Friday, July 31, 2009

Guess what? Wall Street Is About To Rename The Bonus


Andrew Cuomo has once again turned the bright glare on Wall Street bonuses, giving everyone a fresh chance to jeer and offer their ideas about how compensation will be reformed. But the obsession with bonuses is a big distraction whichever side you're on. If there's something to be enraged about, it's not the bonuses, it's the profits in the banking sector.

Because shareholders of companies like JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs are perfectly happy fattening up their big earners. To merely say that bonuses should be lower, is to say that profits should be transfered from one class (employees) to another class (shareholders), which is a totally arbitrary thing, and not really legitimate grounds for public policy. So if you're going to complain, complain about bank profits/business models. The bonuses are just a symptom.

So here's how Wall Street is going to deal with the issue. First, they're going to rename it. Maybe bonuses will be called "commissions" or "risk-weighted commissions" or "production compensation" or something else that's totally dry. Because really, the word "bonus" is not the proper word, at least not how most people use it. They call bonus what the rest of us call "salary" (almost). The next thing they'll do is pay bonuses on a quarterly basis, or maybe every six months. This way nobody can think of it as an end-of-year bonus, like the rest of us (might) get. It'll look like something else entirely, and it won't go over so badly with the public or politicians......

http://www.businessinsider.com/wall-street-is-about-to-rename-the-bonus-2009-7

Weeping Wuss Story: Bullied Fund Manger wins right to sue


A fund manager who claimed bullying was rife at his former employer New Star Asset Management, founded by City veteran John Duffield, has won the right to pursue a claim for compensation at an employment tribunal.

The Guardian says Patrick Evershed, 67, who was a close confidant of Duffield and one of the firm's star performers, is claiming constructive dismissal under the whistleblower act.

He left New Star in September 2008 amid reports his relationship with Duffield had soured. The firm has since been bought by Henderson Global Investors for £115m, after running up heavy debts.

Evershed said he had earlier been told he could not pursue the claim because it had been filed incorrectly, and had overrun a time limit. Today he won an appeal against that decision. It is now reported he could claim up to £1m.

http://www.investmentweek.co.uk/investment-week/news/1495614/evershed-wins-pursue-new-star-bullying-claim-papers

Gold gleams brightly for US hedges

US hedge fund managers are buying gold anticipating that prices will be boosted by the effects of European governments' quantitative easing (QE) programmes.
Gold Twenty out of 22 hedge fund managers interviewed by US firm Moonraker Fund Management say they are buying physical gold out of fear the QE programmes would fail and cause steep price rises.

Should quantitative easing fail and we enter a deeper recession gold prices would rise as investors rush to purchase what is seen as a safe investment in times of deflation. Gold prices soared in the deflationary period in the 1930s.

Moonraker CIO, Jeremy Charlesworth, says: "Gold is the ultimate currency, performing best when economies are at extremes, whether that is inflationary or deflationary.

http://www.investmentweek.co.uk/investment-week/news/1495623/gold-flashes-brightly-us-hedge-funds

CIC Hires Such Good Friends: Morgan, Blackstone

China Investment Corp.'s $200 billion sovereign-wealth fund is reaching out to old friends in the U.S. as it ventures into hedge-fund investing.

The fund has selected Morgan Stanley and Blackstone Group LP to oversee hundreds of millions of dollars in new private-fund investments, people familiar with the matter said.

The Beijing fund has finalized an allocation of $500 million to Blackstone's fund-of-funds unit, which farms out clients' money to dozens of hedge funds, and it has earmarked additional money to be overseen by Morgan Stanley's asset-management unit, the people said.

CIC has been in discussions about allocating billions more dollars ...

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124896400764393841.html

Friday Laffs: The seven habits of highly disengaged employees


1. Persevere + evasiveness = Persevasiveness. Disengaged employees focus all of their energy on eluding any work task that may be assigned. They waste an incredible amount time ensuring their boss thinks they are busy.
2. Web surfing is their 1st job, bathroom breaks are their 2nd.
3. An exaggerated sense of how evil their employer or manager is.
4. They aren't happy until they convince the world they are right. Rather than spreading the good word, disengaged employees are missionaries of malice. Making others feel unhappy about their job makes them feel better about the fact that they are also miserable. This column is living proof.
5. They'll find any way to sneak out of work early.
6. Increased interest in working from home. All disengaged people want to work from home, but not all people who work from home are disengaged. Telecommuting is a dream come true for disengaged employees. It opens up a whole new world of opportunities.
7. A firm belief that everyone they work with is incompetent. This is usually true.

http://www.examiner.com/x-3040-Life-in-the-Cubicle-Examiner~y2009m7d24-The-seven-habits-of-highly-disengaged-employees

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Wall Street Bonuses: Wanna be a Millionaire?


