Lloyd Blankfein
Frontrunning: March 28
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/28/2012 06:35 -0500- Abu Dhabi
- Australia
- B+
- BATS
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- BRICs
- British Pound
- Consumer Confidence
- Creditors
- European Union
- France
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Italy
- Japan
- Lloyd Blankfein
- M3
- MF Global
- News Corp
- Newspaper
- President Obama
- Private Equity
- RBS
- Recession
- Reuters
- Risk Management
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Greece's Fringe Parties Surge Amid Bailout Ire (WSJ)
- ECB fails to stem reduction in lending (FT)
- More Twists for Spanish Banks (WSJ)
- Banks use ECB cash to buy bonds, lend less to firms (IFR)
- UK still long way off pre-crisis growth – King (Reuters)
- Dublin confident of ECB deal to defer payment (FT)
- Goldman's European derivatives revenue soars (Reuters)
- Japan Faces Tax Battle as DPJ Finishes Plan on Sales Levy (Bloomberg)
- Insurance Mandate Splits US Court (FT)
News That Matters
Submitted by thetrader on 03/23/2012 07:32 -0500- 8.5%
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Bond
- Borrowing Costs
- China
- Copenhagen
- Corruption
- Credit Rating Agencies
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Dow Jones Industrial Average
- European Central Bank
- European Union
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Fitch
- fixed
- Freddie Mac
- Germany
- Global Economy
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- Gross Domestic Product
- Hong Kong
- Housing Market
- India
- Institutional Investors
- Iran
- Ireland
- Italy
- Japan
- Lloyd Blankfein
- Monetary Policy
- Newspaper
- Nikkei
- Norway
- Portugal
- Rating Agencies
- ratings
- Recession
- Reuters
- Saab
- Transparency
- Turkey
- Unemployment
- Unemployment Benefits
- Volvo
- Wall Street Journal
- World Trade
All you need to read and some more.
A Wall Street Insider's Response To Greg Smith
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/18/2012 20:19 -0500This cannot be the right course for us to take in the wake of such a widely recognized crisis. The lack of purposeful outrage is deafening. We cannot restore lasting stability to our economy and society unless we are willing to face up to what we did wrong, right it, and throw out the bums who put us there. Without that, the pattern of ever escalating crisis and interventionist, market-distorting solutions will surely lead to a bigger crisis still ahead... Perhaps the most important symbol of our failure to address reform are the pictures accompanying much of the coverage of Greg Smith’s letter, those of a power-posing Blankfein and Cohn, who without the Government’s accommodation might be striking a very different pose, indeed. You want to sign on to Mr. Smith’s army in joint distaste for Goldman’s lost culture? Please, be my guest. But more deserving of your enmity is the insidious co-option of the core premise of capitalism by a handful of people to ensure the banks’ undeserved survival, and their managers’ really nice lifestyle.
FaTHeR MoRAL HaZARD On THE SHIP oF FRaUD
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 03/16/2012 11:52 -0500Thank you Ben Shalom Bernanke for being the singular pompous PhD idiot who can take the yeoman's credit for navigating this entire golbal ship of financial farce into the sargasso sea of pinstriped fraud.
The Relationships Between Wall Street, the Fed, and Politicians Are Crumbling
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 03/14/2012 10:47 -0500Do not, for one minute, believe that the folks involved in the Crisis will get away with it. The only reason why we haven’t yet seen major players get slammed is because no one wants the system to crumble again. And the only way for the system to remain propped up is for the Powers That Be to appear to have things under control and be on good terms with one another. However, eventually things will come unhinged again. When this happens, the relationships between Wall Street, the Fed, and the White House will crumble to the point that some key figures are sacrificed.
A 'Different' Goldman Response To Greg Smith
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/14/2012 10:00 -0500Andy Borowitz provides the one retort to Greg Smith that only free taxpayer money and trillions in bailouts can buy. In other news, we fully expect Mr. Smith to enact a voluntary refund of the 12 years worth of compensation and bonuses earned while working at Goldman any minute now. Or maybe epiphanies on Goldman "culture" following more than a decade of employment comes without compensation clawbacks?
