Strategies & Market Trends | The Residential Real Estate Post-Crash Index-MODERATED


Previous 10 | Next 10 
From: Smiling Bob8/6/2012 6:05:41 AM
   of 91258
 
Wouldn't this "mixed" signal hold true for every day?
-----
Stock index futures signal mixed openReuters

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

From: Pogeu Mahone8/6/2012 7:21:02 AM
2 Recommendations   of 91258
 
As Libor Fault-Finding Grows, It Is Now Every Bank for Itself By AZAM AHMED and BEN PROTESS

Paul Thomas/Bloomberg NewsThe Barclays settlement prompted the resignation of top executives, including the chief executive, Robert E. Diamond Jr., and helped to erase more than $3 billion of the bank’s market value.
Major banks, which often band together when facing government scrutiny, are now turning on one another as an international investigation into the manipulation of interest rates gains momentum.

With billions of dollars and their reputations on the line, financial institutions have been spreading the blame in recent meetings with authorities, according to government and bank officials with knowledge of the matter. While acknowledging their own wrongdoing, institutions are pointing out actions at other banks that they believe are worse — and in some cases, extend to top executives.

One official involved in the case said that banks are emphasizing that “we’re not as bad as the next guy.”



Article Tools

Facebook Twitter Google+ E-mail Share Print



The Swiss bank UBS, which has a history of regulatory run-ins, has shared e-mails, instant messages and other information suggesting it had colluded with traders at Deutsche Bank, HSBC and the Royal Bank of Scotland to manipulate key interest rates, according to court documents and bank employees. In talks with authorities, HSBC is providing its own account of the activities, according to a lawyer briefed on the matter. Citigroup has also detailed rate manipulation with other banks.

When the British bank Barclays recently negotiated a settlement with authorities, it highlighted that other European institutions took part in the rate-rigging scheme, said officials close to the case. Like UBS, Barclays has provided information on activities involving HSBC and Deutsche Bank.

Several banks are using Barclays’ $450 million settlement as a guidepost in preliminary discussions with authorities. JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup are each emphasizing to authorities that their chief executives were not implicated in the wrongdoing as in the case of Barclays, and therefore the banks deserve to be treated less severely, according to the officials.

A Deutsche Bank manager who oversaw traders is facing scrutiny, according to a person involved in the case. However, a Deutsche Bank spokesman said no managers or top executives had been aware of any rate manipulation, adding that the investigation was continuing.

JPMorgan, Deutsche Bank, HSBC and Citigroup have said they are cooperating with officials.

Authorities around the world are investigating more than 10 big banks for their roles in setting global interest rates like the London interbank offered rate, or Libor. Such benchmarks underpin trillions of dollars of financial products, including mortgages and student loans.

Regulators are examining whether banks colluded to move the rates up or down to get extra profits and limit losses on their trading positions. Some banks are also under investigation for reporting artificially low rates to make themselves appear financially healthier.

When banks first started conducting internal investigations at the behest of regulators two years ago, they figured the potential penalties would be manageable, according to bank officials.

But the size of the Barclays settlement and the growing public outcry have left banks scrambling to limit their culpability as the threat of criminal actions increases. Part of the banks’ problem is that their internal investigations have created a road map that authorities are using to pursue criminal and civil cases.

Those findings provide a detailed portrait of the wrongdoing.

Interviews with dozens of government and bank officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the investigation is developing, and a review of court documents and regulatory filings show varying degrees of exposure. Banks like UBS, Deutsche Bank and Citigroup uncovered that employees had worked with traders at other firms to influence rates, according to government and bank officials. A small number of institutions, including Credit Suisse and Bank of America, found more limited actions.

The extent of the evidence has created an every-bank-for-itself attitude.

The financial industry often tries to negotiate a common deal to avoid getting singled out for bad behavior. This year, five banks collectively struck a multibillion-dollar agreement with federal authorities to address foreclosure abuses.

With the rate investigation, institutions are not sharing information or even discussing the case with rivals, according to lawyers involved in the matter. In part, they do not want to appear to have close ties with their rivals, since such cozy relationships are part of the government’s inquiry.

“There is no information-sharing among banks unlike the past 15 years of federal investigations,” said a lawyer involved in the case.

So far, Barclays has borne the brunt of the fallout. In June, the British bank settled with British and American authorities for reporting false rates to bolster its profits and project a rosier picture of its financial position. The settlement prompted the resignation of top executives, including the chief executive Robert E. Diamond Jr., and helped to erase more than $3 billion of the bank’s market value.

At first, Barclays rejected a settlement offer by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the regulator leading the investigation, according to officials close to the case. The bank believed the terms were unfavorable, said a lawyer involved in the matter. As the agency prepared to take the case to court, negotiations resumed. While Barclays secured a modestly smaller penalty, the bank still paid record fines.

