Author Topic: Get the leg irons ready - Corzine (Obama Bundler) is going to jail for fraud.  (Read 14951 times)

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MF Global: Likely Among the 10 Biggest Bankruptcies Ever.Article Comments (6) Deal Journal HOME
By Shira Ovide




MF Global, the brokerage run by former Goldman Sachs chief Jon Corzine, today filed for bankruptcy protection, becoming one of the highest-profile U.S. victims of bad bets on European government debt.

With the Chapter 11 filing, MF Global also is likely to be added to the ignominious list of the 10 largest bankruptcies in U.S. corporate history. Here is that list, according to research firm BankruptcyData.com, and based on the value of each company’s assets before its bankruptcy filing.

Based on MF Global’s disclosed assets in its bankruptcy filing, it is likely to slot in just ahead of Chrysler as the eighth-largest U.S. bankruptcy.

1) Lehman Brothers Holdings, September 2008: $691 billion in assets

2) Washington Mutual, September 2008: $327.9 billion

3) WorldCom, July 2002: $103.9 billion

4) General Motors, June 2009: $91 billion

5) CIT Group, November 2009: $80.4 billion

6) Enron, 2001: $65.5 billion

7) Conseco, 2002: $61.4 billion

MF Global: $41 billion (as of Sept. 30)

8) Chrysler April, 2009: $39.3 billion

9) Thornburg Mortgage May, 2009: $36.5 billion

10) Pacific Gas & Electric Co., 2001: $36.15 billion

Source: BankruptcyData.com; SEC filings for MF Global asset size


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What no tax payer bailout ???

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You Won't BELIEVE How Much Money Jon Corzine Could Walk Away With From the Bankrupt MF Global
Business Insider ^ | 10/31/2011 | Lisa Du




The big story of the day in finance is the bankruptcy of MF Global -- the futures trading house run by ex-Goldmanite Jon Corzine.

Even before filing for bankruptcy, the firm was suspended from dealing with the New York Fed, and two exchanges banned the firm's traders from accessing their trading floors.

A major contributor to the firm's downfall: Outsize risks taken by Corzine, as it bet heavily on European debt last year, something that obviously hasn't gone so well.

So what happens when the firm goes bust, Corzine leaves, and lots of other people lose their jobs?

DealBook reported that Corzine's severance package could allow him to walk away with around $12 million in the event of a sale.

That's $12 million for joining a company and, in two years, flying it into a mountain.


(Excerpt) Read more at businessinsider.com ...






SOUNDS EXACTLY LIKE EVERY DEMOCRAT POTUS AND GOV NO?   

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Now Check Out All The Ways Jon Corzine Is Connected To Democrats And Obama
Joe Weisenthal | Oct. 31, 2011, 12:19 PM | 718 | 9

Jon Corzine, the man at the helm of failed MF Global.



----------------

Jon Corzine’s Wall Street Firm, MF Global Has Filed For Bankruptcy. “Broker-dealer MF Global, headed by former New Jersey governor and Goldman Sachs chairman John Corzine, has filed for bankruptcy protection, apparently because of holdings of European debt.” (“Broker-Dealer MF Global Files For Bankruptcy,” USA Today, 10/31/11)

Corzine Is Expected To Receive A $12 Million Golden Parachute. “With a sale of MF Global, Mr. Corzine’s role at the firm will almost certainly end, though he is expected to receive a severance payment of nearly $12.1 million.” (Michael J. De La Merced And Ben Protess, “MF Global Said To Be In Deal Talks With Interactive Brokers,” The New York Times’ “Dealbook,” 10/30/11)

Corzine Has Bundled Over $500,000 For Obama’s Reelection Campaign. (Center For Responsive Politics, Opensecrets.Org, Accessed 10/31/11)

“Corzine Has Already Held A High-End Fundraiser And Organized A Secret Meet-And-Greet Between Finance Executives And Obama’s New Chief Of Staff.” (Peter Stone, Elizabeth Lucas, John Aloysius Farrell, Paul Abowd and Rachael Marcus, “Obama Campaign Reports More Than 350 Big Bundlers, Including Solyndra Figures,” Iwatch News, 10/14/11)

