Archive - Nov 2, 2009 - Story

Tyler Durden's picture

Darrell Issa's Letter To The NY Fed's Bill Dudley Demanding AIG Bailout Disclosure





Following on previous posts by Janet Tavakoli and Dylan Ratigan, which both reference the need to uncover how and why it is that AIG counterparties received such generous taxpayer funded bailout terms, it is critical to present the letter penned by California Congressman Darrell Issa to New York Fed President Bill Dudley, demanding much more information on the Fed's decision regarding AIG. Issa's quote that "behind closed doors and with no approval from Congress, the FRBNY may have added an additional $13 billion of debt on the backs of taxpayers. These allegations, if true, amount to nothing less than a backdoor bailout of AIG’s creditors, including Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, Société Générale and Deutsche Bank" leaves many open questions as to the true motives of the NY Fed and the Federal Reserve system overall.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: Why Keep Geithner?





"A year ago it was revealed to the American people that our banking system was a legalized Ponzi scheme in which bank and insurance CEOs paid themselves billions of dollars in personal compensation to lend and insure assets with money they didn't have to customers who couldn't pay back the loans. In those dark days between the fall of Lehman Brothers and before the presidential election, we were often carried through that time by the small glimmer of hope in that at least we would soon have a new leader who would hopefully fix this mess and punish those responsible. Yet in the past 9 months, not only has the administration not fixed anything, they have made things much worse for anyone who isn't a Wall Street banker. Therefore, we are past the point where anyone in power still gets the benefit of the doubt and the process of taking back our country for all citizens must begin now." - Dylan Ratigan

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Bob (Janjuah) Is Back... And He Is Pissed





"We said in late Aug that S&P would get to 1100/1120 by end Oct/early Nov. We said growth would peak in Aug and then weaken into and in Q1. This is all playing out. As this plays out, I expect S&P to be in the mid-900s by y/e, and mid/low 800s by Q1 2010." - Bob Janjuah

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: Goldman Sachs - Reasonable Doubt





"The public wanted to know if Goldman Sachs was one of AIG’s large credit derivatives counterparties, since it was involved in the bailout negotiations. In September 2008, AIG’s fresh credit rating downgrade (from AA to A) triggered a clause, requiring it to provide 100% collateral for many of its CDS contracts. It meant AIG had to quickly come up with tens of billions for some of its counterparties, and it was unable to do it. It was in that context that David Viniar made his remarks on September 16, 2008. Viniar’s remarks obscured the fact that Goldman was not disinterested. Goldman’s board first learned of its ongoing collateral dispute with AIG in November 2007, and Goldman bought protection against the possibility that AIG would fail." - Janet Tavakoli

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Week Ahead





Nothing much has changed since Friday. CIT's bankruptcy has been made official, but apparently it's pretty good news. I could not come across one article that viewed it as a bad thing, as certitude funding/financing is pretty much guaranteed for the lender. ISM this morning should confirm/invalidate the strong pick up in PMI last week. The $1Tr. question remains whether the government induced bounce in industrial production worldwide can last. Will administrations remove accommodation, and if so has the consumer recovered enough to pick up the slack. Beyond these considerations remains the obvious truth that the system remains overleveraged and it will at some point blow up. Roubini discussed it this weekend in a FT article, and it's a topic we have covered at length as the short-USD carry trade has brought nations as fragile as Venezuela to issue debt in USD.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

A Less Than Opaque Look At Mel Watt's Motivations To Kill The "Audit The Fed" Bill





There has been lots of speculation on why Representative Mel Watt has done his best to make sure that the Audit the Fed bill will be gutted, and why the Congressman is willing to promote the same irresponsible and unaccountable bubble-inflating behavior that got us to the current Fed-sponsored, bubble-reflation attempt, which is practically guaranteed to end much worse than just a few Goldman competitor banks imploding here and there. Yet there is little question as to Mr. Watt's motivations, and where his true allegiances lie.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Fall 2009 Big Money Poll Results Out: Only 13% Are Bearish, 70% Are Beating S&P, As Taxpayers Get Hosed





According to the latest Big Money poll results, groupthink has taken over with the herd almost completely on the bullish side of things. Currently, only 13% of respondents are bearish in their investment outlook though June 2010. Additionally the divergence on where the bulls and bears see the market in 6 months continues growing larger, with bears expecting the S&P at almost 1,200 while bears retrenching even more from the prior poll, and reducing their S&P expectations from to 1003 to 922.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

CIT Org Chart And Other Data From FTI Affidavit





All you needed to know about the firm's org chart, its background, the reasons for the bankruptcy, and what happens from here. Robert Gerber of ultra-expedient General Motors and Lyondell fame is assigned to CIT.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: November 2





  • Fed Independence: RIP? (Cumberland Advisors)
  • Evans-Pritchard: It is Japan we should be worrying about, not America (Telegraph)
  • Pandit's "near-death" cash hoard signals lower US bank profits (Bloomberg)
  • Goldman looks to buy Fannie tax credits (WSJ)
  • BNY Mellon CEO Kelly tells BofA: No, thanks (WSJ)
  • Galleon and the trouble with insider trading (WSJ)
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Daily Highlights: 11.2.09





  • Asian stocks fell, extending MSCI APAC Index’s first monthly decline since Feb'09.
  • China manufacturing grows at fastest pace in 18 months on stimulus, loans.
  • China's Chen warns of world slump if economic stimulus withdrawn too early.
  • Euro rises against Yen as signs of global recovery spur demand for yield.
  • AEP sees 2010 ongoing EPS of $2.80-$3.20, forms Transmission company.
  • CF Industries adds cash for Terra Industries offer, hikes bid price by $200M to $4.1B.
  • Chevron Corp. reported a 51% drop in Q3 profit at $3.83B on lower oil, natural gas prices.
 

Cornelius's picture

Critical interest rate decision by RBA





A scheduled rate decision by the RBA tomorrow has the potential to demolish AUD/USD carry.

 
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