Category Archives: Uncategorized

GDP Report: What Did Consumers Do With $41 Billion in Accelerated Income

By Pam Martens: January 31, 2013 Protesters Outside 15 Central Park West, the Residence of Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs Yesterday, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) released its report for the fourth quarter gross domestic product (GDP), representing the output of goods and services produced in the U.S. and the most keenly watched measure of the vitality of the U.S. economy. The BEA data, which is subject to revision, showed a decrease of 0.1 percent in the annual GDP rate, versus an increase of 3.1 percent in the third quarter of 2012.  Most economists were shocked by the decline, which was impacted by a 22.2 percent decrease in the government’s spending on national defense versus its third quarter increase in spending on that segment by 12.9 percent.  But the most worrisome part of the report is the revelation that the BEA assumed an additional $41.4 billion went into the pockets … Continue reading

What’s Really Pushing the Stock Market Higher

By Pam Martens: January 30, 2013 I was browsing the Wall Street Journal’s web site last night and found this interesting take on the Dow Jones Industrial Average’s flirtation with 14,000 – a number it last saw in October of 2007. “Small investors are jumping back into the stock market after abandoning it during the financial crisis, and their return is a big reason why the Dow is pushing toward an all-time high.” The article was prominently placed at the very top of the left hand column under the headline “Individual Investors Aid Stock Surge.” On January 25 of this year, the New York Times proclaimed a “flood” of new money from individual investors: “Millions of people all but abandoned the market after the 2008 financial crisis, but now individual investors are pouring more money than they have in years into stock mutual funds. The flood, prompted by fading economic … Continue reading

Tim Geithner’s Treasury Department Gets Another Failing Grade

By Pam Martens: January 29, 2013  Somebody is right and somebody is wrong when it comes to whether Tim Geithner, the man who stepped down as U.S. Treasury Secretary on Friday, is a crony capitalist covering the backs of his corporate pals, their failed companies, and their obscene pay or is an American hero.  President Obama is in the good guy camp, using the January 10 occasion of his nomination of Jack Lew to replace Geithner as Treasury Secretary to say: “When the history books are written, Tim Geithner is going to go down as one of our finest secretaries of the Treasury.”  The President’s assessment stands in stark contrast to that of a growing list of informed insiders, some of whom are already writing those history books.  Neil Barofsky, former Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), had a devastating take on Geithner in his 2012 book … Continue reading

Why Did Treasury Nominee Jack Lew Leave NYU for Scandal-Plagued Citigroup

By Pam Martens: January 28, 2013 There has been much ado by media and public interest groups about Jack Lew’s time spent at Citigroup and whether that renders him unfit to be President Obama’s nominee to head the U.S. Treasury Department. Lew sat on Citigroup’s management committee and in his last position at the firm in 2008, he was Chief Operating Officer at Citi Alternative Investments (CAI), the unit that housed a trifecta of toxic speculation, including proprietary trading, hedge funds that were imploding, and the Structured Investment Vehicles (SIVs) that housed $50 billion in subprime debt – an amount that Citigroup understated in financial reports to the SEC and public by $39 billion. It was the SIVs in Lew’s division that toppled Citigroup into the arms of the U.S. taxpayer. Lew only joined Citigroup in June of 2006. The company had set its course for disaster eight years earlier … Continue reading

Do You Really Need Stocks In Your Portfolio

By Pam Martens: January 25, 2013  Working on Wall Street for over two decades, I often heard financial advisors tell their clients that a good rule of thumb to determine how much of their investment money to put into stocks was to subtract their age from 100 and put the difference in stocks.  For example, if your age is 54, subtract 54 from 100 and put the difference, 46 percent, of your investable money into stocks. If your age is 30, by this formula 70 percent of your funds would go into the stock market.  The overall theory is sensible: the older you are, the less risk you should take because you will not have enough earning years left to replace lost funds.  The high percentages recommended, however, felt like a formula cooked up by Wall Street to coax more money into the market. As with most things peddled on Wall Street, I never bought into this nonsense. … Continue reading

The SEC Holds a “Secret Conversation” With Wall Street Defense Counsel; But at the Justice Department the Pitches Are Made in the Conference Room

