Author Topic: Get the leg irons ready - Corzine (Obama Bundler) is going to jail for fraud.  (Read 16686 times)

Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.
cause you said corzine was a liberal madoff.  Isn't that repetitive?  That's like saying "unprepared Cain" when I could just say "Cain".

 ;D

Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.
Latest Updates
Citizens United Sends FOIA Request To Treasury Department


Posted by David N. Bossie
11/22/2011 3:05:04 PM

Citizens United sent a FOIA request to the Treasury Department today to see how much influence Jon Corzine has had in shaping our country’s economic policy under President Obama and Secretary Geithner. Please see all letters here. Full letter below: Citizens United sent a FOIA to the Treasury
 



http://www.citizensunited.org/latest-updates.aspx?article=4057


Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.
Other people’s money
Corzine & ‘Wall St.’ financing


Last Updated: 3:17 AM, November 23, 2011

Posted: 10:18 PM, November 22, 2011

More  Print Steven Malanga


The meltdown of MF Global is a striking lesson in the degree to which our finance firms and our elected officials often do business in the same way — regardless of claimed ideology. It’s particularly telling because of the way MFG head Jon Corzine moved from Wall Street to government and back.

Back when Corzine ran for governor of New Jersey, he promised to bring fiscal stability to state finances and reduce the crushing property-tax burden on homeowners. Banking on a reputation for financial wizardry from his Wall Street days, he also boasted that he could expand access to health care, fund universal pre-kindergarten in public schools and pump billions into subsidized housing.
 
Bloomberg

Always expecting a bailout: Corzine, here calling for tax hikes in his 2008 State of the State speech, wrought disaster in New Jersey and on Wall Street.

That platform made Corzine a darling among big-government types, who found it astonishing that a former Goldman Sachs chief could preach such “unabashed, old-fashioned liberalism,” as The New York Times put it. Once he became governor, however, the only way that Corzine could live up to his promises was through sharply higher taxes on some residents and accounting gimmicks of the sort that 21st century Wall Street and government often share in common.

After all, Corzine now has to explain not just the collapse of MF Global, thanks to his series of risky bets on European bonds, but also how some $1.2 billion in MF Global’s customer accounts, which are supposed to be kept separate from the firm’s own capital, seem to have disappeared. If the firm misused the money, someone is likely to go to jail.

Of course, in New Jersey, candidates typically make it into office by planning to spend other people’s money — that is, by making lots of expensive promises to special interests.

As governor, Corzine hiked sales taxes $1.1 billion to pay for popular property-tax rebates; later, the rebate program disappeared for most taxpayers but the sales tax stayed. He also instituted a 2.5 percent fee on all commercial development to subsidize his affordable-housing plans at a time when the state’s private economy was already collapsing. And, as the state’s budget foundered in 2008, he slapped a tax surcharge on higher incomes.

But in the end, Corzine also needed a little financial manipulation in order to keep paying the bills in Jersey. Beholden to public-sector unions who helped elect him, he did nothing to solve the state’s huge pension problem. Instead, he simply pushed billions of dollars in yearly pension costs the state should have been paying into the future. In doing so, Corzine taxed future Jersey residents, who had no say in the matter, by ballooning the state’s long-term liabilities.

Whether in government or finance, he seemed to always believe there’d be a bailout. He destroyed MF Global by betting that the European Union wouldn’t let some of its troubled governments default because they were, of course, too big to fail. In Jersey, he simply ignored one of the worst pension crises in the country because the idea that we’d let hundreds of thousands of government workers lose their pensions is also unthinkable.

In the worlds where Corzine operates, the next bailout is always just around the corner if you are big enough and daring enough.

Sadly, even politicians without time on Wall Street seem to share that faith. After all, other states collectively have accumulated $3 trillion in liabilities for pension promises that they haven’t funded. And outstanding state and local debt has soared from $1.3 trillion to $2.5 trillion in a decade.

Some of that money, recent press reports suggest, is being misused by politicians to plug current budget holes when it was raised for other purposes.

You can do such things in politics and suffer no consequences. You may even get re-elected. Corzine was safer back in New Jersey politics, where he could use other people’s money liberally and engage in shady accounting practices without worrying about the kind of dire consequences he may now face. Nobody’s going to occupy Trenton.

Steven Malanga is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.



