Tag Archives: Corruption

Firms That Got Bailout Money Keep Lobbying

“Citigroup and Bank of America are hardly the only two financial firms to confront the issue. During the last three months of 2008, at least seven other firms receiving bailout funds — American Express, Capital One, Goldman Sachs, KeyCorp, Morgan Stanley, PNC and Bank of New York Mellon — all lobbied the government about the bailout, according to a review of their most recent disclosure reports.

The automakers that received billions under the same program lobbied as well: including General Motors; its financing arm, GMAC; and Cerberus Capital Management, the private equity firm that controls Chrysler. Other recipients of federal financing also lobbied Congress, the Treasury or both about other matters. ” (Read more from nytimes.com)

Disgusting. How can all my liberal friends be so quick to forgive Obama for supporting the bailout?

See also:
AP: 9 in 10 execs at bailout banks remain on job –
Bosses whose banks made risky loans are now counted on to save system

Yet Another Obama Pick Sets Poor Example

“In his inauguration speech, President Obama singled out ‘honesty and hard work, courage and fair play, tolerance and patriotism’ as ‘those values upon which our success depends.’

So why did Obama nominate a tax scofflaw to head the U.S. Treasury, which oversees the Internal Revenue Service?

. . . .

The tax issue: Geithner, who now heads the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, failed to pay Social Security and Medicare taxes when they were due on income he received from the International Monetary Fund between 2001 and 2004.” (Read more from sfgate.com)

Obama = more of the same

See Also:
Meet the New Boss; Same as the Old Boss

Government Regulation, Business and Public Perception

In high school, I remember learning about government’s heroic anti-trust break up Rockefeller’s Standard Oil. Yay, government! That was long, long ago. I’ve since come to regard government not as the thin gray line between the public interest and corporate greed, but as the instrument of corporate greed. Here, I think, lies the difference between liberals and conservatives.

In debates with my liberal friends, their underlying assumption often seems to regard government as a benevolent force, which would cure our ills if only we surrendered more wealth, more liberty, and more power to it.

Here are several stories which, I hope, shatter the myth of government benevolence:

Regulator Let IndyMac Bank Falsify Report. A senior federal banking regulator approved a plan by IndyMac Bank to exaggerate its financial health in a May federal filing, allowing the California company to avoid regulatory restrictions only two months before it collapsed, a federal inquiry has found. (Read more from washingtonpost.com)

Press reports document criminality of US financial elite. Recent press reports make clear that the Madoff affair is not an aberration. It is indicative of pervasive fraud and criminality in the highest echelons of the financial establishment, aided and abetted by government regulatory agencies. (Read more from inteldaily.com)

Antitrust’s Greatest Hits. The government’s victory against Standard Oil had a long-term effect on the oil industry that is seldom discussed by those who see parallels with the Microsoft case. Only six years after losing the antitrust case, Standard Oil dramatically changed its attitude toward Washington, moving from hostility or avoidance to a very warm embrace. Company chief A.C. Bedford served as chairman of the War Services Committee, an agency created to mobilize the nation’s supplies of gasoline and diesel fuel for military use during World War I. After the war, federal control never retreated, transforming what economist Dominick Armentano has called “a virtual textbook example of a free and competitive market” into “what had previously been unobtainable: a governmentally sanctioned cartel in oil.” The legacies of this transformation include higher prices for consumers and the “energy crisis” of the 1970s. Deregulation in the 1980s finally restored some measure of competition to the industry.

The Standard Oil case teaches some important lessons about competition, innovation, and antitrust law. We see the difficulty antitrust has dealing with highly innovative companies. We witness the vagueness of antitrust law, which allows prosecution on the basis of alleged intent rather than specific actions. And we see how the Standard Oil case ultimately failed to benefit consumers or investors. Instead, it laid the groundwork for collusion between industry and government, bringing about many of the very ills the “progressive” proponents of antitrust said they were fighting. (Read more from Reason.com)

Washington Is Killing Silicon Valley. From the beginning of this decade, the process of new company creation has been under assault by legislators and regulators. They treat it as if it is a natural phenomenon that can be manipulated and exploited, rather than the fragile creation of several generations of hard work, risk-taking and inventiveness. In the name of “fairness,” preventing future Enrons, and increased oversight, Congress, the SEC and the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) have piled burdens onto the economy that put entrepreneurship at risk.

