Showing posts with label Steve Cohen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Cohen. Show all posts

Friday, December 27, 2013

Friday, December 27, 2013 - Fooled Again

Fooled Again
by Sinclair Noe

And now we present the curious case of Michael Steinberg. Not familiar? That's understandable; Michael Steinberg is a convicted felon, securities fraud and conspiracy, specifically insider trading. Steinberg is a close personal friend and former trader with Steven A. Cohen. You've likely heard that name. Cohen is the billionaire, stock picker who runs SAC Capital hedge fund; recently fined $1.2 billion by the SEC for insider trading and not maintaining adequate supervision of his employees. Cohen has not been charged as an individual.

Eight SAC employees have been criminally charged; six have pleaded guilty and are cooperating with the government; one faces trial in January; Steinberg just lost his trial, and when the verdict was announced, the fellow fainted. The other guy who faces trial in January fainted when he was arrested. It's a bit funny, a bit pathetic. Steinberg faces a maximum of 85 years but that won't happen. Still, it looks like a potential case against Cohen could gain traction.

The US Attorney's Office in Manhattan has secured 77 insider trading convictions since 2009, without losing a single case. Jurors are capable of understanding insider trading. It's a fairly simple form of cheating. Jurors are also capable of understanding more complex forms of cheating. The markets are rigged by cheaters, in the form of insider trading and other, more complex scams. There are many honest people who earn god livings in the markets, but there are plenty of cheaters. The prosecutors aren't even going after the folks on the other side of the insider trades; someone supplied information on Weight Watchers, Gymboree, Dell, Nvidia, and Intermune (and others). At some point, those people expected something for their information. There is an old saying: if you can't identify the “mark” at a poker table, it's you.

No need to actually sit at the table with big time hedge fund types – you're still the “mark”. Just look at what's happening in Detroit. I knew it was just a matter of time until we started hearing more about how the big banks bet against Detroit; slowly but surely the information is oozing out as the vultures fight over the carrion.

Detroit, of course, has many problems, long standing problems. Back in 2005, Detroit's pensions were underfunded to the tune of $1.44 billion. Then-mayor Kwame Kilpatrick and other city officials set up nonprofit entities and corporations to issue the debt, and bought interest rate swaps as a hedge against rising interest rates (more precisely, they were sold interest rate swaps). Interest rates then dropped to the lowest levels in history; they lost the bet. Detroit owes the holders of the swaps the difference between the interest rates, adding to the pensions' underfunding by as much as $770 million over the next 22 years. Essentially, the politicians and banks gambled with the city's debt, and that bet may have exceeded legal limits on the debt; raising the question of whether the illegal bet is valid. There will probably be lawsuits.

And now that Detroit is in bankruptcy, the unelected emergency manager of Detroit, Kevin Orr, worked out a tentative deal to pay the UBS AG and Bank of America Merrill Lynch Capital Services more than $300 million in “secured debt”. Those banks are considered secured creditors because Detroit put up revenue from three casinos as collateral for the loan; which is now the only stable source of revenue for Detroit. The initial settlement would given the banks about 80 cents on the dollar of what they are owed, compared to 16 cents on the dollar that Orr has offered to retirees for their pensions. The judge told attorneys for Orr’s team to renegotiate the casino money deal because every deal the city has made relating to the swaps “has been made with a gun to its head”.

And so they went back to the table, and they have come up with a new deal, an incrementally better settlement that leaves much of the original structure intact. If the deal is approved by federal bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes, Detroit would get out of the swaps deal for about 56 cents on the dollar, get $120 million in cash to bolster city services and free up casino revenues, crucial to the city’s ongoing operations, that were used to secure a previous renegotiation of the swaps deal in 2009. Detroit might be smart to argue that the two major issues with the swaps in the bankruptcy proceeding: whether the swaps are secured debt, and whether the deal was legal in the first place. A favorable ruling for the city on either matter could result in a far better outcome than what has been agreed to.