Read more: http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/other_people_money_bnv7Yjd8IAli3dAJfSbK7M#ixzz1eXHgQB9B


Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.
Obama and MF Global: Corzine prosecution improbable as President has fundraiser with insider
Written By Kenneth Schortgen Jr on Tuesday, November 8, 2011 | 8:04 AM



With the growing scandal for Job Corzine grows in his work at bankrupt MF Global, the question of whether the Obama Administration would actually seek prosecution against his former campaign contributer seemed unlikely despite the growing evidence.

Now it almost appears improbable.  Especially with the news that after the bankruptcy hit last week, President Obama is holding a fundraising dinner at the behest of the primary lawyer for the MF Global bankruptcy.

Monday night, Obama will attend a private fundraiser hosted by Dwight Bush, president of Urban Trust Bank, and his wife Antoinette, a partner at the international law firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher, and Flom. Skadden is the firm hired to handle the bankruptcy of MF Global, the large Wall Street firm headed by Jon Corzine, former governor of New Jersey and a strong ally of President Obama.

Tickets for the event are at least $17,900 per person.

 The Center for Responsive Politics calls Skadden “a clearinghouse for donors to the Democratic Party.” – Daily Caller

Hey Occupy Wall Street... it's about time to move over to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue if you truly want to find the 1%er who is keeping the rich safe and secure from the same justice system that puts you in jail.


http://www.thedailyeconomist.com/2011/11/obama-and-mf-global-corzine-prosecution.html


________________________ ____________





This is the most corrupt Admn of all time. 


Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.
Corzine's Fraud
Townhall.com ^ | November 23, 2011 | Jeff Carter





MF Global committed fraud. The purpose of this short post is to delineate a couple of things that have been circulating, and to try and provide a bit of clarity.

MF didn’t default on the $CME or anyone else’s clearing house. The phrase, “no one has lost a penny due to default of our clearinghouse” still applies.

However, MF did screw over its entire customer base. By doing that, it threw into question every client/firm relationship in the industry. Is your money safe with your clearing firm? Brokerage?

I haven’t gotten a letter from my broker telling me their practices regarding segregated funds. Am I supposed to trust them after this?

As far as the legal ramifications, only time will tell. Right now it looks like the exchanges will be in the clear legally. They will most definitely get sued. Lawyers from both sides will go on fishing expeditions to try and pry any useful information they can and to bring in as many parties as they can to try and extract as much money as they can from the situation. That’s how the sharks work. They smell blood and are in a frenzy right now.

Traders have been crushed by this. They can’t get to their money. Money is the lifeblood of the marketplace. Without it, markets stop. So far, volume is pretty good. Certain pockets have been affected. However, because there is so much going on with Europe and the SuperCommittee, there is a lot of risk and positioning that needs to happen so people are trading. If this would have happened in a non volatile year like 1994, volume might have been a lot different.


CME has mishandled the public perception of the crisis. Instead of talking, they shut up. They released legalese documents. This is the time to get out in front of your customers. They needed to be very aggressive and proactive. The best thing they could have done was send their employees and representatives out and simply listened. Collect information. Show that they care. Instead, they are left with a situation where each customer feels like they are on an island and they will fight with MF, Lawyers, CME and everyone else for a fixed piece of pie.

Corzine committed fraud in my opinion. It was a cardinal sin. The one thing you don’t do is touch your customers' money. What he did is no different than bank robbery.

Lots of people are saying insider trading is blameless. It happens, and the market isn’t really changed because of it.

My significant other had a thought. What about the people or funds that bought? Say Spencer Bachus, Nancy Pelosi or Dick Durbin walked out of a meeting and shorted stock, or sold out of their holdings.

They had to sell them to someone. There was a buyer. Trading isn’t done in a vacuum. The buyers of their position may have been you, or your pension fund, or your government body. They screwed over the entire market place.

Trading supposedly entails a little risk. The Congresspeople took the risk right out of the trade. They were guaranteed winners as soon as they logged into their account, picked up the phone and placed the order.

But, because the theft (that’s what insider trading really is) is a faceless crime, we tend to not want to punish it like a burglar.

MF Global seems faceless to. The number is so huge. But, as Peter Brandt correctly states Corzine and the CFTC undermined the entire market mechanism and the public trust. They should be in jail without bail.


John Corzine and the people that conspired with him at MF have stolen people’s money. No different than the insider trading. How can you trust any clearing firm again? ($CME, $ICE, $NYX) All of a sudden, counter party risk has been injected into the system.

Ponder that as you watch the budget super committee fail to get a deal and Obama fail to lead-all the while the value of your savings tank with the market.


Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.

andreisdaman

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 16720
I can't wait for Corzine to surface and explain this whole thing.....he is definitely going to jail

Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.
Chris Dodd’s wife, Jackie Clegg is on the board at CME (Chicago Mercantile Exchange).

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/money_co/2010/03/chris-dodds-wife-and-her-strange-entanglement-with-derivatives-trading-.html

...and there’s this...(today)

The trustee searching for missing customer money in the bankruptcy of MF Global will investigate how well the Chicago futures markets monitored the brokerage before its collapse, a spokesman said Wednesday.

Kent Jarrell, a spokesman for Trustee James Giddens, said the quality of a late October audit of MF Global by CME Group Inc. will be part of a broader inquiry. CME owns the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, the Chicago Board of Trade and the New York Mercantile Exchange, where MF Global was among the largest trading firms.

CME has said its audit showed the brokerage was complying in late October with rules about keeping customer funds apart from its other investments. After the audit was finished, MF Global drained money from customer accounts in violation of federal rules, CME has said.

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/money_co/2010/03/chris-dodds-wife-and-her-strange-entanglement-with-derivatives-trading-.html

From 2001-2004, Jackie Clegg Dodd served as an “outside” director of IPC Holdings, Ltd., a Bermuda-based company controlled by AIG.

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2009/03/dodds_wife_a_former_director_o.html

Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies






Dodd strikes again. 

Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.
Skip to comments.

Lawmakers to look at Corzine, rating firms’ ties
Reuters via OO ^ | Reuters
Posted on November 24, 2011 8:30:15 PM EST by Enosh

(Reuters) – U.S. lawmakers plan to look into the relationship between bankrupt mid-size brokerage firm MF Global Holdings Ltd’s former CEO Jon Corzine and the major credit-rating agencies, The Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday, citing a person familiar with the matter.

MF Global’s credit ratings were cut to junk in the days before its October 31 bankruptcy.

A U.S. congressional subcommittee plans a December 15 hearing with regulators and top MF Global officials to review the firm’s collapse. The House Financial Services Subcommittee for Oversight and Investigations has invited Corzine and Bradley Abelow, the firm’s chief operating officer.

The Journal, citing its source, said the committee’s members plan to look into the interactions between Corzine and rating agencies like Moody’s Investors Service, Standard Poor’s and Fitch Ratings and whether their judgment was clouded by the prominence of the former New Jersey governor and one-time head of Goldman Sachs.

Lawmakers haven’t yet asked any firm to attend the hearing, the Journal’s source said.

Representatives for Moody’s, SP, Fitch and MF Global did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

A representative for Corzine could not immediately be reached.

Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.
Corzine has hired Andrew J. Levander, a leading white-collar criminal defense lawyer. He'll need him.
There are actually good reasons for allowing brokerages invest in "safe instruments" such as sovereign debt (Treasuries etc.) or CDs etc or "loan" the money at interest to another institution in exchange for a "safe" collateral. It's simple - money is "swept" daily in and out of interest-bearing "cash" and "margin" customers accounts, because the only way the brokerage can pay customers interest is if they can get a higher rate of interest on their money. Brokerage earns an interest on this cash from Treasuries or CDs or other "safe" instruments and passes some of the profit to you as the interest.

If brokerage couldn't earn [and pay back] some interest on customers' "cash" in the account, the only way for the brokerage to finance the cost of the account would be for customers to pay the brokerage a fee to hold the "cash" prior to making a transaction. That's a situation similar to the "free" checking accounts and debit cards "swipe fees" — when Dodd-Frank / Durbin clause reduced the profit the banks could make on debit card transactions where the "swipe fees" and overdraft financed the accounts, the formerly "free" services suddenly became not so "free".

The CFTC Regulation 1.25 allows segregated funds to be used for other purposes including '…general obligations of a sovereign nation' for the purposes of brokerages earning the interest on parked customers "cash" accounts. However, it doesn't, in any way or under any circumstances, allow commingling of "segregated" customer accounts for brokerage's own / trading accounts or leverage, so MFGH couldn't legally do what it did, even if they might try to hide behind Reg 1.25.
(Ref: The case of the missing $600 million at MF Global gets murkier - FR, post #64, 2011 November 19)

After CFTC audited MFGH, it requested that MFGH increased collateral, due to heavy exposure to EU debt and credit markets, via repo-to-maturity strategy. In effect, this served as a "margin call." If customers' accounts were not used for leverage before that, they certainly started moving from customers accounts to accommodate collateral requirements, and Corzine and J.D. Flowers started looking at selling the company. They almost had a deal with Interactive Brokers Group (IBG) when the news of "money missing from customers accounts" hit and the deal fell through.
(Ref: Jon Corzine and J. Christopher Flowers Friendship Tossed in MF Global Storm - WSJ, by Gina Chon, 2011 November 10

