The Dangerous Underpinnings of Why Wall Street Cheers a Weak Jobs Report

By Pam Martens: October 23, 2013 Yesterday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported a very weak jobs number: just 148,000 new nonfarm jobs had been added by employers in September. To the rational mind, an appropriate reaction in the stock market would have been to sell off on the basis that the economy remains weak. Instead, the Standard and Poor’s 500 hit a new record, closing at an all time high of 1,754.67. The general thesis to explain this reaction is that today’s Wall Street is running a racket similar to Lance Armstrong. It’s on a heavy doping regimen in the form of the $85 billion a month that the Federal Reserve is funneling into the markets through the purchase from Wall Street of U.S. Treasurys and mortgage-backed securities. When the Fed buys those instruments, it forces $85 billion of cash each month into the hands of traders to deploy … Continue reading

Have Jamie Dimon’s Interests Diverged from JPMorgan’s

By Pam Martens: October 22, 2013 It’s difficult to take a major newspaper seriously when its editorial page lives in the land of Oz. Reading “The Morgan Shakedown” yesterday in the editorial pages of the Wall Street Journal is the latest reminder of just how detached from reality these opinion writers are. The editorial attempted revisionist history for JPMorgan by misinforming the public that “Federal law enforcers are confiscating roughly half of a company’s annual earnings for no other reason than because they can and because they want to appease their left-wing populist allies.” It’s pretty hard for one editorial to get so many facts and the big picture so horribly wrong. First, left-wing populists will be happy with nothing less than Jamie Dimon losing his dapper worsted wools and presidential cufflinks for an orange jumpsuit. Second, JPMorgan’s earnings last year were $21.3 billion so a proposed “confiscation” of $13 billion … Continue reading

President Obama Proclaims National Character Counts Week As NYU Enshrines a Very Different Message

By Pam Martens: October 21, 2013 As the U.S. sinks to a rank of 19 on Transparency International’s list of the least corrupt countries, President Obama has issued a proclamation declaring this to be the week that we come together as a Nation to reflect on our moral values.  The President’s Proclamation reads in part: “…During National Character Counts Week, we reflect on the ways we support one another, the ways we come together and seek common ground, and the lessons we teach our children about what citizenship means in the United States of America…The children we raise today are surrounded by proud examples of integrity, and moral courage, but it is our task as parents, community members, and leaders to teach them not only the skills they need to succeed, but also the values that keep our country strong…” Yes, our children are surrounded by wonderful, wholesome role models … Continue reading

New York State Is Facing a Contagion of Corruption

By Pam Martens: October 18, 2013 The Wall Street Journal is running a titillating headline this morning, “Prosecutors and SAC Head Toward a Possible Record-Breaking Settlement.” CounterPunch is running my cheerless headline this morning, “It’s Now Official: New York is Drowning in Bribes and Corruption.” There’s an intellectual junction between the two stories. The Obama Justice Department, ensconced with partners from the law firm, Covington & Burling, which helped Big Tobacco hide the dangers of smoking for decades, believes in this formula: money = justice. Thus, SAC Capital Advisors LP, the hedge fund charged with securities fraud and encouraging a culture of insider trading, is rumored to be about to offer up more than $1 billion to settle its charges. That follows on the heels of the $1 billion and counting that JPMorgan Chase has recently paid to settle a mountain of charges of wrongdoing. There’s said to be many … Continue reading

The Computer Programmers Behind the Madoff Fraud

By Pam Martens: October 17, 2013 Five employees of Bernard Madoff are currently on trial for assisting in the perpetration of the largest Ponzi scheme in history; a multi-decade fraud that has resulted in suicides, destroyed retirement dreams, and increased skepticism about the thoroughness of regulators when a Wall Street crony is involved. Madoff was formerly Chairman of the Nasdaq stock market. Both Madoff, and his brother, Peter, who worked together for more than 40 years, are serving prison terms. Two of those currently on trial are Jerome O’Hara and George Perez, former computer programmers who worked at the firm from the early 90s. Both the Securities and Exchange Commission and the U.S. Attorney’s office describe in their respective complaints the intricate level of programming that O’Hara and Perez had to perform to keep the fraud alive. That included programming to generate highly sophisticated account statements, showing stock and option … Continue reading

