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

Goldilocks Economy? What Are They Smoking at the Wall Street Journal?

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: September 25, 2014 Imagine historians 25 years from now looking back on one of the worst economic periods since the Great Depression and finding that the Wall Street Journal was calling this a “Goldilocks Economy” – “not too hot, not too cold.” (They can’t actually bring themselves to say “just right” to stay on script with the fairy tale.) On September 7, 2014 the Wall Street Journal went with this headline: “The Upside of August’s Jobs Report: A Goldilocks Economy.” The next day, in a blog post, this appeared: “Stocks rallied Friday following the disappointing jobs report as those hoping for a Goldilocks economy (not too hot, not too cold) cheered.” During the Great Depression, headline writers were admonished not to use the phrase “Great Depression” but to go with the more benign “hard times.” The theory behind the use of the phrase “Goldilocks … Continue reading

These Charts Are Causing Frayed Nerves on Wall Street

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: September 24, 2014 If there’s a bull market on Wall Street, somebody forgot to tell the small caps. The Russell 2000 index that measures the performance of smaller capitalized companies is down 3 percent this year versus the big capitalized companies in Standard and Poor’s 500 – which is up 8.9 percent year-to-date through the close yesterday. This divergence is a worrisome sign for those who look at historical charts. It becomes even more problematic when combined with the recent news that a good chunk of the buoyancy in the S&P 500 is coming from these big corporations spending billions to buy back their own stock – sometimes in unregulated dark pools operated by global banks on Wall Street. Clearly, smaller companies can’t borrow tens of billions in the debt markets in order to plow it into their own share repurchase programs. As we … Continue reading

Eric Holder Says Justice Department Has Moles on Wall Street

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: September 23, 2014 In addition to hundreds of Federal bank examiners permanently stationed at Wall Street’s biggest banks by the Federal Reserve and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency in an effort to eradicate a serial crime spree, an unknown number of Justice Department moles are now roaming about the mahogany corridors of power, chatting up potential criminals around the water cooler and hoping to make it out alive before being detected. Avoiding detection as a mole becomes so much more challenging when the highest law enforcement officer in the land, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, comes to New York to address Wall Street’s lawyers and tells them, flat out, that he’s got moles stationed inside his Wall Street targets. (There were likely 100,000 text messages flying about Wall Street before Holder got to the next paragraph of his speech.) The revelation by … Continue reading

Alibaba: Wall Street Would Rather You Don’t Kick the Tires

By Pam Martens: September 22, 2014 In 30 years of watching Initial Public Offerings (IPOs) debut on Wall Street, I have to say that I’ve never seen anything remotely resembling the Alibaba episode on Friday. It’s one for the record books not just in size but in opacity. Alibaba is a Chinese e-commerce company whose large investment haul in the U.S. is not likely to brighten the tepid job prospects in this country one little bit. According to news out this morning, Wall Street underwriters exercised their option to boost stock in the deal by an additional 48 million American depository shares, bringing the IPO to the largest ever at $25 billion. The company began trading publicly for the first time on Friday on the premier stock exchanging in the U.S., the New York Stock Exchange, which is supposed to exercise some degree of regimen over what it allows to … Continue reading

Did Senator Orrin Hatch Just Censor Testimony on the Retirement Crisis?

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: September 18, 2014 Senator Orrin Hatch, Republican from Utah, is not the Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. That post is held by Democrat Ron Wyden – whose party currently holds the majority of seats in the Senate. But this Tuesday, in a hearing that he was not even chairing, Senator Hatch appeared to be attempting to censor the speech of the witnesses before they testified by admonishing them not to use a list of specific words and phrases. The hearing was convened to take testimony on the retirement crisis facing millions of Americans because of the disappearance of corporate funded pensions and the inability of most Americans to build up a sufficient nest egg on their own because of stagnant wages and 401(k) fees imposed by Wall Street eating up their savings. Hatch, with a stern face, told the panelists: “What I hope … Continue reading

The 314-Member Club — With $81 Billion in their IRAs

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: September 17, 2014 Yesterday the Senate Finance Committee convened a hearing to chew on one humdinger of a new report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO). The GAO report found that 314 taxpayers have squirreled away at least $25 million in their Individual Retirement Account (IRA) for an aggregate of $81 billion for all 314 taxpayers. That puts the average account within the $81 billion at an astonishing $258 million. The GAO used 2011 data, the most current available to them from the IRS, and noted that since some of the tax returns were for joint filers, the term “taxpayer” may mean an individual or a couple. Still, even two IRA accounts tallying up to $258 million is off the charts. The figures are raising eyebrows in Congress. No one can say with any certainty how an IRA could grow to such astronomical sums. IRAs … Continue reading

Today’s Stock Market: Shades of the Company Town

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: September 16, 2014 The Wall Street Journal carries a story today which builds on a topic we have been reporting on since July: that corporations, themselves, have become the largest single participants in the stock market through the repurchase of their own shares. Using data from Birinyi Associates, the Journal reports that U.S. companies bought back a total of $338.3 billion in the first six months of this year, “the most for any six-month period since 2007.” The year, 2007, by the way, was the year before the stock market imploded. The workers of America, whose 401(k) plans represent their savings and hopes for a better, easier life one day in retirement, are increasingly buying funds indexed to the top 500 companies in America, the Standard and Poor’s 500. This is, effectively, giving a steady source of cheap capital to the biggest companies in … Continue reading

There’s a Bear Growling in this Bull Market

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: September 15, 2014  Last Friday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down a mere 61.49 points or 0.36 percent, but the overall market breadth (number of stocks advancing versus those declining) was abysmal. At the New York Stock Exchange, there were 666 stocks advancing versus 2,515 declining. Nasdaq showed 893 advancers versus 1,834 decliners. Equally troubling for those who have jumped into stocks with both feet, Bloomberg News has a heart-stopper headline out today: “Record S&P 500 Masks 47% of Nasdaq Mired in Bear Market.” The article, by Lu Wang and Joseph Ciolli, advises that: “Beneath the U.S. Stock market’s record-setting gains, trouble is stirring. About 47 percent of stocks in the Nasdaq Composite (CCMP) Index are down at least 20 percent from their peak in the last 12 months while more than 40 percent have fallen that much in the Russell 2000 Index … Continue reading