Customer accounts usually insured against these kinds of specific malfeasance or theft (not against trading losses) or brokerage going bust; e.g., Interactive Brokers Group and Fidelity's accounts are insured with Society of Lloyd's / Lloyds of London. FMR / Fidelity, in addition, is also insured by Minich Re and Axis Specialty Europe. Other brokerages usually use Llloyd's, Aon, Marsh & McLennan, Willis Group or other risk insurers, specifically for the "excess of SIPC insurance" liabilities.

Either way, it's going to take a while until customers will get all their cash unfrozen due to forensic, insurance and criminal investigations going on simultaneously. For open trades, time is of the essence, but many accounts have already been transferred to other brokers, and there is a pressure on the judicial system and SIPC to accommodate segregated brokerage account-holders as soon as possible, possibly getting someone to become a DIP on MFGH "receivables" in exchange for money upfront, to disburse to retail customers. If civil lawsuits start coming (there is at least one already) it may complicate such disbursement scheme.

FTA: Yes, Jimmy and Marty, you are staring in the face of not just a run on the futures markets, but a run on the banks.
Yes, there is now a run on Jefferies, about the same size outfit as MFGH... just like Lehman Bros. and Morgan Stanley and Merrill Lynch were next in line of attack after Bear Stearns.

From Jefferies lashes out at 'lies' - NYP, by Kaja Whitehouse, 2011 November 22


Jefferies Group is the victim of lies, rumor and innuendo.
That's according to Rich Handler, chief of the besieged investment bank, who fired off a six-page letter to clients yesterday blaming “rumors, half-truths and outright lies" for creating doubt about the firm's financial health.

“We are writing so that every one of our key constituencies receive the facts and reality directly from us, instead of being misled by half-truths, false rumors and lies being disseminated with malice by a group whose interests are absolutely opposed to yours and ours," Handler said in the unusual letter, which hints that Jefferies is the target of a so-called short-and-distort scam. ..... < snip >

..... Jefferies has been battling comparisons with collapsed brokerage firm MF Global for several weeks. Handler has tried to quell fears by detailing Jefferies' exposure to European debt.

For those who think that the TARP / "bank bailout" / "Wall Street bailout" was unnecessary and there would be no problem if we just "let the banks fail" — look how much angst and pain has been caused for the Main Street by the fall of the relative "flea" MF Global. Lehman Bros. alone had accounts and "assets under management" 17 times larger than MFGH, and Lehman was much smaller than the investment, commercial and integrated banks with trillions of dollars in business and retail customers' money.

Imagine the pain when the companies couldn't borrow against or access their money to meet payroll, because their repos, ARS, ABS and other collateralized accounts that are used as "cash and cash equivalents" were essentially "marked to zero" - that's what the "market" would pay for collateral at the time... Yes, that really happened, quite a few medium-size companies had to file for bankruptcy, others saw their valuations go down well below cash on hand, in the weeks that Congress was dithering and sitting on TARP legislation.

TARP injected temporary liquidity to solvent banks (domestic and foreign with sizable domestic business or interconnectedness), to prevent ongoing "run on the banks," which was a proper function of federal banking system and central bank, not a "bailout"; if we want to call it a that, it still would be a "bailout" of the Main Street, not the Wall Street where the Main Street's money was kept. Some on "Wall Street" and foreign "Wall Streets" were actually making money shorting banks and hoping for as much damage to Wall Street / banks as possible. TARP did stop the panic and the run on the banks - really, an attack on the U.S. and worldwide banking system.

-----

Let's posit... Corzine faced a criminal trial, is convicted, and sentenced, as it is proven that he directly ordered the funds moved. Can he be sued personally for the lost $$?..civil suit...or can the feds force him to make restitution in return for leniency?..he's reported to be worth several hounded million.
In short, yes, if his culpability in transfer of accounts funds is established.

