2010-04-24

Goldman Sachs e-mails suggest firm profited from mortgage crisis

United States Senate releases Goldman-Sachs emails.
Link here or click title:  http://thehill.com/images/stories/news/2010/PDFs/goldmansachs.pdf

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story by the Hill
written by Ian Swanson

The e-mails released Saturday by the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations show Goldman Sachs Chairman and CEO Lloyd Blankfein saying the bank initially lost money on the investments but then more than made those losses back.


“Of course we didn’t dodge the mortgage mess. We lost money, then made more than we lost because of shorts,” Blankfein wrote in the e-mail, dated Nov. 18.


Blankfein and other Goldman Sachs executives are scheduled to testify next week before the investigations subcommittee, which is examining the Wall Street crisis.

Sen. Carl Levin, the investigative subcommittee’s chairman, said the e-mails show Goldman “made a lot of money by betting against the mortgage market.”

“Investment banks such as Goldman Sachs were not simply market-makers, they were self-interested promoters of risky and complicated financial schemes that helped trigger the crisis,” Levin said in a statement released Saturday.

“They bundled toxic mortgages into complex financial instruments, got the credit rating agencies to label them as AAA securities and sold them to investors, magnifying and spreading risk throughout the financial system, and all too often betting against the instruments they sold and profiting at the expense of their clients.”

Levin said Goldman’s 2009 annual report said the firm “did not generate enormous net revenues by betting against residential related products” and that the e-mails show this is not the case.

Besides the e-mail from Blankfein, Levin released a second e-mail from Goldman Sachs Chief Financial Office David Viniar, who is also scheduled to testify before the panel on Tuesday.

Viniar’s e-mail indicates that in one day the firm netted more than $50 million by taking short positions that increased in value as the mortgage market cratered. “Tells you what might be happening to people who don’t have the big short,” Viniar wrote in the e-mail.

Levin said this showed Goldman was taking the “big short” against the mortgage market.

In a third e-mail released by the subcommittee, a Goldman official says the bank made “serious money” by betting against mortgage-related securities.

In comments to the Financial Times, Goldman accused Levin’s panel of cherry-picking e-mails from hundreds of documents it had handed over to it.

“It is concerning that the subcommittee seems to have reached its conclusion even before holding a hearing,” spokesman Lucas Van Praag told the Financial Times.

He said the bank had released information that showed Goldman had net losses of more than $1.2 billion in residential mortgage-related products in 2007 and 2008.

“As a firm, we obviously could not have been significantly net short since we lost money in a declining market,” he said.

The testimony next week by the Goldman Sachs executives is highly anticipated in part because of the charges the bank faces from the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The SEC says Goldman committed fraud by selling investors a mortgage-backed security that was set up by a hedge fund that was betting on the security to fail. The SEC says Goldman is at fault for not telling investors who set up the security.

Blankfein has said his bank did nothing wrong and is planning a vigorous defense of the charges. Part of Goldman’s argument is that it did not know whether housing prices would rise or fall, which could increase attention on the e-mails released by Levin on Saturday.

According to The Washington Post, Goldman has prepared a document for Blankfein’s testimony that shows the company decided in 2007 to reduce the company’s exposure to the mortgage market, in case prices fell, by making new investments that would pay off if housing prices dropped.

Goldman will testify as the Senate attempts to move forward with legislation on new rules for Wall Street. The Senate will face a procedural vote on a measure Monday, and it is unclear whether Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) will have the votes necessary to move to a debate on the bill.

No Republican senators have offered support for the bill so far.

Democrats have tried to use the allegations against Goldman to their advantage, arguing it shows the need for their legislation.

1 Comments:

Blogger Why This Blog? said...

I am presently in litigation with Fremont Reorganizing, Goldman Sachs dba Litton Loan Servicing, et al., (2 different cases) for about 2 years now. The main issue with the complaint is a fraudulent loan originated by Fremont in June 2006. This in turn produced an array of other
issues: unsigned deed of trust, over billing issues, lost payments, excessive balloon payment, back dated assignments, illegal non-judicial foreclosure documentation, missing documentation, illegally reporting to my credit, falsifying declarations, 6 week TRO's, court procedures not followed, judges wait until the courtroom is cleared to rule against a TRO (both times); retired (78 year old) judge ruled against a seated judges TRO where the retired judge took 30 minutes to read a 300 page brief. The whole time they have been ignoring my request and failing to give me the required documentation so that I can rescind the loan. Goldman Sachs dba Litton Loan Servicing has been aggressively trying to foreclose on my property. I believe to cash out for insurance reasons. (It's over a million dollar loan) I have invested over $400,000 into this property for the past 5 years and if I had known about this mortgage meltdown game played by Wall Street I would have never proceeded with this Real Estate transaction. The Media and the Government has not once addressed or helped the borrower, namely me, who also has been damaged by these defaulted CDO's.

A Time line of what's going on with Goldman Sachs to show how they are scheming to pursue foreclosures for the insurance by acquiring distressed, shelled fraudulent companies which will eventually or haven't already gone BK...

 Oct 26, 2005 Litton Loan Servicing Class Action - mishandling loans, servicing over 400,000 borrowers - case settled Feb 17, 2009 for $537 (limited due to class status)
 Feb 27, 2007 FDIC Cease and Desist - Fremont Reorganizing for illegal loan practices, et al., (largest predatory lenders who heavily solicited brokers for their schemes)
 Oct 16, 2007 Massachusetts Lawsuit vs Fremont and Goldman Sachs - Predatory Lending Practices - settled May 11, 2009 for $60 mil
 Dec 11, 2007 - Goldman Sachs Acquires Litton Loan Servicing
 June 2, 2008 Litton (Goldman Sachs) Acquires Fremont Reorganizing Servicing Rights
 June 19, 2008 Fremont Reorganizing files BK
 Apr 16, 2010 - SEC vs Goldman Sachs - Securities Fraud

Here is the link to my blog http://bushnellcomplaint.blogspot.com/ if you want to download court documents pertaining to my case.

Note: My wife is pursuing individuals who are interested in joining her in a class action lawsuit with regards to violation of her community property rights in a wrongful foreclosure. If you are in a community property state and a spouse is not on title you may have grounds for legal action.

4/24/2010 08:35:00 pm  

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