25 May 2012

Max Keiser Interviews Teri Buhl On JP Morgan's Wells Notice


I found the description of the Wells Notice to be interesting.



Source

Teri Buhl's column discussing this and the implications.

US to Backstop the Anglo-American Derivatives Exchanges with Fed Dollars - 'Too Big To Fail'


It sounds like the principle of keeping AIG whole on its obligations so that it can pay off to the banks at 100 cents on the dollar. This should make Jamie feel a little better about his bad derivatives trades.

And Blythe should rest easy knowing that Benny has her back on those massive metals shorts.

Sounds like they even plan to have the Fed backstop the derivatives trade in London.

Heads the banks win, tails those holding US dollars lose.

How will they support the next bailout? Austerity!

Wall Street Journal
A Mess the 45th President Will Inherit
Thursday, May 24, 2012

Taxpayers Now Stand Behind Derivatives Clearinghouses

...Little noticed is that on Tuesday Team Obama took its first formal steps toward putting taxpayers behind Wall Street derivatives trading -- not behind banks that might make mistakes in derivatives markets, but behind the trading itself. Yes, the same crew that rails against the dangers of derivatives is quietly positioning these financial instruments directly above the taxpayer safety net.

As we noted in May 2010, the authority for this regulatory achievement was inserted into Congress's pending financial reform bill by then-Senator Chris Dodd. Two months later, the legislation was re-named Dodd-Frank and signed into law by Mr. Obama. One part of the law forces much of the derivatives market into clearinghouses that stand behind every trade. Mr. Dodd's pet provision creates a mechanism for bailing out these clearinghouses when they run into trouble.


Specifically, the law authorizes the Federal Reserve to provide "discount and borrowing privileges" to clearinghouses in emergencies. Traditionally the ability to borrow from the Fed's discount window was reserved for banks, but the new law made clear that a clearinghouse receiving assistance was not required to "be or become a bank or bank holding company." To get help, they only needed to be deemed "systemically important" by the new Financial Stability Oversight Council chaired by the Treasury Secretary.

Last year regulators finalized rules for how they would use this new power. On Tuesday, they began using it. The Financial Stability Oversight Council secretly voted to proceed toward inducting several derivatives clearinghouses into the too-big-to-fail club. After further review, regulators will make final designations, probably later this year, and will announce publicly the names of institutions deemed systemically important.

We're told that the clearinghouses of Chicago's CME Group and Atlanta-based Intercontinental Exchange were voted systemic this week, and rumor has it that the council may even designate London-based LCH.Clearnet as critical to the U.S. financial system.

U.S. taxpayers thinking that they couldn't possibly be forced to stand behind overseas derivatives trading will not be comforted by remarks from Commodity Futures Trading Commission Chairman Gary Gensler. On Monday he emphasized his determination to extend Dodd-Frank derivatives regulation to overseas markets when subsidiaries of U.S. firms are involved...

Read the rest here.

JPM Gave Risk Management Oversight To Museum Head Who Sat On AIG's Board


"Financial institutions such as JPMorgan love to buy derivatives because they are opaque, create fictional income that leads to real bonuses, and when, not if, they suffer losses so large that they would cause the bank to fail, they will be bailed out."

William K Black

This is JP Morgan, America's mightiest and unsinkable 'showcase bank,' run by its toughest and craftiest CEO, that holds the counterparty risk on an almost unimaginable $70 TRILLION in derivatives, an amount sufficient to destroy not only their own balance sheet, but probably the entire world's financial system as well, over a weekend.

And Greece is irresponsible.

Are you fucking kidding me?

Sleep well.

Bloomberg
JPMorgan Gave Risk Oversight to Museum Head Who Sat On AIG Board
By Dawn Kopecki and Max Abelson
May 24, 2012

The three directors who oversee risk at JPMorgan Chase & Co. include a museum head who sat on American International Group Inc.’s governance committee in 2008, the grandson of a billionaire, and the chief executive officer of a company that makes flight controls and work boots.

What the risk committee of the biggest U.S. lender lacks, and what the five next largest competitors have, are directors who worked at a bank or as financial risk managers. The only member with any Wall Street experience, James Crown, hasn’t been employed in the industry for more than 25 years...

Read the rest here.

Office of the Comptroller of the Currency 4th Quarter 2011 Derivatives Report

The Pigman's Motto:

If you make people frightened enough, they will give you anything.

24 May 2012

No Justice: SEC Probes Lehman For Three Years, Recommends Nothing


Corruptio optimi pessima.
(The best things when corrupted become the worst.)

Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics

Not even a wristslap.

Well at least the SEC released its report. The craven curs and hypocrites at the CFTC have been studying the criminal manipulation of the silver market for more than four years, and as of yet have not even had the decency to release their findings, and then proclaim they will do nothing about it.

It is the contempt of vultures. The more you take it, the bolder they become.

But not to worry, you will be able to vote for 'change' again in November.

There will be another financial crisis. And there will be another bailout. And you will take it and do nothing, except perhaps grumble quietly and draw comfort with the thought, 'Thank God, at least we are not socialist like Europe.' Before it is over they may do monstrous things in your name, and you will avert your eyes and say nothing.
"For what does it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, but lose his soul?"
There is little downside to white collar crime, and accounting fraud has been effectively decriminalized in the acceptance of Lehman's 'Repo 105.'

Nothing is safe.

Deep Capture the Movie.

Bloomberg
SEC Staff Said to End Lehman Probe Without Seeking Action
By Joshua Gallu
May 24, 2012

U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission investigators have concluded their probe of possible financial fraud at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and determined that they will probably not recommend any enforcement action against the firm or its former executives, according to an excerpt of an internal agency memo.

The agency has been grappling with the case for more than three years amid questions from lawmakers and investors as to whether Lehman misrepresented its financial health before filing the biggest bankruptcy in U.S. history in September 2008.

Under a heading reading “Activity in Last Four Weeks,” the undated document reads, “The staff has concluded its investigation and determined that charges will likely not be recommended.”

SEC officials didn’t dispute the authenticity of the memo or its contents.

Pressure on the agency to punish any wrongdoing related to Lehman’s collapse escalated after Anton Valukas, the court- appointed bankruptcy examiner, found the firm misled investors with “accounting gimmicks” that disguised the firm’s leverage.

Senior officials have been reluctant to formally close the matter even though investigators found a lack of evidence of wrongdoing, according to people with direct knowledge of the matter. The officials have weighed issuing a public report on their findings that would stop short of an enforcement action while describing questionable conduct...

Read the rest here.