Corzine Co-Hosted A Wall Street Fundraiser For Obama In April. “President Obama's first New York event since he declared his reelection will be at the home of former New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine, the former Goldman Sachs financier who will host a high-dollar, small dinner, an invitation to the event shows. Tickets to the event, which sources said Corzine is co-hosting with another financier, longtime Obama backer Orin Kramer and his wife, cost $35,800 per person.” (Maggie Haberman, “Obama Fundraiser At Corzine Home,” Politico, 4/5/11)

The Fundraiser Was Part Of Obama’s Efforts “To Soothe Frayed Relations” With Wall Street. “The choice of Corzine's home is notable, given his ties to the financial sector. The White House has made efforts in recent months to soothe frayed relations with the business community, after an election cycle during which some donors, unhappy with the push for Wall Street reform, claimed to be sitting on their hands.” (Maggie Haberman, “Obama Fundraiser At Corzine Home,” Politico, 4/5/11)

Corzine Attended Obama’s Blue Room Meeting With Wall Street Donors. (Josh Gerstein, “All At DNC Blue Room Meeting With Obama Were Donors, Politico’s “Under The Radar,” 6/26/11)

Just Before Announcing For Reelection, Obama Brought Two Dozen Wall Street Executives And Long-Time Donors To The White House For A Blue Room Meeting. “A few weeks before announcing his re-election campaign, President Obama convened two dozen Wall Street executives, many of them longtime donors, in the White House’s Blue Room.” (Nicholas Confessore, “Obama Seeks To Win Back Wall St. Cash,” The New York Times, 6/12/11)

The Meeting Was Organized By The Democratic National Committee To Try To “Win Back” Wall Street, One Of Obama’s Main Sources Of Campaign Cash. “The event, organized by the Democratic National Committee, kicked off an aggressive push by Mr. Obama to win back the allegiance of one of his most vital sources of campaign cash — in part by trying to convince Wall Street that his policies, far from undercutting the investor class, have helped bring banks and financial markets back to health.” (Nicholas Confessore, “Obama Seeks To Win Back Wall St. Cash,” The New York Times, 6/12/11)

Obama “Opened The Floor” For The Donors To Talk To Him “On Hot Issues.”  “The guests were asked for their thoughts on how to speed the economic recovery, then the president opened the floor for over an hour on hot issues like hedge fund regulation and the deficit.” (Nicholas Confessore, “Obama Seeks To Win Back Wall St. Cash,” The New York Times, 6/12/11)
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Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/check-out-all-the-ways-jon-corzine-is-connected-to-democrats-and-obama-2011-10#ixzz1cNhKXAoU


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This whole time I was doing it all wrong. Appearantly you have to totally fuck things up to get ahead.

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This whole time I was doing it all wrong. Appearantly you have to totally fuck things up to get ahead.

Fail upwards.

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(Hypocritical Liberal Democrat) Corzine Crashes Like It’s 2008
ny times ^ | 11/1/2011 | Joe Nocera
Posted on November 1, 2011 7:01:28 AM EDT by tobyhill

When Goldman Sachs went public on May 4, 1999, Jon Corzine, who was then the firm’s chief executive, held a stake that was suddenly valued at $305 million. So, perhaps, it’s uncharitable to complain about the piddling $12 million severance he was poised to gain if he had managed to sell his current firm, MF Global Holdings, over the weekend.

But I’m going to complain anyway. The idea that Corzine, who single-handedly destroyed MF Global Holdings, was in a position to command so much as a penny in severance is horrifying. It suggests two things. The first is the extent to which “heads-I-win-tails-you-lose” remains the operative concept for Wall Street compensation. The second is that one’s politics doesn’t much matter when it comes to lining one’s pockets. Corzine is an avowed liberal who has decried income inequality and Wall Street pay — but right up until the end, he had his hand out for millions he didn’t deserve.

