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Hints of an Explosive Wall Street Story from FT’s Tett

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  • Hints of an Explosive Wall Street Story from FT’s Tett

    Hints of an Explosive Wall Street Story from FT’s Tett
    By Ryan Chittum

    http://www.cjr.org/the_audit/fts_tet..._explosive.php

    There’s an interesting bit of reporting buried deep in this good Gillian Tett column in the Financial Times last week about Geithner’s proposed regulation of credit derivatives.

    Tett is one of the smartest financial journalists working, and she’s just out with a book on credit derivatives (Audit review to come shortly), so it’s comforting to read this from her:
    For what this week’s announcement essentially represents is not just an effort to reform the letter of the 2000 act; it is also a move to overturn the spirit - and idea that free market discipline alone can encourage bankers to behave.
    The 2000 act she’s talking about was the infamous Phil Gramm legislation that banned regulation of credit derivatives, the instruments that are in no small part responsible for the financial crisis.

    But take a look at this:
    Tales are circulating on Wall Street that some unscrupulous traders have been manipulating the price of “single name” CDS contracts to hurt rivals, or make quick profits. It is also claimed that banks have been deliberately trying to push companies into bankruptcy, in locations ranging from Ukraine to the heartland of the US, to profit on CDS positions they secretly hold.

    Interesting, but sounds like the usual scuttlebutt/conspiracy-mongering common amongst traders. But check out the following paragraph:
    One senior banker, for example, described to me this week how the large Wall Street group where he recently worked had a trading desk that would “pick off” weak companies and hedge funds, by exploiting the murkiness and illiquidity of bilateral CDS deals to push prices around. “It disgusts me, and its still going on,” he admitted.

    That sounds like a blockbuster story to me. I mean, this is what you’d expect to read from some conspiracy-addled commenter on a Yahoo Finance message board. But this is the august Financial Times—and perhaps its top reporter, with a “senior banker” as the source. I don’t doubt this is for real. I just wonder why it’s buried so deep in the column. Perhaps this is a bit of bait to lure other sources who can fill in more information.

    Tett is presumably restricted by the conditions of her background interview from naming the bank and exactly which companies it’s manipulating, but I’d hope she’s working her sources to get at this story through other means.

    Meanwhile, this is an open invitation for all journalists on Wall Street to figure out what’s going on here. Are banks manipulating derivatives to push companies into bankruptcy or to hurt other investors? It sure looks like at least one is.

    If this story breaks, the political repercussions these folks have been dealing with for the last few months is going to look like small beer.

  • #2
    Re: Hints of an Explosive Wall Street Story from FT’s Tett

    Originally posted by babbittd View Post
    Hints of an Explosive Wall Street Story from FT’s Tett
    By Ryan Chittum

    http://www.cjr.org/the_audit/fts_tet..._explosive.php
    whatever happened to tet here on itulip?

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    • #3
      Re: Hints of an Explosive Wall Street Story from FT’s Tett

      Originally posted by metalman View Post
      whatever happened to tet here on itulip?
      I don't know, but we knew each other on another forum and after pestering Tet many times for a source that could explain the Federal Reserve actions, he sent me a link to itulip in mid-2006.

      Before that, I was attempting to decipher documents such as the Fed's Modern Money Mechanics. Would still love to to hear EJ's take on that document.
      Attached Files

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      • #4
        Re: Hints of an Explosive Wall Street Story from FT’s Tett

        That CDS should be used for...darker purposes does not surprise me. I have long thought they bore too close a resemblence to a primitive insurance arrangement called a tontine (see wiki: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tontine) which was eventually made illegal as it was bad public policy to allow persons to have a financial interest in someone else's death. Hence in most places one cannot get life insurance on someone else without an "insurable interst", relative employee, etc.
        That this story will have legs, and probably the rest of the body parts, will probably be an enduring part of of the rich pageant of the system's destruction. :rolleyes:

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