Of course you knew banking was lucrative, but being a millionaire ain’t what it used to be. But most Americans–median household income $50,000–would still relish the opportunity.

The Wall Street bonus numbers released today by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo show that the nine financial institutions that received Trouble Asset Relief Program rescue money counted at least 4,793 people receiving more than $1 million in bonus payments.

The companies employed 1,279,167 people overall, which means that any one employee’s likelihood of being a millionaire was at least 0.37%, or roughly one millionaire for every 270 bank employees. That still significantly understates the total number of millionaires because base compensation isn’t counted in the numbers. And it isn’t really the purest reflection of “Wall Street”–or what remains of it–because it includes tens of thousands of tellers, clerks and other back-office people who support the retail banking operations.

Still, by comparison, the income of the top 0.1% of taxpayers in 2007 (well before last year’s stock-market crash ) was just above $1 million. That means that there is one millionaire for every 1,000 taxpayers……

http://blogs.wsj.com/deals/2009/07/30/wall-street-bonuses-what-are-your-chances-of-being-a-millionaire/

Man the gates, the barbarians are coming.....again


There are signs of revival among private equity's giants. Along with the rest of the finance industry, the private-equity business has endured a miserable couple of years. As banks, which had been lending buy-out firms spectacular sums of money on extraordinarily generous terms, abruptly turned off their taps, buy-outs became a rarity. In the first half of 2009, just $24 billion of private-equity deals were completed worldwide and only three loans were extended to fund leveraged acquisitions, the lowest number since 1985, according to Dealogic. That compares with deal volumes of $131 billion last year and $528 billion in 2007.

Meanwhile, the economic crisis has meant that many of the firms snapped up by private equity in the boom years have got into difficulties, so private-equity bosses have had to spend most of their time trying to keep them alive when they would rather have been selling them for a profit and snapping up new bargains.

There have been some notable casualties suffered by some usually reliable performers. Apollo could not save Linens ’n Things, a retailer, from bankruptcy. The purchase of Chrysler by Cerberus made the private-equity firm named after the three-headed dog guarding the gates of hell look like a different sort of dog when the carmaker filed for bankruptcy. But possibly the most ignominious loss in the history of private equity was suffered by the venerable Texas Pacific Group……

http://www.economist.com/businessfinance/displayStory.cfm?story_id=14116441

Is Goldman better than other banks? (It’s the culture, dumbo!!)


According to Heidi Moore, the basic rule of Goldman culture is that the company manages its people exactly the opposite of how every other Wall Street firm does. It's not that Goldman doesn't have its egos—it surely does—but as a matter of management, the firm also has several safeguards in place to keep rampant egos from destroying decision-making. Another thing that makes Goldman different from other firms is not that all Goldman bankers agree but that they are free—and, in fact, encouraged—to disagree. Anyone who has read accounts of Goldman's knockdown, drag-out fights over going public will understand this, as will anyone who has read two great books about Goldman: The Partnership and The Culture of Success. The firm's management committee meetings are, by all accounts, rambunctious affairs full of disagreement. John Thain once presented a case for Goldman's IPO to the management committee, and several of his fellow partners disagreed. Thain's reply to his vehement colleagues, according to Bloomberg: "Would it hurt you to suck up to me once in a while?" CFO David Viniar is a dragonlike protector of the firm's balance sheet, known to shoot down trading ideas and expansion plans day in and day out. Viniar's default answer, according to Goldman bankers, is "No," and he is known for his even-handed rejection of expensive schemes.

