Author Topic: Get the leg irons ready - Corzine (Obama Bundler) is going to jail for fraud.  (Read 14883 times)

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With results like this, he's all but locked up being the next Sec. of Treasury.

Further proof that any jerk-off could have made it in easy money days. The real ballers make money in this type of economy.

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(RAT) Corzine's firm admits to using clients' money, fed says (FBI investigates missing $600 mil)
NH Register ^ | 11/02/11
Posted on November 2, 2011 7:12:41 AM EDT by Libloather

Corzine's firm admits to using clients' money, fed says
By Associated Press
Published: Wednesday, November 02, 2011

WASHINGTON — MF Global, the securities firm led by former New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine, admitted using clients’ money as its financial troubles mounted, a federal official says.

An MF Global executive admitted that to federal regulators in a call early Monday, after regulators raised questions about the company’s books, according to an official familiar with the conversation.

It is not clear where the money ended up or what it might have been used for, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to discuss an investigation by federal regulators.

**SNIP**

The investigation of MF Global Holdings Ltd. is preliminary. A formal investigation by the company’s main regulator, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, requires a vote by its five commissioners.

It isn’t clear whether the violations could lead to criminal charges.

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








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Cohan: Others Pay Price for Corzine’s Revenge
By William D. Cohan - Nov 1, 2011




In the end, Jon Corzine was little more than an unsupervised rogue trader.

His disproportionately reckless $6.3 billion bet on the credit quality of a few European nations bankrupted MF Global Holdings Ltd. (MF) over the course of three dramatic days after the short-term credit markets quickly lost confidence in him and his firm. His gamble will cost MF’s shareholders and creditors billions of dollars and, virtually overnight, put the careers of MF’s almost 3,000 employees in jeopardy.

MF Global now has the distinction of being one of the largest bankruptcies in American corporate history, with almost $40 billion in liabilities. There is also the matter of the hundreds of millions of dollars of customers’ money that regulators have reported to be missing from the firm’s coffers.

In any case, it’s incredible how little Corzine and his associates learned from the collapses of Bear Stearns Cos., Merrill Lynch, Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and American International Group Inc. three years ago. And it now seems very hard to believe that just a few months ago Corzine was considered the front-runner to be the next U.S. Treasury secretary.

It didn’t have to be this way. The tragic element of Corzine’s MF Global is that Monday’s bankruptcy filing could have easily been avoided if Corzine’s ego and ambition had been held in check by someone -- anyone -- willing to stand up to the former New Jersey governor, senator and senior partner at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS)

No One Watching
Where, for example, was J. Christopher Flowers, the billionaire founder of J.C. Flowers & Co.? According to MF Global’s most recent proxy statement, Flowers’s firm owned 6.8 percent of MF. But then Flowers had reasons to have blind faith in Corzine: It was Flowers who recruited the former governor to MF in 2010, and also made Corzine a partner in his private- equity fund. When the two men were at Goldman Sachs in the 1990s, they had a symbiotic relationship: As Flowers was head of the financial-institutions group, Corzine relied on him to make introductions to other Wall Street bosses so they could ponder strategic deals.

Where were MF Global’s other institutional shareholders, such as Fidelity Investments (which held a 14.8 percent stake, according to the proxy), Guardian Life Insurance Co. (7.4 percent), TIAA-CREF Investment Management LLC (6.6 percent) and Piper Jaffray Cos. (PJC) (6.3 percent)? Were they too dazzled by Corzine’s resume to take a serious look at how he intended to transform MF Global from a backwater to a major player on Wall Street? Where was MF Global’s auditor, PriceWaterhouseCoopers LLP, which managed to pocket almost $25 million in fees from the company over the past two years?

And where, for heaven’s sake, was MF Global’s eight-member board of directors -- a ragtag collection of mostly unknown Wall Street types who had the fiduciary responsibility on behalf of creditors, shareholders, counterparties and employees to make sure Corzine wasn’t taking irresponsible risks? Is it too much to ask a board of directors to take this responsibility seriously? Apparently it was at MF Global.

In granting Corzine a three-year extension of his employment agreement in 2011, the board’s compensation committee noted that his “performance has been exemplary since joining the firm just over one year ago,” according to the proxy statement. The board also noted that Corzine “accomplished key near-term building blocks, including significant improvements in the reputation of the firm as demonstrated by its ability to hire quality professionals, the company’s success in securing primary dealer status, its growing client balances and its improved posture with regulators.” One wonders if the board members still hold that opinion.

