Archive - Apr 20, 2010
POT & NYSE Advancing Issues Smoke Up while Everyone Gets High on AAPL
Submitted by Chopshop on 04/20/2010 23:45 -0500AAPL earnings blew the doors off, DARPA got its grapefruit on with an Industry Day for the "Mind's Eye Program" and even 'Hitler is no longer upset about the iPad'. Wonder what Jimmy Cayne was up to in the clubhouse between bridge tournaments? After inspecting AAPL and market internals, almost as many looks at POT as UC-Boulder saw yesterday.
Obama’s Secret Plan for Economic Revival
Submitted by madhedgefundtrader on 04/20/2010 23:44 -0500Let the economy do the heavy lifting, Some 60% will be achieved through tax hikes, and 40% via spending cuts. But the plan assumes that interest rates remain unchanged, the economy grows at 3%, and the war on terror ends in four years. What if the terrorists don’t cooperate? Houston, we have a problem….
Will SEC "Witch Hunts" Hurt the Economy?
Submitted by Leo Kolivakis on 04/20/2010 21:55 -0500Did the SEC just take away Wall Street’s punch bowl with this suit? "They might have," says Jim Bianco, President of Bianco Research in Chicago. If the SEC wins the Goldman case, "this would have far-reaching effects," he says. With all due respect to Jim, I say let the witch hunts continue. Besides, it's just another circus show and nothing will change on Wall Street. The sleazebags will concoct new ways to satisfy their insatiable greed.
CalPers Joins Everyone Else Who Has Lost Money Or Stands For Reelection, In Reevaluating Goldman Relationship
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/20/2010 19:37 -0500Today's Casablanca moment of the day is brought to you by CalPers. The latest entity to be shocked, SHOCKED, at just what Goldman's standard operating procedure has been for many, many years is none other than the world's largest pension fund, the California Public Employees' Retirement System (and repeat Goldman client), which itself has been having quiet a few problems recently, and not just ethical ones, but more importantly performance related ones. The irony is that were Goldman to close tomorrow, the outcry from all these same hypocritical bandwagoneers would have been ten times louder.
From The Tip Bag: C-BASS Involved In SEC Request
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/20/2010 18:21 -0500From the tip-bag:
c-bass was a subject of the SEC request. i don't have any knowledge of what turned up in the search for material on it.
This is getting interesting.
Marcy Kaptur Writes To AG Holder, Demands A Full Scale Criminal Investigation Of Goldman Sachs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/20/2010 18:18 -0500Dear Attorney General Holder:
While the SEC lacks the authority to act beyond civil actions, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has the power to file criminal actions against those who commit financial fraud. We ask assurance from you that the U.S. Department of Justice is closely looking at this case and similar cases to further investigate and prosecute the criminals involved in this, and other financially fraudulent acts. Furthermore, if the DOJ is not currently looking into this particular case, we respectfully ask you to ensure that the U.S. Department of Justice immediately open a case on this matter and investigate it with the full authority and power that your agency holds. The American people both demand and deserve justice in the matter of Wall Street banks whom the American taxpayers bailed out, only to see unemployment and housing foreclosures rise.
Daily Oil Market Summary: April 20
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/20/2010 18:13 -0500By 1 PM, the DJIA was up more than 30 points and crude oil prices were up right around $2.00 a barrel. The US dollar was higher against the euro and yen, but precious metals prices were higher. It might be too broad a statement to say that risk appetite has returned, but certain aspects of it did seem to be back in play.
More than anything else, it seemed that investors felt they had over-reacted to the Goldman event on Friday – and even more so on Monday, when there was still left-over selling. A large part of that selling was attributed to the volcano, but it was clearly predicated on Goldman, as well – or we would not have seen such a sharp rally on Tuesday. An additional 24,824 contracts were liquidated on Monday, showing that investors were still getting out of existing positions as the week started.
Daily Credit Summary: April 20 - Charge!
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/20/2010 18:09 -0500Spreads tightened in general today with HY outperforming IG as both the major US indices gapped tighter and never made it back to yesterday's tightest levels as the late day charge in risk appetite continued into today. Breadth was largely positive with single-names catching up to yesterday's late day strength.
Krugman: Break Up the Giant Banks to Stop Their Domination of the Political Process
Submitted by George Washington on 04/20/2010 17:32 -0500I applaud and welcome Paul Krugman's clarification ...