To read a recounting of Corzine’s tenure at MF Global Holdings is to wonder how he missed the 2008 financial crisis. Oh, yes! That’s right: he was the governor of New Jersey, a job he won in 2005 after one term in the Senate. Still, you would think that as a former Wall Street titan, he would have noticed that taking giant bets on shaky, long-term bonds while financing your operations with overnight loans that can be pulled at any second is not exactly a recipe for success.

But that’s exactly what Corzine did. After taking over the firm in March 2010 — just months after losing his re-election bid to Chris Christie — he decided to transform the derivatives broker into something sexier, something more like his old firm, Goldman Sachs.

(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...

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Someone Is Going To Jail For This: MF Global Caught Stealing Hundreds Of Millions From Customers?
ZeroHedge ^ | 10/31/11 | http://www.zerohedge.com/users/tyler-durden
Posted on November 1, 2011 2:02:18 AM EDT by Kartographer

What do you do? Do you go ahead and tell your superior that the firm is broke even though the co-opted media is trumpeting every 5 minutes that "MF Global is fine", knowing full well you will be immediately fired for being the bearer of bad news, or do you assume that courtesy of your uber-boss being the former head of the Vampire Squid, and thanks to infinite moral hazard which after Lehman made sure nobody would ever fail ever again, that there is simply no way that you will be left without some miraculous rescue, if only you can last one more day, and as a result proceed to "commingle" some client funds with the firm's cash. It turns out that at MF Global you do the latter... over and over... until you have literally stolen hundreds of millions from the firm's client accounts in hopes that the miracle rescue will come on Friday...

(Excerpt) Read more at zerohedge.com ...