Other People’s Money
The collapse of MF Global points once again, in the strongest possible terms, to the importance of having a substantive, teeth-bearing regulatory regime charged with overseeing the kind of asynchronous risk-taking that gives people like Corzine the incentive to gamble with other people’s money in hopes of reaping financial windfalls. And yet, more than three years after the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the onset of the financial crisis, we don’t have in place anything close to necessary regulations to try to prevent companies like MF Global from exploding.

There is little question that from the outset of his tenure at MF Global, Corzine was swinging for the fences. He told me at the time that he saw MF Global as sleepy and risk-averse; he was determined to ratchet up exponentially the amount of risk the firm took using its creditors and shareholder money. Corzine himself had only a tiny fraction of his fortune invested in MF Global. His option-oriented compensation package encouraged him to take outsize risks in order to move MF Global’s stock price into “in-the-money” territory.

One also suspects that Corzine was looking for some serious redemption after the January 1999 coup he suffered at the hands of his fellow Goldman Sachs partners. Even though Corzine hadn’t sat on a trading desk in years, MF Global was his return ticket to the land of the Wall Street giants.

Corzine has always been a bit precocious and underestimated. In 1980, at the age of 33, he became a Goldman Sachs partner after just 4½ years at the firm. In 1986, he turned a wrong-way bet by Goldman Sachs on the direction of interest rates and Treasury securities -- a bet that looked like it was going to cost the firm $150 million -- into a $10 million gain after he personally took charge of the trade and worked it out. Many of his Goldman Sachs partners saw him as a bit of a hero afterwards, and the slope of his career trajectory angled dramatically upward.

In 1993, his future leadership of the firm was virtually assured after his trading group racked up impressive gains on the direction of various currencies against the dollar, helping Goldman Sachs to achieve record pretax earnings of $2.7 billion.

A Golden Boy
Corzine was the firm’s golden boy. But just after those earnings were paid out as partner bonuses, the trading environment in 1994 turned decidedly sour. In that year, the firm started losing almost $150 million every month and Corzine refused to give up on his trades --another wrong-headed bet on interest rates. In the end, the firm barely broke even in 1994, and some 40 partners left the company as they watched their capital accounts dwindle. Somehow, Corzine wasn’t held accountable.

In September 1994, despite the huge trading losses for which his fixed-income group was responsible, Corzine’s partners selected him to be the firm’s new senior partner. In 1995, the year after the worst annual performance in Goldman Sachs’s history, he exhorted his partners to try to make $10 billion in pretax income during the next five years. After first snickering at this goal, his partners accomplished it -- and more -- making the firm’s May 1999 initial public offering both inevitable and a huge success. By then, though, Corzine’s unilateral efforts to merge Goldman Sachs with a variety of other Wall Street titans - - from Salomon Brothers to JPMorgan to Mellon Bank -- had so alienated his partners that they colluded to oust him. He said he never saw it coming.

While the denouement of MF Global is still being written, one thing is crystalline: Behind Jon Corzine’s bearded, avuncular facade lies the soul of a stubborn, ambitious and aggressive risk-taking trader who in the end drove MF Global into the financial abyss. If only someone had had the guts to stop him.

(William D. Cohan, a former investment banker and the author of “Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World,” is a Bloomberg View columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.)

To contact the writer of this article: William D. Cohan at wdcohan@yahoo.com

To contact the editor responsible for this article: Tobin Harshaw at tharshaw@bloomberg.net
.

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Mr. Corzine’s Big Bet

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/02/opinion/mr-corzines-big-bet-on-mf-global.html?_r=1&ref=opinion&pagewanted=print




Why did Jon S. Corzine make the risky bets that have now plunged MF Global Holdings into bankruptcy court? We don’t know, but the likely explanations are disturbing.

Over the past year, most investors have been fleeing the sovereign debt of Spain, Italy and other euro-zone basket cases. Not Mr. Corzine. The onetime chief executive of Goldman Sachs and former New Jersey senator and governor who has run MF Global since early 2010, was all in, buying up $6.3 billion worth of discounted euro-zone debt.

As Azam Ahmed reported in The Times on Tuesday, Mr. Corzine appeared to be wagering that the European Union would come to the rescue of Europe’s troubled economies, averting a default. In other words, Mr. Corzine was betting on a bailout.

