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The Fall Of Goldman Sachs?
The last 72 hours have left Goldman Sachs with a shattered reputation among the people who matter to them, their customers and the politicians they have courted. The SEC’s civil fraud suit over one of their synthetic CDO deals is bad enough, but it’s just getting worse and worse for them.
Goldman Sachs, one of the most prestigious banks in the world, has issued a detailed rebuttal of the SEC's accusation of fraud, but many assume more investigations will follow. First of all, the SEC is not alone in investigating the giant
financial firm. Gordon Brown, fighting for his political life in
Britain, savaged Goldman’s “moral bankruptcy” in an interview and called for an immediate investigation with the UK Financial Services Authority. Germany’s Angela Merkel joined him,
saying that her nation would evaluate “legal steps.” The major clients
in the derivative deal, the ones who bought long while Goldman never
disclosed their hedge fund partner Paulson and Co. was buying short,
included the Royal Bank of Scotland and the German bank IKB.
Obviously, politicians here in America are pushing each other out of the way to find a microphone where they can denounce Goldman Sachs. You couldn’t find a speech at the California Democratic Party convention which didn’t mention them by name. The DNC bought the Google ad for “Goldman Sachs SEC,” and Democrats are clearly wanting to use the case as a springboard for financial reform.
And beyond the politics there are the facts of the case. Securities fraud is pretty clear on the point that disclosure to investors must be put in writing. “Nobody reads those statements” is no excuse. The Abacus (name of the deal) pitchbook just never mentions Paulson’s role in devising the mortgage-backed securities that made up the deal. And while Goldman wants to claim that this was merely one deal and they were not trying to mislead their investors, today’s NY Times just obliterates that argument:
Mr. Tourre was the only person named in the S.E.C. suit. But according to interviews with eight former Goldman employees, senior bank executives played a pivotal role in overseeing the mortgage unit just as the housing market began to go south. These people spoke on the condition that they not be named so as not to jeopardize business relationships or to anger executives at Goldman, viewed as the most powerful bank on Wall Street.
According to these people, executives up to and including Lloyd C. Blankfein, the chairman and chief executive, took an active role in overseeing the mortgage unit as the tremors in the housing market began to reverberate through the nation’s economy. It was Goldman’s top leadership, these people say, that finally ended the dispute on the mortgage desk by siding with those who, like Mr. Tourre and Mr. Egol, believed home prices would decline [...]
With Mr. Paulson’s help, Goldman created an Abacus investment that, the S.E.C. now says, was devised to fall apart. By betting against that Abacus investment, Mr. Paulson reaped $1 billion in profit, according to the S.E.C. Mr. Paulson was not named in the S.E.C. complaint.
Goldman’s top ranks changed its stance on housing in December 2006. In a meeting in a windowless conference room on the executive floor, Mr. Viniar, the chief financial officer, and Mr. Cohn, the president, gathered about 10 executives for a briefing. Mr. Sparks, the head of the mortgage unit, walked them through the numbers. The group was unanimous: Goldman had to reduce its exposure to the increasingly troubled mortgage market.
All the literature provided to investors said basically the opposite, that the securities put in the CDO (which is “synthetic” because the holders of the CDO don’t own the product in question) were designed for long-term advances. With Goldman’s top executives apparently aware of what they were doing in the housing market, they face serious criminal and civil penalties, says Simon Johnson (he also thinks John Paulson should call a lawyer).
And Goldman’s in serious, class-action lawsuit kind of trouble if this is true:
Talk about Goldman not disclosing material information. I’m not talking about Abacus here, I’m talking about the fact that Goldman knew as far back as last September that the SEC was on the warpath with respect to Abacus, and gave no hint to shareholders that there might be legal trouble afoot.
The WSJ has got its hands on — but, unforgivably, has not posted online — a letter that Goldman Sachs sent to the SEC in September, claiming that the Paulson’s involvement in Abacus was not material … In fact, the SEC probe dates back all the way to August 2008.
Anyone who did business with Goldman between August 2008 and last week has reason to sue.
And what’s more, this one deal is most certainly the beginning and not the end. The newly vigorous SEC is actively investigating other mortgage deals. Indeed, what they’re pinning on Goldman in the Abacus deals could just as easily be subscribed to the banks running the Magnetar deal, where that hedge fund created CDOs on mortgage backed securities they believed would fail.
Brad DeLong has a pretty helpful POV of the case as well. My gut feel is that this has the potential to take down the firm, and they’re going to have to call in every chit they have around the world to avoid that.