From 7 banks sued over MF Global collapse - NYP, 2011 November 21


< snip > ..... The lawsuit was filed Friday afternoon in Manhattan federal court against units of Bank of America Corp, Citigroup Inc, Deutsche Bank AG, Goldman Sachs Group Inc, Jefferies Group Inc, JPMorgan Chase & Co and Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc. Other defendants include several officials associated with MF Global, including former Chief Executive Jon Corzine.
Friday's lawsuit may be one of the earliest efforts for investors to recover money from relatively deep-pocketed defendants that they believe may share in responsibility for MF Global's Oct. 31 bankruptcy. ..... The lawsuit was brought by the IBEW Local 90 Pension Fund in Connecticut, and the Plumbers' and Pipefitters' Local #562 Pension Fund in Missouri, and seeks class-action status. ..... < snip >


Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.
The Game Is About Done (Denninger)
Market Ticker ^ | 11-23-2011 | Karl Denninger

Posted on Friday, November 25, 2011 7:26:50 AM by blam

The Game Is About Done

Karl Denninger
November 23, 2011


It's pretty-much over at this point....

This morning Germany had a failed Bund auction. That's not particularly noteworthy; it happens from time to time.

But what's noteworthy is what happened to bond yields everywhere through Europe in response: They blew out.

The Greek and Italian "problem" is no longer about Greece and Italy. It has been creeping into Spain and more-recently France, but this morning jumped into Germany and everywhere else "all at once."

Capital has said "no more" to the lies in Europe. While this does not mean an instant implosion it does mean one important thing: The willingness of capital holders to continue to permit deficit spending is coming to an end, and with it the false "GDP" that this lie has "supported" will also come to an end.

Our lawmakers, for their part, continue to sing a happy song about how we'll get it done -- but not today, since the supercommittee was an abject failure. Covering up the failure was the fact that there were departments that had 10, 20 even 30% increases in the funding found in the appropriateions bills that were passed in the House even while the "committee" was trying to find a way to "cut" spending.

Folks, this political game of lie, lie and lie some more cannot go on forever. Eventually the waiter appears with the check and you either pay it, wash dishes, or get arrested for theft. In the political world that "arrest" comes in the form of capital holders saying that they no longer believe you will ever pay and borrowing costs go up -- way up.

The Fed cannot "print" out of this and neither can the ECB. If either try that they will engender an all-on revolt, never mind that as purchasing power falls the fixed costs of staying alive go up relative to incomes and the war is lost anyway.

Reality must eventually be faced. That day is here for Europe and it will soon be here in the US. We have permitted the lies and stealing -- both indirectly and now, as we've seen, it appears directly through MF Global -- to go on for too long.

To those Seniors (and soon-to-be-Seniors) and others who say "but we were promised!" and "I vote damnit - you better give me what you said I'd get" respond: The till is empty and your check is going to bounce.

Occupy Wall Street? Well sure, but while you're at it, why aren't the Seniors encircling the Capitol and refusing to leave? Why isn't the underlying truth being discussed and why aren't the jackals that led to this happening being forced from office and run out of town on a rail?

I'll tell you why: Because everyone thinks that they can manage to somehow "get theirs" while "someone else" will take the hit.

I'm sorry to tell ou that it isn't going to work out like that.

There's no point in continuing to play this game. MF Global showed us -- you're right, you hedge or you place your bet, you still lose your money! How many farmers, airlines, industrial producers and other legitimate entities using the market for risk management got screwed by that little game and why is it that Corzine is not in handcuffs? FINRA? What's that -- it appears Corzine didn't have a valid (and required) securities license. Self-regulation not only failed so has any resemblance of actual law enforcement.

The same game was run over in Europe with sovereign CDS. You hedge, you bet right, the ISDA declares that you were "voluntarily" exchanging your bonds and the hedges you bought were worthless. Your "exchange" was as voluntary as is handing over your wallet when there's a gun up your nose, but that doesn't matter -- the word "is" can be redefined any time the people in charge want, and they want.

Your money, that is.

It will not be long ladies and gentlemen, when the bulk of the folks running the algorithms deduce that they're exposed to the same risks - they have to post margin too, you know, and if it can be stolen then their capital isn't safe either. These deposits aren't supposed to be "at risk" when there's no position actively open -- that's a performance bond against possible failure to pay, but is supposed to be exactly as safe as a bank deposit in a checking account under FDIC limits.

Well, it wasn't. The CDS you bought on Greece wasn't. And it will only take another event like this or two before people conclude that everything is unsound as the jackals running the game will redefine the meaning of words to suit themselves and, failing that will simply steal the money.

30+ years of lawless behavior has now devolved down to blatant, in-your-face theft. They don't even bother trying to hide it any more, and Eric "Place" Holder is too busy supervising the running of guns into Mexico so the drug cartels can shoot both Mexican and American citizens.