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“That seems crazy,” said William Larkin, a fixed-income portfolio manager who oversees $500 million at Cabot Money Management Inc. in Salem, Massachusetts, and has 22 years of experience. “I’ve never heard of something like this.”
Corzine, the 64-year-old former governor of New Jersey, helped run Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) from 1994 to 1999 and served in the Senate from 2001 to 2006. Since joining MF Global last year, he’s taken more risk with the firm’s money in a bid to remake the broker into a mid-size investment bank and has sought to alter its capital structure to reduce borrowing costs. The shares rose 9.5 percent in the past year under his watch, while the Standard & Poor’s 500 Financials Index fell 4.9 percent.
A Democrat, Corzine is among the biggest fundraisers for President Barack Obama’s 2012 re-election campaign. He has been the subject of speculation about administration jobs such as Treasury secretary or White House economic adviser, said Christopher Allen, an analyst at Evercore Partners Inc. in New York.
Retention Bonus
Jay Carney, the White House press secretary, said he had “no knowledge” that Corzine was being considered for an administration post. He declined to comment on the bond sale.
Corzine’s employment contract is written with a view to future government service. It stipulates that he’ll be paid his $1.5 million retention bonus on a pro rata basis if he leaves to work for any “U.S. federal, state or local government” before March 31, 2014.
Five senior Wall Street executives at rival firms, who declined to be identified because they weren’t authorized to comment, expressed amazement at the bond offering’s unique terms. Hedge funds sometimes allow investors to withdraw their money if a star manager or founder, designated a “key man,” leaves the company.
Diana DeSocio, an MF Global spokeswoman, said yesterday she couldn’t comment because the company is in the offering period for the bond. She couldn’t immediately be reached for comment today.
‘Extra Protection’
“I can’t say I’ve ever seen a provision similar to this one,” said Alexander Diaz-Matos, an analyst at New York-based Covenant Review LLC, which analyzes bondholder protections. “Apparently Corzine is a big enough deal to the company that if he leaves, potential investors demanded a little extra protection.”
Larkin said he was surprised that the interest-rate change on the bonds applies only if Corzine leaves for a government job and not in any other circumstance.
“To have it so specific makes it even more unusual,” said Diaz-Matos.
The notes pay a coupon of 6.25 percent, with proceeds to be used to repay a bank credit facility and for general corporate purposes, according to the statement. Jefferies & Co. managed the bond sale, the company said. MF Global initially offered $300 million of the debt, said a person familiar with the offering who declined to be identified citing lack of authorization to speak publicly.
Investor Concern
The idea for the Corzine step-up provision emerged from Jefferies bankers working on the deal, according to one person with direct knowledge of the discussions, who asked not to be identified because the talks were confidential. The Jefferies bankers indicated they wanted to head off any investor concern that Corzine might leave, the person said.
Moody’s Investors Service ranks MF Global Baa2, the second- lowest investment grade, while Standard & Poor’s rates it BBB-, one step lower. The interest rate will also rise if Moody’s or S&P cuts the company’s debt grade to junk, the regulatory filing shows.
A rate increase of 1 percentage point, or 100 basis points, is the least that bondholders should seek as protection against a Corzine departure, said Sean Egan, president of Egan-Jones Ratings Co., a credit-rating company.
“We believe Corzine is worth more than a 100 basis-point increase,” Egan said. “Corzine’s departure is a major risk and the bond step-up in rate is addressing the risk.”
The innovation reminded Egan of Michael Milken, who helped create a market for the debt of smaller and riskier companies by issuing high-yield securities in the 1980s.
‘Rock Star’
“Milken would be proud of the structure since it addresses a major concern,” he said.
Larkin, who said he owns bonds in Wall Street firms including Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley (MS) and JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), said he doubts the idea will catch on at other companies. Corzine is a unique case, he said.
“I’m guessing this is a one-time thing -- he does have sort of a rock-star component to him because people believe in his ability to turn around the firm,” Larkin said. “The management should never be one person. If it’s one person that’s critically important, I tend to avoid the company just because I’m trying to establish stable income and return of principal.”
MF Global was named a primary dealer by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and has hired more than 80 salespeople and traders this year.
Cutting Costs
Even with the additions, Corzine has cut costs by reducing the firm’s workforce by 5.5 percent and delivered unadjusted profit last quarter. Prior to that period, the firm was unprofitable on a generally accepted accounting principles basis in eight of the previous nine quarters.
Net revenue per employee has risen to $110,000 for the three months ended in June, compared with $93,000 a year earlier, the company said last week. At the same time, Corzine brought the ratio of employee compensation to net revenue down to 54 percent from 63 percent in the June quarter of 2009.
Net income climbed to $7.67 million, or 5 cents a share, in the period ended June 30, compared with $783,000, or 1 cent, a year ago, the company said July 28.
Last week, the firm said it planned to buy back $109.1 million of 9 percent outstanding convertible notes with the proceeds from a sale of $325 million of 3.375 percent securities maturing in August 2018.
The interest-rate increase under the key man provision will reverse if MF Global is upgraded to at least A3 by Moody’s or an equivalent A- by S&P after a departure by Corzine, according to the regulatory filing.
It’s no surprise that major MF Global investors would be nervous about the potential impact of a Corzine departure, said Niamh Alexander, a New York-based analyst at KBW Inc. “There aren’t that many former senators that are running public companies that are in the middle of a turnaround.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Tim Catts in New York at tcatts1@bloomberg.net; Matthew Leising in New York at mleising@bloomberg.net; Christine Harper in New York at charper@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alan Goldstein at agoldstein5@bloomberg.net; David Scheer at dscheer@bloomberg.net.
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How Jon Corzine’s Trades Imperiled MF Global.


As MF Global works to save itself through a possible sale in whole or in pieces, details are emerging about how the brokerage finds itself on the brink.

Jon Corzine, the former Goldman Sachs CEO and ex-governor of New Jersey, took the helm at MF Global last year, and he started making large bets on debt issued by European countries. As The Wall Street Journal recounts, the bets came amid concerns by others that Corzine was putting too much of MF Global’s money at risk.

