Stock Market or Thrill Ride?

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: October 10, 2014 Here’s the action of the Dow Jones Industrial Average on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of this week: down 273 points; up 274.8 points; down 334.97 points. In the span of a week the stock market has taken investors on a stomach-churning roller-coaster ride and futures are pointing to a weak open this morning. What’s rattling the market? Headlines have incorrectly simplified the worry to concerns on global growth. But that inadequately explains the underlying fears that are causing the gyrations and sending the timid to the exits. Wall Street On Parade will have an in-depth analysis of the core issues this coming Monday.

A Fed Rally or More Tinkering in Chicago Futures Markets?

By Pam Martens: October 9, 2014 There were some interesting moves in the Chicago futures markets yesterday that might have been an effort to instill fear in traders that were short the market ahead of the release of the Fed’s minutes slated for unveiling at 2 p.m. Getting the party started early could induce panic short covering if the Fed minutes suggested a dovish approach to raising interest rates – which indeed they did. The stock market had been down as much as 55 points around the 11 a.m. hour but began a gradual advance ahead of the release, with a surge to close up 274.8 points higher on the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Looking a bit psychotic, that move of more than 329 points peak to trough followed by just one day a loss of 273 points in the Dow. Eric Hunsader, chart watcher and computer whiz who heads … Continue reading

With Oil Prices in Freefall, Morgan Stanley Can’t Close on an Oil Deal

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: October 8, 2014 In July 2013 and again this past January, the U.S. Senate’s Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Protection, part of Senate Banking, convened hearings to get a handle on the extensive physical commodity holdings of Wall Street banks. At the January hearing, Senator Sherrod Brown, chair of the Subcommittee, told hearing participants that “the six largest U.S. bank holding companies have 14,420 subsidiaries, only 19 of which are traditional banks.” At the time of the July 2013 hearing, Morgan Stanley, one of the nation’s largest retail brokerage firms, an investment bank, as well as an FDIC insured depository bank, owned sprawling crude oil operations. Congress had been aware of Morgan Stanley’s foray into the oil business since at least 2009 when 60 Minutes reported that Morgan Stanley had acquired the capacity to store 20 million barrels of oil. Ostensibly as a … Continue reading

Saudi Arabia Goes Rogue, Risking Oil Price War

Pam Martens and Russ Martens: October 7, 2014 In the mid 1980s, there was a different King and a different oil minister in Saudi Arabia than present today, but, other than that, the threat of an oil price war within the ranks of OPEC has all the hallmarks of early 1986. Typically, cartels like OPEC are supposed to act in unison on prices. But last Wednesday, Saudi Arabia’s state-owned oil company, Saudi Aramco, stunned world oil markets by acting alone in cutting its official crude price by $1 per barrel for November deliveries to its Asian customers. It also dropped its price by approximately 40 cents per barrel to U.S. and European customers. If this is the opening salvo of a replay of 1986, be forewarned that crude oil prices plunged by over 50 percent in less than eight months in that era. The Saudi oil minister in 1986 was … Continue reading

Fed Chair Janet Yellen Has a New York Problem

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: October 6, 2014 America’s central bank, the Federal Reserve, has a credibility problem and a management crisis unique to its unusual structure. If the Chair of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, Janet Yellen, had any real management powers, she would have immediately asked William Dudley, President of the New York Fed, to step down after internal tape recordings revealed that his staff rubber stamps “legal but shady” deals at the big Wall Street banks it supervises. “Legal but shady” and patently illegal dressed up as just shady deals collapsed this Nation’s financial system only six years ago and continues to depress the country’s economic growth. The tapes were released by former New York Fed bank examiner, Carmen Segarra, via the public interest web site ProPublica and public radio’s “This American Life.” Segarra is suing the New York Fed, charging that she was terminated … Continue reading