A euro-zone bailout may well come, but not in time for Mr. Corzine and MF Global. Concerns about Mr. Corzine’s big bet led two ratings agencies to downgrade the firm to junk last week, draining investor confidence — and cash — from the firm, and sending it spiraling into bankruptcy proceedings. The fact that Mr. Corzine built a strategy betting on a government (in this case, European) rescue should be a chilling reminder of how far the world has not come since the darkest days of the financial crisis. Europe is trying to bail out Greece, in part, to protect its big banks.

In fact, the financial system, on both sides of the Atlantic, is still dominated by too-big-to-fail banks and regulations intended to ensure that their collapse won’t bring down the financial system are still a work in progress.

It is progress that in Europe, at least, creditors are being asked to bear some of the burden. But the need for bailouts is clearly still very much with us.

Another reason that Mr. Corzine’s bets may have gone so wrong — and another echo of the financial crisis — is that American regulators did not rein in the firm. MF Global was highly leveraged, with liabilities at the end of June of $44.4 billion and equity of only $1.4 billion.

In a research note published on Tuesday, Steve Blitz, a senior economist with ITG Investment Research, pointed out that MF Global was one of the firms designated by the Federal Reserve as a primary dealer in United States Treasuries. After the havoc of high leverage in the financial crisis, how is it possible that the Fed allowed MF Global to operate with so much leverage? Are the Fed, the Securities and Exchange Commission and other relevant regulators fully monitoring the risks at other broker dealers?

Meanwhile, self-regulation is clearly not the answer. The Wall Street Journal reported on Monday that the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, a self-regulatory agency for brokerages, recently warned MF Global to shore up its capital to cushion against its increasingly risky positions. Whatever the firm did, if anything, clearly wasn’t enough.

In the end, the American people are lucky that MF Global was small enough to fail, its riskiness and recklessness absorbed by the bankruptcy process. But with the devastating damage from the crisis still hobbling the economy, relying on luck is not enough.

MF Global is a warning that the system is still far too vulnerable and the work of regulatory reform far from finished.



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FBI Reportedly Investigates MF Global, Jon Corzine's Future Uncertain
ABC ^ | 11/2/2011 | Susanna Kim




The story of MF Global's downward spiral, with former New Jersey governor Jon Corzine at the helm, is only starting to unfold, though some may say it was a predictable one.

With news that federal regulators, including the FBI, are investigating whether the broker-dealer is missing customer money, the company's failure may have larger repercussions to the financial system.

"I think it will add to the complexity of the situation and will add to more skeletons," Jody Lurie, corporate credit analyst at Janney Capital Markets, said. "This won't be as much of an open-and-shut case as we would expect."

On Tuesday, the Associated Press reported that the FBI is expected to investigate whether customer money is missing and if criminal activity was involved.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) said on Monday that MF Global "reported possible deficiencies in customer futures segregated accounts held at the firm."

The two agencies determined that a bankruptcy proceeding led by the Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC), as opposed to a bankrutpcy trustee, "would be the safest and most prudent course of action to protect customer accounts and assets."


(Excerpt) Read more at abcnews.go.com ...


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$600 million missing at MF Global (Where's Occupy Wall Street? Company run by Liberal Democrat)
cnn money ^ | 11/2/2011 | James O'Toole
Posted on November 2, 2011 9:33:27 PM EDT by tobyhill

A government regulator said in court Wednesday that roughly $600 million is missing from the books of bankrupt brokerage MF Global.

The firm, headed by former New Jersey governor and Goldman Sachs CEO Jon Corzine, filed for Chapter 11 protection on Monday following a panic from investors over its holdings of risky European debt.

"MF Global has discovered a shortfall of segregated accounts of around $600 million," a lawyer with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission said, adding that this is a preliminary figure that could increase.

This past weekend, executives at MF Global had been scrambling to sell the firm to Interactive Brokers, but the missing money scuttled the deal and forced it into bankruptcy, regulators said this week.

(Excerpt) Read more at money.cnn.com ...





Bump for team Kenya. 

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put him in prison, homeslice.

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put him in prison, homeslice.

Sorry , he is too busy bundling cash for Obama.   Remember - he is Obamas wall street guy right now and potential next treasury sec after MaoBama. 