Guest Post: Money from Nothing - A Primer On Fake Wealth Creation And Its Implications (Part 1)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/12/2012 09:48 -0500- AIG
- Collateralized Debt Obligations
- Corruption
- Credit Default Swaps
- default
- European Central Bank
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- Guest Post
- HFT
- High Frequency Trading
- High Frequency Trading
- Lloyd Blankfein
- MF Global
- Naked Short Selling
- None
- OTC
- OTC Derivatives
- Private Equity
- Reality
- Shadow Banking
What is fraud except creating “value” from nothing and passing it off as something? Frauds interlink and grow upon each other. Our debt-based money system serves as the fraud foundation. In our debt-based money system, debt must grow in order to create money. Therefore, there is no way to pay off aggregate debt with available money. More money must be lent into the system to make the payments for old debts. This causes overall debt to expand as new money for actual people (vs. banks) always arrives at interest and compounds exponentially. This process is called financialization. Financialization: The process of making money from nothing in which debt (i.e. poverty, lack) is paradoxically considered an asset (i.e. wealth, gain). In current financialized economies “wealth expansion” comes from the parasitic taxation of productivity in the form of interest on fiat lending. This interest over time consumes a greater and greater share of resources, assets, labor, and livelihood until nothing is left.
The Triumvirate of Wall Street/ the Fed/ and US Politicians is Crumbling Pt 2
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 02/17/2012 13:41 -0500One thing is for certain, the litigation is beginning to shift from minor players to major players at the core of the Financial Crisis. Investors take note, this is a major shift and needs to be monitored as it will have major implications for market dynamics going forward.
Guest Post: Illusion Of Recovery - Feelings Versus Facts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/06/2012 14:56 -0500- Ally Bank
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Black Friday
- BLS
- Cash For Clunkers
- Chrysler
- Con Artists
- Consumer Credit
- CPI
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Ford
- GE Capital
- GMAC
- Great Depression
- Guest Post
- headlines
- Jamie Dimon
- John Hussman
- Lloyd Blankfein
- Ludwig von Mises
- McKinsey
- Mortgage Loans
- NASDAQ
- National Debt
- None
- Personal Income
- Purchasing Power
- Real Unemployment Rate
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- Steve Liesman
- Student Loans
- Tim Geithner
- Too Big To Fail
- Unemployment
- Wells Fargo

The last week has offered an amusing display of the difference between the cheerleading corporate mainstream media, lying Wall Street shills and the critical thinking analysts. What passes for journalism at CNBC and the rest of the mainstream print and TV media is beyond laughable. Their America is all about feelings. Are we confident? Are we bullish? Are we optimistic about the future? America has turned into a giant confidence game. The governing elite spend their time spinning stories about recovery and manipulating public opinion so people will feel good and spend money. Facts are inconvenient to their storyline. The truth is for suckers. They know what is best for us and will tell us what to do and when to do it.... The drones at this government propaganda agency relentlessly massage the data until they achieve a happy ending. They use a birth/death model to create jobs out of thin air, later adjusting those phantom jobs away in a press release on a Friday night. They create new categories of Americans to pretend they aren’t really unemployed. They use more models to make adjustments for seasonality. Then they make massive one-time adjustments for the Census. Essentially, you can conclude that anything the BLS reports on a monthly basis is a wild ass guess, massaged to present the most optimistic view of the world. The government preferred unemployment rate of 8.3% is a terrible joke and the MSM dutifully spouts this drivel to a zombie-like public. If the governing elite were to report the truth, the public would realize we are in the midst of a 2nd Great Depression.
