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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: US Senator Bernie Sanders |
Demanding an End to Fed Secrecy, Sanders Questions Bonuses at Goldman Sachs and Other Big Banks
WASHINGTON - July 15 - Stepping up a campaign for Federal Reserve
accountability, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) today questioned whether
some of more than $2.2 trillion in secret subsidies went to Goldman
Sachs and other bailed-out banks now planning to shower executives
with huge bonuses.
Sanders voiced his concern in a letter to Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner and during remarks at an Economic Policy Institute conference.
Goldman Sachs yesterday reported that its profits surged on second-quarter income of $3.44 billion. The turnaround came less than a year after reckless investments by Goldman and other Wall Street firms triggered a worldwide recession and drove many rivals out of business.
With the good times rolling again on Wall Street, Goldman repaid its $10 billion taxpayer bailout and now plans to dole out the biggest bonuses in its 140-year history. The investment bank reportedly plans to pay as much as $20 billion this year in bonuses and other compensation, about $700,000 per employee. Goldman is one of 10 big banks that announced plans to return bailout funds so they could evade restrictions on executive compensation and bonuses.
“The question I have is how do we know that right after Goldman and other banks pay back billions to the Treasury, the Federal Reserve doesn’t turn around and provide them with billions more with no strings attached?” Sanders asked. “The answer is that we don’t know. Ben Bernanke refuses to say.”
In a keynote speech at an Economic Policy Institute conference, Sanders argued that any firm that received a taxpayer bailout through the Troubled Asset Relief Program or the Federal Reserve should be subject to strict limits on compensation and should not be rewarding bonuses to senior executives.
The Senate in April approved 59 to 39 an amendment by Sanders calling on the Fed to disclose the names of all of the institutions that received more than $2.2 trillion in taxpayer assistance, how much each received and what they are doing with this money. The amendment was included in the final version of the Budget Resolution.
Sanders also is the chief sponsor of legislation to require the Fed to name the financial institutions that have received what could total more than $7 trillion in loans and loan guarantees. A separate Sanders bill would require the Government Accountability Office to conduct a comprehensive and independent audit of the Federal Reserve. It now has 13 cosponsors, including Sens. Russ Feingold (D-Wis.), John McCain (R-Ariz), Blance Lincoln (D-Ark.) and John Barrasso (R-Wy.). Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) has introduced an identical bill in the House. It now has 261 cosponsors, including 85 Democrats.
“Chairman Bernanke and the Federal Reserve have got to understand that this money does not belong to the Federal Reserve. It belongs to the American people,” Sanders said. “As long as the Federal Reserve is allowed to keep the information on their loans secret, we will never know the true financial condition of the banking system.”
Sanders voiced his concern in a letter to Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner and during remarks at an Economic Policy Institute conference.
Goldman Sachs yesterday reported that its profits surged on second-quarter income of $3.44 billion. The turnaround came less than a year after reckless investments by Goldman and other Wall Street firms triggered a worldwide recession and drove many rivals out of business.
With the good times rolling again on Wall Street, Goldman repaid its $10 billion taxpayer bailout and now plans to dole out the biggest bonuses in its 140-year history. The investment bank reportedly plans to pay as much as $20 billion this year in bonuses and other compensation, about $700,000 per employee. Goldman is one of 10 big banks that announced plans to return bailout funds so they could evade restrictions on executive compensation and bonuses.
“The question I have is how do we know that right after Goldman and other banks pay back billions to the Treasury, the Federal Reserve doesn’t turn around and provide them with billions more with no strings attached?” Sanders asked. “The answer is that we don’t know. Ben Bernanke refuses to say.”
In a keynote speech at an Economic Policy Institute conference, Sanders argued that any firm that received a taxpayer bailout through the Troubled Asset Relief Program or the Federal Reserve should be subject to strict limits on compensation and should not be rewarding bonuses to senior executives.
The Senate in April approved 59 to 39 an amendment by Sanders calling on the Fed to disclose the names of all of the institutions that received more than $2.2 trillion in taxpayer assistance, how much each received and what they are doing with this money. The amendment was included in the final version of the Budget Resolution.
Sanders also is the chief sponsor of legislation to require the Fed to name the financial institutions that have received what could total more than $7 trillion in loans and loan guarantees. A separate Sanders bill would require the Government Accountability Office to conduct a comprehensive and independent audit of the Federal Reserve. It now has 13 cosponsors, including Sens. Russ Feingold (D-Wis.), John McCain (R-Ariz), Blance Lincoln (D-Ark.) and John Barrasso (R-Wy.). Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) has introduced an identical bill in the House. It now has 261 cosponsors, including 85 Democrats.
“Chairman Bernanke and the Federal Reserve have got to understand that this money does not belong to the Federal Reserve. It belongs to the American people,” Sanders said. “As long as the Federal Reserve is allowed to keep the information on their loans secret, we will never know the true financial condition of the banking system.”
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6 Comments so far
Show AllMatt Taibbi's July 2 article in The Rolling Stone should be required reading, "The Great American Bubble Machine". This article threw the finacial world into a tizzy.
G.S. is embedded in the upper echelons of most American financial decision makers. Bernanke, Paulson, Bolton, Summers, Rubin, ad nauseum.
"a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money." Matt Taibbi is a poet.
It's quite simple.... you send the government one dollar, they in turn send you back three pennies. THAT is ALL the change you can count on!
BANKSTERS
In a white paper written by Themis Trading, called “Toxic Equity Trading Order Flow on Wall Street" they basically outline why volume and volatility of the stock market have jumped so much since 2007; and it’s not due to the credit crisis. They estimate that 70% of the volume in today’s markets is from high-frequency trading, which is performed by powerful and very fast electronic trading, where the computer programs respond in milliseconds.
They outline how large brokers and funds can buy and sell a stock for the same price and still make 0.5 cents. Do that a million times a day and the money adds up. Or maybe do it 8 billion times. It requires powerful computers, complicity of the exchanges (because the exchanges get paid a lot), and highly proximate computer connections. Literally, the need for speed is so important that to play this game you have to have your servers physically at the exchange. Across the river in New Jersey is too slow. Forget Texas or California. This is a game played out in microseconds at Wall Street.
The retail world doesn’t get to play. This is a game only for big boys who can afford to pay for the “arms” needed to fight this war.
But we all pay for the game, as that half cent is like a tax on transactions, money created out of thin air, not to mention the increased daily volatility, which exploits the market.
Think it doesn’t affect you? That “tax” is paid by mutual funds, your pension fund, every large institution and last but not least by the in-de-flation we experience.
Go Bernie! I love that guy.
But good luck getting any real answers from the bankster ring leaders.
Senator Sanders,
You are sending your letter to the wrong people (they are complicit criminals in this massive Ponzi scheme). Not that it will get much more attention, but it would be better to send the letter to the DOJ. The chance of anything happening is between 0-1%, but it is better than the sure circular file into the trash can by Geithner and Bernanke.
Those who read my postings in CD during 2008 remember that I kept saying that the most meaningful measure of candidate Obama's commitment to "change" would be how long it took him to fire Ben Bernanke after January 20, 2009.
Not only is Bernanke still employed, Obama hired Tim G. to run Treasury, thereby assuring that the only "change" we will see is ever greater wealth for the Wall Street Banks and Insurance Companies, at our expense.