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MF Global Client Theft Estimate Doubled To $1.5 Billion?
Zero Hedge ^ | Tyler Durden
Posted on November 2, 2011 4:55:22 PM EDT by tcrlaf

Even as we hear rumblings that the MF fire is spreading, and the associated auditor of the now infamous former Primary Dealer is about to get in serious hot water, the bankrupt company itself continues to dig itself an ever deeper grave.

Because according to a just filed motion by the MF Global liquidating trustee, it seems that the gross criminal activity by the company may have been orders of magnitude bigger than anyone has expected.

To wit: "As a result of the apparent segregation violations and the suspension of clearing privileges, more than 150,000 customer accounts essentially were frozen on October 31, 2011, of which more than 50,000 accounts were regulated commodities customer accounts. The CME estimates that MFGI’s current segregated funds requirement is approximately $5.45 billion.

Moreover, the total amount of MFGI customer segregated funds on deposit at the CME is approximately $2.5 billion, and the clearing-level segregated collateral is approximately $1.5 billion or approximately 60 percent of the MFGI customer segregated funds on deposit at the CME."

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







Wow.     Corzine the liberal scion turns put to be another madoff. 

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Obama was set to make him tres sec after geithner and corzine is now obamas liason on wall street for donations. 


Ad you far left fools have the balls to attackcain?   

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Bump for straw.     Hey straw do you like the fact that obamao and corzine are "one voice".  ????? 

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Source: Reuters

WASHINGTON, Nov 2 (Reuters) - President Barack Obama's re-election campaign would return the donations made by embattled MF Global chief Jon Corzine if he were charged with any wrongdoing, a campaign official said on Wednesday.

Corzine, who is at the center of a storm over the securities firm's bankruptcy this week, was a major fundraiser for Obama. The former Goldman Sachs chief has raised or "bundled" donations of at least $500,000 so far for Obama's 2012 re-election effort.

Corzine himself has donated the maximum that an individual can give for a presidential campaign, according to campaign finance records. He held a lavish $35,800-a-head fund-raising dinner for Obama at his home in April.

A campaign official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Obama's campaign would return the donations from Corzine as an individual if civil or criminal charges are brought against him.

Read more: http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/11/02/mfglobal-fund...

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Re: Get the leg irons ready - Jon Corzine is going to jail for fraud.
« Reply #38 on: November 02, 2011, 08:35:24 PM »

November 2, 2011 12:27pm
20 Comments
Jon Corzine for Treasury Secretary! byDavid Freddoso Online Opinion Editor
Follow on Twitter:@freddoso
With the sinking of MF Global, where he now serves as CEO, former New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine, D, could well be remembered as the man who bet on a government bailout one time too many. (Don't forget, Corzine was CEO at Goldman Sachs during the infamous bailout of Mexican bonds in 1995, engineered from within the Clinton White House by his predecessor.)

But don't just think of Corzine as a bad governor who drove a multi-billion-dollar firm to bankruptcy. The Weekly Standard's Mark Hemingway reminded me on Twitter today of this lovely November 2008 essay on Corzine as Obama's prospective Treasury Secretary, in which The Nation's John Nichols called Corzine "change we can believe in." Note also the praise at the bottom from former SEIU boss Andy Stern:

Everyone is excited about the fact that President-elect Barack Obama is talking with New York Senator Hillary Clinton about the prospect that she might serve as Secretary of State. But the big news from inside the transition process is the speculation that New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine might be selected for the essential economic position of Secretary of the Treasury....

...Corzine is not your typical Goldman-Sachs man.

After he was elected to the US Senate from New Jersey in 2000, Corzine searched out Minnesota Senator Paul Wellstone. The new senator from New Jersey informed the iconic liberal Democrat -- who was often at odds with his own party's leadership -- that he hoped they could work together on social and economic justice issues.

Corzine, a very wealthy former Goldman-Sachs chairman and co-CEO, might have seemed like an unlikely economic populist. But he soon made the senator from Minnesota a believer. Indeed, when we were sitting in his office one afternoon in 2001, talking about the senators who could be counted on to stand up to the new Bush-Cheney administration, Wellstone said, "Put Corzine of the list. He's going to surprise people.