Frontrunning: February 6
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/06/2012 08:02 -0500- Greeks Struggle to Resolve Their Differences (WSJ)
- China May See Deeper Slowdown on Crisis: IMF (Bloomberg)
- Banks to take a hit on US home loans (FT)
- Europe’s banks face challenge on capital (FT)
- Smaller Interest-Rate, Credit-Default Swap Trades Seen On Horizon (WSJ)
- Pro-European elected Finland president (FT)
- Push Sputters for Credit-Default Swap Futures (WSJ)
- China Money Rate Rises as Central Bank Gauges Demand for Bills (Bloomberg)
- China Takes On Skeptics of Aid to Euro Zone (WSJ)
Guest Post: Paychecks, Perception, Propaganda & Power
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/24/2012 18:10 -0500- Alt-A
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Black Friday
- BLS
- Corruption
- CRAP
- Fail
- Fat Cats
- Federal Reserve
- George Soros
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Government Motors
- Great Depression
- Guest Post
- Hank Paulson
- Hank Paulson
- Housing Market
- Iran
- Iraq
- KIM
- Lloyd Blankfein
- Madison Avenue
- Medicare
- Meltdown
- MF Global
- National Debt
- Nationalism
- Obama Administration
- Obamacare
- Personal Consumption
- Personal Income
- PrISM
- Rating Agencies
- Real estate
- Reality
- Rolex
- Ron Paul
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- SPY
- TARP
- The Big Lie
- Unemployment
- Warren Buffett
Humans are a flawed species. Our minds are easily manipulated. We don’t like pain. We prefer instant gratification. We are susceptible to mass delusion. We will often choose hope over critical thought. Those with higher IQs will regularly attempt to take advantage of those with lower IQs. Fear and greed are the two motivations used by the minority in power to control and manipulate the majority. The American people have been led astray by a small group of powerful men. We were herded through a door in the wall of perception that promised an American dream of material goods, entitlements and pleasure with no obligations or responsibility to future generations. There is only one choice that can save this country from ruin. Each individual must make a choice to either to continue supporting the manipulative, corrupt status quo or coming back through the Door in the Wall.
“The man who comes back through the Door in the Wall will never be quite the same as the man who went out. He will be wiser but less sure, happier but less self-satisfied, humbler in acknowledging his ignorance yet better equipped to understand the relationship of words to things, of systematic reasoning to the unfathomable mystery which it tries, forever vainly, to comprehend” – Aldous Huxley
Psychopaths Caused the Financial Crisis … And They Will Do It Again and Again Unless They Are Removed From Power
Submitted by George Washington on 01/03/2012 14:21 -0500The Inmates Are Running the Asylum
Artist's Rendering Of Lloyd Blankfein's Desktop
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/03/2010 15:02 -0500
Continuing the series of artist impressions of (in)famous desktops (Tim Geithner, Ben Bernanke), today we bring to you the proposed desktop of one Lloyd Blankfein, courtesy of Sancho P. If nothing else, it explains where all the physical is.
Guest Post: Lloyd Blankfein's Days Are Numbered As Chairman Of Goldman Sachs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/16/2010 20:47 -0500It's a testament to the odd world in which we live that when a Wall Street firm pays a $550 million fine by conceding negligence in how it dealt with clients, its stock surges, adding billions of dollars in market value for the firm's shareholders. But that's what's happening to Goldman Sachs, as it reached its long awaited settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission over how it sold a basket of mortgage related debt to investors in 2007. Back when the SEC brought the case, the conventional wisdom on Wall Street and the financial media was that Goldman didn't have to settle -- the case was weak and Goldman is, after all, Goldman. Now that Goldman has indeed settled, the news is being spun, again mostly by the financial media, that the deal with the SEC was a victory for Goldman's CEO Lloyd Blankfein, who survived the investigation largely unscathed, paying a measly $550 million to the government (equivalent to a few days trading gains at Goldman) and without having to give up any power, such as relinquishing his role as chairman of the board, as senior executives both inside Goldman and at competing firms believed would be part of any settlement. Well, if history is any guide, Blankfein may not go tomorrow, or even next month, but sometime in 2011, Blankfein will at the very least no longer be chairman of Goldman, and may also be forced out of the firm altogether. - Charlie Gasparino
A Quick Look At Lloyd Blankfein's 15 CPW Residence
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/16/2010 10:44 -0500
With recent news that Lloyd Blankfein paid cash for his 15 CPW residence in 2008, it is useful to see just what other masters of industry (or, as the case may be, services), reside at New York's most desirable property. In addition to Lloyd, quite a few other Goldmanites seem to have a particular predisposition for expensive West Central Park views. Here is the full list courtesy of AmazonAWS.






