Just as much as high energy costs are squeezing the North American economy, the fight for survival of some of the major banks in the world is also scaring long-term oriented traders who know the importance of the financial sector for the continued good health of the equity market.
This fight to save the banks has been joined by central bankers and finance ministers, using the People’s money, with nobody permitted to rock the boat. However, if this were your problem or mine, those same banks wouldn’t skip a heartbeat before calling in our loan and taking the boat with it.
In essence, that is why we don’t yet live in a fair society.
So, without further adieu, let’s look into a report by David Einhorn as to how deceitful are these banks. “Exposing Lehman’s Lies” (pdf file) is the type of investigation and analysis that independent traders need.
Lehman Brothers (LEH) had a bad week in the market, and I am sure that Einhorn’s article didn’t help. The stock plunged -17.3% last week, -23.0% over 4 weeks, -41.9% YTD, and -51.3% over the past year.
But I suppose if you are a LEH shareholder, consider yourself fortunate you are not stuck in Citigroup (C) (-61.6% over 52-weeks). And you can point to UBS (UBS) (-54.2%), Merrill Lynch (MER) (-53.8%) and Morgan Stanley (MS) (-51.2%) as being in about the same position.
How much worse can this get for Humungous Bank & Broker [HB&B]? I happen to think there is a further -20% to come, mostly because the banks are still hiding the losses, refusing to take write-offs of permanently destroyed assets. What David Einhorn has done is merely invite at least a million eyes to the problem. From this point forward, regulators and auditors who look the other way may be found culpable and could be charged for participating in a fraud. They must take action. The problem is not just Lehman; it's all these major banks.
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This article has 16 comments:
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Outside Observer
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11 Comments
May 26 09:25 AM-
Serge Birbrair
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45 Comments
My Website
May 26 09:38 AMUBS and it's "cowboy style" banking makes it the best run bank in the world:
www.nothingcontroversi...
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archman82011
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134 Comments
May 26 09:47 AMThey are as deceitful as our own Treasury Secretary is, Mr. Hank (bold faced liar) Paulson.
They are as deceitful as our Fed.
They are as deceitful as our own gov't who blatantly put out phony gov't reports. I guess the good news on that front, is that many, many people know those reports are totally bogus and made up.
The bad news is the gov't is so corrupt now and feel they are above reproach, they will continue to outright lie to it's own people.
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Moral Hazards Amok
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37 Comments
May 26 11:21 AMObviously, Sarbanes-Oxley doesn’t prevent this type of nonsense. It’s time to ditch Sarbanes-Oxley as it’s only burdensome overhead to American corporations that doesn’t work. In the end, if a corporation wants to lie and cheat, it will simply lie and cheat.
The beat goes on. The FED will always be your ace in the hole if you’re an investment bank and will always guarantee your reckless but highly profitable behavior. If LEH or BS needs a bailout from the FED and taxpayers due to their reckless speculation in RE, obviously they will get it, despite the terrible moral hazards being created. Now investment banks are helping to create yet another asset bubble by speculating in oil. $200/barrel is easily on the radar. What happens if the world economy hits the skids thanks partly to their speculation and prices fall back down to $60? Not a problem if you’re an investment bank. The American taxpayer that you worked over by stealing their income, putting them in the unemployment lines, and wrecking their 401ks, is always there to bail you out. Many more examples of the FED and Treasury underwriting highly destructive and morally behavior of investment bank at the expense to the rest of us can be given.
Finally, the Fed can pound their chests and now make a big deal about how they will seriously address inflation, but we all know it’s just a show. If the funds rate needs to be 7 or 8 percent they will keep it at 2, or if they economy slows down further they will drop it to 1. What ever it takes to save the RE bubble from seriously hurting the investment banks they will do it even though it creates runaway inflation. Also, If M3 data needs to be totally ignored because it’s running at over 15%, but it greatly benefits the investment banks and the games they play, then the FED will conveniently ignore it. Double digit inflation in real world terms is here for the foreseeable future.
Lessons, the FED will do whatever it takes to protect investment banks despite runaway inflation, moral hazards, stealing from the taxpayer, a wrecked economy, third world starvation... whatever. Allocate your investment portfolio accordingly.
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FXTrader40
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9 Comments
May 26 12:45 PM-
BioInvestor
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127 Comments
My Website
May 26 01:35 PM-
DaveW
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225 Comments
May 26 03:18 PMThe social and cultural motivations behind behaviors is very important with regard to where we find ourselves now. But, just as importantly, these behaviors can be changed.
Let's live within our means, teach our children to live within their means and make it 'normal' to live honestly and make an honest, un-leveraged, living. As such, I would wager that more future CEO's and CFO's would stay away from vague and highly-leveraged investments.
Do I REALLY think that will happen? No, but I can dream. Therefore, in leau of shangri-la, the investment banking system must entirely be regulated and monitored, like the problem child they are.
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Greg Pinelli
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574 Comments
May 27 12:13 AMThe Fed is beyond rules.....and we are going to see the tail end of moral hazard jump onto the impossibly expanding debt bandwagon as it rolls over the edge....
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Burt
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8 Comments
May 27 07:48 AM-
Serge Birbrair
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45 Comments
My Website
May 27 09:17 AMIf A equals B and A equals C,
B=C
Financials of major Investment Banks you can find in this chart made by St Louis Federal reserve:
research.stlouisfed.or...
Bill, don't be afraid to generalise, the truth is scarrier than we all can imagine.
I double dog dare everybody to find scarrier chart in their lifetimes.
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John Pseudonym
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232 Comments
May 27 10:13 AMYou can take it from there.
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Burt
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8 Comments
May 27 12:32 PMYou have to be an ignoramus to believe that banks and brokerage houses are one in the same. It's amazing how many "experts" are on this website.
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nbdubya
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2 Comments
My Website
May 27 03:42 PMShameless self-promotion: I discussed the motivations and consequences of this meddling in a recent blog series.
nik-o-laus.blogspot.co...
nik-o-laus.blogspot.co...
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adan
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303 Comments
My Website
May 27 04:28 PM-
Serge Birbrair
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45 Comments
My Website
May 28 03:04 AM-
Burt
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8 Comments
May 29 08:18 AMI'm short the sector, especially the brokerage stocks which you have a hard time distinguishing. I too believe they are great shorts, but to classify LEH, MER, MS as big banks is ignorant. They are just not the same animal. Keep pretending like you actually know what you're talking about.