During his five years in the Senate, Corzine did, indeed, side with Wellstone (until the Minnesotan's death in 2002) and with the left wing of the Democratic Senate Caucus -- sponsoring the "Start Healthy, Stay Healthy Act" to expand access to health care for children and pregnant women and a proposal to lower the marginal tax bracket from 15 percent to 10 percent for low-income wage earners. Corzine worked with Wellstone and Massachusetts Senator Ted Kennedy to defend Pell Grants and entitlement programs that were under attack, he criticized schemes to privatize Social Security and played a critical role in passing legislation designed to crack down on corporate malfeasance.

The senator from New Jersey promoted regulation of major industries (chemical and nuclear power, in particular) and he was one of the few senators to question blank-check giveaways to the airline industry in aftermath of the September 11, 2001, attacks.

Corzine also voted against authorizing Bush to take the country to war with Iraq and got a whole lot of other issues -- not all of them, but a whole lot -- right.

It is rare that someone with Corzine's record even gets on a list of prospective Treasury officials.

Corzine may or may not be the perfect pick. But the fact that he is being considered is one more sign that a change -- maybe even a "change we can believe in" -- is coming to Washington.

After all, when was the last time that a potential nominee for the Treasury post was being talked up by the head of the Service Employees International Union. On Thursday, Andy Stern told reporters he thought the governor's strong economic credentials and government experience make Corzine an appealing prospect. Stern's right.

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Re: Get the leg irons ready - Jon Corzine is going to jail for fraud.
« Reply #39 on: November 03, 2011, 07:26:58 AM »
Contentions Corzine: Poster Child for Liberal Hypocrisy
Jonathan S. Tobin | @tobincommentary
11.01.2011 - 5:45 PM     




As Seth noted earlier, the collapse of former New Jersey Governor and Goldman Sachs co-chairman Jon Corzine’s latest financial venture is the end of his hopes for higher office. But it is more than that. The discovery that $700 million of the money investors put into his MF Global firm is missing is a shocking scandal that highlights liberal hypocrisy as much as it does the excesses of the world of Wall Street high finance.

Corzine is not just another high-flying investment ace that was shot down by bad bets — in this case by his firm’s decision to put customers’ money in European sovereign debt. Such figures are generally associated with the fat cats whom popular culture tells us are all Republicans who finance conservative causes. Corzine was, after all, not just a Democrat but one of the party’s bright hopes just a few years ago and a leading liberal advocate for bigger government as well as, in a touch dripping with irony, for reining in excessive compensation for Wall Street executives. More than just a stereotypical “limousine liberal,” Corzine was a major figure in mobilizing financial support for the Democratic Party, a role that he continued to play even after losing his try for re-election in 2009 to Chris Christie. The White House will try to distance itself from Corzine, but the disgrace of one of his leading bundlers will make it a little harder for Obama to spend the next year wandering the countryside complaining about Republican responsibility for Wall Street greed and income inequality.


Seasoned observers of both politics and finance already understood that scoundrels could be found in every political camp. But that’s not the song being sung by the president and his Democratic choir. Obama has sought to piggyback on the Occupy Wall Street protests and their inchoate demands for punishing the wealthy. The president has been inveighing against the avarice of financiers as well as the willingness of Republicans to oppose efforts to confiscate more of their income in the name of a loosely defined belief in lessening income inequality. But the fact that one of the leading pillars of his campaign appears to be guilty of all the sins generally associated by Democrats with the 2008 financial meltdown that helped elect Obama in the first place ought to cut the legs out from under the president’s populist pose.

The fact that Corzine’s financial skullduggery is linked with the impending default of Greece is also telling. Corzine’s reign of error in New Jersey was marked by fiscal profligacy that mirrors the breakdown in Athens and forced his successor to go to war with state unions in order to start the state back down the road to solvency. Like the Greek politicians who complain about the impact of austerity policies needed to pay for past spending sprees, Democrats now indulge in demagoguery aimed at portraying their opponents as the party of the rich while opposing genuine reform of government spending habits. That they do so while raking in contributions from Wall Street malefactors like Corzine just adds to their hypocrisy.

When Obama speaks about the political influence of a corrupt Wall Street establishment that victimized investors and ordinary Americans while reaping profits he will want us to associate those vices with his opponents. But Corzine proves that this self-serving sermon would be better served up to his own wealthy supporters than anyone else.