Over the past five years Detroit has reduced its salary expenses by 30 percent. More than 2,350 public jobs have been cut, accelerating the city’s already notable pace of deterioration. Far from uncontrollable, the cost of health benefits for the city’s public workers and retirees has risen more slowly than the national rate of 4 percent a year. Since 2008, Detroit has reduced its spending by more than $400 million. In the same period, city revenues have fallen by nearly $260 million, with a steep decline after 2011. This decline, rather than its pension obligations, more than accounts for the city’s projected deficit this year of $198 million.

One consequence of these cuts is that public services like transportation, infrastructure maintenance and education are barely functioning. And yet there is one expense that has, so far, been spared: service fees on derivatives that were sold to the city by banks backed by UBS and Bank of America. In fact, these fees are the only significant increase in spending over the past five years. There have been many numbers tossed about in the Detroit bankruptcy, including the claim that the pensions are underfunded by $3.5 billion, but by some calculations, if you strip out the wheeling and dealing, the actual underfunded amount may be closer to $800 million. The public sector pays for the mistakes of the financial sector, and observers are led to believe that the basic promise of retirement is the city’s problem.

This isn't the first time the “swaps” problem has hurt municipalities, we also have examples from Montgomery County, Alabama and San Bernardino, California, and at the core is the question of whether pensions, secured by 20, 30, or 40 years of work are more or less secure than bets by banks. A new report by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College indicates that costly pension promises are not the major cause of municipalities weak financial conditions. The researchers compared 32 cities that have recently made headlines as they struggle with serious budget problems to a list of 149 other cities that are in relatively good financial shape. "When identifying the source of the problems, fiscal mismanagement leads the list," the study's authors found. "Economic problems, in large part a response to the financial crisis and ensuing recession, come in second." And, "In many cases pension were a contributing factor, but they weren't the driving factor in the fiscal challenges these cities are facing."


Our next story takes us to Switzerland, where 300 Swiss banks are working to meet Department of Justice year-end deadline to put a stop to tax evasion by American clients. Banks with reason to believe they violated tax laws can ask the DOJ to waive prosecution if the banks disclose how they helped Americans hide assets, and the banks will be required to hand over data on undeclared accounts, and pay penalties. If the banks don't apply for waivers and cooperate, then the banks and their customers could face criminal probes.

To gain the non-prosecution deals the banks must pay 20% of the value of accounts not disclosed by August 2008, 30% for accounts opened between August 2008 and February 2009, and 50% for accounts opened afterward. Fourteen Swiss banks are already part of criminal investigations. The crackdown on tax cheats really took off back in 2009, when the US charged UBS, the biggest Swiss bank, with aiding Americans in hiding some $20 billion in assets. UBS admitted it fostered tax evasion; they paid $780 million in fines; they avoided prosecution.

The banks are complaining, whining really, that the penalties are too high. Some Swiss banks may decide to opt-out of the non-prosecution deal, but that comes with a risk. Nearly 40,000 clients told the IRS all about their offshore accounts so that they might avoid prosecution. If it is later learned that some of those clients had accounts with banks that skipped the non-prosecution deal, it would seem like a slam dunk case against the bank. One area that still seems confusing is how to treat multinational corporations with headquarters in the US but offices in Switzerland.

You might think the decision to opt-in to the non-prosecution deal would be simple because the banks aren't really paying a penalty; the money comes from client accounts; it isn't really the banks' money; it is the clients' money. Of course this is not how banksters think. Once the money is in the banks' account, it becomes their money; it is capital they can leverage, and then use to trade.

Just a reminder, we're talking about tax evasion, the same crime that brought down Al Capone. Imagine some petty thief robs the local liquor store and steals a case of beer; he won't get a non-prosecution deal by just handing over a few beers to the cops. Meanwhile, two Swiss banks, Wegelin and Bank Frey, have already gone out of business; and UBS estimates several more will likely close in the coming year. Tax evasion is the business model of the Swiss banks; without it they really can't function. The practice has become institutionalized over time. There is a much older model for taxation: render unto Caesar.


We “celebrated” the Federal Reserve's 100th anniversary on December 23. Of course, we could probably eliminate taxes if we could just come up with a better central bank. The government, if it and not the Fed was in control of its money supply, could spend as needed to meet its budget, drawing on credit issued by its own central bank (not the Fed); it could do this until price inflation indicated a weakened purchasing power of the currency. Then and only then, could the government need to levy taxes; and the need for taxes would not be to fund the budget but to counteract inflation by contracting the money supply.

