If no answer was given or a diversion taken by a witness it should have been so noted and questioning continued..  Personal opinions and comments made to witnesses were also inappropriate even though I enjoyed some of them.  the comments and opinions should have been made after all the testimony was heard, analyzed and a report given by the Committee Chairperson.

Whose opinion is correct?
Browse the links below.  Listen to all the different opinions and observations, listen to the testimony again and decide for yourself.  Your opinion is as good as anyone's.  Any and all of our opinions are just that - opinions  The opinion that will matter will be the opinion that is rendered by a judge, jury or court, a regulatory agency with teeth and punishment or by the U.S. Government if vioations and actions against the country or its people are found to have occurred.  The real justice will be in the punishment - if any.  . The guilt or innocence of the specific SEC fraud charge is not the real issue.  Again, it must be brought out that this is a civil suit that could very well never see the inside of a court room and guilt or innocence never determined.

This hearing and the SEC civil law suit are part of this three ring circus.  The real issues and the real questions have yet to be brought out and asked although if you listen very carefully there does seem to be a foundation being laid for the real issues and questions to be raised.

My next post will be on the real issues and questions  Goldman Sachs should be asked.  What was their  real role in the economic crisis.  Who is responsible and Why?  Who should be accountable to the millions and millions devastated?


Senate hearings made politicians look worse than Goldman Sachs
Baltimore Sun
All-Star Panel on 'All-Star' panel on Goldman Sachs, Democratic Push for ...
FOXNews
Goldman Trader 'Hedging' Means 'Conflict' to Senator
BusinessWeek
Organized Labor Puts a Bull's-eye on Wall Street
DailyFinance
Goldman Sachs Crossed Ethical Lines in Selling CDOs, Levin Says
BusinessWeek
Goldman Sachs deal in fraud case involved unsophisticated investors
Los Angeles Times
Goldman Sachs Hearing: Senators Wield Oversimplified Metaphors, Execs Fight ...
Huffington Post (blog)
Self-Evaluations Pose New Concern After Goldman Sachs Hearing
BusinessWeek
Political Wisdom: Arizona, Goldman Sachs Stir the Pot
Wall Street Journal (blog)
Goldman Sachs Says SEC Case Hinges on Actions of One Employee ... 
Bloomberg
Goldman Sachs Emerges From Senate Showdown Ahead $549 Million ...
Bloomberg
Comparing Goldman Sachs to a Casino is an Insult to Casinos
Huffington Post (blog)
Goldman Sachs: Playing Devil's Advocate
Forbes (blog)
Bill Clinton Says He Isn't Sure Goldman Broke Law
BusinessWeek
Political Grandstanding: Wall Street Slams Goldman Sachs Hearings
ABC News
Lincoln gives Goldman Sachs donations to charity
Washington Post
RBS Chairman Says Too Soon To Act On Goldman Sachs Transaction
Wall Street Journal
RBS Chairman Says Too Soon To Act On Goldman Sachs Transaction
Wall Street JournalJon Slattery: Thomson Reuters chief defends Goldman Sachs
By Jon Slattery
 Goldman Case Is Just 'the Beginning' for Banks, Malmgren Says
BusinessWeek
 Goldman's Viniar, Sen. Levin Agree: Don't Say Securities 'Crap'
BusinessWeek
'Fabulous Fab' Goldman Sachs exec Fabrice Tourre, Wall Street sext king, is a ...
New York Daily News
For Some on Wall St., the Spectacle on TV Was Background Noise
New York Times
Goldman Sachs Gets Potty Mouth Grilling
FOXNews
Congress berates Goldman Sachs
Chicago Sun-Times
Accused Goldman Sachs Exec Crowed Of Pending 'Collapse' -SEC - WSJ.com
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--
Viniar Says Firm Didn't Negotiate With Treasury on AIG Payments
BusinessWeek
Goldman Sachs Grilled: Join the Live Chat
CNN (blog)
Goldman Sachs Knows How to Get 'Er Done!
Vanity Fair
Goldman Sachs' Long Day In Washington « Forbes.com's StreetTalk
By Nathan Vardi
Goldman Sachs's Tourre to 'Categorically' Deny SEC's Claims ...
By By BLOOMBERG NEWS
Goldman Armed Salespeople to Dump Bonds, E-mails Show
BusinessWeek
 Fabulous Fab Shows Managers Oblivious to E-Mail Peril
BusinessWeek
Goldman Sachs executives face senators investigating role in financial crisis
Washington Post
Goldman Sachs, Goldfish Eat Their Young
Huffington Post (blog)
Goldman Sachs Gains as Senate Hearing Questions Executives
BusinessWeek
Wall Street Comparison Offends Las Vegas, Ensign Says
BusinessWeek
Goldman Sachs bankers disagree on duty to clients
MarketWatch
Enron law firm sues Goldman Sachs
CNNMoney
 Probe: Goldman Eyed Profits from Housing Bust
CBS News
Goldman Sachs Suffers The Perils Of PR Spin
Forbes
Goldman Sachs fraud is criminal
Chicago Tribune
Will their bite match their bark? Obama advisor rails against Goldman Sachs ...
New York Daily News

Will Goldman fraud lead to real reform?