What am I, or anyone else, supposed to do in this sort of "market" environment? Invest in.... what? Land titles are worthless as they've been corrupted by robosigning, margin deposits have been stolen, Madoff's clients had confirmations of trades that never happend and proved to worthless pieces of paper instead of valuable securities and while Madoff went to prison nobody else has and the money is still gone!

Without enforcement of the law -- swift and certain -- there is no deterrent against this behavior.

There has been no enforcement and there is no indication that this will change.

It will take just one -- or maybe two -- more events like MF Global and Greek CDS "determinations" before the entire market -- all of it -- goes "no bid" as participants simply stuff their hands in their pockets and say "screw this."

It's coming folks, and I guarantee you this: Whatever your "nightmare" scenario is for such an event, it's not bearish enough.



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



Got a great deal on a gun safe this morning at Dicks as 5 a.m.   heavy as a mofo!! 

Funny thing is that the store was completely empty except the firearms department.   

Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.
MF Global's Jon Corzine may decide silence is golden
   

 
Pleading the Fifth could serve Corzine well, as shown after other high-profile corporate collapses.

Next month, the House financial services committee will publicly quiz Corzine for the first time about the collapse of MF Global, the brokerage he headed until it went bust. Government lawyers and private investors will be hanging on his every word as Corzine is called upon to explain what went wrong in what could be one of the most worrying bankruptcies since the collapse of Lehman Brothers.

Regulators and the court-appointed trustee looking for MF Global's missing money are now searching for somewhere between $600m and $1.2bn (£773m) in missing funds.

The case is gaining more attention as farmers who used the firm to hedge against losses have begun to press politicians and regulators for action as they fret about their missing money. In relative terms MF Global is small fry but the problems its collapse exposes could end up being anything but.

The hearings come as federal investigators continue to try to work out what happened at MF Global. So far Corzine has said nothing publicly about the broker's spectacular collapse. He could refuse to testify, in which case the panel could subpoena him. Corzine faces a tough choice as he faces a committee that, in its own words, will focus on "the decisions and events leading to the collapse of MF Global, the effectiveness of regulators in overseeing MF Global's activities and the impact MF Global's bankruptcy will have on its customers".

http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2011/nov/25/jon-corz...

240 is Back

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 102387
  • Complete website for only $300- www.300website.com
I can't wait for Corzine to surface and explain this whole thing.....he is definitely going to jail

Obama will pardon him, Christmas 2012, just to piss off republicans.

Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.

Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.

Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.

Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.
The face of Wall Street arrogance
By JOHN CARNEY

Last Updated: 3:42 AM, November 28, 2011




More  Print Jon Corzine’s unbelievably swift fall is a classic story of Wall Street arrogance.

Just a few months ago, the Obama administration was considering Corzine as a possible successor to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. Investors in the bonds of his firm, MF Global, demanded the right to an extra percentage point of interest if he left as its CEO and chairman.

Nobody else on Wall Street makes a promise like that to buyers of its bonds. Not even JPMorgan Chase, run by Jamie “King of Wall Street” Dimon. Corzine had come to be regarded as a demigod, a divinity in the mortal world. Hercules with a trading desk.

And no one believed the myth of Corzine as much as Corzine himself. When explaining to associates and investors that he wasn’t preparing to leave to become treasury secretary, he never for a moment let on that he had any doubts that he could — and probably should — be running the highest economic office in the land.

Meanwhile, Hercules was pushing his firm to take on more Euro-debt risk — even as most Wall Street firms were shrinking their exposure to the sovereign bonds of troubled nations on Europe’s periphery. In filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, MF Global claimed that the market was wrong about Europe — and MF Global knew better.

“Volatility in the European sovereign debt markets created occasional dislocations in the cash and repurchase markets for certain short-dated securities, providing more trading opportunities in the quarter ending June 30, 2011,” MF Global said in what turned out to be its final quarterly report.

Except those “trading opportunities” turned out to be deadly. To paraphrase the British economist John Maynard Keynes, the market in European government bonds stayed dislocated longer than MF Global could stay solvent.

Corzine & Co. thought they’d developed a genius method of investing in the European sovereign bonds. In a trade called a “repo-to-maturity” on Wall Street, MF Global would borrow money from big banks, use that cash to buy bonds coming due in the next year or so, then use those very bonds as collateral for the loan. The bonds and the purchase loans matured at exactly the same time, so there was no risk of having to find new financing for the positions. In Wall Street parlance, there was no “refinancing risk.”

The trade was also supposedly free of what Wall Street calls “credit risk” — the risk that a borrower will not repay its loans. All of the bonds were protected by the European Financial Stability Facility, which wasn’t due to expire until after the bonds were paid off.