- Posted in

40 Comments so far
Show AllPerhaps they'll shred GS, but they won't get the money back, and some bad-hat insiders will then come along, buy the pieces for pennies, and reassemble it as a player again. Guaranteed.
It's a pump. Whether on the upstroke or the downstroke, government pumps money out of our pockets and into those of the wealthy elites.
It's hard to imagine how justice could be served, mairead. The only thing that comes close is RICO, and then distributing everything that is confiscated from the banksters directly to all those who were injured. Very long list. It would be pennies on the dollar, but something. Don't think it will happen.
Any other ideas for justice? Might as well dream.
Joe
well, this is the place for dreamers Joe...
This SEC action takes the wind out of the "nobody could have seen it coming" sails, thereby presenting an opportunity for real reform.
Unless the Dems immediately dump the token "reform" bill they are pushing and make restoration of New Deal financial industry regulations their top priority, the Goldman Sachs charges will just be another in the series of missed opportunities (to implement real reform) that we have witnessed since the Sept. 2008 meltdown, and the Goldman Sachs crooks and anybody else who gets indicted will simply morph into another corporation of financial mass destruction.
Glass-Steagal was revoked by Bill Clinton at the behest of Tim Giethner (and others).
Tim is now Treasury Secretary.
Who better to cover up the crime than the criminal?...
Hurrah for the SEC. Someone in the SEC finally decided to do his job. Maybe it will catch on, and some journalists might start doing their jobs. And some judges might start doing their jobs. And even, maybe, some politicians might start doing their jobs. Job creation, getting America back to work, is anchored on people who have responsible jobs actually doing them.
sierra7
I know we "may" live in different times (regarding the SEC) but, remember what happened to Spitzer?????
Yes, Obama and Rahm have a fiduciary responsibility to protect the interests of the corporation that contributed more money to the 2008 Dem campaign than any other...Goldman Sachs.
There was an article posted briefly yesterday on CD and then pulled after I had commented on it. In any case the basic premise of the article was that "We were just NOW learning that the Financial crisis was part of a CON and not the result of poor business decisions".
I commented that this was absolute rubbish and that I had posted over a year ago that it was a Con and had given the links to all the articles written by people about the con and nature of the criminal activity.
My basic point was that the Government HAD TO HAVE KNOWN this yet still went ahead with the massive bailout. This while they were lying to the public as to its nature.
The sudden outrage is fabricated. It is intended for public consumption. The Politicians have already looted the treasury on the behalf of those firms. Those firms have stashed their illicit gains and now will throw a few people under the bus to give the illusion that justice being served.
Even if Goldman Sachs vanishes tomorrow, the ones left with the losses will not be the ones who profited the most.
Exactly. Regardless of the outcome at this point, the daylight robbery of the US treasury by private corporations is a fait accompli. Our bought and paid for "representatives" did everything they could to make sure the cash got to the corps fast and with little oversight.
As for justice, perhaps Lloyd Blankfein and his ilk should be sentenced to live in one of the increasing number of tent cities popping up around our growing facist state. I am sure he would be well taken care of.
God I hate Fascism.....
The truth is, the robbery of the federal treasury was institutionalized with the creation of the Federal Reserve system, which essentially privatized the nation's currency. Such robbery will therefore continue until the Fed is abolished. The central bankers don't depend on any one bank for their booty, they depend on the privatized nature of the monetary/banking system itself; a system of privatized debt-based currency subject to interest.
Knowing very little about the USA Financial and monetary control I yet must say this sounds exactly correct. Common sense in the light of what is up. This fungus now being investigated is thoroughly embedded in the Western world.
several times I had mentioned articles - very thoroughly written and historical in coverage , right down to the "who's who" and "what's what" of events during the course of history, by Henry CK Liu of Asiatimesonline (he also has a website to google) -- that detail how the USA
not JUST certain institutions - is really , variously,
"the worlds Main Currency Manipulator"
"Protectionist Nation Pretending to be Free Market".....etc
below are a few paragraphs of very exhaustive essays on how it is NOT JUST about a few "big banks" - but INSTITUTIONALLY the ENTIRE USA is really, from FED down - IS exactly what the titles above by the writer - show it to be:
=================
The UNITED STATES AS THE WORLD'S LEADING CURRENCY MANIPULATOR
By
Henry C.K. Liu
This article appeared in AToL on February 14, 2007
For decades, the US, a self-professed evangelist for free trade, has been paranoid about other nations manipulating the exchange value of their currencies for trade advantage with counterproductive distortions in global free trade. Such apprehension has even been institutionalized into law.