The difference is that Goldman Sachs bankers can disagree only before decisions are made; once all opinions are solicited, consensus is reached, and decisions are made, the decision is one made by the firm, on behalf of everyone, and it's final. Mostly, other Wall Street firms—from partnerships to giant investment banks—are hotbeds of infighting, and you need only talk to a few bankers before you find evidence that they undermine management decisions, subvert prominent colleagues, or openly ignore one another. Even worse, at many firms, bankers or traders will attempt to hide information about bad deals or trades until they can "fix" them and preserve year-end bonuses, as Brian Hunter was alleged to have done at Amaranth. At Goldman, management is like the Godfather: They want the bad news first. And daily…..

http://www.thebigmoney.com/articles/judgments/2009/07/29/will-everyone-please-shut-about-goldman-sachs?page=0,0

Trustee sues Ruth Madoff for $44 million

The trustee winding down imprisoned swindler Bernard Madoff's former firm sued his wife on Wednesday, seeking at least $44.8 million (27.6 million pounds) for investors bilked in Wall Street's biggest investment fraud.

Court-appointed trustee Irving Picard said in court papers that of that amount, Ruth Madoff received at least $23.7 million directly or indirectly from Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities (BLMIS). He said she received an additional $21.1 million during the six years up to her husband's arrest last December.

"For decades, Mrs Madoff lived a life of splendour using the money of BLMIS's customers," the trustee said in the filing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York. "Regardless of whether or not Mrs Madoff knew of the fraud her husband perpetrated ... she received tens of millions of dollars from BLMIS."

Married to Madoff for 49 years, she was a controller of Madoff Securities International in London and worked on accounts at the New York firm, the lawsuit said.

http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2009/07/30/business/business-uk-madoff-ruth.html

Wowsa! Lazard Reports a $43 Million Profit

Lazard, the investment bank run by Bruce Wasserstein, reported a $43 million profit for the second quarter as it showed growth in its core mergers and restructuring advisory businesses.

The firm also showed improvement in its other main operation, asset management, as its executives saw a slow but continued recovery in the overall markets.

While Lazard’s profit, which amounted to 34 cents a share, was down 33 percent from its profit of $65 million, or 54 cents a share, a year earlier, it was still a marked improvement from the nearly $30 million loss it recorded for the first quarter this year, one arising from restructuring costs. Revenue was down 20 percent, to $402 million from $504 million. The firm’s strongest gains were in its restructuring advisory business, which reported $93.2 million in revenue for the quarter, nearly three times what it pulled in for the same time period last year and 53 percent more than in the first quarter.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/business/30lazard.html

AIG not the resume-killer you thought it was…

With all the turmoil in the markets these days, it might seem like a good time to become a public servant. That’s what David Frankel is doing: Mr. Frankel, a former managing director at Morgan Stanley, has been chosen to become New York City’s next finance commissioner, The Associated Press reports.

Michael Bloomberg, New York’s mayor, announced the appointment on Wednesday.

Mr. Frankel is hardly a stranger to City Hall. In addition to a stint as a senior vice president at a unit of the American International Group, he previously worked in the administrations of two former New York City mayors, David Dinkins and Ed Koch.

http://dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/from-wall-street-to-city-hall/

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Holden’s Unfounded Rumor Of The Afternoon: JPM Intern Worked Into Seizure


DB is hearing that an intern in the Natural Resources IB Group at JPM, having likely pulled consecutive all-nighters to complete a "Homework Project" that was in addition to the intern's daily duties, collapsed into a seizure last week. We hope the intern in question is OK and are awaiting further details.

Update I: The intern is reportedly OK and has provided a good excuse for the House of Dimon to launch another investigation into the general work/life balance of summer neophytes. JPM will look to improve on their prior upgrades which included adding more healthy snacks in the vending machines- which were later removed because they posed a fire hazard.

Update II: The intern had apparently been working for 3 days straight before the convulsions began. Those not seizing were given last weekend off in light of their fallen comrade.

http://www.dealbreaker.com/

Ignore This at Your Own Risk

China is bailing out the world economy, growing at 8% a year while the rest of the globe struggles. Unfortunately, if China bears are right, those days will soon be over.

Jeremy Grantham of GMO is nervous about emerging markets, especially China.

– has had an amazing recovery, all things considered, and is no doubt also vulnerable to a reassessment of how quickly the global economy is recovering. Deciphering the strength of the Chinese economy will also play a major role in formulating our view of any future relative strength of emerging. My colleague, Edward Chancellor, strongly suspects that the Chinese economy is dangerously unbalanced and very likely to come unhinged in the next few quarters, surprising the pants off investors.