In fact, the EFSF lacked the funds to make good on this promise. Arrogant European bureaucrats had simply assumed that merely making the promise would put a halt to the “dislocations” — and Corzine seems to have assumed exactly the same thing.

This works great — until it doesn’t. As part of the repo-to-maturity deals, Corzine’s gang had to promise to put up more collateral for the loans if the prices of the bonds fell too far. And, despite the EFSF, prices did keep falling — requiring MF Global to pony up ever-larger sums to its trading partners.

(The firm’s books are a mess, but it now seems that it actually resorted to secretly using $1.2 billion in customer funds to cover its shortfalls — an illegal and appalling violation of its fiduciary duties.)

Investors, customers, and regulators grew anxious about MF Global’s financial health, shattering the Corzine myth. This wasn’t the son of Zeus at the head of a trading desk. It was a guy who’d put his trust in financial engineering (still, even after the lessons of 2008) and the ill-conceived bailout plans of European governments. The mortal blow for MF Global was the realization that Corzine was just a mortal man.

It’s tempting to blame “Wall Street greed” for Corzine and MF Global’s missteps, but something deeper was at work. Corzine has described himself as an “unabashed liberal.” His liberalism included a faith in the effectiveness of government and a suspicion that the best and the brightest know better than markets.

The ancient Greeks would have recognized this as hubris — thinking that you are equal to or greater than the forces of nature and the Gods. For the authors of the Greek tragedies, hubris always ends in ruin.

The collapse of MF Global and the ruin of Corzine’s reputation have taught us that the old lessons of the ancient Greek playwrights are still true — even on Wall Street.

John Carney writes CNBC’s Wall Street Web site, netnet.CNBC.com.



Read more: http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/the_face_of_wall_street_arrogance_8XAZ7crBF3ZbQFUEr5SyPK#ixzz1f0WImaa6



Former Head Of FBI To Probe MF Global Collapse
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/28/2011 14:17 -0500


FBI MF Global


The judge in the MF Global disaster just got real. The assignment of Louis Joseph Freeh, former Director of the the FBI no less, somewhat assures that Corzine and crew will get their day in court - or at least be vilified enough that someone pays the real price for the wrongdoings. He is the perfect man for the job having investigated, among others, mob connections to Italian pizza joints.

Average:


http://www.zerohedge.com/news/former-head-fbi-probe-mf-global-collapse





Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.

Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.

Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.

Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.
Watch Live As A Recusing Gary Gensler Tries To Explain Why The CFTC Failed Massively In Its MF Global Oversight
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2011 11:11 -0500



Commodity Futures Trading Commission Consumer protection MF Global


Nothing like watching one Goldmanite explaining why he failed to prevent another Goldmanite from (allegedly) stealing hundreds of millions in customer accounts. Linked below is the live hearing by the "Continuing Oversight of the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act" in which Schapiro and Gensler are held to account for their epic failure with MF Global oversight.



Average:
5
Your rating: None Average: 5 (1 vote)



http://www.zerohedge.com/news/watch-live-recusing-gary-gensler-tries-explain-why-cftc-failed-massively-its-mf-global-oversigh




Gentsler Obama Corzine Geithner = Axis of corruption 

Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.
Pollock: So that's why you're calling Jon Corzine a chicken on CNN? Koutoulas: Yes, where's the money, Jon?
Submitted by EB on 12/01/2011 14:18 -0500

MF Global


http://www.zerohedge.com/contributed/pollock-so-thats-why-youre-calling-jon-corzine-chicken-cnn-koutoulas-yes-wheres-money-jo



Reposted from our blog at EconomicPolicyJournal.co m

Today's Senate hearings into the MF Global debacle demonstrate that conflicted Chairman (and ex-Goldman Sachs CEO) Gary Gensler is unwilling to provide anything more than mere lip service to the beleaguered customers whose funds remain inaccessible more than one month from the bankruptcy filing.  Further, the issue of just why exactly SIPC, a securities resolution agency, is "managing" a futures commission merchant liquidation is among the more salient issues being completely ignored--except by various customer advocacy sites, such as MFGFacts and MyInvestorsPlace.

However, MF Global customers can take a bit of solace knowing they have a voice in front of Judge Glenn in the liquidation proceedings in the form of the Commodity Customer Coalition (#CCC) and its team of hard working attorneys (working largely pro bono, we might add).  The synoganists remain Trustee James W. Giddens, earning $891 per hour and seemingly doing his best to drag out the proceedings, along with JP Morgan's attorneys, who are "dictating the agenda", according to CCC attorney James Koutoulas. [Update: for an expose of the conflicts of interest arising from Giddens' firm, Hughes Hubbard, vis a vis JP Morgan Chase, MF Global's largest creditor, see this excellent piece by MFGFacts.]

