Archive - Oct 17, 2009 - Story

Anonymous's picture

Brokedown Palace: The Undermining of Property Rights in America





ZeroHedge recently highlighted the TPG raid on CDOs. This action puts into focus the alarming trend of the undermining of creditor rights. When even the Courts are in on the gang bang, what hope do we have?

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Nelnet Whistleblower Scandal Hits Wikileaks: JPM, Citi And Nelnet Implicated In Massive Conspiratorial Student Loan Fraud





Wikileaks has released the lawsuit filed by Nelnet former employee Rudy Vigil against Nelnet, JPMorgan and Citigroup, which alleges an extensive conspiracy between JPMorgan and Citi and the student servicer in order to steal millions of dollars from US taxpayers. In the lawsuit, Nelnet is accused of keeping "false records, statements and certifications of compliance with statutes, regulations and policies" as it was falsely stating the amount of US money Nelnet was entitled to receive from the US, on behalf of itself or the two other banks, it was administering FFELP loans not in compliance with HEA statutes, that it was providing wrong and misleading data, and other comparable reasons.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

A Stern Opponent Of Funding The FDIC's Depleted Deposit Insurance Fund, And Monetization Is... Alan Greenspan?





"Not only would use of the Reserve Banks for funding the BIF serve no apparent economic purpose, it could create potential problems of precedent and perception for the Federal Reserve. In particular, the proposal involves the Federal Reserve directly funding the government. The Congress has always severely limited and, more recently, has forbidden the direct placement ol Treasury debt with the Federal Reserve, apparently out of concern that such a practice could compromise the independent conduct of monetary policy and would allow the Treasury to escape the discipline of selling its debt directly to the market. Implementation of the proposal could create perceptions, both in the United States and abroad, that the nature or function of our central bank had been altered." - Alan Greenspan, 1991

 

Anonymous's picture

Open (Contributor) Thread II





The Iran-abandoning-the-dollar headline turned into an open thread yesterday---300 comments and counting. At this point it is getting to be difficult to navigate. There you go...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Dollar And The Deficits





Even as efforts to recover from the current crisis go forward, the United States should launch new policies to avoid large external deficits, balance the budget, and adapt to a global currency system less centered on the dollar. - C. Fred Bergstein

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: Dear Larry Summers - You're A Funny Guy





Larry: So many of us really do appreciate your oft noted deep concern in regards to the unemployment situation in the USA as well as the big push to rein in the banks, but with thousands of comedians out of work, it just isn’t fair that you are delivering the best comedy and crowding out these comedians from their rightful work.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

A Rare Glimpse Into The Fed's Discount Window Courtesy Of The Brewing Lehman-Barclays Scandal





While it appears that Barclays will soon have to part with $5 billion (or more) to satisfy the increasingly loud chorus of people who claim the bank managed to literally steal Lehman's assets in those torrid days after the Lehman collapse, we use this opportunity to pore through a goldmine of just unsealed documentation to present some rare glimpses into the Federal Reserve's garbage laden balance sheet.

 

Travis's picture

China to Commence Trading on Shenzhen-Based Small Stock/Cap Exchange. A GEM of An Idea?





Next week, trading will begin on China’s new "little" stock market, catering to small companies. Think of it like the Dim Sum of stock exchanges. A little bit of this, a little bit of that. A "Buyers Beware" market "for Informed Investors..." Their words, not mine.

 

Travis's picture

Lucky Number 99 in 2009? 99 FDIC Insured Bank Closures That Is...





Lucky number 99 in ’09? Regulators shut down San Joaquin Bank yesterday, marking almost the hundredth of a federally insured bank. Relax, more to come!

 
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