Meanwhile, Jeremy's prediction earlier this year that S&P would soar to 1000-1100 and then collapse for 7 years seems right on track.

http://www.businessinsider.com/henry-blodget-grantham-china-will-collapse-2009-7

Poor Harvard Adjusts To Life As A $24 Billion University


Harvard grads, you can't escape it. Yale grads, you can't either. Everywhere you look, there's another story about your alma mater's shrinking endowment, each one carrying the same subliminal message: give.

Schools are almost too eager to talk about, and play up, the extent to which their buffeted endowments will mean lower spending, scaled-back ambitions and layoffs.

Bloomberg: “We can’t discount the fact that the universities are now poor,” said Robert Merton, a professor at Harvard Business School in Boston who won the Nobel prize for economics in 1997 with Myron Scholes for their work on pricing options. “If they’re going to be poor, they are going to make changes as a result.”

Administrators didn’t adequately understand the impact that endowment losses would have on school finances and overlooked the risk managers were taking, said Merton, who wrote a paper titled “Optimal Investment Strategies for University Endowment Funds.”

Part of the problem, especially at Harvard, but also at Yale and elsewhere, is that the universities made all kinds of private equity commitments, and other investments that have prevented them from capturing the upside of the rebounding market.

According to one "expert" estimate, Yale will need 10 years to get back to its high water mark….

http://www.businessinsider.com/harvard-adjusts-to-life-as-a-24-billion-university-2009-7

Knocking Banker Bonuses Helps New York Cream London

David Butler, who advises hedge funds on tax issues, says he helped 23 firms leave London in the past 18 months, most of them for Switzerland.

“Managers do not feel there is a good relationship with politicians,” said Butler, founder of Kinetic Partners LLP in London. “When it is announced that taxes will go up, without any consultations, people understand there may be more on the way and they think the lifestyle they can have somewhere else is better than in London.”

Butler is one indicator London’s recovery from the worst financial calamity since the 1920s may take longer than New York’s. While both cities have claimed bragging rights as the capital of global capital, London’s financial district was hit harder than Wall Street.

The U.K. capital shed almost twice as many finance jobs as New York as a percentage of the total. Its workforce shrank by 29,371 in 2008, or 8.3 percent, according to the London-based Centre for Economic and Business Research. New York lost 20,200 financial-services jobs, or 4.3 percent, data from the New York State Labor Department show. The value of daily trades on the London Stock Exchange fell 41 percent in the first half of this year from the same period in 2007. At the New York Stock Exchange, the drop was 29 percent.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=a9YQldt4DtVY

Deutsche Bank baitch-slapped by loan fears

Shares in Deutsche Bank, Germany’s biggest bank, tumbled 11 per cent on Tuesday amid renewed fears over its exposure to the economic crisis and increased provisions against bad loans.

The concern over bad loans overshadowed a second successive quarter in which profits from investment banking helped Deutsche earn net income of more than €1bn.

Josef Ackermann, CEO, said he was cautious about the global economic outlook. Deutsche raised its provisions against loan losses to €1bn, double the amount in the first quarter and about the same as its total provisions during 2008.

Exposure to two unnamed counterparties accounted for €433m of the provisions and were among €1.4bn of one-off charges in the quarter…..

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/fbae99fe-7b3e-11de-9772-00144feabdc0.html

Fund Sued for $2.83 Million

Highland Capital Management LP, the Dallas-based investment firm that’s liquidating its main hedge fund, was sued by attorneys Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP for allegedly not paying $2.83 million in legal fees.

The New York-based law firm initiated a lawsuit in New York state court yesterday, listing what it said were unpaid invoices from June 2008 to this month.

“We believe Schulte Roth overbilled the firm and its funds for legal services,” Highland said in an e-mailed statement. “Highland has paid Schulte Roth nearly $1 million in good faith, and has made every effort to resolve this issue with them.”

Highland, founded by James Dondero and Mark Okada in 1993, said in October it would wind down its flagship Highland Crusader Fund and the Highland Credit Strategies Fund over a three-year period after suffering losses. Highland was sued earlier this month by a group of investors over claims that it misled clients about the health of those two hedge funds following bad bets on real estate.