By Pam Martens: January 24, 2013 Two stunning assertions came out of the Martin Smith investigative report on Tuesday evening on the PBS program, Frontline. Titled The Untouchables, producer, writer and correspondent Martin Smith interviews Lanny Breuer, the head of the criminal division of the U.S. Department of Justice, who tells Smith he didn’t prosecute any senior executive of the major Wall Street firms because he couldn’t find a criminal case where he could “prove beyond a reasonable doubt every element of a crime.”  As the public has watched big money settlements and deferred prosecutions at the largest banks, the public has assumed that every available device of the U.S. Department of Justice — the top law enforcement agency in America – was being deployed to root out and prosecute those who collapsed Wall Street in 2008, costing the U.S. taxpayer trillions in bailouts, the economy trillions in lost jobs and home … Continue reading

One Day After Frontline Airs Critical Report on Justice Department’s Lanny Breuer, WaPo Reports He’s Stepping Down

By Pam Martens: January 23, 2013 The Washington Post is reporting this afternoon that Lanny Breuer, head of the Criminal Division of the U.S. Department of Justice and the focus of a damaging report by producer Martin Smith for the PBS program, Frontline, that aired last evening, is stepping down from his post. The portion of the program that likely galvanized the White House was the startling report by prosecutors that had worked under Breuer in the criminal division of the DOJ that there wasn’t even a pretense of a real investigation against the major Wall Street firms: no subpoenas, no document reviews, no wiretaps. Following is the verbatim transcript of that portion of the program: NARRATOR: Frontline spoke to two former high-level Justice Department prosecutors who served in the Criminal Division under Lanny Breuer. In their opinion, Breuer was overly fearful of losing. MARTIN SMITH: We spoke to a couple of sources from within the … Continue reading

The Untouchables: PBS Asks Why U.S. Justice Department Isn’t Prosecuting Wall Street

By Pam Martens: January 23, 2013  The Untouchables, which aired last evening on the PBS program “Frontline,” builds on the outstanding 2012 series co-produced by Martin Smith and his wife, Marcela Gaviria, Money, Power, and Wall Street. (I highly recommend watching all four episodes of the earlier documentary, then rewatching The Untouchables if you want an epiphany into why Wall Street can’t be tamed.) Smith is producer, writer and correspondent in the latest effort.  Unfortunately, last night’s program sought an answer to an abbreviated question: why has no Wall Street executive been criminally prosecuted for fraud tied to the sale of mortgages. The unabbreviated question and the one that infuriates Americans is: why has no executive of a major Wall Street firm been criminally prosecuted for anything.  If the U.S. Justice Department was serious about doing its job, it has a cornucopia of crimes to pick from: Wall Street CEOs … Continue reading

Congressman Markey Asks SEC to Immediately Halt High Frequency Trading

By Pam Martens: January 22, 2013  Congressman Edward Markey (D-Massachusetts) sent a letter to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) last week, asking it to use its inherent authority to limit the use of High Frequency Trading. Markey called the practice a “clear and present danger to the stability and safety of our markets” and said “its use should be curtailed immediately.” He noted that Congress had already given the SEC the power to ban this practice. (See full text of letter at link below.)  High Frequency Trading (HFT) is a technique used by sophisticated Wall Street firms and hedge funds using algorithms to buy and sell stocks on exchanges in a fraction of a second, or as Markey put it in his letter, “thousands of times faster than a human can breathe or even think.”  Markey details for the SEC a system that has effectively consumed the marketplace, pushed out … Continue reading

President Obama Invokes Conservative and Liberal Themes in Inaugural Address

By Pam Martens: January 21, 2013 The President’s Inaugural address today sounded themes that both conservatives and liberals can applaud. The President said: “…we have never relinquished our skepticism of central authority, nor have we succumbed to the fiction that all society’s ills can be cured through government alone. Our celebration of initiative and enterprise; our insistence on hard work and personal responsibility, are constants in our character.” But the President also added later in the speech: “Our journey is not complete until we find a better way to welcome the striving, hopeful immigrants who still see America as a land of opportunity; until bright young students and engineers are enlisted in our workforce rather than expelled from our country. Our journey is not complete until all our children, from the streets of Detroit to the hills of Appalachia to the quiet lanes of Newtown, know that they are cared … Continue reading