From Ampedstatus:

Not only did Goldman Sachs profit on betting against CDOs they designed to fail; more importantly, they insured them through AIG which led to a $182 billion taxpayer bailout.
How 
the SEC and Congress Can Bring Down Goldman Sachs and Expose the 
Financial CoupHave you heard the news? It’s everywhere! The SEC and Congress have all of a sudden sprung to life and are now “getting tough” on Goldman Sachs. Is this all the first phase of a long-awaited investigation that will reveal the causes of our current economic crisis, or is this just more show trials and psychological operations designed to manipulate public opinion and make the American people feel that our elected officials are finally standing up to their campaign funders on Wall Street?
First off, let’s address these SEC charges against Goldman Sachs. At first glance you might think, oh big deal, this is just a minor civil suit that only indicts a low-level Goldman employee. Goldman will just throw some money at it and it will most likely go away. After all, Wall Street firms have already thrown over $430 billion out to derail 1500 cases against them, so what will make this any different?
We are also left wondering, if the SEC was serious about this case, why aren’t they investigating and prosecuting John Paulson and top Goldman executives under the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) statutes? Even the NY Times reported that top executives were involved in the process. If you think Lloyd Blankfein wasn’t fully aware of this billion dollar deal involving John Paulson, you’re delusional. Blankfein became CEO of Goldman due to his outstanding expertise in this particular area, serving as Goldman’s head of the Fixed Income, Currency and Commodities Division (FICC) since its formation in 1997.
So unless this is just the first of many moves on the part of the SEC, this whole case amounts to a psychological operation designed to once again quell popular outrage. These indications lead me to believe that this is a classic “limited hang-out.”

....

Read the rest here

More Goldman Incestuos Relationships

From Alternet:

Ex-Goldman Trader Bought Major Stake in ACA, Shorted Subprime CDOs

The Goldman-Paulson fraud suit threatens to throw a spotlight on a realm of Wall Street that has escaped most scrutiny throughout the financial crisis: the hedge fund industry. Top hedge fund managers profit from Wall Street’s business model of fraud and collusion more than any CEO at the big banks, but tend to evade accountability because of the opacity of their industry and their extraordinary power.

One such hedge fund manager is Richard Perry. Perry, a former Goldman Sachs trader, became known as one of the subprime winners in 2007 — one of the hedge fund managers who saw the crisis coming, and placed profitable bets that the housing market would collapse. Perry reportedly shorted $3 billion in subprime-related securities, netting a $1 billion profit on the trade.

....

Perry’s winning billion-dollar subprime short, alongside his major investment in ACA, is all the more notable because of his ties to Goldman Sachs. He was a star trader at the bank under former Goldman Sachs head Robert Rubin, and has partnered with the bank on investments in recent years. Perry is extremely close to Rubin, outside of the professional context — former babysitter to his children, teaching assistant, and advisory board member at Rubin’s Hamilton Project. Despite being extremely close to someone who made $1 billion shorting the subprime market, Rubin has called the financial crisis a “perfect storm” that no one saw coming.

....


Read the rest here

Goldman Hearings Followup

Well, the hearings are over. Predictably, Blankfein attempted to dodge all blame. Their strategy of misdirection may have worked for some but that's not gonna fly here.
It is exactly what we expected and with the exception of Levin, it was a dog and pony show. The Automatic Earth (among many others) predicted it as well:

For now, Blankfein et al will be fine, they may just not like all the pesky questioning, but they'll leave confident that they've won the day. That's their default mindset, after all, and an addiction to boot. It could also, however, easily be their undoing.

It seems they followed their strategy well and Levin was none too pleased about it.
From the ABA Journal:

A lawyer reportedly helping Goldman Sachs executives prepare for a Senate hearing today revealed his usual strategy for congressional hearings in an interview last year.

O’Melveny & Myers partner K. Lee Blalack II told the American Lawyer last March that a congressional hearing room is not a forum for divining the truth, according to The BLT: The Blog of Legal Times. The goal, he said, is minimal damage to reputation.

“Long, thoughtful pauses followed by rambling nonresponsive answers can easily devour half of a member’s allotted questioning time,” Blalack told the American Lawyer.

