Billionaire Nabbed In Largest Hedge Insider Scheme

In the news (:http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=asliefsvW5Zc)

“Oct. 16 (Bloomberg) — Raj Rajaratnam, the billionaire founder of Galleon Group, and ex-directors at a Bear Stearns Cos. hedge fund were among six people charged in a $20 million insider trading scheme federal prosecutors called the biggest ever involving hedge funds.

Also accused were Rajiv Goel, who worked at Intel Capital as a director in strategic investments, Anil Kumar, who worked as a director at McKinsey & Co., and IBM Corp. executive Robert Moffat. The former officials at Bear Stearns Asset Management are Danielle Chiesi and Mark Kurland, who were affiliated with the firm’s New Castle Partners, which managed about $1 billion.

“The defendants operated in a world of, you scratch my back, I’ll scratch your back,” U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara in Manhattan said at a press conference today. “Greed, sometimes, is not good.”

My Comment

The biggest hedge scam – there you go. Anything Westerners can do, Easterners can do better. We’re not going to settle for any penny-ante crime anymore.  Now you know how at least one South Asian billionaire got rich so fast. Nothing like having an edge…

What’s interesting is that this is the first time that the Fed’s used wire-tapping to target insider trading on Wall Street. Until now that tool has been the reserve of organized crime and drug cases.

Fraud On the Run: Goldman Cop On SEC Beat (ROTFLOL)

In the news, to be filed under – What parallel universe does New York live in?:

“Oct. 16 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission named Adam Storch, a 29-year-old from Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s business intelligence unit, as the enforcement division’s first chief operating officer.

Storch, who joined the SEC Oct. 13, was named to the newly created post of managing executive in the enforcement unit, charged with making the division more efficient, the SEC said today in a statement. At New York-based Goldman Sachs, he had worked since 2004 in a unit at that reviewed contracts and transactions for signs of fraud.”

My Comment:

Personally, I’ve come to nurse a kind of contemptuous respect for, an appalled amusement at Goldman Sachs. It’s the contrarian in me.

In-your-face-corrupt, shameless, self-promoting, out-of-touch, sanctimonious, and bottomlessly greedy –  It’s a firm made for our times…

If Goldman Sachs didn’t exist, we’d have to invent it.

Mid-East, Europe, Africa Securitizations Will Deteriorate More, Says Moody’s

From the Global Arab Network:

“The performance of many asset classes in the Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) securitisation sector will continue to deteriorate throughout the rest of the year and into 2011, says Moody’s Investors Service in a new Special Report. The report examines the prospects of recovery for international securitisation in several asset classes and geographies: EMEA Auto ABS, UK Credit Card ABS, UK Non-Conforming RMBS, Spanish ABS and RMBS, Asia Pacific ABS and Global Derivatives. The rating agency expects performance volatility and uncertainty to decline in the coming months, although it cautions that a drop is predicated on achieving some level of economic moderation if not slight improvement, combined with the seasoning of securitised loan portfolios.

Moody’s says that although GDP growth is expected to turn positive in many countries in EMEA later this year or in early 2010, employment and home prices will continue to deteriorate well into 2010, which will lead to securitised loan losses remaining at elevated levels throughout 2011 and 2012.”

Taibbi’s Penson Video..(Correction)

Correction:
(10/12/09, Monday)

I should have said “allegedly faked” video. I stand corrected. No weasel words, Mr. Byrne (see Byrne’s comment below).

I often post stories on which I have no comment or opinion one way or other, because I haven’t followed them, but think readers might like to. In my last several posts, in fact, I defended Deepcapture’s, Taibbi’s, and Zerohedge’s work, in spite of occasional alleged or real errors.

But the reason I linked to Wenzel’s blog is because Wenzel’s post is pretty funnily written, and I don’t follow Taibbi, except occasionally. I didn’t like his attacks on David Griffin, where he exposed himself as somewhat ignorant. Taibbi also doesn’t attribute people (apparently others have that complaint too). But arrogance and ignorance in one area don’t equate to being incorrect in another.

