Bill Black: Why the World Economic Forum and Goldman Sachs are Capitalism’s Worst Enemies
Bill Black discusses the basis for giving the “Private Eye” award to Goldman at the counter World Economic Forum gathering at Davos .
Read more...Bill Black discusses the basis for giving the “Private Eye” award to Goldman at the counter World Economic Forum gathering at Davos .
Read more...By Ian Fraser, a financial journalist who blogs at his web site and at qfinance. .
This is the first interview that Chicago lawyer Anton Valukas has given since the publication of his 2,292 page report into the bankrutpcy of Lehman Brothers on March 11th, 2010. At that time, Valukas found strong evidence of financial and accounting fraud designed to deceive investors at the defunct New York-based investment bank. Valukas is surprised, especially given Lehman Brothers’ rampant abuse of Repo 105 to disguise its precarious financial position in the quarters ahead of its September 2008 collapse, that the former Lehman Brothers’ chief executive Dick Fuld or any other Lehman Brothers’ director has been charged with fraud or related offences.
Read more...I am delighted to be proven to be wrong on the premise of the last post, which is that lying pays and it has become so routine that an op-ed writer for a liberal newspaper can point that out without being concerned about the broader ramifications. But this is almost certain to fall into “the exception that proves the rule” category.
Lanny Breuer, former Covington & Burling partner and more recently head of the criminal division at the Department of Justice, resigned abruptly today.
Read more...After extensive debriefing of Bank of America whistleblowers, we found overwhelming evidence that the bank engaged in certain abuses frequently, in some cases pervasively, in its servicing of delinquent mortgages. This is the first in a series of posts discussing our findings and providing support for these charges.
Read more...As we anticipated, the Republicans have climbed down on making the debt ceiling the key battle line in their plan to impose spending cuts. Good Democrats applauded that move as a sign that Obama had displayed toughness and prevailed.
It’s not quite that simple.
Read more...Reader Mrs. G. took note of how Khuzami’s effort to defend his record in the National Law Journal backfired.
Read more...The Wall Street Journal gives a teaser, in the form of excerpts from a speech to be made later today, on new rules the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will be implementing to regulate how servicers treat homeowners who become severely delinquent on their mortgages.
Read more...When I took the introductory fine arts course in college (which actually was a tough course), one of the ideas that stuck with me was devolution.
Read more...By Marcy Wheeler. Cross posted from emptywheel
Yesterday, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency issued two orders to JP Morgan Chase, one related to its London Fail Whale, the other related to failures in its Bank Secrecy Act/Anti-Money Laundering compliance.
Read more...No wonder the Fed and the OCC snubbed a request by Darryl Issa and Elijah Cummings to review the foreclosure fraud settlement before it was finalized early last week. What had leaked out while the Potemkin borrower reviews were underway showed them to be a sham, as we detailed at length in an earlier post. But even so, what actually took place was even worse than hardened cynics had imagined.
Read more...Reviewing the press coverage of the HBOS fraud charges, and asking some questions.
Read more...Real News Network has run an occasional series based on an interview with Peter Kuznick on what he calls “untold history,” which are important junctures in American history that are airbrushed out of the mainstream narrative. Here, Paul Jay and Kuznick continue their discussion of Roosevelt’s wildly popular vice president Henry Wallace and how he was shoved aside in favor of Harry Truman.
Read more...One of the popular conservative memes is to fulminate that lots of Americans have been living “rent free” in homes slotted for foreclosure, taking advantage of the fact that court dockets are crowded. An important Reuters piece documents the flip side of this picture: what happens when the servicer starts foreclosure but keeps the property in limbo-land, and the homeowner has decamped, on the mistaken assumption that foreclosure was imminent? The Reuters tag phrase for this syndrome, “zombie title” doesn’t begin to do justice to the horrorshow that borrowers experience.
Read more...The Wall Street Journal has an exclusive story based on a whistleblower leak, apparently with supporting transaction records.
Read more...Never underestimate the greed of a billionaire. But I have to say separately that I will thoroughly enjoy the pigfight between former AIG chief Hank Greenberg’s C.V. Starr (now the biggest shareholder in AIG) versus the Federal government over the rescue of AIG. Any cost and embarrassment that the Administration suffers will be the direct result of the Bush-Obama policies of being concerned only about saving financial players rather than meting out any punishments, and for being incompetent negotiators.
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