Looks like ole Abe Lincoln is as relevant today as he was back then:
“The money powers prey upon the nation in times of peace and conspire against it in times of adversity. It is more despotic than a monarchy, more insolent than autocracy, and more selfish than bureaucracy. It denounces as public enemies, all who question its methods or throw light upon its crimes…....corporations have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the money powers of the country will endeavor to prolong it’s reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed.”



Recommended Reading:

I'm only part way through Amped Status' Report "The Economic Elite Vs. The People of the United States of America" but so far it looks to be an excellent and complete article.

I have the "Lost Science of Money" from the AMI on order and I'll post more about that later.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Goldman Sachs & Stonewall Jackson

The Consensus on Big Banks Starts To Move

 By Simon Johnson, co-author of 13 Bankers: The Wall Street Takeover and The Next Financial Meltdown

The ideology of unfettered finance is crumbling.  Whatever you think of the merits of the Goldman case from a legal or short-term perspective, the SEC’s allegation – and Goldman’s response – have further moved the mainstream consensus away from “finance is generally good” to “big banks are frequently scary.”
Senator Ted Kaufman should get a great deal of credit for his well timed charge on this issue – as I argue in BusinessWeek/Bloomberg.  But Lloyd Blankfein also gets an inadvertent assist, quoted in the Financial Times yesterday as saying that the SEC case against Goldman would “hurt America.”
Mr. Blankfein is starting to sound – and act – a lot like Nicolas Biddle, head of the Second Bank of the United States (by far the most powerful commercial bank of the day), during his confrontation with President Andrew Jackson in the early 1830s.

.....

Read the rest here

Goldman Sachs Hearing Highlight

Goldman Sachs Links and News - April 27 , 2010 - Early Edition

 Hearing Update:  Senators blast "fat cats".
The testimony from each panel including the final testimony from Lloyd Blankfein has been very interesting.  What they did not say is more important then what they were trying not to say when they were talking.  There were those occasional slips when they all said things that I am sure made their attorneys shudder.

It is 7:15 and Lloyd Blankfein is still testifying.  His statements are all very guarded and evasisve except for his occasional slip.  Frankly I am getting tired of listening to him hem and haw and never answer a question directly.  Moreover, he appears to be anything but knowledgeable and one must wonder how he got his job.  What will be interesting will be how long he and some of the others keep their jobs.

What we are learning is that there very definitely are issues with conflicts of interest, disclosure and transparency as Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-MS) summed up.  But even more then that, ethics becomes a real issues as does absolute wrong doing with knowledge.

What also was brought out is the fact that the problems and causes of the economic crisis are not exclusive to GS.  McCaskill said at one point that Blankfein should have been joined by other bank CEO's as well.  My hope is that this investigation expands and that more charges come as a result as the entire banking system is exposed. 

The media and blogs will be humming tonight and tomorrow and for aggregaters like us their should be enough material to last weeks.  I also will be offering my comments and opinions.

TAKE-A-LOOK-Goldman Sachs faces fraud charges
Reuters
Goldman Sachs on Capitol Hill: Testimony of David Viniar
CBS News
Costs to insure Goldman Sachs debt rise-Phoenix
Reuters
Goldman Sachs Grilled in Senate Hearing Over Mortgage Business
BusinessWeek
Goldman Sachs Investors Sue Over Abacus Disclosures
BusinessWeek
Sen. McCaskill zings Goldman Sachs execs
Washington Post
Goldman Sachs' German Problem
Forbes (blog)
Goldman Sachs's Tourre to 'Categorically' Deny SEC's Claims
Bloomberg
Alwaleed Says He'll Go on Working With Goldman Sachs
BusinessWeek
Goldman Sachs's Blankfein Says Firm Didn't Bet Against Clients ...
(Bloomberg)
Goldman Sachs Bet Against Its Own Deals, Senate's Levin Says ...
(Bloomberg)
Goldman Sachs Abacus E-mails Show Hunt for 'Easiest' Asset Firm ...
(Bloomberg)
A Few Questions for Goldman Sachs
New York Times 
Goldman Turns to New Lobbying Playbook for Washington Battle
BusinessWeek 
Goldman shouldn't be judged as "evil empire"
Reuters 
Here's How Spitzer Might Handle Fabulous Goldman: Susan Antilla
BusinessWeek 
Here's How Spitzer Might Handle Fabulous Goldman: Susan Antilla
BusinessWeek 
Goldman Sachs CDO Labeled 'Shi**y Deal' by Montag
BusinessWeek






Senate Hearings on Goldman Sachs

   

...click here to go to Senate Committee on  Homeland Security and Government Affairs