I’ll add a separate post with the rather long back and forth between Taibbi and his various critics and defenders. I went by Penson’s dismissal of the video, but I’ve since noted that Penson has some history that is troubling and tends to makes its dismissal less credible.

So what else might be construed as “weasel-worded” in my recent blogging?

Perhaps my rather neutral approach to the Byrne vs. Weiss feud, still going strong. Well, I’m neutral about it – who stalked whom, etc. etc. – because I don’t know the ins and outs of it. I had my own experience of being harassed, and can barely keep up with the details of that, let alone someone else’s stalking experience.

I also don’t know which of the two abuses of the market – “stock pumping and money laundering” (criticized by the Wall Street “captured” media) or “naked-shorting” (criticized by Byrne, Davidson “ “Bob O’Brien,” and many others, including Taibbi) – is the more momentous.

As a libertarian, I think naked-shorting is, but that’s only my opinion. Which is why I’ve been neutral. My sense is both abuses are real and extensive.

Likewise, I really don’t know enough about what the SEC’s investigation of Overstock is about. Could it be punitive?

Quite likely, given all we know about the SEC. But does that mean everything else the SEC does is incorrect? Unlikely.

Does that mean what Byrne wrote about “naked short selling” is incorrect? No.

Final point. I tend not to like shrill personal attacks.

That’s a deferral to civility and complexity, not weasel-wordedness.

ORIGINAL POST:

On Matt Taibbi getting suckered by a “faked” (quotes added for now) naked shorting video:

“Carney is a sharp guy, and he has Taibbi nailed on this one, but, I repeat, naked short selling, like a lot of Wall Street, is a very complex game. Carney in some of his other posts suggests there is nothing wrong with naked short-selling, he is off on that one. Some of it can be justified as simple market maker operations, but some of it is major league abuse by very clever insiders, which is the point Taibbi is taking, but doesn’t have the knowledge to back up properly.

Anyway, once you sit down an analyze the entire naked short selling thing, you realize that the bad naked short selling would go away if the SEC would stop issuing regulations that protect the bad guys. Basic common sense and commercial law would put an end to the bad naked short selling, real fast.

Bad naked short selling exists because there is a power source to manipulate, in this case the SEC, and the bad guys are running circles around the SEC.

What you want to understand naked short sales for yourself? Well pull up a chair, give yourself five hours and read this. It’s a great first step.

But, I tell you, it will be much more fun watching Taibbi attempt to pull the bayonet out of his brain.”

More by Robert Wenzel, at Economic Policy Journal.

Gulf Arabs to Move Out of Petro-Dollar (Updated)

Update:

I’m adding my comment at the top here after watching this puzzling day. Gold shot up to new highs over $1040 (and not just in the US but elsewhere). Is this the bull break-out the bugs have been waiting for? Maybe. Central bankers and officials from the Gulf states came out to pooh-pooh the story, but it couldn’t be put back in the box.

My puzzlement is this: If gold is soaring because of this “revelation” of the dollar’s death – then why did the dollar itself sink only modestly (at least, as I write).

I note also that the stock market recovered some of its ground. That might have something to do with the Australian Reserve Bank announcing a tighter policy, quite unexpectedly, and in apparent belief that the recovery is real, never mind Joseph Stiglitz, George Soros, Marc Faber, Jim Rogers, and other no-longer-strange bedfellows who think the opposite.

V-shaped, U-shaped, Square-root shaped, or corkscrewed, the recovery isn’t your grandfather’s recovery, that’s for sure. And someone is trying to make a silk purse out of this sow’s ear. That skepticism leads me to wonder whether this very convenient rumor, which coincides with the IMF meeting in Istanbul, might be a certain kind of saber rattling in anticipation of negotiations – except that these very public meetings are never where anything substantial takes place any way. (So says Simon Johnson in a recent blog post). But the IMF is selling gold, we know, and we know also that it wants to make sure it doesn’t hit the markets too hard when it does. Could this little upswing be helpful toward that end? Probably. Could this rumor – widely denounced as insubstantial – have something to do with that? Perhaps.