Congress Plays a Dangerous Game of Chicken As the World Watches

By Pam Martens: October 16, 2013 The People’s House, the U.S. House of Representatives, is now the Obstructionists’ House. Many have forgotten whom and what they represent – the American people and the interests of the United States. As major financial institutions dump more and more U.S. Treasury bills, once considered the absolute bedrock of safety, the damage the so-called conservatives are doing to confidence in the U.S. is growing exponentially daily. Yesterday, Fitch Ratings placed the United States sovereign debt on Ratings Watch Negative, meaning it is contemplating a credit downgrade from its current AAA rating on U.S. debt. In 2011, when Congress showed similar dysfunction in raising the debt ceiling, Standard & Poor’s downgraded U.S. debt from its AAA rating to AA+. A country lacking an unblemished AAA credit pays more in interest when it brings its debt to market. And market participants remember which countries have always had … Continue reading

Blowing the Whistle on the New York Fed and Goldman Sachs

By Pam Martens: October 15, 2013 There are a number of interesting aspects to the lawsuit filed by Carmen M. Segarra against the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and three of its employees. Segarra was a bank examiner at the New York Fed who is charging in her lawsuit that she was told to change her negative review of Goldman Sachs and when she refused to do so, she was terminated in retaliation and escorted from the Fed premises. The first notable aspect of this saga is that Segarra has hired a lawyer, Linda Stengle, whose office is in Boyertown, Pennsylvania. (It is fairly safe to assume that the number of lawyers working in Manhattan who want to take on the New York Fed and Goldman Sachs runs in the single digits, if they exist at all.) This hunt for legal representation may explain why Segarra is filing her … Continue reading

Banks Are Still Failing At Ten Times the Pre-2008 Crash Rate

By Pam Martens: October 10, 2013  Before Wall Street took a bazooka loaded with credit default swaps and toxic mortgage securitizations and fired it directly at the heart of the U.S. economy, we had a very stable banking system. In the five years before the 2008 crash, only 10 banks failed in the United States. Let me repeat that: ten banks went belly up in the entire period between January 2003 through December 2007.  Since January 2008 through today, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation shows 487 banks have failed, with 22 failures just so far this year. With an average of two bank failures per year in the five years before the crash, that means banks are still failing at 10 times the pre-crash rate. But the numbers get worse from there.  While the FDIC shows 487 banks have failed, other data at the FDIC show that a total of 1,306 … Continue reading

What Was Janet Yellen Thinking One Year Before the Crash?

By Pam Martens: October 9, 2013  According to wire services, today President Obama will nominate Janet Yellen, current Vice Chair of the Federal Reserve and former President of the San Francisco Fed, to be the next Chair of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors.  With the nomination, the simmering controversy over the President’s tortured reasoning to show a preference for Larry Summers for the post will likely be sidelined by a rapid shift to scrutinize every word Yellen has ever stated, written or testified.  In that vein, Wall Street On Parade thought it would be interesting to see what Janet Yellen saw through the lens of the San Francisco Fed President one year before the Wall Street Crash of 2008. We have printed below, in its entirety, the speech Yellen delivered on September 10, 2007 to the National Association for Business Economics in San Francisco.  Titled Recent Financial Developments and the U.S. … Continue reading

Ryan Chittum Has Had It With Hank Greenberg and Maria Bartiromo

By Pam Martens: October 8, 2013 Last week, Ryan Chittum, writing for the Columbia Journalism Review, unleashed the simmering disgust of hundreds of editors and reporters across America: why won’t former Chairman and CEO of AIG, Maurice (Hank) Greenberg, just shut up and go to trial on his eight year old charges of engaging in accounting fraud at his former company. He’s now on his third New York State Attorney General who has valiantly tried to let this case see the sunshine of a jury trial. What Greenberg has done instead is to pay the law firm of superlawyer David Boies to motion our courts to death while his army of pr flacks try his case on CNBC and in the opinion pages of the Wall Street Journal. Greenberg’s latest soiree into fantasy land came in an October 2 piece in the Wall Street Journal where Greenberg empathized out loud … Continue reading