03 April 2012

Remembering the 44th Anniversary of Martin Luther King's Last Speech



Martin Luther King's Last Speech

3 April 1968, Church of God in Christ, Memphis, Tennessee



On 4 April 1968, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated.

O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, you who kill the prophets and abuse those whom God has sent as messengers to you, how often I have longed to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her young under her wings, but you would not let me.

As you willed, your house is now yours, but is made desolate. For I tell you, you will not see me again until you rise and say, ‘Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord.’”

Net Asset Value Premiums of Certain Precious Metal Trusts and Funds



The FOMC minutes at 2 PM NY time set off a sell signal in gold of about 2.25%, and to a lesser extent stocks .90% and silver which was down 1.44%.


Reggie Middleton On Bank Fraud and Financial Ponzi Schemes



Financial analyst Reggie Middleton is interviewed on a range of topics by Max Keiser.
- Fed bought 61% of new Treasury debt issuance distorting markets
- Higher oil prices are due to monetization of the currency and not increased demand
- Higher education has all the characteristics of a debt bubble
- Big name investment banks are taking advantage of their clients in order to make short term financial goals
- JPM and other TBTF banks have forged partnerships with governments to public detriment
- Facebook IPO is good for Mark Zuckerberg but not for shareholders, Wall St. marketing



McKenna: JP Morgan Chase Knew MF Global 'All Too Well'


"JPM had a history with Dennis Klejna. He was the head of compliance at Refco when that firm failed. JPM was one of the underwriters of the Refco IPO and agreed in April 2010 to pay $49.5 million to settle a shareholder lawsuit over that firm's collapse less than two months after going public in 2005...

Klejna was not criminally charged over his involvement in the Refco fraud, but he did sign a consent order with the Department of Justice and paid $1.25 million in disgorgement of his IPO gains. Then he went to work in the same job for MF Global."

Francine McKenna once again brings clarity and common sense to bear on the MF Global case in her guest blog for American Banker. It is very refreshing.

She also has a blog called Re: The Auditors.

AmericanBanker

JPMorgan Chase Knew MF Global All Too Well
By Francine McKenna
APR 2, 2012

I suspect that JPMorgan Chase (JPM) knows a lot more about MF Global than the bank's in-house lawyer let on in her Congressional testimony last week.

Diane Genova, deputy general counsel for JPM's investment bank, mostly answered lawmakers' questions about a much-discussed $200 million overdraft on a London account that MF Global allegedly used customer funds to cover. But JPM had an extensive relationship with Jon Corzine's brokerage, giving the megabank a bird's-eye view of the firm’s finances before and after it failed.

As such, JPM must have at least a clue about the other $1.4 billion of MF Global customer funds that have gone missing.

As MF Global's largest unsecured creditor, for example, JPM was first to the courthouse to protect its rights after the Oct. 31 bankruptcy filing. And as Genova told the House Financial Services Oversight and Investigations Committee on March 28, MF Global maintained a large number of cash demand deposit accounts at JPM. Four of these accounts in the U.S. were designated as customer segregated accounts.

MF Global also cleared agency securities through JPM, Genova said. The brokerage had two revolving credit facilities in which JPM was the administrative agent for a syndicate of other banks. And MF Global had securities lending and repurchase arrangements with JPM, the largest of which involved MF Global borrowing U.S. Treasuries from JPM's securities lending clients and posting agency securities as collateral.

JPMorgan even considered acquiring MF Global. But before anyone else outside of MF Global knew that there was a $1.6 billion hole in customer segregated funds, JPM passed on a deal. Rep. Francisco Canseco (R-Tex.) asked Genova why.

She testified: "After an extensive review, we determined that it was not a good business fit." Why am I not surprised?...

JPM could have been also feeling a bit skittish about being a beneficiary of inappropriate commingling. Its own broker/dealer recently committed the sin of not segregating customer funds in the U.K. JPM and its auditor PricewaterhouseCoopers – also MF Global’s auditor – recently admitted to UK regulators that for at least seven years, about $23 billion of JPM clients' assets had been inappropriately commingled. JPM was fined 33.3 million pounds.

I hope investigators from the FBI, Department of Justice, the regulators and the bankruptcy trustees will continue to dig into what JPM can tell us about the mystery of the missing $1.6 billion.

Read the rest here.