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Re: Get the leg irons ready - Jon Corzine is going to jail for fraud.
« Reply #40 on: November 03, 2011, 07:37:20 AM »
MF Global Under SEC Investigation Over Prior Statements On European Bets
First Posted: 11/3/11 08:35 AM ET Updated: 11/3/11 08:35 AM ET

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/03/mf-globals-claims-over-european-debt-sec-investigation_n_1073388.html



The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has launched a probe into whether MF Global Holdings made misleading statements about the $6.3 billion bets that sank the company, the Wall Street Journal said, citing people familiar with the matter.

MF Global, the futures brokerage which collapsed on Monday after risky trades on European debt, faces a shortfall of $633 million in customer funds, according to an estimate from CME Group Inc.

A source familiar with the matter told Reuters that regulators are still not sure where the money is, and why they can't find it.

MF Global maintains that any shortfall is the result of money stuck at banks that handled its trades or unintentional bookkeeping problems, the Journal said, citing people familiar with the matter.

The securities firm's trades are usually cleared on the same day. But as MF Global's situation became more dire, the banks held on to the funds, one of the people told the WSJ.

MF Global and the SEC could not immediately be reached for comment by Reuters outside regular U.S. business hours.


(Reporting by Sakthi Prasad in Bangalore; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.




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George Soros Trader Involved in Bankrupt Firm Tied to Obama
Accuracy in Media ^ | November 2, 2011 | Cliff Kincaid




A major figure in liberal Democrat Jon Corzine’s bankrupt firm, MF Global, used to work for hedge fund operator and Democratic Party financial patron George Soros. MF Global Holdings Ltd., now under FBI investigation, had hired Munir Javeri as Global Head of Trading.


“He is no longer with the company,” a spokesman for the firm informed Accuracy in Media. The spokesman added that he had no contact information for Munir Javeri and couldn’t say when he left the firm. He had been Vice-President of Soros Fund Management from 2003-2004 and was given an “inducement award” in the form of stock options after being hired by MF Global.


Hundreds of millions of dollars are reportedly now missing from the firm’s customer accounts. The firm is said to have experienced major losses because of questionable investments in European bonds.



..The bankruptcy of MF Global is being described as the eighth-largest corporate bankruptcy in U.S. history. Steve Schaefer of Forbes says it is “the largest bankruptcy (by assets) of a public company this year, and by a huge margin.”


..To make matters worse, MF Global had close financial ties to the Federal Reserve. The firm was designated a primary dealer by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which means that it participated directly in Treasury auctions and provided analysis and market intelligence to trading desks at the New York Federal Reserve.


At his news conference today, however, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke insisted the Fed was not the supervisor of MF Global and had never given the firm a “seal of approval.”


But a “seal of approval” for Corzine had come from Obama.


The New York Times reports that President Obama’s first major re-election fund-raiser in New York was held at Corzine’s Manhattan home, with tickets going for $35,800 each


(Excerpt) Read more at aim.org ...


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Its difficult reading this stuff sometimes. Makes your blood boil. If only the public paid attention to these kinds of things in numbers taht mattered.

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http://mafiatoday.com/bonanno-family/jon-corzines-drive... /

November 2, 2011



EX-N.J. GOV. Jon Corzine’s personal chauffeur was the victim of a Mafia shakedown in the meat locker of a Brooklyn butcher shop, the Daily News has learned.

Bonanno crime soldier Michael (Mike the Butcher) Virtuoso pleaded guilty last month to extortion in connection with a loan that had a 250% interest rate.

He is referred to only as “John Doe” in the Brooklyn Federal Court indictment .

The driver got a $1,000 loan from Virtuoso and made the payments in the amounts of $50 and $100 in the rear office of the mobster’s Graham Ave. Meats & Deli in Williamsburg — and on one occasion “inside a walk-in freezer,” according to court papers.

“Although I did not threaten him, it was understood that harm could be used if he did not pay,” Virtuoso told Judge Sandra Townes.

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MF Global Client Theft Estimate Doubled To $1.5 Billion?
Zero Hedge ^ | Tyler Durden




Even as we hear rumblings that the MF fire is spreading, and the associated auditor of the now infamous former Primary Dealer is about to get in serious hot water, the bankrupt company itself continues to dig itself an ever deeper grave.

Because according to a just filed motion by the MF Global liquidating trustee, it seems that the gross criminal activity by the company may have been orders of magnitude bigger than anyone has expected.

To wit: "As a result of the apparent segregation violations and the suspension of clearing privileges, more than 150,000 customer accounts essentially were frozen on October 31, 2011, of which more than 50,000 accounts were regulated commodities customer accounts. The CME estimates that MFGI’s current segregated funds requirement is approximately $5.45 billion.