Josh Hamilton, a spokesman for Schulte Roth, declined to comment on the filing.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=aPbIScK4wZak

When Nomura Stumbles, It Stumbles


Japanese brokerage firm Nomura Holdings Inc. kicked off a training session for new hires in April by separating the men and women. The women, including Harvard graduates hired by Lehman Brothers before it collapsed, were taught how to wear their hair, serve tea and choose their wardrobes according to the season, say executives who fielded a complaint about the session.

Ever since Nomura acquired Lehman's international operations last September, cultural and business differences between the two organizations have loomed large. There has been tension over executive compensation, how quickly decisions are made and treatment of women in the bank….

It's not like they're being asked to slut it up. In fact, the females are being expressly told: do not dress like a ho’, or you're out on your ass. This is a place of business. We can't have bitches running wild.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124882265902988289.html

Top Citi Trader Still Fighting For His $100 MILLION Payday

The clashes continue at Phibro, the Citigroup's highly successful commodity trading unit, where compensation has gotten all messed up due to TARP limits.

Citi desperately wants to keep Phibro, but it's fighting with the unit's top trader, Andrew J. Hall, who is demanding to be made whole on some $100 million in owed compensation for his performance. Needless to say, Citigroup isn't in a position to go around writing $100 million checks just like that.

Mr. Hall is contractually obligated to receive pay based on Phibro's profits, and some observers on Wall Street believe Citigroup has a better chance at repaying the U.S. money with its Phibro unit humming…..

http://www.businessinsider.com/top-citi-trader-still-fighting-for-his-100-million-payday-2009-7

Goldman Sachs Employee Takes One For The Team

As you're no doubt aware, the PR department over at 85 Broad has been working overtime to get people to stop talking trash about how the bank owns the government, would screw a hobo for a nickel, and could just generally buy (and sell) your life for mere pennies. All of that is for the most part true, but the bad press is starting to grate, so attempts are being made to ingratiate the Masters of the Universe to the peasants like yourselves. Demonstrate that they're just regular guys with regular problems. So even though, in reality, anyone with a GS ID could get any woman they want, they've started to do stuff like pay for sex, and troll for underage tail on the internet, like a common man/Citi employee:

A lawyer for Wall Street powerhouse Goldman Sachs was caught in a sting operation aimed at perverts who solicit young girls for sex, officials said Tuesday.

Todd Genger, 33, is accused of trying to lure an underage teen with explicit chat on the Internet and then traveling to Westchester to consummate the cyber-affair.

In reality, the "girl" Genger was chasing was an undercover investigator posing as a teen in the chat room, the Westchester County district attorney's office said.

http://www.dealbreaker.com/

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

How Goldman makes all that cash


While the U.S. banking industry struggles to right itself, Goldman Sachs has figured out how to turn financial turmoil into gold. Here’s how. The answer is that Goldman Sachs isn’t really a bank. It’s a gigantic investment company that offers very limited conventional banking services — like lending money — on the side. Because it’s one of the few investment banks left standing, it has the highly profitable field of trading and underwriting pretty much to itself.

The bulk of the $2.7 billion profit Goldman reported for the second quarter, and roughly three-quarters of its revenues, came from trading — making bets buying stocks and bonds. Though it officially became a regulated bank holding company last year when the financial crisis hit, Goldman still behaves like a traditional investment bank. Since the financial meltdown wiped out most of its major rivals — including Lehman Bros. and Bear Stearns — it has picked up investment banking business from former customers of those defunct companies.

Because there are fewer players left, each trade also becomes potentially more profitable. Here's why. When an individual stock, for example, is heavily traded, the difference — or spread — between the price a buyer is willing to bid and what a seller is asking usually is very narrow. Traders make their money on that spread: A nickel here, a dime there and soon you’re talking real money.

In Goldman’s case, the trades that proved so profitable were in securities that few other traders wanted to make, including dodgy bonds. With fewer buyers and sellers, the spreads on these trades are much wider. If you bet right, your payoff is much bigger…..

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32129836/ns/business-personal_finance

Maybe Unemployment Is Not A Lagging Indicator After All

The unemployment rate hit 9.5 percent in June and projections forecast it to go up to 10 percent in 2010. While the unemployment rate's recovery is generally expected to lag behind the recovery of the economy as a whole, what happens if it never comes?