PBS Producer Who Toppled Eric Holder’s Criminal Chief Gets an Award

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: October 2, 2014 Martin Smith, producer extraordinaire of some of the most riveting documentaries for the PBS program, Frontline, has received the 2014 John Chancellor Award for Excellence in Journalism, presented by the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. Typically, our reaction to journalism awards is akin to that of the late Alex Cockburn, author, columnist and long-time co-editor of the sassy CounterPunch.com web site, who had this to say on the subject in 2009: “…as a rule CounterPunch disapproves of the endless prizes the journalism industry awards itself. Many years ago, the great editor of Le Monde, Hubert Beuve-Mery, let it be known that anyone at his newspaper accepting an award would be fired. These farcical rituals peak in the annual absurdities of the Pulitzers… “Now I see that another CounterPuncher has been given a major journalism prize. His newspaper reports that ‘Patrick … Continue reading

Four Other Lawyer Whistleblowers are Essential at the Carmen Segarra Senate Witness Table

 By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: October 1, 2014 Wall Street’s crime spree has been coming at the public for the past six years like a geyser spewing from a broken water main. It’s been tough for the public to keep track of the twists and turns, and equally so for Congress. What has been lost in all the media frenzy over the tapes released by Carmen Segarra, an attorney and bank examiner at the New York Fed who was fired for wanting to hold Goldman Sachs accountable, according to her lawsuit, is that four other regulatory lawyers have stepped forward from 2006 to earlier this year to report that their Wall Street regulator has been captured. In the case of those four, the captured regulator is the Securities and Exchange Commission. When you have five Wall Street insiders with law degrees telling you that Wall Street regulators are not … Continue reading

New Report: Global Economies May Be on Path to Another Crash

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: September 30, 2014 Four noted economists have issued a report under the umbrellas of the International Center for Monetary and Banking Studies and the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR) that is raising alarm bells at global central banks. According to the report: “The world is still leveraging up; an overall, global deleveraging process to bring down the total debt-to-GDP ratio – or even to reduce its growth rate – has not yet started. On the contrary, the debt ratio is still rising to all-time highs.” This, say the authors, has produced an “ongoing vicious circle of leverage and policy attempts to deleverage, on the one hand, and slower nominal growth on the other,” setting the basis “for either a slow, painful process of deleveraging or for another crisis, possibly this time originating in emerging economies (with China posing the highest risk).” These are … Continue reading

Carmen Segarra: Wall Street’s Spy Vs Spy

By Pam Martens: September 28, 2014 If you missed our coverage in 2012 of the Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center where Wall Street sleuths from those serially charged firms like Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan dunk donuts alongside New York’s finest in a $150 million spy center, keeping tabs on the comings and goings of their own Wall Street employees as well as innocent pedestrians, then you may not fully appreciate why Carmen Segarra has been celebrated all weekend for her temerity in taping her boss and colleagues at the New York Fed, as well as employees inside the cloistered bowels of Goldman Sachs. While Wall Street was spying on everyone else in lower Manhattan in a high tech center funded by the taxpayer, Segarra strolled over to a Spy Store, plunked down a modest sum and walked out with a tiny tape recorder. She then proceeded to capture the essence … Continue reading

Carmen Segarra: Secretly Tape Recorded Goldman and New York Fed

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: September 26, 2014 Jake Bernstein has a financial blockbuster up today at ProPublica on the secret tape recordings made inside the New York Fed and Goldman Sachs by bank examiner turned whistleblower, Carmen Segarra, who was fired by the New York Fed after she refused to change her examination findings on Goldman Sachs. Segarra is one gutsy bank examiner and lawyer: according to the article, she went to the Spy Store, bought a tiny microphone, and proceeded to tape record two of the most powerful financial institutions in the world — 46 hours worth of tapes. Read our past coverage of the Carmen Segarra story and the deeply conflicted New York Fed at these links: Blowing the Whistle on the New York Fed and Goldman Sachs The Carmen Segarra Case: Welcome to New York, Wall Street and McJustice A Mangled Case of Justice on Wall Street … Continue reading