Our colleagues write:

Mr. Corzine oversaw the European sovereign-debt trades largely on his own even after hiring a new trading chief earlier this year, a person familiar with the matter says. In one quarter where the trade worked well, it represented 12% of the firm’s revenues, according to Christopher Allen, an analyst with Evercore Partners Inc. Mr. Corzine regularly reviewed the positions with the company’s directors, and he was allowed by the board several times to increase MF Global’s exposure to Europe, these people said….

One person who has worked with Mr. Corzine at MF Global says he was uncomfortable that so much of the firm’s strategy essentially boiled down to a bet by Mr. Corzine on European bonds. “There was no one else at the firm who was helping him think about what to do on this trade,” this person says.

Read more at WSJ.com.






And the morons wanted this jerkoff for a second term over Christy? 

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Panic Behind The MF Scenes As Company Refuses To Disclose Information To Regulators Even In Death
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/31/2011 18:35 -0400



Commodity Futures Trading Commission Erin Burnett Federal Reserve MF Global Reuters Securities and Exchange Commission Treasury Department


As in life, so in death. Reuters reports that "U.S. regulators are unhappy with the failure of MF Global Holdings Ltd to provide them with the required data and records, a source close to one regulator told Reuters on Monday. "So far they've been very disappointed with the cooperation in the fulsomeness of records and data from MF," the source said, noting regulators have been working with the firm since late last week. "They were supposed to be able to show us their books and they're supposed to be able to tell us what's what and where their customer funds are and how they've been segregated and protected and to date we don't have the information that we should have," the individual told Reuters." Seriously, as Erin Burnett would say, you are already bankrupt. Just how much worse is it if you even in death you still are hiding secrets? And at this point it should be obvious to everyone: whatever MF is hiding is not something that will hurt it or much less its stakeholders for which the management team obviously never cared one iota. After all the company is already dead. Whatever is on its books has huge impacts to those either behind the corporate veil, read Mr. Corzine, who may or may not have regulatory issues arising from 10(b)-5 "concerns", or more probably, to other banks and Primary Dealers. And with even one simple affidavit still to be filed in Bankruptcy Court, the panic behind the scene is palpable.

From Reuters:

MF Global, which filed for bankruptcy protection on Monday, is the biggest U.S. casualty of Europe's debt crisis, and the seventh-largest bankruptcy by assets in U.S. history.

 

Regulators had expressed "grave concerns" about the viability of MF Global, which filed for bankruptcy only after "no viable alternative was available in the limited time leading up to the regulators' deadline," the company's chief operating officer, Bradley Abelow, said in a court filing.

 

U.S. regulators held a series of calls on Monday related to MF Global.

 

The Financial Stability Oversight Council, which is headed by the Treasury Department, received "a series of oral reports" from the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the Federal Reserve, according to one Treasury Department official.

 

No other details of the calls were provided.

So: just what secrets is the corpse of MF about to reveal? We, for one, can't wait.

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GASPARINO: There's No Surprise At MF Global, As Jon Corzine's Career Has Failure Written All Over It
Charlie Gasparino, The Daily Beast | Nov. 1, 2011, 7:31 AM | 1,336 | 9




Jon Corzine is many things: Erudite, down to earth, and well-meaning being chief among them, people who know him tell me. But is he a good businessman? Not even close, these same people openly admit.

In fact, based on his long years in the financial business, from CEO of Goldman Sachs to his current job as chief executive of the failing MF Global, Corzine is proof positive that on Wall Street you don’t have to be very good at your job to get paid a lot of money, which is why hatred of fat cats remains a bipartisan pastime—and will for the foreseeable future.

I say this as someone who both personally likes Corzine and who has covered his career from his days as a successful bond trader at Goldman Sachs, when it didn’t take much more than a balance sheet and a phone to make money—and Corzine did, a lot of it. So much in fact that people I know put his net worth at around $500 million, more than enough money to buy multiple elections in New Jersey as U.S. senator and then as governor.

But his record of achievement on Wall Street as someone who had to run something? Pretty poor and it goes beyond his latest flop at MF Global, which was forced to declare bankruptcy Monday morning following massive losses tied to its investments in sovereign debt.

