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Octafish

(55,745 posts)
17. Greece has noted it's no hobnailed boot on their face; it's a vampire squid.
Sat Feb 7, 2015, 12:10 PM
Feb 2015

Sorry to mix Orwell and Taibbi metaphors for the game of greedheads:



Goldman Sachs, Greece Didn’t Disclose Swap Contract

By Elisa Martinuzzi
Bloomberg - February 17, 2010 13:31 EST

Feb. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Goldman Sachs Group Inc. managed $15 billion of bond sales for Greece after arranging a currency swap that allowed the government to hide the extent of its deficit.

No mention was made of the swap in sales documents for the securities in at least six of the 10 sales the bank arranged for Greece since the transaction, according to a review of the prospectuses by Bloomberg. The New York-based firm helped Greece raise $1 billion of off-balance-sheet funding in 2002 through the swap, which European Union regulators said they knew nothing about until recent days.

Failing to disclose the swap may have allowed Goldman, a co-lead manager on many of the sales, other underwriters and Greece to get a better price for the securities, said Bill Blain, co-head of fixed income at Matrix Corporate Capital LLP, a London-based broker and fund manager.

“The price of bonds should reflect the reality of Greece’s finances,” Blain said. “If a bank was selling them to investors on the basis of publicly available information, and they were aware that information was incorrect, then investors have been fooled.”

CONTINUED...

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=akqC4y5U7MnU



Then, there's the Big Picture...



Draghi at the Central Bank

Is Goldman Sachs Poised to Takeover Europe?

by MIKE WHITNEY
CounterPunch, OCTOBER 31, 2011

Goldman Sachs is about to take over Europe, but you wouldn’t know it by reading the papers.

On Tuesday, G-Sax alum, Mario Draghi, will take the helm at the European Central Bank replacing retiring ECB president Jean-Claude Trichet. The appointment has slipped by the media virtually unnoticed even though the ECB is the most powerful institution in the EU and is likely to play a critical role in solving the debt crisis.

Draghi was formally a Managing Director at Goldman. He also served as an advisor to the Bank of Italy in 1990, chairman of the Italian Committee for Privatisations, and was an Executive Director of The World Bank from 1984 to 1990. His bio. affirms his globalist pedigree which makes him the perfect candidate to replace the curmudgeonly Trichet who failed to comply with all of Big Finance’s demands. That’s not likely to be the case with Draghi.

The new ECB chief faces the difficult task of trying to pacify Germany while implementing policies that are opposed by the German political class as well as the German people. It won’t be easy, even for a skilled diplomat like Draghi. But Draghi will move forward with his bank-centric agenda, because it may be the last chance to keep the 17-member monetary union from disintegrating.

First, he will lower interest rates by .50 basis pts (from 1.5% to 1.%) at the ECB meeting on November 3 even though headline inflation in the eurozone is presently 3 percent and even though the move is bound to raise eyebrows in Berlin. Then he will announce that the ECB will step up its controversial bond buying program (already 170 billion euros) in order to push yields on soaring Italian debt below 6 percent. The Italian 10-year bond has zoomed to over 6.15 percent since the EU leaders announced their “breakthrough” agreement last Thursday. That means that bondholders do not believe the deal will solve the crisis. Draghi will act quickly to address the situation despite German opposition. Italy has 1.9 trillion euros in debt, 200 billion of which will come-due next year. Rising yields pose an existential threat for the faltering country.

In exchange for ECB support, Draghi will demand that Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi (Bunga-bunga) push through unpopular reforms that target the unions and pensions. Italy will also be required to privatize more of its public assets and services. At the same time, the bank bailouts will continue mainly through easing new capital requirements and by underwriting bank debt so banks can issue bonds that are guaranteed by the ECB. Here’s the scoop from Bloomberg:

“European banks, which need to refinance more than $1 trillion of debt next year, may struggle to fund themselves until policy makers follow through on a pledge to guarantee their bond sales.

European Union leaders promised this week to “urgently” look at ways to guarantee bank debt in a bid to thaw funding markets frozen by the sovereign debt crisis. Lenders have found it hard to sell bonds for the past two years and have increasingly turned to the European Central Bank for unlimited short-term emergency financing…

In the U.S., the Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program allowed banks to issue bonds with backing from the FDIC for as long as three years…

European governments including France, Spain, the U.K. and Germany guaranteed some bonds issued by their banks to reassure investors after the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in September 2008. In May 2010, the EU ended the program when it said banks that relied on the pledges would face a review of their long-term viability.” (“European Bank Debt-Guarantee Proposals May Struggle to Thaw Funding Market”, Bloomberg)


Guarantees on bank debt is a direct subsidy to big finance, which is why we think that a former G-Sax exec. will support the policy.

