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Score One For The Good Guys: The Rise of DeepCapture.com

PragmaticIdealist's picture




 

For those of you out of the loop, www.deepcapture.com, winner of the 2008 weblogs award for best business blog, has at long last made headway in its relentless and noble crusade against naked short seller abusers.

The blog sums up its recent accomplishments as follows:

  1. The SEC recently enacted permanent restrictions on illegal naked short selling, which include greatly enhanced disclosure of delivery failures and shorting activity.
  2. Today, the SEC brought its first enforcement cases against illegal naked short selling.
  3. Also today, FINRA expelled a member firm for engaging in illegal short selling.

Unfortunately, as the blog explains, the battle against corruption, manipulation and fraud in the financial markets is far from over:

Yes, the pendulum is now unambiguously swinging in our direction, but the job is not done. Indeed, we can only be assured of progress to the extent that we each recognize our responsibility to continue pushing.

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The story of DeepCapture.com is quite unlike any other business blog (at least that I know of). After publishing remarkable, stunning and factually-supported investigative research covering the inner-workings and dealings of a vast network of political and financial 'miscreants,' the blog and its (non-anonymous) authors have been the target of journalistic attacks, unwarranted legal action, public mockery and even physical violence and threats.

The blog implicates Michael Milken, Eliot Spitzer, Jim Cramer, Steven Cohen, Gary Weiss, James Chanos and literally hundreds of others in wide-ranging efforts to manipulate everything from stocks to public perception (notably through the tampering of Wikipedia pages). Virtually every allegation is backed by well-sourced facts and findings, and when clearcut evidence is lacking, correlationary and circumstantial evidence is provided extensively.

Recently, the blog has unleashed a 15-part case study of heavily shorted firm Dendreon Corp, known for its prostrate cancer treatment drug Provenge, which details the immense financial struggle this David has had to overcome in the midst of the most ruthless hedge fund Goliaths. Indeed, the blog alleges that this very struggle has indirectly caused the hastening of over 60,000 deaths of men with prostrate cancer.

Further, Zero Hedge readers may be interested in gleaning the full extent to which media outlets such as cnbc as well as institutions such as the FDA have been infiltrated by sleazeballs allied with manipulative and fraudulent hedge funds. Hence the phrase 'Deep Capture,' which has come to define those in the media / political / legislative realms who have become 'captured' by dangerous financial forces and have actively worked to blur the lines between reality and fiction.

Perhaps the most frightening of the blog's contentions is that the mafia has come to play quite a significant role in the financial dealings of hedge funds. To prove this case, perpetrators of various well-documented cases of mafia violence are systematically linked to hedge fund operators and/or cronies.

But don't take my word for it --- check out the blog yourself right now: www.deepcapture.com.

Unless, of course, you'd rather just opt for the blue pill.

 

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Side Note: One of the two founders of DeepCapture, Patrick Byrne, has quite an alluring biography as well as mental faculties, as told by this CNN Fortune article 'The Renaissance Man of E-Commerce.'

"He earned a Ph.D. in philosophy from Stanford and black belts in hapkido and tae kwon do. He has bicycled across the U.S. three times, studied moral philosophy at Cambridge as a Marshall fellow, and briefly pursued a career in boxing. Byrne also speaks Mandarin--not to mention four other foreign languages--and translated Lao Tse's Way of Virtue during his senior year at Dartmouth. He has a nearly photographic memory, which he is fond of demonstrating with what he calls his memory trick: If he studies a deck of cards for a couple of minutes, he can recite them back, one by one, in either direction. He can even recite the same list again six months later."

 

 

 

 

 

 




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Mon, 08/10/2009 - 07:04 | Link to Comment Raymond Shaw
Raymond Shaw's picture

PragmaticIdealist,

Nice one!  You beat me to this... I was going to write about this story on ZH and give props to Deep Capture.  Truly magnificent article on Dendreon.  Haven't read the Chanos stories but should be interesting!

ZH readers, check out the DeepCapture.com stories... no superlatives required !

- Ray

Sat, 08/08/2009 - 19:15 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Sat, 08/08/2009 - 20:24 | Link to Comment PragmaticIdealist
PragmaticIdealist's picture

You are terribly misinformed.

1) Artificially low stock prices can easily hurt business.

2) DNDN's business was hurt by not only the short selling but the media, FDA and political manipulation that followed the short selling.

3) If you actually read the 15-part DNDN saga you would see that, yes over time the shorts lost, but a lot of the shorts ended up taking long positions at the right time and cashed out at good times too... the manipulative fraudulent ones at least.

Sat, 08/08/2009 - 17:23 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Sat, 08/08/2009 - 14:59 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Fri, 08/07/2009 - 23:17 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Fri, 08/07/2009 - 20:16 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Fri, 08/07/2009 - 23:35 | Link to Comment Cheeky Bastard
Cheeky Bastard's picture

wow... your kool-aid must be extra spiced with acid and meth ...

Fri, 08/07/2009 - 21:42 | Link to Comment joann
joann's picture

We be red pill people here, no cults involved, just straight truth in english.