Is it too little too late? We hope not, as continuance after continuance increases the odds that looting of customer funds continues to this day.  In a brief but compelling video (below), Warren E. Pollock of Inflection Points goes head to head with a few journalists outside the bankruptcy court in lower Manhattan, then conducts a candid, must-watch interview with Mr. Koutoulas [if you don't see the video embedded, click the link to the left]:

 



A few choice excerpts:

 

at 3:30 in:

Koutoulas: We were the first group to object to JP Morgan's use of the cash collateral.  I think over the weekend, three or four other parties have joined our objection.  And they keep continuing it...I'm going to get up and say, "Judge, there are some issues we have to talk about. We can't just keep continuing this ad infinitum."  One of those is--you probably saw on ZeroHedge--the way that Order is written, it makes it possible...if these [repo-to-maturity] trades are still on, we have to know about it.

Pollock: You don't know if the trades are on right now--normally they'd have to wind down positions.  But they could still be tapping into customer money at this very moment and there's no way to...recognize that.

Koutoulas: And if they did do that...that is the ultimate epitome of enabling someone to fall in love with their trade....These trades bankrupted MF Global, and the fact that there's even a possibility that they could still be on and still be using customer money to back them, it's beyond the pale.

 

 

at 5:25 in:

Koutoulas: The problem here is JP Morgan's lawyers are running the show...and they're running the agenda...Judge, the fox is in the hen house.  JP Morgan cannot be dictating the agenda.

 

 

at 5:50 in:

Pollock: So that's why you're calling Jon Corzine a chicken on CNN?

Koutoulas: Yes...stand up...where's the money, Jon?

 

The Outcome:

In the course of the hearing that followed, the Judge asked the CCC to file a motion to formally make its case against the JP Morgan super priority status and the continued trading of customer funds.  A hearing was set for December 7, 2011.  Let's hope there's still money left by then.

Average:
5
Your rating: None Average: 5 (2 votes)



Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.
Where in the World Is Jon Corzine?
CNBC ^ | December 1,2011

Posted on Thursday, December 01, 2011 4:52:59 PM by Hojczyk

When was the last time anybody saw Jon Corzine?

For several days following the bankruptcy of MF Global, Corzine was regularly appearing in the office. Sources at MF Global told me he spent his days in conference rooms with teams of lawyers and accountants. Then he abruptly resigned as chief executive.

And for his next act, he vanished.

Corzine is not an ordinary chief executive. As a former US Senator and former Governor of New Jersey, he is a public figure. He was even under consideration to be the next Treasury Secretary.

As one of the few people who can answer questions about what happened to MF Global-how it went from a healthy midsized commodities brokerage to a fatality-Corzine should be in front of the public offering explanations. He used publicity to climb his way to the top of America's power-structure, and now he's trying to hide. This seems unfair.

The explanation, no doubt, is that his lawyers have told him to keep quiet. They realize that there is a very high risk that civil and criminal cases may be filed against Corzine. As they say on the cop shows, anything he says can and will be used against him.

This strategy may protect Corzine legally. But it won't save his reputation.

Every day of silence, every day of invisibility, just adds to the public impression that Corzine is not an honorable man.

The legal system may have to presume people innocent until proven guilty. It may have to promise not to hold silence against the accused. But ordinary thinking people are under no such constraints.

Corzine may be able to hide from cameras. Perhaps even from the Senate's panel investigating the collapse of MF Global. But he can't hide from public suspicion. And silence will never save his reputation.


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


Soul Crusher

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 41759
  • Doesnt lie about lifting.
House Committee Votes to Subpoena Corzine on MF Global
AP ^ | 12/02/11 | AP



Edited on Friday, December 02, 2011 11:07:59 AM by Admin Moderator. [history]


WASHINGTON – A congressional panel has subpoenaed former Sen. Jon Corzine to testify next week about his role leading MF Global, a brokerage firm that collapsed this fall after a disastrous bet on European debt.

The House Agriculture Committee voted Friday to issue the subpoena. Committee Chairman Rep. Frank Lucas, R-Okla., said his testimony is "essential to fulfill our objectives." Lucas said the subpoena was necessary because Corzine hadn't answered an informal request to testify at the Dec. 8 hearing.




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