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| Inside Goldman | | Print | |
| Written by Bob Adelmann | ||||||
| Monday, 28 December 2009 09:30 | ||||||
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It was a simple announcement, really: The Securities and Exchange Commission was investigating some potential self-dealing by a large financial services company. But, like Toto pulling away the curtain to expose the imposter behind the Wizard of Oz, the world could see, however briefly, the inner workings of how business is really done at Goldman. Derivatives are hard to value. They are virtually hidden from investors, analysts and regulators, even though they are one of Wall Street's biggest profit engines. In 2005 Egol and Goldman saw an opportunity not only to hedge its own long positions, but also to take short positions in hopes of generating additional profits in the event of the decline they saw coming in the market. And that is where, according to some, they crossed the line. And that’s why the SEC is investigating Goldman. It’s one thing to offer a product to a customer. It’s another thing entirely to take a position against those customers without disclosure. Although the investigation is in its early stages, inside sources say that the SEC is trying to determine whether securities laws or rules of self-dealing were violated by [firms like Goldman and others] that created and sold these mortgage-linked debt instruments and then bet against the clients who purchased them. The simultaneous selling of securities to customers and shorting them because they believed they were going to default is the most cynical use of credit information that I have ever seen. When you buy protection against an event that you have a hand in causing, you are buying fire insurance on someone else’s house and then committing arson. The profit potential in going against their customers was enormous. One particular package, Hudson Mezzanine, was an $800 million CDO. The investors would make money if the housing market stayed strong; they would lose if it didn’t. Goldman made financial bets against the securities in that CDO so that it would profit if they failed, which they did. One of Goldman’s salesmen said, “Here we are selling this, but we think the market is going the other way.” As revealing as this is, there is further investigation of whether [Goldman] purposely helped to select especially risky mortgage-linked assets that would be the most likely to crater, setting their clients up to lose billions of dollars. As one reader commented on the Times article: "This accusation goes far beyond betting ‘betting against your clients.' This is an accusation of deliberate sabotage, then betting on the outcome. It isn’t like a doctor taking out life insurance on a patient. It is like a hit man taking out insurance on [his] target. If the investigation successfully proves the allegations, it will confirm what many believe is “business as usual” standards of conduct for Goldman. And, as noted by Jon Pesch: "These were the investments that cost investors dearly and pushed the government to use billions of our tax dollars to stabilize the banking system." Photo of Goldman Sachs Chairman and Chief Executive Lloyd Blankfein: AP Images
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Tim
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..."When the New York Times announced in their lead article on the front page of their Christmas Eve edition that the Securities and Exchange Commission was investigating Goldman Sachs for allegedly self-dealing, it was a moment of surprise for many and, for others, a moment of clarity and confirmation." Uh, the NYT article didn't say that the SEC is investigating Goldman. It said that the SEC was investigating synthetic CDOs in general -- and Goldman wasn't a big player in SCDOs at all (they had the Abacus shelf and that's basically it). It's amusing how some people are absolutely convinced that Goldman broke the law somehow. Sheep. |
Brett
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Tim, Goldman is one "among others.." if you read the article. I disagree with you that Goldman wasn't a big player. At any rate it's not that relevant whether Goldman was a large or small player, it was still a player. |
Tim
said:
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... No, the article says: How these disastrously performing securities [synthetic CDOs] were devised is now the subject of scrutiny by investigators in Congress, at the Securities and Exchange Commission and at the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Wall Street’s self-regulatory organization, according to people briefed on the investigations. The "among others" line that you cite is just describing who was involved in the synthetic CDO market in general. SEC officials absolutely do not leak the names of firms they're investigating -- that would be a very serious breach of federal law. They might anonymously confirm that they're "looking into" synthetic CDOs generally, but that's it. You can disagree with me on whether Goldman was a big player in SCDOs all you want, but you're wrong. The Abacus deals (Goldman's SCDO shelf) totaled just $11 billion, while the total SCDO issuance for that period was over $250 billion. Anyone who says Goldman was a big player in SCDOs has no clue what he's talking about. Full stop. |





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