Sunday's NYT Magazine says ominously that the "new joblessness" is different than past recessions and, "It's worse than you think." Compared to past recessions, the job shedding far exceeds what is normal and some economists think that the job market won't bounce back, even when the economy does. "It's an ugly picture out there," the commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics told the magazine.

The increased joblessness is coming from employers not just cutting the excess, but also reducing pay rolls to the bare minimum and reducing the salaries of employees they keep. (One ready example is large law firms, where highly paid attorneys who previously considered their jobs secure through good times and bad have seen massive layoffs, salary freezes and even salary reductions.)

The excess job loss comes during a time when even those companies who are expanding are adding fewer jobs - 6 for every 100 people on the pay roll, down from 7 out of 100 in the previous recession and 8 out of 100 at the end of the Clinton era.

So, what, besides being really bad news for the currently unemployed does this mean? It could mean the economy itself may not be on the road to recovery everyone is hoping for. As today's WSJ points out, unemployment is seen as a lagging indicator, but lower payrolls have provided a revenue cushion for companies:

According to Deutsche Bank's calculations, 82% of the S&P 500 companies to report so far have beaten second-quarter earnings expectations. The snag is that only 50% have beaten sales targets…...


http://www.businessinsider.com/jobs-arent-coming-back-yet-no-economic-recovery-without-jobs-so-thats-not-good-2009-7

SEC rule on 'naked' short-selling permanent

Federal regulators on Monday made permanent an emergency rule put in at the height of last fall's market turmoil that aims to reduce abusive short-selling. The SEC announced that it took the action on the rule targeting so-called "naked" short-selling, which was due to expire Friday.

The SEC rule includes a requirement that brokers must promptly buy or borrow securities to deliver on a short sale. Brokers acting for short sellers must find a party believed to be able to deliver the shares within three days after the short-sale trade. If the shares aren't delivered within that time, there is deemed to be a "failure to deliver." Brokers can be subject to penalties if the failure to deliver isn't resolved by the start of trading on the following day.

At the same time, the SEC has been considering several new approaches to reining in rushes of regular short-selling that also can cause dramatic plunges in stock prices.

Investors and lawmakers have been clamoring for the SEC to put new brakes on trading moves they say worsened the market's downturn starting last fall. SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro has said she is making the issue a priority.

http://breakingnews.nypost.com/dynamic/stories/U/US_SEC_SHORT_SELLING?SITE=NYNYP&SECTION=BUSINESS

Putnam Plans Fee Slashing

Putnam, a unit of financial-services conglomerate Power Corp. of Canada, plans to cut fees on fixed-income funds an average of 13% to bring its prices more in line with rival bond funds from Fidelity Investments and Allianz SE's Pacific Investment Management Co., or Pimco.

Putnam, of Boston, has recently been staging a comeback in mutual-fund performance under Chief Executive Robert Reynolds and is trying to get investors to follow.
The company managed $102.8 billion at the end of June, down from $172 billion a year ago.

Putnam will cut fees on its asset-allocation funds 10% and will eliminate management fees on its target-date funds, which hold a mix of investments and that becomes more conservative as investors approach their retirement date.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124874795315085801.html

Are smaller hedges a vanishing breed?

Cash may have been pouring into hedge funds at a faster rate in the past quarter, but the little fish may soon find themselves on the hook…

The hedge fund industry remains shaky and needs to string together a series of quarters of stable returns to soothe investors’ nerves. There is also a flight to quality. Nervy types would prefer to invest with larger firms that have diversified trading strategies. In a highly-fragmented and over-populated industry, such firms will be the likely winners, especially as they can also better afford to attract money back through lower fees. US hedge fund Fortress is already considering gobbling up competitors. The big boys are about to come out and play. Smaller funds need to watch out.

http://ftalphaville.ft.com/blog/2009/07/27/63916/lex-hedge-funds/

Grim News: Accused Trader Found Dead

A Kuwaiti trader accused by US financial regulators of making millions of dollars on the back of hoax stock market rumours has been found dead in his home country. Hazem Khalid al-Braikan, who ran Al Raya Investment, was found dead just three days after the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) accused him of making millions of dollars from trading on falsified takeover deals.