In trying to work out a deal, the British bank offered information on the multiyear scheme with Deutsche Bank, HSBC, Société Générale and Crédit Agricole, according to government and bank officials. Also, a senior trader at Barclays tried to manipulate the Euro interbank offered rate, or Euribor.

Other cases are expected to follow. The Justice Department is aiming to file criminal actions against two banks before the end of the year and is preparing to arrest former traders at Barclays and other banks, according to government officials. In addition, state attorneys general and local district attorneys have approached the Justice Department in recent weeks, seeking a role in the case.

Since the Barclays settlement, banks have been reassessing their defense strategies and reaching out to authorities. Officials warn that all talks with the banks are preliminary, and no settlement deals are imminent.

After targeting Barclays for rate manipulation four years ago, regulators gradually turned their attention to a wide swath of banks.

In a 2010 letter, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission contacted a small group of banks, including UBS. The regulator quickly expanded the list, sending a memo to all 16 institutions that helped set Libor rates at the time. The agency ordered the firms to hire outside attorneys to conduct an investigation into suspected rate manipulation, according to bank and regulatory officials.

After examining the extent of its wrongdoing, UBS moved swiftly to strike an immunity deal with government authorities. In its inquiry, the Swiss bank uncovered that one of its former traders, Thomas Hayes, had apparently worked with employees at Deutsche Bank, HSBC and the Royal Bank of Scotland to influence rates and make profits, according to bank officials and court documents. At times, the traders communicated via instant messages on Bloomberg machines, the court documents show.

UBS was eager to cooperate in part because the government typically only grants immunity to the first party to step forward in a case. The Swiss bank also wanted to avoid the harsh spotlight of a prosecution or a settlement, according to a bank official. The bank has been at the center of several financial scandals, including a rogue trader and an illegal tax shelter scheme.

Citigroup has been forthcoming with regulators, as well. After leaving UBS, Mr. Hayes moved to Citigroup where the problems continued, according to bank officials with knowledge of the case. The bank has handed over documents on that rate-rigging group.

Citigroup is emphasizing to authorities that the wrongdoing did not reach the upper levels of management, as it did at Barclays. Based on its internal investigation, the bank told regulators and its audit committee that neither its chief executive, Vikram S. Pandit, nor its chief financial officer, John Gerspach, was implicated, according to a bank official and a lawyer with knowledge of the matter. The bank’s investigation showed that its wrongdoing is mainly centered on another key benchmark, the Tokyo interbank offered rate.

In contrast, Deutsche Bank is facing heavier scrutiny in the United States. The German institution has been named in the rate conspiracies outlined by Barclays and UBS, as has HSBC. In working with regulators, HSBC is making employees available to government investigators and turning over e-mails and other information, according to one person with knowledge of the matter.

Ian Austen contributed reporting.

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

From: Pogeu Mahone8/6/2012 7:54:45 AM
   of 91258
 
US Olympic gold medal winner Gabby Douglas's mother facing bankruptcy • Popular gymnast's mother filed papers in January
• Ryan Lochte's parents also facing financial woes


guardian.co.uk, Monday 6 August 2012 05.46 EDT


US Olympic gold medal winning gymnast Gabby Douglas's mother has filed for bankruptcy. Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters

Court records show that the mother of the Olympic gold medal winning gymnast Gabby Douglas filed for bankruptcy earlier this year in Virginia.

The filing was first reported by TMZ, a day after it was revealed that the parents of her fellow US Olympian Ryan Lochte were facing foreclosure in Florida.

Documents filed in January in Virginia show Douglas' mother, Natalie Hawkins, filed for Chapter 13 bankruptcy, which allows people to reorganise their finances and pay down debt over several years.

Douglas has been one of the most popular athletes at the Olympics in London, becoming the first African-American woman to win an all-around gold medal in gymnastics. The 1.5m (4ft 11in) 16-year-old has taken home two gold medals so far and has become an international superstar, winning over fans with her smile and the nickname "Flying Squirrel."

The gymnast's agent has fielded hundreds of emails from businesses, talk shows and magazines interested in Douglas, and she's already slated to appear on the cover of a Corn Flakes box. She stands to earn millions of dollars from endorsement deals and other ventures. Douglas has been training for two years in Iowa and hasn't been home to Virginia Beach since then.

The bankruptcy filings list Hawkins as having assets totalling $163,706 (£105,186), with a townhouse in Virginia Beach and a 2007 Nissan Maxima accounting for the bulk of it. Other possessions include miscellaneous books and clothing valued at $600 (£385).

Hawkins also lists roughly $80,000 (£51,396) in debts. The bulk of that is from her mortgage. Other debts include: a $4,300 (£2,762) student loan, about $1,800 (£1,156) in credit card purchases and a $400 (£257) medical bill. Hawkins is separated from her husband and lists about $2,500 (£1,606) in income per month, which comes from Social Security disability benefits and child support, according to the documents. Douglas also has three older siblings.