Draghi is no fool, he knows that the German plan that was announced last week is more of the same “extend and pretend”. It has no chance of ending the crisis. Regardless of the stock market’s (positive) reaction, borrowing costs are still rising, the credit markets are in turmoil, and the clock is ticking. It’s now or never. Either the ECB takes the initiative and acts as lender of last resort or the eurozone is toast.

CONTINUED...

http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/10/31/is-goldman-sachs-poised-to-takeover-europe/



I'd say 99-percent of the People are missing from the benefits of austerity picture, but they just happen to be off camera. Goldman Sachs' government division will make sure they are brought back in the frame for the scene where they get to pick up the tab.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Gotta get their minions in there octoberlib Feb 2015 #1
Dick Cheney pioneered the piratization process at the Pentagon... Octafish Feb 2015 #3
As long as there's been war machinery, there's been corruption and greed erronis Feb 2015 #21
''War is a Racket.'' -- Gen. Smedley Darlington Butler, USMC (ret.) Octafish Feb 2015 #28
When you allow capital to rule economic systems fasttense Feb 2015 #39
K&R! marym625 Feb 2015 #2
Citigroup Wrote the Wall Street Giveaway The House Just Approved (MoJo via WillyT) Octafish Feb 2015 #6
yes, I read that marym625 Feb 2015 #13
yes i read that... StoneCarver Feb 2015 #33
You hit the nail on the head marym625 Feb 2015 #34
Great info. RiverLover Feb 2015 #15
Weiss was a fool. Hillary got her money upfront. Scuba Feb 2015 #4
He wasn't counting on Elizabeth Warren noticing. Octafish Feb 2015 #7
Don't forget the relatives of politicians (e.g. Chelsea Clinton and hubby). nt Romulox Feb 2015 #5
Reading that one thread is better than getting an MBA Octafish Feb 2015 #9
Legalized corruption Faryn Balyncd Feb 2015 #8
Word. Octafish Feb 2015 #12
Exactly right. tclambert Feb 2015 #25
and they avoid capital gains tax, according to a tax loophole antigop Feb 2015 #10
Bless their little offshoring hearts. Octafish Feb 2015 #16
It's hard to have any hope. Yes, it's rigged, but I thank you, Octafish, for all of your posts. nt antigop Feb 2015 #26
In Europe, Greece is a perfect example, Wall St, Goldman Sachs to be precise, installed GS People sabrina 1 Feb 2015 #11
Greece has noted it's no hobnailed boot on their face; it's a vampire squid. Octafish Feb 2015 #17
The corruption in Europe is so blatant, the only conclusion to come to as to why it is allowed to sabrina 1 Feb 2015 #19
thank you for bringing this to my attention madokie Feb 2015 #14
Money. Those with a lot of it seem to want a lot, lot, lot more. Octafish Feb 2015 #20
I'm willing to sell, but I'm just a serf. JEB Feb 2015 #18
Remember, our fellow peasant who tape-recorded her fellow SEC Goldman Regulators? Octafish Feb 2015 #27
It going to take more than pitchforks JEB Feb 2015 #32
The government pays bankers to work in the government. Lucky Luciano Feb 2015 #22
I know who knows the answer. In fact, he'd lock up every crook in government. Octafish Feb 2015 #42
Thanks for this information. midnight Feb 2015 #23
Citigroup’s Man Goes to the Treasury Department Octafish Feb 2015 #43
You might enjoy this link that shows discussion between Elizabeth Warren, and Katie Couric. midnight Feb 2015 #51
k & r ND-Dem Feb 2015 #24
Sen. Warren Criticizes Washington-Wall Street 'Revolving Door' Octafish Feb 2015 #46
Kicked Enthusiast Feb 2015 #29
Federal Judge says Corruption is all legal-like now... Octafish Feb 2015 #47
There is a mountain of corruption from sea to shining sea. Enthusiast Feb 2015 #49
This might be the most important post I've read all week BrotherIvan Feb 2015 #30
Uncorrupted Dems don't grow on trees. Enthusiast Feb 2015 #50
k&r. Thanks for posting. nm rhett o rick Feb 2015 #31
Then there's the private company owned by BFEE that the NSA uses to spy on America... Octafish Feb 2015 #53
Great information throughout the thread marym625 Feb 2015 #35
K&R DeSwiss Feb 2015 #36
To the Greatest Page. woo me with science Feb 2015 #37
14 Defining Characteristics Of Fascism blkmusclmachine Feb 2015 #38
Well that's dramatically corrupt Rose Siding Feb 2015 #40
K & R ctsnowman Feb 2015 #41
On top. On top. woo me with science Feb 2015 #44
“It fuels the revolving door between banks and the government...” MrMickeysMom Feb 2015 #45
I can sure understand why critics would call that deferred compensation/government employment Trillo Feb 2015 #48
kick woo me with science Feb 2015 #52
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