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Strategies & Market Trends : Buy and Sell Signals, and Other Market Perspectives -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Hawk who wrote (970)2/26/2010 7:27:21 AM
From: GROUND ZERO™  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 219475
 
Manipulation = business as usual

GZ



To: Hawk who wrote (970)2/27/2010 6:45:52 AM
From: fred woodall3 Recommendations  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 219475
 
When Greece Met Goldman ............................

(From BARRON'S)
By Thomas G. Donlan

If you lie down with dogs, you'll get up with fleas. Goldman Sachs and the
Greek government lay down together, and now the European Union suffers from a
plague of fleas.

In 2001, Greece wanted to dress up its finances to qualify for admission to
the European Union and to trade in its tarnished drachmas for shiny new euros.
Politicians and bureaucrats could see the advantages of borrowing in a currency
made strong by the strength of the big German and French economies. The EU also
makes generous subsidies to uncompetitive industries in its member countries --
especially the poor countries, and especially in agriculture.

Greece was spending enthusiastically and taxing ineffectually. It could not
qualify to become a member of the euro zone because its deficits were too high.

Enter Goldman Sachs, a firm that lives to help its customers do what they
want, even if it isn't in the clients' best interests. Some clever young
bankers in Goldman's London office turned Greek dross into something more
attractive -- not gold exactly, more like gilded dross. Their deal converted
inconvenient billions of dollars of Greek debt into currency hedges that
weren't reported as national liabilities.

All sides ignored the fact that the currency hedges were structured to lose
money for Greece in proportion to the debt being hidden, plus something left
over for Goldman -- like about $300 million.

This would be nothing more than a bad joke on gullible Europeans, if fiscal
deceit hadn't become a habit in Greece lasting to this day, and if the
flea-bitten financial practices had not spread to other countries.

Now traders and journalists are comparing Greece to Lehman Brothers, or maybe
AIG, depending on whether they believe Greece will default or be bailed out by
the stronger members of the EU.

Greece has 53 billion euros of debt to roll over this year -- unless it is
still lying and the number is bigger. Pension funds and other international
investment sheep who bought 8 billion euros (US$10.9 billion) of Greek debt in
January probably aren't dumb enough to buy again. Even the rating agencies are
warning about downgrades.

The new Greek government would like the world to believe it will cut civil
servants' jobs and salaries, raise tax rates and collect taxes owing -- and
generally make itself creditworthy. To this, millions of Greeks have gone into
the streets and said something rude.

In Europe now, as on Wall Street in the summer of 2008, everybody knows there
are problems. Nobody knows how big they are, or how many countries -- and banks
-- share them. And, as in the summer of 2008, Goldman Sachs has nimbly used its
knowledge to place new bets. Last week it was reported that Goldman had turned
on its former Greek clients, buying up big interests in credit-default swaps
that would pay the firm if the Greeks can't pay their debts.

Although stage-managed in London, it's a perfect Wall Street play: First
Goldman helped create a problem, then it stands to profit from it. But the
lesson goes beyond Goldman Sachs.

After decades of developing ever-more efficient ways of front-running their
customers, Wall Street casino sharks have ceased to care about their clients.
The sharks have no concept of fiduciary duty, unless there is a controlling
legal principle and cops to enforce it.

The next important question is, Who is feeding the sharks? A trader can still
buy insurance on $10 million of Greek debt for $400,000. What idiot makes that
trade with Goldman or anyone else? If it turns out to be AIG, we won't be
shocked.

In Europe as in the U.S., some people blame the existence of credit-default
swaps for the Greek problems, which is like blaming the dog for having fleas.
The solution is flea powder -- ethical practice and fiscal prudence -- all
around.