 

In the news, the Independent’s Robert Fisk reports on the coming fall of the petro-dollar:

“In a graphic illustration of the new world order, Arab states have launched secret moves with China, Russia and France to stop using the US currency for oil trading

In the most profound financial change in recent Middle East history, Gulf Arabs are planning – along with China, Russia, Japan and France – to end dollar dealings for oil, moving instead to a basket of currencies including the Japanese yen and Chinese yuan, the euro, gold and a new, unified currency planned for nations in the Gulf Co-operation Council, including Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi, Kuwait and Qatar.

Secret meetings have already been held by finance ministers and central bank governors in Russia, China, Japan and Brazil to work on the scheme, which will mean that oil will no longer be priced in dollars.

The plans, confirmed to The Independent by both Gulf Arab and Chinese banking sources in Hong Kong, may help to explain the sudden rise in gold prices, but it also augurs an extraordinary transition from dollar markets within nine years.”

China Saved Brazilian Economy, Says Brazilian Economist

From the Brunei Times:

“In Latin America, IMF economists said the crisis is affecting countries differently depending on whether, like Mexico, they are more closely tied to the US or, like Brazil, they have more links with China.

If it was not for China we wouldn’t have seen positive growth in the second quarter in Brazil,” Ilan Goldfajn, chief economist at Brazilian bank Itau Unibanco, said at an IMF-organised conference in Istanbul. He said the world would now start to “rebalance towards Asia”.

What A Billionaire Can Buy

For those who think that nationalism is the threat, rather than transnationalism, consider this:

“Bill Gates, America’s richest man with a net worth of $50 billion, has a personal balance sheet larger than the gross domestic product (GDP) of 140 countries, including Costa Rica, El Salvador, Bolivia and Uruguay. The Microsoft ( MSFT – news – people ) visionary’s nest egg is just short of the GDP of Tanzania and Burma.”

More here at Forbes.

Prechter – Debt Is the Problem, Not Paper Printing

Goldseek radio has an interview with Robert Prechter here.

Prechter’s 2002 book, “Conquer the Crash,” predicted the current economic collapse and this is an interesting and wide-ranging interview. Prechter is a renowned Elliot Wave theorist and a long-time prophet of depression.

Summing up his most important points:

*We have been in a developing deflation since 2002

*Debt is the problem, not paper-printing.

*Gold will hold value and do well, but it won’t go to the moon

*Cash is a good place to be

*The market will go down for a replay of 2008, in spades

Faber: Indian Central Bank One of the Best in the World

Marc Faber on CNBC:

“Where does India fit in your preferred or not preferred list right now of markets?

A: I think the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has one of the best monetary policies in the world because they supervise the financial sector very closely. They have maintained relatively tight monetary policies and also they pay attention not only to core inflation which is not representative of the cost of living increase and is not representative of inflation in the system but the RBI also pays attention to rising and falling asset prices. So I have to give them credit for being one of the best Central Banks in the world.

My Comment:

Faber goes on to argue for a pull-back in markets everywhere (maybe immediately, maybe after a further 10% rise), for a snap-back of the dollar in the near term (by around 10%), and for substantial further decline in the market, and over the next 2-3 years, in the dollar.

I like the point he makes in the quote that inflation isn’t just “core” inflation – the rise in prices in the stuff on the grocery shelves – but should also include asset price inflation. Because then you’d have a better judgment of what was going on in the markets.

My own take is that the media is misjudging some of the numbers coming from the emerging markets. The Chinese figures are likely to be highly over-optimistic and inflated, maybe by as much as 50% or more. The Indian market is also not that transparent….