In 1977, Congress gave the Fed a dual mandate, not only to maintain the stability of the currency but to promote full employment. The Fed also has another job, as a regulator of the banking system; and as a regulator, it is an abysmal failure; worse than an atheist priest.

There is a discipline in economics known as the “theory of repeated games” and the basic idea is that if you repeatedly cheat at a game, then it increases the likelihood that I will retaliate by trying to cheat you. Of course that is just a theoretical game. In the real world, I might just stop playing your game. When corruption and cheating permeates a society, everything starts to break down, fairness and trust turn to dust and the vacant, crumbling buildings of Detroit.

You have probably invested through Wall Street at some time or another, and yet we know that insiders rig the game; they cheat to fatten their own wallet at your expense. We know that the banks change the laws to make their wagers more “secure” than the pensions of retired cops and firefighters. Even the new deal for Detroit values banks bets at 56 cents on the dollar but pensioners would only get 20 cents on the dollar. Ah, but you might not have a public pension, so you are not concerned. Do you have a private retirement account? A 401k or IRA? The banksters have no more respect for private accounts than public accounts.

Political and economic inequality go hand in hand with a two-tiered justice system, and at the root of the rot are the banksters, cheating the system, lying on a grand scale, and doing it all with impunity. Maybe 2014 could be the year when we won't be fooled again. Best wishes for the New Year.














Thursday, August 1, 2013

Thursday, August 01, 2013 - From Russia With Love


From Russia With Love
by Sinclair Noe

DOW + 128 = 15,628
SPX + 21 = 1706
NAS + 49 = 3675
10 YR YLD + .13 = 2.72%
OIL - .08 = 107.81
GOLD – 14.30 = 1309.90
SILV - .18 = 19.73

Record highs for the Dow and the S&P 500 indices.

Economic data today from the Institute for Supply Management; its index of national factory activity rose to 55.4 last month from 50.9 in June, with increases in new orders and production. A reading above 50 indicates expansion in the sector, which hit a soft patch in the spring.


The pick-up in manufacturing was also corroborated by financial data firm Markit, which said its U.S. Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index rose to a four-month high in its final July reading. Measures of factory jobs rose in both reports, with the ISM employment index reaching its highest since June last year.

The improvement in employment is in line with a separate report from the Labor Department showing initial claims for state unemployment benefits dropped 19,000 to a seasonally adjusted 326,000 last week, the lowest since January 2008. In another report, consultants Challenger, Gray & Christmas said planned layoffs at U.S. firms fell 4.2 percent in July.

Tomorrow morning we'll get the government's monthly jobs report. The government is expected to report nonfarm payrolls increased 185,000 last month after rising 195,000 in June. And the unemployment rate might inch down to 7.5%. Overall job gains in the second quarter averaged 196,300 per month.

A federal court ruling on Wednesday paves the way for a further reduction in the interchange fees (also known as “swipe” fees) that banks levy on merchants for debit cards. It is a victory for retailers, who protested that the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial law, which lowered the fees from 44 cents to 21 cents per transaction, didn’t go far enough. Now, U.S. District Court Judge Richard Leon has essentially scrapped the 21-cent limit and set the stage for an even lower amount, though it may be months, if not years, before any changes are made to the existing cap.
But if changes are indeed made, it could be consumers who ultimately pay the price for banks’ potential loss of billions of dollars in “swipe” fees. As banking industry experts note, the revenue has to be replaced, so higher overdraft penalties and account maintenance charges are all possible. And ultimately, the very existence of debit cards could be in doubt, even if consumers still embrace them as a way to instantly tap into their checking accounts when they reach the cash register.


Russia has granted American fugitive Edward Snowden asylum for a year, allowing the former US spy agency contractor to slip quietly out of Moscow's airport after more than five weeks in limbo.


The White House, which wants Snowden sent home to face trial for leaking details of government surveillance programs, signaled that President Barack Obama might boycott a summit with President Vladimir Putin in Moscow in September and one official said high-level talks next week were "up in the air".