The SEC last week froze more than $5m (£3m) of his assets in various trading accounts after claiming the money was earned on false news of a purported offer by a secretive Middle Eastern investment group to buy US audio equipment maker Harman International Industries, a rumour which saw Harman’s share to rise 40pc before the opening bell on July 20. The regulator also alleged that two trading firms which Mr Al-Braikan had connections with traded on the rumour in April that another such secretive consortium was going to buy mini-conglomerate Textron, manufacturer of Bell helicopters.

Mr Al-Braikan’s body was found in his home in an upmarket district of Kuwait City on Sunday.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/5920037/Trader-accused-by-SEC-found-dead.html

Wealth Watch: What is killing America’s millionaires?

It hasn't been a good recession for the rich. The late boom was extraordinarily top-heavy, with the overwhelming majority of economic gains seemingly defying gravity and flowing to the top rung of the economic ladder. Now those with the most assets and income have the most to lose. Add together the declining markets, an imploding finance sector, a real estate rot that has eaten its way up from the ground floor to the penthouse, and the predations of Bernie Madoff and Sir Allen Stanford, millionaires who ripped off other millionaires, and, as my Newsweek colleague Robert Samuelson notes, these are tough times for the wealthy.

As if market forces and malevolent actors weren't enough, the rich are now finding themselves targeted by politicians. Strapped for cash, states, cities, and the federal government are seeking to soak the rich—or at least to make them pay taxes at the same marginal rates as they did in the Reagan years, which many on the right regard as an act equivalent to executing landed gentry. Some politicians have even suggested that we fund health care by slapping a surtax on people with annual incomes of more than $1 million.

This tactic isn't likely to work, in large part because people who make a lot of money are quite effective at swaying public policy. What's more, the wealthy have many defenders who argue that taxing the golden geese will cause them to fly away. In May, the Wall Street Journal op-ed page argued that millionaires fled Maryland after the state legislature boosted the top marginal state income tax rate to 6.25 percent on the top 0.3 percent of filers. "In 2008 roughly 3,000 million-dollar income tax returns were filed by the end of April," the Journal notes. "This year there were 2,000, which the state comptroller's office concedes is a 'substantial decline.' " The Journal uses this small sample to warn the federal government and states with progressive tax structures and lots of rich people—New York, New Jersey, California—to heed the lesson. Tax the wealthy too much, and they'll leave......

http://www.slate.com/id/2223481/

Fairchild Greenwich’s Piedrahita So Sorry About Blowing Client Money With Madoff He Bought A $30 Million Yacht

If Fairfield Greenwich Group partner Andres Piedrahita went through a period when he felt ashamed of blowing $7 billion of client money on Bernie Madoff, that period is apparently over. Vicky Ward reports that Piedrahita is now in the Adriatic Sea, aboard his new yacht Oxygen. He took delivery of the boat in June, Vicky says, and he paid about $30 million for it:

Recently he has been spotted in St. Tropez and in Venice. Over the weekend I was with financiers who say they've seen him out and about as if nothing ever went awry in his life. Acquaintances believe this blatant vacationing is "a tremendous risk" -- no doubt referring to the very angry Latin Americans who allegedly gave him money to invest and could not legally declare it. I have heard he would be unwise to set foot in certain places around the globe, people are so furious with him.

http://www.businessinsider.com/henry-blodget-fggs-piedrahita-so-sorry-about-blowing-client-money-with-madoff-he-bought-a-40-million-yacht-2009-7

Monday, July 27, 2009

Damn their eyes, Government Sachs couldn’t care less whether we like them or not..


Love them. Hate them. Lob somewhat imaginative insults in the general direction of 85 Broad. Suck on their gold-plated scrots. When it comes down to it, Goldman Sachs (or Government Sachs, its nickname on the Street) could really honestly care less. Sure, they're not thrilled by this new (or if not new, intensified) trend in which everyone hates their guts, which would explain why the bank has begun allowing basically anyone into the building in an attempt to combat the bad press, the conspiracy theories, and the websites popping up daily claiming to have evidence that Lloyd Blankfein has been trafficking human fetuses created with the sole intent of one day putting grass on that field. They're not idiots. They do want to at least make a vague effort to show they're not "oblivious to public opinion," and, seriously, if you mention the AIG thing one more time, or suggest there was some impropriety there, someone will be dispatched to go circus freak crazy on your ass, but really? So long as no one stands in the way of makin' it rain? You can say or think whatever you want. Yes, even you, you hooker loving dick.*