Moreover, the total amount of MFGI customer segregated funds on deposit at the CME is approximately $2.5 billion, and the clearing-level segregated collateral is approximately $1.5 billion or approximately 60 percent of the MFGI customer segregated funds on deposit at the CME."


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


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Regulator gave $10k to NJ Dems as Corzine ran (for Governor of Jew Jersey in 2005)
Yahoo ^ | 11/3/11 | Daniel Wagner - AP




WASHINGTON (AP) -- The regulator overseeing the investigation of Jon Corzine's collapsed securities firm, MF Global, gave $10,000 to the New Jersey Democratic Party in 2005 as Corzine ran for governor of that state.


Gary Gensler, chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and Corzine had worked together for 18 years at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and later collaborated to pass a law to combat corporate fraud.

Election records show Gensler gave the money in August 2005. Corzine, a Democrat, was elected governor later that year.

MF Global filed for bankruptcy protection on Monday. Gensler and other regulators are trying to find out what happened to hundreds of millions in clients' money that went missing last week.

Gensler's long history with Corzine poses an apparent conflict of interest that could taint the probe's findings, experts say.

"The appearance of a conflict is there, there's no question," said Jay Lorsch, a professor at Harvard Business School. "It might be wise for Mr. Gensler to recuse himself from this particular investigation."

Gensler rose to become Goldman's co-head of finance before leaving in 1997. Corzine left Goldman in 1999, after serving as chairman and CEO.


(Excerpt) Read more at finance.yahoo.com ...



________________________ ________________________ ___


Guess who appointed Gensler to that post? ? ?  ? ? 

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RNC calls on Obama to return Corzine contributions (Obama now connected to the missing $600 million)
cnn ^ | 11/3/2011 | Paul Steinhauser
Posted on November 3, 2011 6:42:09 PM EDT by tobyhill

The head of the Republican National Committee is calling on President Barack Obama to return half a million dollars in fundraising Jon Corzine raised on the president's behalf, now that the former one term New Jersey governor's bankrupt brokerage firm is under investigation by the federal authorities.

"In light of the FBI Investigation into Jon Corzine's company, President Obama should immediately return the $500,000 that Corzine raised on his behalf," said RNC Chairman Reince Priebus, in a statement released Thursday.

A government regulator said in court Wednesday that roughly $600 million is missing from the books of bankrupt brokerage MF Global, which is headed by Corzine, a former Goldman Sachs CEO and former Democratic governor of New Jersey and U.S. senator. Corzine's firm filed for Chapter 11 protection on Monday following a panic from investors over its holdings of risky European debt.

The FBI and federal prosecutors are now investigating how some $600 million of MF Global customers' money went missing, CNN learned Tuesday from sources close to the probe.

According to federal election records, employees of the company contributed more than $100,000 to the president's re-election campaign and the Democratic National Committee. And this year Corzine has contributed the maximum legal limit to both the Obama campaign ($5,000) and the DNC ($30,800).

(Excerpt) Read more at politicalticker.blogs.cn n.com ...






Lmfao.   


Obama = Bernie madoff. 

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Yet again, House reaffirms ‘In God We Trust’

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Dan Eggen & T.W. Farnam
MF Global ties awkward for Obama campaign

View Photo Gallery —  President Obama’s reelection campaign and DNC together raised $70 million in the third quarter of 2011.

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By T.W. Farnam, Published: November 2

The bankrupt financial company MF Global, now under federal investigation for possibly misusing clients’ money, is one of the top sources of contributions for President Obama’s reelection, complicating the campaign’s effort to turn public anger at Wall Street into a political advantage.

Employees of the company have given $108,650 to Obama’s campaign and the Democratic National Committee, according to federal records. MF Global’s chairman and chief executive, former New Jersey governor Jon Corzine, has raised at least $500,000 for the campaign and the DNC as a “bundler,” or volunteer fundraiser.

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Mitt Romney is the only other major presidential candidate who reports receiving money from an MF Global employee, listing a $2,500 check from a company trader based in Stamford, Conn.

MF Global declared bankruptcy Monday, becoming the first U.S. victim of the European debt crisis. The FBI plans to conduct a preliminary probe into reports that hundreds of millions of dollars are missing from client accounts, federal law enforcement officials said.