White House spokesman Jay Carney said: "We see this as an unfortunate development and we are extremely disappointed by it. We are evaluating the utility of the summit."

Snowden has avoided the hordes of reporters trying to find him since he landed from Hong Kong on June 23, and gave them the slip again as he left the transit area where he had been holed up. Almost unnoticed, he was driven away from the airport by car.

Snowden, whose first leaks were published two months ago, was quoted as saying by the WikiLeaks anti-secrecy group which has assisted him, that: "Over the past eight weeks we have seen the Obama administration show no respect for international or domestic law but in the end the law is winning," And he thanked the Russians for granting asylum.

A Russian lawyer assisting Snowden said he had gone to a safe location which would remain secret, and that he could now work and travel freely in the country of 142 million.

State television showed a picture of Snowden getting into a grey car at the airport accompanied by Sarah Harrison, a WikiLeaks legal researcher. Wikileaks release a statement saying, “We have won the battle – now the war.”

Meanwhile, Glenn Greenwald, the reporter with the British newspaper, the Guardian, is out with another story compliments of Snowden; this one is titled “Xkeyscore: NSA tool collects nearly everything a user does on the internet”
A top secret National Security Agency program allows analysts to search with no prior authorization through vast databases containing emails, online chats and the browsing histories of millions of individuals. The NSA boasts in training materials that the program, called XKeyscore, is its "widest-reaching" system for developing intelligence from the internet.
The files shed light on one of Snowden's most controversial statements, made in his first video interview published by the Guardian on June 10.
"I, sitting at my desk," said Snowden, could "wiretap anyone, from you or your accountant, to a federal judge or even the president, if I had a personal email".
US officials vehemently denied this specific claim. Mike Rogers, the Republican chairman of the House intelligence committee, said of Snowden's assertion: "He's lying. It's impossible for him to do what he was saying he could do."
But training materials for XKeyscore detail how analysts can use it and other systems to mine enormous agency databases by filling in a simple on-screen form giving only a broad justification for the search. The request is not reviewed by a court or any NSA personnel before it is processed.

Under US law, the NSA is required to obtain an individualized Fisa warrant only if the target of their surveillance is a 'US person', though no such warrant is required for intercepting the communications of Americans with foreign targets. But XKeyscore provides the technological capability, if not the legal authority, to target even US persons for extensive electronic surveillance without a warrant provided that some identifying information, such as their email or IP address, is known to the analyst.

Meanwhile, three US senators announced bills today that proposed the most sweeping structural changes to the secret court that oversees the legal basis for surveillance activities since it was set up 35 years ago.

Senators Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, Ron Wyden of Oregon and Tom Udall of New Mexico, all Democrats, want a special advocate for Americans' privacy to argue before the Fisa court when the government seeks extraordinary surveillance requests. They also propose to diversify the powerful secret court ideologically and geographically.


A separate measure from the three senators would still allow the chief justice of the US supreme court to select the Fisa court judges, but would require him to pick them from nominations brought by the chief judges of the US federal circuit courts. The court's membership would expand to 13 judges, essentially representing each of the federal courts nationwide, from the current 11.  Currently, the Fisa court has only one petitioner: the government. In its 35-year history, it has rejected 11 out of more than 34,000 surveillance requests.

Yesterday, Private Bradley Manning was convicted on multiple counts of violating the Espionage Act (which could result in 136 years of prison) but was found not guilty of the most serious charge against him, "aiding the enemy."


Manning was found guilty of leaking - which he admitted to and will not get anything like 136 years for - but that he was found not guilty of "aiding the enemy." That "not guilty" is a good thing, it means Manning is not guilty of treason. The fact that the government would even pursue it is chilling to a free press. Under the prosecution's Orwellian logic, essentially any classified information given by a whistle-blower to a journalistic outlet (whether WikiLeaks or the Times, which published Manning-WikiLeaks revelations) amounts to treason if "the enemy" can read it. Well, the enemy, whomever it may be at any given moment, can read anything it wants on the Internet, the government can (and does) stamp its every embarrassing action "classified," and so almost any revelatory investigative reporting on national security (the Pentagon Papers, the Abu Ghraib revelations, you name it) could in principle lead to the death penalty. It makes you wonder what the government is hiding.

