JPMorgan Rushed to Hire Trader Who Suggested on His Resume That He Knew How to Game Electric Markets

By Pam Martens: December 3, 2014 On April 29, 2010 at 7:47 in the evening, Francis Dunleavy, the head of Principal Investing within the JPMorgan Commodities Group fired off a terse email to a colleague, Rob Cauthen. The email read: “Please get him in ASAP.” The man that Dunleavy wanted to be interviewed “ASAP” was John Howard Bartholomew, a young man who had just obtained his law degree from George Washington University two years prior. But it wasn’t his law degree that Bartholomew decided to feature at the very top of the resume he sent to JPMorgan; it was the fact that while working at Southern California Edison in Power Procurement, he had “identified a flaw in the market mechanism Bid Cost Recovery that is causing the CAISO [the California grid operator] to misallocate millions of dollars.” Bartholomew goes on to brag in his resume that he had “showed how … Continue reading

New York Fed’s Dudley Goes from Fire Warden to Soothsayer

By Pam Martens: December 2, 2014 Yesterday, William Dudley, President of the scandalized Federal Reserve Bank of New York, cast off his Fire Warden’s helmet long enough to enthrall an audience at Bernard M. Baruch College in New York City with his soothsaying ability on economic matters. Dudley sits at the helm of the regional Fed bank that supervises the mega Wall Street banks that collapsed the U.S. economy in 2008. His ability to supervise either the Wall Street banks or his own institution has come into serious question. Recently, he told Senator Elizabeth Warren during a Senate hearing that he viewed his regulatory role over Wall Street not as a cop on the beat but “more as a fire warden,” making sure the banks don’t burn down. (Burning the country down is clearly another matter.) The U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Protection called Dudley to testify … Continue reading

Hitting Post-Crisis Lows: Oil, Global Bond Yields, Fed Credibility on Rate Hike

By Pam Martens: December 1, 2014 If there’s a robust recovery in the U.S., somebody forgot to tell the commodities market, and the U.S. Treasury market, and holiday shoppers. Crude oil plunged over 10 percent on Friday, following an OPEC decision to keep output at 30 million barrels a day. Both West Texas Intermediate (WTI), the U.S. domestic crude and Brent, the international benchmark, traded lower overnight at prices not seen since 2009 – in the midst of the financial crisis. Both WTI and Brent are now under $70 a barrel, seeing a decline of 38 percent this year with a loss of 18 percent in just November. One might attempt to chalk up the plunge in oil prices to a situation unique to OPEC overproduction or supply coming from U.S. and Canadian shale production were it not for other economic indicators also flashing red. The Bloomberg Commodity Index of … Continue reading

Why Do So Many John Wiley Authors Want You to Trade the Markets?

By Pam Martens: November 26, 2014 The way the 200-year old publishing house, John Wiley & Sons, is pumping out books enticing average folks to trade the markets, one might be inclined to forget that 2014 will go down in history as the year when there were more charges of rigged markets on television, in courtrooms, at Senate hearings, and in prosecutors’ offices than at any time in the history of markets. If ever there was a time less conducive to trying your hand at trading, I can’t think of it, although October 29, 1929 might be a contender. Wiley says it “provides everything the trader needs to survive and succeed in every kind of market.” But if every market is rigged against even highly sophisticated traders, how could a rookie with a little book learning succeed? Let’s review what we’ve learned so far this year. On March 30, author … Continue reading

Senate Report: Scale of Wall Street Holdings Are “Unprecedented in U.S. History”

By Pam Martens: November 25, 2014 Last Thursday, the U.S. Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, chaired by Senator Carl Levin, released an alarming 396-page report that details how Wall Street’s too-big-to-fail banks have quietly, and often stealthily through shell companies, gained ownership of a stunning amount of the nation’s critical industrial commodities like oil, aluminum, copper, natural gas, and even uranium. The report said the scale of these bank holdings “appears to be unprecedented in U.S. history.” Adding to the hubris of the situation, the Wall Street banks’ own regulator, the Federal Reserve, gave its blessing to this unprecedented and dangerous encroachment by banking interests into industrial commodity ownership and has effectively looked the other way as the banks moved into industrial commerce activities like owning pipelines and power plants. For more than a century, Federal law has encouraged the separation of banking and commerce. The role of banks has … Continue reading