The new laws and regulations have neither prevented frauds nor instituted fairness. But they have managed to kill the creation of new public companies in the U.S., cripple the venture capital business, and damage entrepreneurship. According to the National Venture Capital Association, in all of 2008 there have been just six companies that have gone public. Compare that with 269 IPOs in 1999, 272 in 1996, and 365 in 1986.

Faced with crushing reporting costs if they go public, new companies are instead selling themselves to big, existing corporations. (Read more from wsj.com)

Anti-trust, Anti-truth. In his masterpiece, Antitrust and Monopoly: Anatomy of a Policy Failure, Dominick Armentano carefully examined fifty-five of the most famous antitrust cases in U.S. history and concluded that in every single case, the accused firms were dropping prices, expanding production, innovating, and generally benefiting consumers. It was their less-efficient competitors who were “harmed,” as they should have been.

For example, the American Tobacco Company was found guilty of “monopolization” in 1911, even though the price of cigarettes (per thousand) had declined from $2.77 in 1895 to $2.20 in 1907, despite a 40 percent increase in raw material costs. (Read more from the Ludwig Von Mises Institute)

Letter from an angry business owner. To All My Valued Employees, There have been some rumblings around the office about the future of this company, and more specifically, your job. As you know, the economy has changed for the worse and presents many challenges. However, the good news is this: The economy doesn’t pose a threat to your job. What does threaten your job however, is the changing political landscape in this country. (Read more from fivemilliondots.com)

On Madoff’s Ponzi Scheme

I guess I’m sorry for the charities who lost their money, but with rumors of a $250k minimum to join Madoff’s scheme, it included many of the filthy rich Wall Street types. I keep thinking of the scene at the end of Orwell’s Animal Farm. The animals watch their oppressors – humans who look like pigs, and pigs who look like humans – playing cards. A great squabble erupting two players simultaneously play an ace of spades.

– Overview:

– Madoff: “I’m very close to regulators.”

SEC Ignored Madoff Scheme whistleblower!
Here’s a tiny sampling of what Markopolos told the SEC in his 21-page November 7, 2005 letter:

“I am a derivatives expert and have traded or assisted in the trading of several billion $US in options strategies for hedge funds and institutional clients. . . (Highly Likely) Madoff Securities is the world’s largest Ponzi Scheme. . . The [Madoff] family runs what is effectively the world’s largest hedge fund with estimated assets under management of at least $20 billion to perhaps $50 billion.”

Madoff bought influence in Washington Within a day of the Dec. 11 arrest of Wall Street financier Bernard L. Madoff, his Washington lobbyists were scrambling to sever all ties to a man who’s been accused of a $50 billion fraud and who may go down in history as the largest financial scam artist ever.

List of victims
HSBC HSBC’s direct exposure is believed to be about $1bn in loans provided to clients who invested some $500m of their own funds in Mr Madoff’s venture.
Access International $1.4 billion
Fortis Bank $1.4 billion
Man Group’s RMF division has about $350m invested. (FT)
Tremont Capital Fund of funds. $3.3 billion invested. (FT)
Pioneer Investments, an arm of Italy’s UniCredit, had “substantially all” of $835m invested with Madoff. (FT)
Union Bancaire Privet: $1.1 billion
Benbasset & Cie: $935 million
BBVA: $404 million
Maxam Capital Management LLC. Combined loss of $280 million. “I’m wiped out,” said Sandra Manzke, Maxam’s founder and chairman. The Darien, Conn., fund of hedge funds will have to close as a result of the losses, she said. (WSJ)
Fairfield Greenwich Group. Bloomberg: The biggest loser may be Walter Noel’s Fairfield Greenwich Group, whose $7.3 billion Fairfield Sentry Ltd. invested with Madoff’s eponymous firm, three people familiar with the matter said.
Kingate Management Ltd. Bloomberg says $2.8 billion Kingate Global Fund Ltd. invested with Madoff.
Santander. WSJ: The eurozone’s largest bank by market value, said its clients had an exposure of €2.33 billion ($3.1 billion). €2 billion belongs to institutional investors and international clients of its private-banking business, which provides services to wealthy individuals, it said. The remaining €320 million belongs to private-banking customers in Spain, where Santander is based.
el.”
Members of half-a-dozen country clubs: WSJ: “Mr. Madoff tapped social networks in Dallas, Chicago, Boston and Minneapolis. . . . investors from the two clubs may have invested more than $100 million combined.
(. . . and more)