The situation shows the political risk of relying on big money bundlers who can collect checks from friends and colleagues. Trouble can often rub off on candidates when they’re getting help from powerful public figures. Obama’s campaign has released a list of 350 bundlers who have raised at least $50,000, including 40 who have raised more than $500,000 each.

MF Global did not return a request for comment. A company attorney said in a recent bankruptcy court hearing that the company was not aware of any missing funds.

Obama campaign spokesman Ben LaBolt said in a statement that the president has been tougher on Wall Street companies than the Republican opposition.

“While the president passed Wall Street reform to combat risky financial deals that put our entire economy at risk,” LaBolt said, “Mitt Romney and the Republican candidates would let Wall Street write its own rules again no matter what the consequences for middle class families.”

The Obama campaign said it would return contributions from any MF Global employees, including Corzine, if they are charged with crimes related to the company’s collapse.

A Romney spokeswoman declined to comment.

MF Global recently made a bond sale with an unusual clause, saying the interest rate on the bonds would rise 1 percent if Corzine ended up being appointed to a post in the Obama administration. There has been speculation that he could be in line for Treasury secretary if the president is reelected.

The president has voiced support for recent protests against the financial industry and his campaign aides have said they plan to use the Occupy Wall Street movement to help build momentum for his reelection.

“I think it expresses the frustrations that the American people feel,” Obama said in a news conference last month. “The protesters are giving voice to a more broad based frustration with how our financial system works…. The American people understand that not everybody’s been following the rules, that Wall Street is an example of that.”

Obama held his first New York fundraiser for the reelection campaign at Corzine’s home on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, overlooking Central Park. Guests gave the maximum $35,800 donation to Obama and the DNC.

Obama’s links to financial companies don’t end with MF Global. The president has raised $15.6 million from the financial industry for his reelection effort and the DNC, according to a Washington Post analysis.

The third-largest source of cash for Obama is Chicago-based Chopper Trading, which employs a controversial high-frequency trading technique. The firm’s chief executive, Raj Fernando, held a fundraiser at his home with Vice President Biden and has raised at least $200,000 for the campaign and the DNC.

A federal study of the 2010 “flash crash,” when the stock market briefly lost $1 trillion in value only to recover shortly thereafter, placed the blame squarely on high-frequency trading technologies like those employed by Chopper. Other studies have cited high-frequency trading, which now accounts for more than half of all trades, as contributing to stock market volatility. A company spokesman did not return a request for comment, but defenders of the industry dispute those studies.

Obama has raised $48,572 from Credit Suisse employees. The bank’s Swiss parent company is under investigation for allegedly helping Americans avoid taxes with offshore accounts. The bank is at top funder of Romney’s campaign, with workers donating $180,250.






Hope n change.

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Regulators dig in at MF Global in money pursuit
Yahoo ^ | 11/3/11 | Sarah N. Lynch and Christopher Doering - Reuters
Posted on November 4, 2011 12:00:26 AM EDT by NormsRevenge

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. regulators are launching a broad review into the business practices of failed futures brokerage MF Global Holdings Ltd as their hunt continues for over $600 million in missing customer money.

Round-the-clock shifts for examiners have become the norm as they sort through the collapse of the firm headed by former New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine. MF Global filed for bankruptcy on Monday after risky bets on European debt scared away clients and investors.

"We will look at every aspect of how the firm conducted business," Mary Schapiro, chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, told Reuters regarding the agency's review. She declined to discuss any potential action that the SEC's enforcement division may take.

Investor fears over European sovereign debt risks facing other investment houses hit shares of Jefferies Group Inc hard early on Thursday until it issued a statement saying it had no meaningful net exposure.

...

Both SEC's Schapiro and Gary Gensler, chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, painted a picture on Thursday of close teamwork between regulators to get to the bottom of why the firm collapsed and track down the funds.

...

So far, the long hours have failed to turn up much in terms of money -- and that may not be an accident. CME Group, .. has said that MF Global appeared to have made "transfers of customer segregated funds in a manner that may have been designed to avoid detection.

...

Brokerages like MF Global are required to keep their customers' money segregated from the firms' own cash. Questions about whether this took place at MF Global has attracted the Federal Bureau of Investigation in addition to regulators.

Neither MF Global nor Chief Executive Jon Corzine, who once ran Goldman Sachs, have been accused of any wrongdoing.

(Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ...






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