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Michael Collins
07-17-2009, 01:24 AM
Scoop News http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0907/S00188.htm

Michael Collins: Give It Back Goldman!
Thursday, 16 July 2009, 10:55 pm
Opinion: Michael Collins

GIVE IT BACK GOLDMAN!

Wall Street Welfare Queen Average
Bonuses $1.0 Million a Person

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v474/autorank/Articles/americanpsycho1-1.jpg
Hacking its way through the financial jungle, Goldman always
comes out on top. Cheers! Image

The Money Party at Work

Michael Collins

There are a number of stories out there about Goldman Sachs gaining unfair advantage in the financial markets. One concerns a former employee who allegedly swiped a special program to maximize automated stock trades. Questions were raised about the propriety of this since Goldman is hauling in tons of cash on a daily basis while others struggle. A variation of this story involves speculation that Goldman gets insider information through some internet scheme and uses that to maximize their haul.

But the biggest outrage is what's happened in public.

We Made Goldman Sachs what it is Today

If it weren't for our tax dollars and the cash flow that citizens provide for the United States Treasury, Goldman Sachs would have joined Bear Sterns and Lehman Brothers in the graveyard of financial high flyers.

But they were saved. Bush Secretary of the Treasury Henry Paulson came to the rescue when he assured that one of Goldman Sachs most important customers, the AIG group, survived a financial mess of its own creation.

Our original contribution was in the $20 billion range but then our elected representatives helped Goldman even more when they jacked up the subsidy to $85 billion. That's enough money to hire a workforce of one million people at a salary of $60,000 a year, plus benefits.

Had AIG tanked, Goldman would have been in very serious trouble. In September 2008, Paulson, a former CEO of Goldman met with Tim Geithner, soon to be President Obama's Secretary of the Treasury, when Geithner headed up the New York Federal Reserve Bank. Goldman's CEO was "the only Wall Street chief executive" at the critical meeting.

This back room meeting was exposed by Gretchen Morgenson in an outstanding New York Times article: "Although it was not widely known, Goldman, a Wall Street stalwart that had seemed immune to its rivals’ woes, was A.I.G.’s largest trading partner … A collapse of the insurer threatened to leave a hole of as much as $20 billion in Goldman’s side, several of these people said." Sept. 27, 2008

While Lehman Brothers got nothing, AIG got some serious cash and survived, thus assuring Goldman's survival. Secretary Paulson and Geithner came through with the guarantees. When Paulson left with Bush, Geithner showed up to take Paulson's place at Treasury. The beat goes on.

It's The Money Party at work. They have no permanent friends or permanent enemies, just permanent interests. Goldman's interest was turning a sow's ear, the financial collapse that they helped create, into a silk purse. Mission accomplished.

Goldman's chief financial officer attributed the $39 million a day income to the firm's reputation for "very, very strong culture of risk management." Is he kidding? Their success is based on that $85 billion of our money that saved their asses. Goldman's average $1.0 million per employee bonuses wouldn't exist were it not for citizens paying for their survival.

Have you received your thank you card from Goldman Sachs yet?

Don't hold your breath. But you can be sure that when they've screwed up what people are trying to pass off as a recovery, they'll be back at our Treasury Department again for the next big bailout courtesy of you know who.

We have no government left. It's simply a welfare agency for the most favored failed financial giants; a paper money producer to wrap the ugly truth in fictional dollars; a subprime governance scheme developing Potemkin Villages everywhere.

It's socialism for the ultra rich and survival of the fittest for the rest of us.

Millions get sick, suffer and die without medical coverage. But Goldman bags $39 million a day in the Wall Street casino. Millions of hardworking citizens lose their jobs and can't find work. But Goldman gives out bonuses averaging $1.0 million per employee. Their survival is based entirely on our assistance but when citizens need some help, there's no room at the inn.

And count on it, nobody in power will do a single thing about it. Not one thing.

Fairness, equity, civility, good taste, discretion, opportunity, even the least degree of common decency -- all dead -- thanks to The Money Party.

END

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TBF
09-02-2009, 08:16 AM
Bailed-out bankers to get options windfall: study (http://www.reuters.com/article/businessNews/idUSTRE5810O320090902?feedType=nl&feedName=usbeforethebell)

By Steve Eder

NEW YORK (Reuters) - As shares of bailed-out banks bottomed out earlier this year, stock options were awarded to their top executives, setting them up for millions of dollars in profit as prices rebounded, according to a report released on Wednesday.

The top five executives at 10 financial institutions that took some of the biggest taxpayer bailouts have seen a combined increase in the value of their stock options of nearly $90 million, the report by the Washington-based Institute for Policy Studies said.

"Not only are these executives not hurting very much from the crisis, but they might get big windfalls because of the surge in the value of some of their shares," said Sarah Anderson, lead author of the report, "America's Bailout Barons," the 16th in an annual series on executive excess.

The report -- which highlights executive compensation at such firms as Goldman Sachs Group Inc, JPMorgan Chase & Co, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America Corp and Citigroup Inc -- comes at a time when Wall Street is facing criticism for failing to scale back outsized bonuses after borrowing billions from taxpayers amid last year's financial crisis. Goldman, JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley have paid back the money they borrowed, but Bank of America and Citigroup are still in the U.S. Treasury's program.

It's also the latest in a string of studies showing that despite tough talk by politicians, little has been done by regulators to rein in the bonus culture that many believe contributed to the near-collapse of the financial sector.

The report includes eight pages of legislative proposals to address executive pay, but concludes that officials have "not moved forward into law or regulation any measure that would actually deflate the executive pay bubble that has expanded so hugely over the last three decades."

"We see these little flurries of activities in Congress, where it looked like it was going to happen," Anderson said. "Then they would just peter out."

The report found that while executives continued to rake in tens of millions of dollars in compensation, 160,000 employees were laid off at the top 20 financial industry firms that received bailouts.

The CEOs of those 20 companies were paid, on average, 85 times more than the regulators who direct the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp, according to the report.

(Reporting by Steve Eder; editing by John Wallace)