Goldman Sacked?
Courtesy of George Washington
The Goldman fraud indictment is obviously huge news.
The Connecticut Attorney general wants to file criminal charges:
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And New York might not be far behind.
ProPublica points out that other major banks did the same thing as Goldman.
Shahien Nasiripour writes:
Securities fraud charges against Goldman Sachs are just the beginning as federal regulators and investigators comb through the wreckage of a fraud-induced recession, caused by a pervasive and systemic culture of deceit at Wall Street’s biggest firms, say Wall Street analysts.
Are the prosecutions finally starting? Is the dam finally breaking? Has Goldman really been sacked?
Maybe.
But Tyler Durden thinks it’s all bread and circuses.
And as Mish points out (edited slightly for readability):
Here is a list of some of the things the SEC has ignored.
Geithner’s Illegal Money-Laundering Scheme Exposed; Harry Markopolos Says “Don’t Trust Your Government”
77 Fraud, Money Laundering, Insider Trading, and Tax Evasion Investigations Underway Regarding TARP
Secret Deals Involving No One; AIG Coverup Conspiracy Unravels
Questions Geithner Cannot Escape
Time To Indict Geithner For Securities Fraud
Bernanke Guilty of Coercion and Market Manipulation
Paulson Admits Coercion; Where are the Indictments?
Bernanke Suffers From Selective Memory Loss; Paulson Calls Bank of America "Turd in the Punchbowl"
Let the Criminal Indictments Begin: Paulson, Bernanke, Lewis
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We need a complete ethics overhaul but we will not see it until people are thrown into prison and corporations have to choose which business they want to be in as opposed to the current state of affairs where anything for a profit is acceptable.
- Firms give advice based on how much profit the firms will make on it
- Firms trade their own books to the detriment of clients
- Firms make upgrades and downgrades after they take positions themselves
- Firms front-run trades
- Firms engage in dark pools
- Firms deemed too big to fail take advantage by upping leverage
- Firms like Goldman Sachs (which is nothing more than a giant hedge fund with no ethics) have access to Fed funds at low interest rates to do whatever the hell they please
Is someone finally standing up to the vampire squids of the world?
Or is this yet another p.r. stunt, where deals will be cut, a few low-level patsies will be convicted, and business as usual will continue?
Only time will tell …