It also makes you think about investigative journalism. Compare the coverage of the Bradley Manning trial to the trial of Jodi Arias or George Zimmerman. What passes as news is pathetic.
So, I leave you with these words from Thomas Jefferson: "Our liberty cannot be guarded but by the freedom of the press, nor that be limited without danger of losing it."


Let's go to the police blotter.

A jury found former Goldman Sachs Group Inc vice president Fabrice Tourre liable for fraud for his role in a failed mortgage deal that cost investors $1 billion. The SEC had accused Tourre in a civil lawsuit with misleading investors in a product known as Abacus 2007-AC1 by failing to disclose that hedge fund billionaire John Paulson helped choose, and intended to bet against, mortgage securities underlying the 2007 deal.

It also alleged that Tourre misled ACA Capital Holdings Inc, a company also involved in selecting assets for Abacus, into believing Paulson & Co would be an equity investor in the synthetic collateralized debt obligation.Paulson went on to make billions of dollars in 2007 betting against the U.S. housing market.

The SEC said he made about $1 billion from his short position on Abacus, while investors including ACA and IKB Deutsche Industriebank lost about the same amount.

Goldman agreed in July 2010 to pay $550 million to settle with the SEC over Abacus, without admitting or denying wrongdoing. Tourre parted ways with Goldman in 2012, but the bank paid for his legal defense. So, the headline will read that the “SEC scores a conviction in an important case dealing with fraud on Wall Street”, but it really should read “Goldman throws a Junior Staffer Under the Bus to Appease Regulators”.

Meanwhile, a federal judge gave final approval to a $590 million settlement by Citigroup that resolves a shareholder lawsuit accusing the bank of hiding tens of billions of dollars of toxic mortgage assets.

In the written opinion the judge wrote: "Although the $590 million recovery is a fraction of the damages that might have been won at trial, it is substantial and reasonable in light of the risks faced if the action proceeded to trial."

The settlement resolves claims by shareholders who purchased Citigroup shares from February 2007 to April 2008 that the New York-based bank misrepresented its exposure to securities known as collateralized debt obligations that were tied to mortgage investments. Citigroup lost $27.68 billion in 2008. The lawsuit cited the plunge in the company's stock price from $47.89 at the start of the fourth quarter of 2007 to $2.80 by January 2009.

The settlement was announced last August, but the judge had questioned the fairness of the settlement, and eventually awarded substantially lower fees and expenses than what was sought by the plaintiffs' lawyers.

And let's briefly check in on Wall Street's most infamous insider trader, Steve Cohen of SAC Capital. Earlier this year, when the SEC extracted $616 million from Cohen's fund in two regulatory settlements, he expressed his deep remorse by buying, within weeks, a $155 million Picasso and a $60 million beach house in the Hamptons, right down the road from his other Hamptons beach house, worth $18 million. Then in late July, Cohen was hit with two new major blows: a civil charge from the SEC and criminal charges filed by federal prosecutors against his firm, SAC Capital Advisors. The SEC charge, "failure to supervise," looked at first like a relatively tame thing to lay on a suspected criminal mastermind, with a lifetime ban from the securities business being the worst possible outcome. It looked like Cohen would skate without a criminal charge, which most would consider a huge victory, but the story is still unfolding because  the SEC filed its case through an administrative proceeding, not in civil court, Cohen will have limited rights to discovery, which would have helped him prepare his defense in any potential criminal cases. That's assuming the SEC actually pursues a criminal case. So far the SEC has been pretty spineless in its efforts to find justice on Wall Street.


The reason for the lack of serious efforts to prosecute wrong-doing are simple; the regulators don't want to upset their future bosses. The New York Times reports that the revolving door has been spinning fast, pushing former powerful regulators like Robert Khuzami (former SEC enforcement chief), Mary Schapiro (former SEC chief) and Lanny Breuer (former head of the Justice Department's Criminal Division) all the way from the halls of justice to the corner office in Fat City. All three are now out of government and in private practice representing those very Wall Street interests they once regulated - earning a combined annual income of more than $9 million.