An order issued in March says Hawkins is to pay $400 a month toward her debts over a nearly five-year period. Her attorney declined to comment on Sunday in an email.

The bankruptcy filing was the latest report of financial woes associated with an Olympian. CitiMortgage is suing to foreclose on the Florida home owned by Ryan Lochte's divorced parents, Ileana and Steven. Both have been in London to cheer on their son, who has won two gold medals of his own.

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

From: Travis_Bickle8/6/2012 8:25:05 AM
1 Recommendation   of 91258
 
Knight Capital plunges some more, sometimes a sabe is not a sabe

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: Travis_Bickle who wrote (72304)8/6/2012 8:38:27 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone   of 91258
 
lol
=================

Don't let euro zone debate turn nasty: German foreign minister

Reuters) - German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle on Monday warned politicians to rein in the language they use about the euro zone debt crisis after a weekend of ugly exchanges in the German press over Italy and Greece. Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti told magazine Der Spiegel that he needed Germany's moral support but not its cash and that Berlin should "cut some slack" for those countries implementing budget cuts demanded by the European Union.

He also said governments needed to keep some room for maneuver independent of decisions taken in national parliaments - a thinly veiled attack on the role Germany's Bundestag lower house has played in slowing up action on the crisis.

Westerwelle's remarks looked like as much of an attack on ruling coalition allies Christian Social Union (CSU), whose leader Markus Soeder said on Sunday Berlin should cut Greece off by the end of 2012, before it was too late.

"The tone in the debate is extremely dangerous," Westerwelle said in a statement released in Berlin.

"We've got to take care that we don't talk Europe to death. We can't allow our actions to be reduced to attempts to raise political profiles domestically - and that goes for Germany too.

"The situation in Europe is too serious for that and there's too much at stake," Westerwelle added.

Westerwelle is one of the leading politicians in Germany's pro-business Free Democrats (FDP), junior coalition partners along with the CSU to Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU). The FDP and CSU are often at odds with each other.

"In this situation you have to apply the old mountain climbing rule," the CSU's Soeder said on Sunday. "If someone is hanging on your rope and pulling you down into the abyss with him, you have to cut the rope. We are at that stage now. If we don't cut the rope on which Greece is hanging in time, Germany could be in danger.

Soeder also told Bild am Sonntag newspaper that giving Greece aid "is like trying to water a desert". He also said: "At some point, everyone's got to move out of mum's house and for the Greeks the time is ripe for that now.

Monti warned that if the euro became a factor in European countries drifting apart "then the basis of the European project will have been destroyed."

"The tensions that have accompanied the euro zone in recent years already carry the psychological marks of a break-up of the euro zone," he said.

"If governments were fully tied to the decisions of their parliaments without having their own room for maneuver, then Europe would be more likely to break apart than come closer together."

Both Westerwelle and a government spokesman on Monday dismissed the latter remarks, saying there was a need for more democratic backing in Europe and not less.

"There can be no discussion about parliamentary controls of European policies," said Westerwelle. "We need a strengthening of the democratic legitimacy in Europe and not a weakening."

(This story corrected paragraph eight to show Westerwelle one of FDP's leaders, not leader)

(Reporting By Erik Kirschbaum; editing by Chris Cottrell and Patrick Graham)



Italy
Greece
Euro Zone

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

From: Travis_Bickle8/6/2012 8:41:25 AM
   of 91258
 
Best Buy founder offers to buyout company, stock is screaming lol

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

From: TH8/6/2012 9:42:43 AM
1 Recommendation   of 91258
 
Welcome to another week of ridiculous fraud, lies, and manipulation. To the market that never ends, to an endless sea of green, where all data is good, bad is best, but good is also welcome.

Step right up. There is no risk, for like polio or smallpox, modern science has done it magic.

LOL, Monday can make ya crazy <g>

GT
TH

20% BUMP on one of my shorts.

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: TH who wrote (72297)8/6/2012 10:13:52 AM
From: Amelia Carhartt1 Recommendation   of 91258
 
What kinda ploy is this? finance.yahoo.com 

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (2)

To: Amelia Carhartt who wrote (72308)8/6/2012 10:20:49 AM
From: The Reaper5 Recommendations   of 91258
 
"Bold and extensive changes are needed for Best Buy to return to market leadership," Mr. Schulz wrote.

I hope he plans on making it an exclusively online retailer with the call centers in India because that's the only survivability plan that's going to work. Say hello to Bain Capital.

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: The Reaper who wrote (72309)8/6/2012 10:41:35 AM
From: Amelia Carhartt1 Recommendation   of 91258
 
Lotsa luck to him!

Maybe he just wanted to juice the share price so he could sell? ;)

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read
Previous 10 | Next 10 

Copyright © 1995-2013 Knight Sac Media. All rights reserved.