In fact, Corzine’s career has failure written all over it. Yes, he made a lot of money trading bonds over the years, but also lost a lot of money managing people who trade bonds, which made his latest screw-up at MF Global all the more inevitable.

Even friends of Corzine say his management style is erratic at best. For all his affability, he consults with almost no one except a small coterie of advisers, and often makes decisions based purely on gut instinct.

Gut instincts might be good for a trader, but they are lousy in management; particularly when you’re the manager in charge of reining in risk-taking traders from losing so much money that it might imperil the franchise. 

At Goldman, that’s exactly what happened. It was Corzine who led Goldman into its first major financial morass (its second one would come just 10 years later and nearly destroy the firm) in 1998, when as chief executive he approved money-losing trading positions along the lines of those committed by the faltering hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management. 

Those trading losses were costing the firm nearly $500 million, and forced the delay of its long-awaited initial public offering, in which Goldman wanted to transform itself from a private partnership to a public company that enriched it partners to no end (Corzine included).

Goldman eventually would go public once the Long-Term Capital storm passed and the losses subsided, thanks in large part to a government-led bailout of the hedge fund. But Corzine wouldn’t survive the ordeal. He was ousted by his second-in-command, Hank Paulson, when it became clear that Corzine wasn’t just a lousy manager, he was lousy at the very skill you get paid big bucks at Goldman to possess—risk management.

With that, Corzine left Goldman with $500 million to indulge his second-biggest passion after making money on Wall Street: politics of the left-wing variety. A longtime liberal Democrat, Corzine used his Wall Street winnings to launch successful campaigns first as U.S. senator from New Jersey, and then as the state’s governor. 

In 2009, when the voters of New Jersey had enough of him, as people did at Goldman, Corzine was back to where he started, looking for a job on Wall Street. At first, most of the big firms wanted nothing to do with him, particularly in the aftermath of the financial crisis, where risk-taking bond traders like Corzine were the cause of the collapse of Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers—and absent the taxpayer bailouts, probably nearly every other major firm and bank, including his old one, Goldman Sachs.

But Corzine was undeterred. His friend, former Goldman executive and now-private-equity honcho Chris Flowers, owned a chunk of a midsize brokerage firm named MF Global, and persuaded the board that Corzine was the right guy to ramp up profits and the firm’s share price, mired in single digits after a trading scandal.

Corzine’s plan to remake the firm was to make it be like the old Goldman. He argued that because of the new Dodd-Frank financial reform, the big Wall Street firms were constrained as to how much risk they could take in trading stocks and bonds. Goldman, for instance, was about to disband its proprietary trading desk and other firms weren’t far behind.

MF Global could emulate Goldman’s success over the years in trading all sorts of things, from derivatives to bonds to plain old stocks—and make a lot money at it because of a huge loophole in the Dodd-Frank provisions in which the trading ban only covered large “systemically important” firms, not midsize players such as MF Global.

It all sounded good on paper, until you consider that all that money Goldman and the rest of Wall Street made over the years didn’t mean much in the fall of 2008, when risk-taking caused such massive losses that the entire financial system was on the brink. 

Obviously Corzine didn’t consider any of this, and then oversaw one of the worst bets in modern financial history, buying into the teeth of the European financial crisis debt of Italy and Spain, two of the countries considered most likely to default after Greece.

Corzine’s spokeswoman didn’t return repeated calls for comment, but here’s what we know right now: MF Global has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and is quickly heading for liquidation because Corzine can’t find buyers willing to pay enough money for those parts of the firm that don’t take risk. 

Some 3,000 people stand a good chance of losing their jobs in the coming days. Investors are demanding answers about Corzine’s risk controls, and whether the firm’s board had any inkling what he was doing. Even worse, federal regulators are investigating whether the firm in its final hours used customer money to support its trading activities—when such funds are supposed to be kept separate. As this column goes to press, regulators still can’t locate hundreds of millions of dollars in client funds, making a messy situation even messier.