Wall Street and the Financial Crisis: The Role of Investment Banks

Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations

Watch this hearing live!
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
10:00 AM
Dirksen Senate Office Building, room 106
The Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations has scheduled a hearing, "Wall Street and the Financial Crisis: The Role of Investment Banks," on Tuesday, April 27, 2010, at 10:00 a.m., in Room 106 of the Dirksen Senate Office Building. This hearing will be the fourth in a series of Subcommittee hearings examining some of the causes and consequences of the recent financial crisis. The fourth hearing will focus on the role of investment banks in the securitization of residential mortgage related products, and the development, marketing, and trading of residential mortgage related structured financial products such as collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) and credit default swaps (CDS). The hearing will also review certain investment and trading activities of investment banks that involve residential mortgage based securities and related products. A witness list will be available Thursday, April 22, 2010.
Exhibits This is a large file and may take some time to download depending on your connection speed.

Witnesses

Panel 1

  • DANIEL L. SPARKS [view testimony]
    Former Partner, Head of Mortgages Department
    The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
  • JOSHUA S. BIRNBAUM [view testimony]
    Former Managing Director, Structured Products Group Trading
    The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
  • MICHAEL J. SWENSON [view testimony]
    Managing Director, Structured Products Group Trading
    The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
  • FABRICE P. TOURRE [view testimony]
    Executive Director, Structured Products Group Trading
    The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.

Panel 2

  • DAVID A. VINIAR [view testimony]
    Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
    The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
  • CRAIG W. BRODERICK [view testimony]
    Chief Risk Officer
    The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.

Panel 3

  • LLOYD C. BLANKFEIN [view testimony]
    Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
    The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.

Goldman Worms Squirm

Live on C-SPAN 3: Goldman execs questioned about fraud.
Watch it live here

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Update @ 1:30 PM EST
So far, it's been comedy gold.

Goldman Screws the World

How Goldman Sachs Screwed Ghana
Goldman Sachs, the global financial institution, with fraud allegations levied against it has a long history of setting up its clients for a fall...and making handsome profits. This is a story of how this global investment banking and securities firm screwed Ghana In 1998, Ashanti Gold was the 3rd largest Gold Mining company in the world. The first "black" company on the London Stock Exchange, Ashanti had just purchased the Geita mine in Tanzania, positioning Ashanti to become even larger. But in May 1999, the Treasury of the United Kingdom decided to sell off 415 tons of its gold reserves. With all that gold flooding the world market, the price of gold began to decline. By August 1999, the price of gold had fallen to $252/ounce, the lowest it had been in 20 years.

Ashanti turned to its Financial Advisors - Goldman Sachs - for advice. Goldman Sachs recommeded that Ashanti purchase enormous hedge contracts - "bets" on the price of gold. Simplifying this somewhat, it was similar to when a homeowner 'locks in' a price for heating oil months in advance. Goldman recommended that Ashanti enter agreements to sell gold at a 'locked-in' price, and suggested that the price of gold would continue to fall. But Goldman was more than just Ashanti's advisors. They were also sellers of these Hedge contracts, and stood to make money simply by selling them. And they were also world-wide sellers of Gold itself.

In September 1999 (one month later), 15 European Banks with whom Goldman had professional relationships made a unanimous surprise announcement that all 15 would stop selling gold on world markets for 5 years. The announcement immediately drove up gold prices to $307/ounce, and by October 6, it had risen to $362/ounce. Ashanti was in trouble. At Goldman's advice, they had bet that gold prices would continue to drop, and had entered into contracts to sell gold at lower prices. These contracts were held by a group of 17 other world banks. Ashanti found themselves being forced to buy gold at high world prices and sell it at the low contract prices to make good on the contracts. The result? In a few weeks time, Ashanti found itself with 570 million dollars worth of losses. It had to beg the 17 banks not to force the execution of the contracts.

Who served as the negotiator for the 17 banks and Ashanti? Goldman Sachs. The same company that designed the contracts for Ashanti (making a profit in their sale). The basic bankruptcy of Ashanti drove its stock price from an all time high of $25 per share to a paltry $4.62 per share. Thousands of investors - your blogger among them - lost their investments almost overnight as Ashanti was declared insolvent. In the end (2003), Ashanti was purchased by their largest African competitor, AngloGold, a British company headquartered in South Africa, who bought them for a song. The Financial Advisors to AngloGold? You guessed it: Goldman Sachs.

The destruction of Ashanti Gold by Goldman Sachs was saturated with fraud and conflicts of interest: Goldman Sachs served as Ashanti's Financial Advisors; profitted form the contracts they designed and marketed for Ashanti; was involved in the manipulation of the gold prices on which the contracts depended; represented Ashanti's creditors when the contracts went bad; and profitted as the Financial Advisors to the company that picked up the Ashanti corpse for pennies on the dollar.