U.S. Senate Tries Public Shaming of New York Fed President Dudley

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: November 24, 2014 Last Friday, the Senate Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Protection, chaired by Sherrod Brown, effectively put William Dudley, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, in stocks in the village square and engaged in a rather brilliant style of public shaming. With each well-formed question posed by the panel, Dudley’s jaded leadership of a hubristic regulator came into ever sharper focus. There were a number of elephants in the room during the lengthy session that were only briefly touched upon but deserve greater scrutiny by the press. First, Congress knew that the New York Fed was a failed, crony regulator during the lead up to the financial collapse in 2008, but it granted it an even greater supervisory role under the Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation in 2010. This Congress has also failed to engage in public shaming of … Continue reading

A Citigroup Banker Dies – Along With Responsible Press Reporting

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: November 20, 2014 Depending on where and when you got your news yesterday on the tragic death of Shawn D. Miller, a Managing Director of Wall Street mega bank, Citigroup, you were either emphatically told he died of a suicide or you were led to believe he was murdered. By late evening yesterday, the story had disintegrated into wild speculation. The New York Daily News ran this stunning headline, based on anonymous sources, at 9:22 p.m.: “Banker, 42, slashed his own throat in Manhattan bathtub during drug- and booze-filled bender: sources.” It is becoming abundantly clear that if you work for a major Wall Street firm and die a sudden death, it will be shaped, molded, twisted and contorted until it fits with the suicide narrative – no matter how strongly the facts argue otherwise. This is what we can reliably report this morning: … Continue reading

Wiseguys: Drawing Parallels Between the Mafia and Wall Street Persists

By Pam Martens: November 19, 2014 Every now and then, someone raises the question of Mafia infiltration on Wall Street or suggests that Wall Street has become an Ivy-league educated, better tailored version of the mob. Now, two lawyers, Helen Davis Chaitman and Lance Gotthoffer have dramatically ratcheted up the debate, suggesting boldly in the latest chapter of their free on-line book that there are stark parallels between the Gambino crime family and JPMorgan Chase – the nation’s largest bank. Writer Matt Taibbi had a similar epiphany back in 2012 in an article for Rolling Stone titled The Scam Wall Street Learned from the Mafia – the story of how major Wall Street firms conspired together to rig bidding in the municipal bond market. Taibbi writes: “In fact, stripped of all the camouflaging financial verbiage, the crimes the defendants and their co-conspirators committed were virtually indistinguishable from the kind of … Continue reading

GAO Report: SEC Is Bungling Collection and Accounting of Billions in Fines

By Pam Martens: November 18, 2014 For at least the past 20 years, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) has been telling the Securities and Exchange Commission to clean up its act when it comes to the proper handling, collection, disbursement and financial reporting of penalties and disgorgements it is supposed to be collecting from violators of securities laws. Yesterday, the GAO filed yet another report on the subject, this time finding that “during our fiscal year 2014 audit, we identified continuing and new deficiencies in SEC’s internal control over disgorgement and penalty transactions that constituted a significant deficiency in SEC’s internal control over financial reporting.” Unfortunately, the GAO’s own opaque presentation on this subject leaves the public in the dark about just how bad the situation is at the SEC. As part of the SEC’s enforcement responsibilities, ostensibly to catch and punish securities law violators, it is also frequently assigned … Continue reading

Is JPMorgan’s $9 Billion Witness Letter Under Seal in the Dracula Fraud Case?

By Pam Martens: November 17, 2014 It’s called the Dracula fraud case against JPMorgan because no matter how many times JPMorgan’s lawyers try to kill it, the case rises up from the dead to find new life. Now, with former JPMorgan insider Alayne Fleischmann revealed by Matt Taibbi in Rolling Stone as someone who has critical firsthand evidence that a jury needs to hear in this case, a potential $1.6 billion jury award against JPMorgan is looking winnable – if the case can ever get in front of a jury. The lawsuit was filed by affiliates of the Belgian-French bank Dexia, which received multiple bailouts by the two governments during the financial crisis. Dexia’s original complaint that was filed on January 19, 2012 in New York State Supreme Court, alleged widespread fraud in the sale of Residential Mortgage Backed Securities (RMBS) by JPMorgan, its direct affiliates and two firms it … Continue reading