As for Jon Corzine’s future, fellow CEOs say MF Global will likely be his last job on Wall Street; that having left Goldman in a similar fashion, he really has nowhere else to go. But I doubt Corzine is through. Wall Street is one of the few places where failure of great magnitude is an accepted way of life: Almost no CEO of a major Wall Street firm was forced out over the events that led to the 2008 financial collapse.

So my bet is Jon Corzine will be back and people, from Tea Partiers to Occupy Wall Street protesters, will find common ground having even more reason to hate Wall Street.

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Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/gasparino-theres-no-surprise-at-mf-global-as-jon-corzines-career-has-failure-written-all-over-it-2011-11#ixzz1cSY4FR00


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that dude drove like he didn't respect others on the road, nor the rule of law.

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that dude drove like he didn't respect others on the road, nor the rule of law.

That piece of garbage was being hailed as the next Tres Sec after Geitner by your messiah.   


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MF Global Acknowledged Diverting Customer Funds
Wall Street Journal ^

Posted on Tuesday, November 01, 2011 4:18:59 PM by Sub-Driver

MF Global Acknowledged Diverting Customer Funds By VICTORIA MCGRANE And JAMILA TRINDLE

MF Global Holdings Ltd. admitted to federal regulators that money had been diverted out of customer accounts, according to a federal official who said the move violated the law.

The Wall Street brokerage, which filed for bankruptcy protection Monday, acknowledged the shortfall amid mounting questions from regulators as they went through the firm's books while trying to facilitate a sale to Interactive Brokers Group Inc., the official said. Regulators still don't know where the customer funds went, who directed the move or how widespread the practice was, the official said.

Regulators are still working to determine whether MF Global had a continuing problem with handling customer funds or if executives diverted funds as the company's financial situation deteriorated and grew more desperate, the official said.


(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...


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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/01/mf-global-admitted-using-client-money_n_1069757.html#comments





Wow - what a pofs! ! ! !


Oh thats right - Obama wanted him for next Tres. Sec.  after Geithner.   LMFAO   @ the liberal Madoffs !!!!   

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This whole time I was doing it all wrong. Appearantly you have to totally fuck things up to get ahead.



:D

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FBI to investigate MF Global over missing funds: WSJ
Reuters ^ | Nov. 1, 2011
Posted on November 1, 2011 6:16:41 PM EDT by Free ThinkerNY

(Reuters) - The Federal Bureau of Investigation plans to examine MF Global Holdings Ltd amid concerns about missing client funds at the futures brokerage, the Wall Street Journal said Tuesday, citing a person familiar with the matter.

The FBI will examine whether money is missing, the person told the Journal, and whether any criminal laws were broken.

That decision is a preliminary step, the person said, but could lead to a criminal investigation.

(Excerpt) Read more at reuters.com ...





democrat crime wave. 

Soul Crusher

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Source: NY Times

Federal regulators have discovered that hundreds of millions of dollars in customer money have gone missing from MF Global in recent days, prompting an investigation into the company’s operations as it filed for bankruptcy on Monday, according to several people briefed on the matter.

The revelation of the missing money scuttled an 11th hour deal for MF Global to sell a major part of itself to a rival brokerage firm. MF Global, the powerhouse commodities brokerage run by Jon S. Corzine, had staked its survival on completing the deal.

Now, the investigation threatens to tarnish the reputation of Mr. Corzine, the former New Jersey Governor and Goldman Sachs chief who oversaw MF Global’s demise, making it the first American victim of Europe’s debt crisis.

.....

But regulators are examining whether MF Global diverted some customer money to support its own trades as the firm teetered on the brink of collapse. If that was the case, it could violate a fundamental tenet of Wall Street regulation: Customers’ money must be kept separate from company money.



Read more: http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2011/10/31/regulators-inves... /







Wow!!! 

Fury

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What kind of stupid fuck would invest in European sovereign debt right now? Greek 1-years are trading at 200% right now.


This is the kind of company Obama keeps! HAHAHAHAHA!

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