Section 3004 of Public Law 100-418 (22 U.S.C. 5304) requires, inter alia, the Secretary of the Treasury to analyze twice-yearly the exchange rate policies of foreign countries, in consultation with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and to consider whether countries manipulate the rate of exchange between their currency and the dollar for purposes of preventing effective balance of payments adjustment or gaining unfair competitive advantage in international trade. Section 3004 further requires that if the Secretary considers such manipulation occurring in countries, such as Japan and China, that (1) have material global current account surpluses; and (2) have significant bilateral trade surpluses with the US, the Secretary of the Treasury shall take action to initiate negotiations with such foreign countries on an expedited basis, in the IMF or bilaterally, for the purpose of ensuring that such countries regularly and promptly adjust the rate of exchange between their currencies and the dollar to permit effective balance of payment adjustments and to eliminate any unfair advantage.
Section 3005 (22 U.S.C. 5305) requires, inter alia, the Secretary of the Treasury to provide each six months a report on international economic policy, including exchange rate policy. The reports are to contain the results of negotiations conducted pursuant to Section 3004. Each of these reports bears the title, Report to Congress on International Economic and Exchange Rate Policies.
Unfortunately, the underlying implication of the law assumes erroneously that current account surpluses can be by themselves evidence of currency manipulation by the surplus countries. In fact, as trade imbalances are the structural effects of fundamentals in the terms of trade, attempts to correct them with exchange rate adjustments are by definition currency manipulation, for they try to use exchange rates to mask dysfunctional terms of trade as functional.
Exchange rate policies cannot be substitutes for structural economic adjustments necessary for mutually beneficial trade between two economies. Nor can exchange rate policies be substitutes for sound domestic monetary or economic policy. When two economies of uneven stages of development trade, a trade surplus in favor of the less-developed economy is natural and just, until the less-developed economy catches up with the more-developed one, otherwise it would be imperialistic exploitation, not trade.
A Protectionist Nation in Free Trade Clothing
That the US, by its unilateral trade policies, has really been a nation of protectionists in free trader clothing is again highlighted by the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affair hearing on January 31, 2007, headed by its new chairman Senator Christopher J. Dodd (Democrat- Connecticut) whose party won control of the Congress in the 2006 mid-term elections. The hearing was on the Treasury Department’s Report to Congress on International Economic and Exchange Rate Policy and the US-China Strategic Economic Dialogue. Hank Paulson, the 74th Treasury Secretary of the nation and the newly installed current Secretary in the Bush administration, was the lead witness.
It would appear as if Goldman Sachs might well become Obama's Enron...and all indications are there history will repeat itself: the politicians who gained from their association with the tainted company "manage" to walk away clean.
I believe to this day that Kenny-boy is still alive and living the good life on some resort.
I agree. A local wino from A$pen got wheeled into the coroner'$, tagged and bagged.
Ken hopped a jet for Uruguay.
Big time execs have clubs where they are kept in shape, trips to medical facilities to have pictures of their hearts taken before golf, eat well, etc.
The autopsy claimed massive artery blockage and plaque. Not likely.
Some poor wino paid the price.
Fall of Goldman Sachs? Yeahhhh!!!!!!!!1
I'm sorry but I can't help envisioning a multimillion aire whose money just went bye bye, our waiting tables or cleaning offices. Or maybe they'd go to the farm and start growing organic, hands in the earth, ya know a real transformation.
mmmmm, nah, gues that was a pipe dream. they probably have money stashed in all kinds of places.
Ironic how this civil suit comes at precisely the same time as the financial "reform" legislation is front and center.
If I was a skeptic I might be inclined to believe that it is simply part of a "getting tough" on Wall Street propaganda push.
The coincidence is glaring.
Let us hope that the "vampire squid from hell" will finally have its blood-sucking tubers ripped off of our financial veins - and that we don't bleed to death in the process.
Maybe we should just print a few more dollars...
When people like Blankfein go to prison for a substantial period of time, preferably to prisons like Leavenworth or Atlanta, and have their assets seized so they are left absolutely penniless; when Goldman Saxophone goes out of business, that will be the time to celebrate.
Yawn ...
"Honey, is this election year?"
"Yes, Poochie, it's only six months away."
Vote for anybody with and R or D after their name on the ballot and you contribute to the problem and against any possible solution.
Every time we vote for the lesser of two evils, both evils become more evil.
Ray is correct.