Did Barnard Madoff act alone? (Fortune) — Like the conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald was a lone gunman, the theory that Bernard Madoff acted alone is hard to swallow.

True, Madoff has allegedly confessed that he perpetrated a massive fraud that left behind $50 billion in losses; and he claimed to have done this all alone.

– See also: The 10 nastiest ponzi schemes ever.

The Democrats

This blog post is dedicated to my self-described liberal friends who squarely blame the evil Republicans for all this country’s woes. YOU know who you are! All excerpts are from “The Senate Caves,” by Tim Dickinson, RollingStone June 12, 2008.

“Since regaining the majority in 2006, the Democrats have granted the Bush administration and big telephone companies immunity for illegal wiretapping, declared a branch of the Iranian military a terrorist organization and stuffed the recent Foreclosure Prevention Act with far more goodies for big lenders than for struggling homeowner. They also confirmed Attorney General Michael Mukasey despite his refusal to disavow torture – a move engineered by Schumer.”

Chuck Schumer (D – NY)
“Every democrat in the Senate likes to imagine himself as a friend of the middle class. But few take the delusion to the extremes of Chuck Schumer. In his book Positively American, the senator from New York writes in eerie detail of his decades-long, entirely imaginary friendship with Joe and Eileen Bailey, a non existent middle-class couple from Long Island who struggle to get by on $75,000 a year. . . But Schumer’s love of his made-up friends in the middle class didn’t stop him from championing one of the biggest tax breaks for billionaires in the history of the republic. Last year, Democrats in the House fought to close a loophole that levies a tax rate of only 15 percent – barely half what real-life versions of the Baileys pay – on hedge-fund managers who make as much as $3.7 billion a year. But when the debate reached the Senate, Schumer broke with his fellow Democrats and sided with Wall Street – inspiring the hedge-fund industry to hail him as its ‘guardian.'”

Harry Reid (D – NV)
“In a recent interview with Reid in his opulently chandeliered suite in the Capitol, I ask why the Democrats had not used their majority in the Senate to close the hedge-fund loophole. He greets the question with dead silence. When he finally speaks, he tells me something I never thought I would hear from a Democrat: that it would be wrong to single out the nation’s wealthiest investors simply because they are bilking the treasury out of billions. ‘The only difference between hedge fund operators and other folks similarly situated,’ Reid argues, ‘is that they make more money.’ . . . What Reid also failed to mention is that the real difference between hedge-fund billionaires and others ‘so situated’ is that they are the ones underwriting efforts by the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee run by Schumer. . . . All told, the hedge-fund and private-equity sectors have showered the Democrats with more than $14 million this year – double what they have given Republicans.”

Nancy Pelosi (D – CA)
As speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi can bend Democrats to her will – including the likes of Rep. John Dingell, the lifelong champion of automakers whom Pelosi has muzzled in the debate over global warming. She has even been able to bring conservative “blue dog” Democrats to heel, repeatedly garnering their support for a timeline for withdrawal from Iraq.”

I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: It’s not right vs. left, it’s power vs. liberty. Right vs. left is an illusion and distraction from what’s most important.