Fri, 08/07/2009 - 20:26 | Link to Comment PragmaticIdealist
PragmaticIdealist's picture

I see you've successfully entered the first stage: Denial.

Good luck with that.

Fri, 08/07/2009 - 21:53 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Fri, 08/07/2009 - 15:47 | Link to Comment zeropointfield (not verified)
Fri, 08/07/2009 - 13:33 | Link to Comment joann
joann's picture

Agree DeepCapture is another excellent investigative financial blog like Zero, Market Ticker, and Mish.  When I was researching Primary Dealers run on LEH beginning 9/11/08, it appeared that it was a systematic attack to bring LEH down instantaneously (similar to a naked short selling attack on a company like Overstock and Dendreon).  Which was the catalyst for the unwinding of the derivatives market and consequently global crash.

Then yesterday, we find PD are selling back treasury auction purchases to the FED within a day or two.  Wondering if these PD are the same that started the run on LEH on 9/11/08?  Does anyone else have that information?

Fri, 08/07/2009 - 21:51 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Fri, 08/07/2009 - 11:14 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Fri, 08/07/2009 - 12:52 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Fri, 08/07/2009 - 15:22 | Link to Comment Apocalypse Now
Apocalypse Now's picture

Excellent post, interesting information on multiple mortgages for the same home.  This is the same scam by the same group of people working itself through every market (people are paying real money for duplicated fake assets).

Fri, 08/07/2009 - 23:53 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Fri, 08/07/2009 - 16:30 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Fri, 08/07/2009 - 10:42 | Link to Comment Talkhard
Talkhard's picture

I first heard of Deep Capture after reading an article about the DTCC on Judd's Antisocialmedia.net.  I had run across an article detailing how the DTCC is involved in nearly every trade done in the US and how they are a private, for profit business. Their board of directors seems, like the Federal Reserve, to have huge conflicts of interests. http://dtcc.com/about/governance/board.php

Anyway, Judd turned me on to Deep Capture and the amazing amount of information and investigating they have done.  Very good stuff.  Thanks for bringing this to ZH readers. 

Fri, 08/07/2009 - 10:00 | Link to Comment br8kedown
br8kedown's picture

Deep Capture is the blog that first sparked my interest in learning of the true workings of our financial system.  Much kudos to them and their work against abusive naked short selling.  It's definitely worth checking out the Wikipedia page on the subject and looking at the battles that have taken place over the content of the article on its discussion page.  

Another of Deep Capture's founders/contributors, Judd Bagley, has authored some very interesting articles about the perils of Wikipedia at http://akahele.org

Sat, 08/08/2009 - 00:01 | Link to Comment Econocataclysm
Econocataclysm's picture

Me, too. When I first got all pissed off about TARP and the way we were getting ripped off right in front of our noses, DC was the first blog I encountered. They came up when I did a search on "Regulatory Capture", actually. Next was Taibbi's article and then Max Keiser...

You can see some even funnier stuff here:

http://encyclopediadramatica.com/Gary_Weiss

Fri, 08/07/2009 - 09:18 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Fri, 08/07/2009 - 08:42 | Link to Comment Howard_Beale
Howard_Beale's picture

Watch this great Bloomberg special regarding phantom shares, Patrick Byrne, the SEC, Reg SHO, etc. Chanos states it's all a non-issue. While none of the Mafia connections are in it, it is well done, albeit dated to the glory days when there were more than two I Banks.

http://www.bloomberg.com/avp/avp.htm?clipSRC=mms://media2.bloomberg.com/cache/vIrfhgQPAJ1s.asf.

Fri, 08/07/2009 - 15:14 | Link to Comment Apocalypse Now
Apocalypse Now's picture

That was brilliant - I was concerned about DTCC ensuring the # of shares are accurate.  That video showed an investor was able to buy more than 100% of all the shares of a company on the long side (indefinitely - not just the short period of time for theoretical naked short selling settlement). 

This means there is no credibility whatsoever in the markets and that they are merely a ponzi scheme - if you can buy or sell more shares than are issued it is not a market, it is racketeering.  As part of this new regulation on short sales they should ensure not just 3 day delivery settlement on shorts, but ensure companies are not printing money by increasing the number of shares (beyond the # issued).

For all of those that were getting notices that you had to sell your shorts because they couldn't find the shares - welcome to the new world.  This is a paradigm shift brought on by this regulation change - it's different than the past because the shares have to exist now.  BUT I want to make sure that they don't just create more shares than the shares in existence SO IT IS IMPERATIVE THAT THEY RECONCILE # OF SHARES AT DTCC.  We should know who has what # of shares at all times and that they tie to the # of shares issued - if not someone is printing money.  If there are more shares available to purchase than shares issued, pricing makes no sense.

On a scary thought, what if the market just keeps going higher for the simple reason that there is more demand to purchase securities (pension/401k assets institutions) in the market than available securities now that naked shorting is outlawed as a price vent- it would cause securities in every asset class to rise despite fundamentals.

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