"The modern banking system manufacturing money out of nothing, the process is perhaps the most astounding piece of sleight-of-hand that was ever invented. Banking was conceived in sin,...If you want to continue to be slaves to the bankers and pay the cost of your own slavery, than let the bankers continue to create money and control credit." (Sir Josiah Stamp president of the Bank Of England,in the 1920's.) Nothing has changed in nearly a century.
I wouldn't be surprised if Goldman shorted their own stock just before news of the civil suit came out.
COD--Collateralized Debt Obligation
For a complete explanation of this go to:
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/s/syntheticcdo.asp
COD--Collateralized Debt Obligation
For a complete explanation of this go to:
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/s/syntheticcdo.asp
The top officers at Goldman and its allies ought to spend the remainder of their days behind bars and their wealth distributed to those made homeless or destitute by their acts. Goldman and the companies involved with it must be fined many Billions then smashed with a hammer into hundreds of shards. Remember, the people in charge of Goldman and its allies caused many people to die and even take other's lives in the process, which in the eyes of those dispossessd amounts to terrorism.
WERE Goldman Sachs to "fall" -- it is really only the TIP of the iceberg or , rather, just another of the Army of ZOMBIE Capitalists running around the world, but mainly spawned in the USA.
the earth would have to be rid of the Vampiric species to ensure that real sanity can be brought around.
in a family of Vampires of the Capitalist Class - Goldman Sachs is just like one COVEN...
they all really should be hunted down and exposed to the Sun. and NEITHER are their "investor" compadres really that "innocent" - for they also , as a part of the whole spectrum of Vampirism, are also enablers...regardless of what their own personal qualities are.
sorry to say - but that is the truth.
Colourfully put but true. The investor compadres must be hunted down and eliminated (I omit the inverted commas). They have made the sanctimonious, superior West into a criminal culture (yet again if we look at world history as a dispassionate look at heroes such as Queen Victoria will show). It has been clear all along that the 'Free Market' this class refers to in justification for their actions is in truth Privateering or Free Booting. I am certain that the matter of wars and killing, Israel, Iraq, Afghanistan and Climate Change Denialism and the profiteering associated with CO2 credits can be made to cease or effectively resolved when that happens.
We must not forget, however, that these people would rather lose everything than abide by others having what they regard as rightfully theirs. This is what should be called the Nuclear Option in Economics and they use it freely. They would rather anyone or even the world was laid waste than share.
It is an attitude they have borrowed from Game Theory and applied to life and death and never to games which they do not see as the height of cultural sophistication but for sissies. They are insane and will always be with us, which is why, imperfect as they are, we have the state and laws.
GS is just the tip of the ice berg - - get them, then get their compadres. In the meantime, put pressure on the Repuglicans in the Senate to pass the economic reform bill (for all of its inadequacies) and get soem regulation back into investment banking. This deregulation has been taking place gradually over the past forty years, but it really got extreme when Phil Gramm sneaked that last little amendment into a financing bill just before he retired from the Senate.Hope you're satisfied, "you rascal, you"! The only trouble is, Phil, you're far more dangerous than a "rascal".
"Over the summer, Goldman suffered an embarrassment on that score when one of its employees, a Russian named Sergey Aleynikov, allegedly stole the bank's computerized trading code. In a court proceeding after Aleynikov's arrest, Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph Facciponti reported that "the bank has raised the possibility that there is a danger that somebody who knew how to use this program could use it to manipulate markets in unfair ways." - Matt Taibbi
Oh, hell, you don't think that Lloyd Fauntleroy would manipulate markets in unfair ways - do you?
Goldman Sachs--buddies of Obama.
Go belly up please-- and make it quick!
goldman sucks......................
Perhaps after the SEC is done making their case against Goldman Sucks in this civil case, there will be sufficient evidence for a criminal warrant or two or three or four. We can only hope. If so, I recommend the reopening of Alcatraz Island for the extended stays of these Wall St. criminals. Should they try to escape, they can swim the cold waters of the San Francisco Bay with their larger cousins the Great Whites. Bon appetit little fishies!
Can you say: Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act
Grappa
Boycot Arizona!
Those who would take over the earth
And shape it to their will
Never, I notice, succeed.
The earth is like a vessel so sacred
That at the mere approach of the profane
It is marred
And when they reach out their fingers it is gone.
For a time in the world some force themselves ahead
And some are left behind,
For a time in the world some make a great noise
And some are held silent,
For a time in the world some are puffed fat
And some are kept hungry,
For a time in the world some push aboard
And some are tipped out:
At no time in the world will a man who is sane
Over-reach himself,
Over-spend himself,
Over-rate himself.
LaoTzu #29 600 BC
Wishful thinking? Could not happen soon enough.