Behind The Scenes: Did A Goldmanite Lose Their Job Over The SEC Investigation? And Just How/Why Did Goldman Purchase C-BASS For Pennies On The Dollar?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/20/2010 17:13 -0500Some terrific investigative reporting by Matt Goldstein at Reuters discloses that while Lloyd Blankfein is aggressively defending Tourre, claiming the Frenchman did nothing wrong despite earlier reports that he was deregistered by the FSA, and the Telegraph now chiming in he has now in fact been barred in a major setback for Goldman's defense, another Goldman employee who was part of the 18-month SEC investigation, mysteriously departed in June of 2009. The person in question: Gail Kreitman, a 1991 Wharton grad, who had previously worked at Merrill (1997-2003) and Lehman (2003-2006) according to her Finra records, before finally landing at Goldman for a three year stint as a "GS&Co. Sales Rep." Gail had been identified previously in the initial Goldman Wells response, and was named as a person whose sworn testimony may have been the catalyst for the SEC's case against Goldman Sachs. Where the plot really thickens is a cursory glance at the bio of her husband, Jeffrey Toll, who according to Bloomberg is a Co-Founder of now-defunct C-BASS (Credit-Based Asset Servicing and Securitization) a company formed with initial funding by mortgage insurers MTIG and Radian. For those unfamiliar, "C-BASS was a leading issuer, servicer, and investor specializing in credit-sensitive residential mortgage assets. These assets included performing subprime and Alt A, nonperforming, reperforming, second lien and small commercial loans, as well as subordinated and mezzanine RMBS with prime, subprime, Alt A and high LTV collateral" and that "It currently is liquidating its existing portfolio and returning the cash proceeds received to its lenders and investors." One wonders just what Ms. Kreitman did to merit the severance of her ties with Goldman, and whether C-BASS was in any way involved, or whether it had any dealings with Goldman's now infamous mortgage group, ala ACA?
RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 20/04/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 04/20/2010 16:21 -0500RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 20/04/10
ABC Consumer Comfort Index Drops Back To 2010 Low, 92% Say The Economy Is In "Bad Shape"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/20/2010 16:06 -0500
The April 19 Consumer Comfort Index number dropped back to -50, a 2010 low, just 4 points from its all-time low in 24 years of weekly polls, -54 in January 2009 and December 2008. 92% of those polled said the national economy’s in bad shape. The silver lining: "just 30 percent say it’s getting even worse, down from recent highs of 36 percent in January and 43 percent last September, much less a towering 82 percent as the economy fell into the abyss in October 2008." 25% said the economy’s getting better, while a little more than 4 in 10 say it’s staying the same: truly abysmal numbers when once look away from the wine and ambrosia flowing at the altar of Steve Jobs.
FDIC Sells Junk Zeros
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 04/20/2010 15:53 -0500Yes, they sold junk zero's and they did it a premium pricing. My question is, "Why?".
Gasparino And Chanos Discuss Lehman, Touch On Every Goldman Client's Lack Of Willingness To Short The Squid
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/20/2010 15:36 -0500
Charlie Gasparino led an informative discussion with Jim Chanos earlier, in which in addition to the trademark topic of China, the two had a rather poignant tete-a-tete on Lehman, Goldman, pervasive financial fraud, state and local finances, i.e., the muni implosion (the stuff that keeps Chanos most up at night), on shorting US debt, on the Volcker rule and, lastly, on China. While for the most part the interview is boilerplate, what caught our attention is Chanos' reluctance to express his feelings toward Goldman in a monetary fashion: he refuses to short anyone he does business with. Indeed, this is the mentality shared by many. However, while Chanos may or may not be sincere in his reasons, most others would refuse to short Goldman primarily as a result of such activity showing up immediately on Goldman's very own Redi. And the last thing a prime broker account, and client of a monopolist wishes, is to be perceived as a rogue. It also explains why Goldman has been calling up alumni and tell them to be good. This is also one more reason to immediately commence Goldman monopoly proceedings with the ultimate intent of breaking up the organization which is certainly big enough to benefit its employees and shareholders, but far too big to either fail, or to survive in the long run.
Dow Jones Files Suit Against Briefing.com For Misappropriation Of Content, Copying Of Hundreds Of Articles
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/20/2010 14:50 -0500*DOW JONES FILES SUIT VS BRIEFING.COM
*DOW JONES TO TAKE ACTION TO STOP MISAPPROPRIATION OF CONTENT
*DOW JONES SAYS BRIEFING.COM COPIED SUBSTANTIAL OF 100 ARTICLES
*DOW JONES SAYS BRIEFING.COM DIDN'T RELY ON OWN SOURCES, EFFORTS
*DOW JONES SAYS BRIEFING.COM REPUBLISHED OVER 70 HEADLINES








