Category Archives: Credit markets

Magnetar, Goldman Press Flurry Still Misses the Biggest Point of All

By Andrew Dittmer, a mathematician with hedge fund experience, and Richard Smith, a UK based capital markets IT consultant Readers of this blog are by now familiar with the incredible story of how a single hedge fund (Magnetar) managed to play a shockingly extensive role in inflating the housing bubble in 2006-2007. The story was […]

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SEC/CDO Litigation: Why Aren’t the Collateral Managers Being Sued Too?

By Tom Adams, an attorney and former monoline executive, and Yves Smith One issue that continues to puzzle us, in looking at the sudden furor about seemingly duplicitous dealings by investment banks in the real estate related CDO business, is that the focus thus far has been primarily on the investment banks that packaged and […]

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Who is Next in the SEC’s Crosshairs? Some Possible (and Heretofore Overlooked) Suspects

By Yves Smith and Tom Adams, an attorney and former monoline executive Both the traditional media and the blogosphere have taken an almost obsessive interest in the suit the SEC filed against Goldman last week with regard to one of its synthetic real estate related CDOs, Abacus 2007 AC1. Goldman’s shares and the stock market […]

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Guest Post: How Should Traders and Investors Weight the Goldman Sachs Fraud Case for their Investment and Trading Decisions?

By John Bougearel, author of Riding the Storm Out and Director of Financial and Equity Research for Structural Logic “The whole intellectual edifice collapsed.” ~ Alan Greenspan “Blaming individuals [or a few institutions] is no substitute for acknowledging the failure of the whole system.” ~ ` BOE Mervyn King ~ Quotes excerpted from Yves Smith’s […]

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Rabobank: Merrill Committed Similar Fraud to Goldman With a Magnetar-Sponsored CDO

The Wall Street Journal reports that Dutch bank Rabobank has filed a suit alleging that Merrill Lynch engaged in teh same type of behavior as Goldman did with John Paulson, namely, devising a CDO on behalf of a hedge fund who was using it to take a short position, and not disclosing that fact to […]

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Leaked Goldman Presentation on Abacus Trade

We received a copy of the document via e-mail and assume this is being leaked broadly (which begs the question of whether this was by happenstance or deliberate. The proximity to the filing of the suit suggests the latter). Richard Smith published it on ScribD: Abacus-2007-AC1-INDICATIVE TERMS Update 8:15 PM: Several items jump out. First […]

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SEC Sues Goldman for Fraud

Oooh, things are starting to get interesting. A number of journalists and commentators (yours truly included) have taken issue with the fact that some dealers (most notably Goldman and DeutscheBank) had programs of heavily subprime synthetic collateralized debt obligations which they used to take short positions. Needless to say, the firms have been presumed to […]

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Senator Lincoln Proposed Segregating Derivatives Units of Commercial Banks

Bloomberg reports that Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman Blanche Lincoln is expected to table a proposal to require commercial banks to separate their derivatives operations from their commercial banking activities. The intent is to prevent banks from using cheap deposits to subsidize risky derivatives businesses, and thus eliminate the government backstopping of these activities. This “no […]

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Doth Magnetar Speak With Forked Tongue?

By Tom Adams, an attorney and former monoline executive; Andrew Dittmer, a mathematician who has worked for a hedge fund; Richard Smith, a UK-based capital markets IT consultant, and Yves Smith As described in ECONNED and in later reports by ProPublica, a Chicago-based hedge fund, Magnetar Capital, entered into a program of sponsoring subprime-based CDOs […]

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Tom Adams: The Myth of “Insatiable” Investor Demand for CDOs

By Tom Adams, an attorney and former monoline executive One of the ongoing myths of the financial crisis is that investor demand was what motivated the creation of so many bad securities. Banks, journalists and academics have all described the period prior to the crisis as a period of “insatiable investor demand” for things like […]

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Rahm Emanuel and Magnetar Capital: The Definition of Compromised

Magnetar 1) A neutron star with an intense magnetic field, capable of emitting toxic radiation across galaxies 2) A hedge fund, the single market player most responsible for the severity of the 2008 financial crisis, through the toxic instruments it created Rahm Emanuel 1) White House Chief of Staff 2) Politician selected by Magnetar’s CEO […]

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Satyajit Das: Liquid in Every Sense

By Satyajit Das, a risk consultant and author of Traders, Guns & Money: Knowns and Unknowns in the Dazzling World of Derivatives Zygmunt Bauman (2007) Liquid Times: Living in an Age of Uncertainty; Polity Press, Cambridge Zygmunt Bauman (2010) Living on Borrowed Times; Polity Press, Cambridge Alex Preda (2009) Framing Finance: The Boundaries of Markets […]

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Auerback: The Central Bank as “Dealer of the Last Resort”?

By Marshall Auerback, a fund manager and investment strategist who writes for New Deal 2.0. Over the last thirty years, we have steadily moved from a bank lending credit system, to one in which capital markets have become the primary form of credit intermediation. Unfortunately, our regulatory apparatus has not kept up. The result has […]

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