The idea that things might just go back to the way they've always been on Wall Street is, of course, infuriating to those who had hoped the financial meltdown would be an opportunity for reform. (In case you wondered, we’re among ‘em..) A few days after Goldman reported its second-quarter profits, Eliot Spitzer, a critic of the AIG bailout, tells me: "If all we are getting are newly empowered and capital-rich hedge funds that benefit from market volatility, then we are not only rebuilding the same edifice, but we're contributing to the underlying rot in our economy."

In the end, Goldman's reputation is a luxury they may well be able to do without. Robert Rubin has been privately critical of how the firm has handled the threats to its prestige, and Rogers recently addressed the firm's reputation in seminars with Goldman staff. But a person who frequently talks to senior executives at Goldman sums up the company's attitude this way: "If we can push the envelope without D.C. punishing us, we don't care about our Main Street reputation." Blankfein in particular is said to be dismissive of the firm's critics. According to a person close to him, the CEO believes Goldman's internal problems will disappear once compensation comes back. In other words, money will solve everything.

In the short run perhaps, but shit can happen. Everyone thought that Arthur Andersen was as 99 and 99/100 percent pure – until Enron and then suddenly Andersen became Typhoid Mary. We wouldn’t wish it on anybody, but…..

http://dealbreaker.com/2009/07/masters-of-the-universe-dont-g.php

Get ready for banking's next headache

According to Fortune, a weak economy and frozen financing markets could spell trouble for regional banks with big commercial loan portfolios. Regional banks can no longer ignore the elephant in the room -- their exposure to the commercial real estate bust.

Though housing markets remain weak, analysts expect credit problems over the next year to center on commercial real estate -- mortgages on office and apartment buildings and shopping malls, as well as construction, development and industrial loans.

U.S. banks hold some $1.8 trillion worth of commercial loans, according to Federal Reserve data. Big regional banks, including PNC of Pittsburgh, KeyCorp of Cleveland and BB&T of Richmond, Va., have more than half their loan books in commercial loans.

With financing markets locked up and the economy still mired in recession -- unemployment is at a 26-year high while capacity utilization, a key measure of industrial production, recently hit a record low -- observers fear a wave of loans will go bad in coming quarters.

http://money.cnn.com/2009/07/24/news/economy/banks.commercial.fortune/index.htm?section=money_mostpopular

Top firm’s trader demands $100mm in scrap over pay

Tne British-born trader Andrew Hall is pressing Citigroup to honour a $100m (£61m) pay package that could spark a showdown between the banking giant and America’s new pay czar. Hall, an Oxford chemistry graduate, heads Phibro, Citigroup’s energy-trading unit, which has generated huge returns for the troubled group.

A bumper pay day for Hall will likely prove a test for Kenneth Feinberg, who was appointed by the US Treasury department last month, charged with setting pay at the companies that received the most government financial aid. The US government now in effect owns a third of Citi. Banks and others have until halfway through next month to submit pay requests to Feinberg.

According to The Wall Street Journal, Hall has threatened to leave if the bank cuts his package to appease regulators. He runs the secretive trading group from a former dairy farm in Connecticut. This year’s pay has not yet been set but Phibro is reportedly having a good year and on current trends likely to trigger a handsome payout for Hall.

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/banking_and_finance/article6727979.ece

Buffett’s Secret Millionaire’s Club

The so-called Sage of Omaha, Warren Buffett, is a billionaire, a philanthropist, a stockpicker and an author. In a new turn for his veteran career, the wily 78-year-old investor will shortly add cartoon star to that list.

An animated character of Buffett is to tutor children about the art of finance in a series called The Secret Millionaires Club, to be created by the internet empire AOL and media production firm A Squared Media. Episodes lasting three to five minutes will initially appear on AOL, before being distributed more broadly across the web via social networking sites.

The world's second richest man is in august company. Others featuring in cartoons as part of the same project include the supermodel Gisele Bündchen, who plays a superhero protecting the environment, and Martha Stewart, who will educate viewers in cooking, crafting, gardening and creating "unforgettable" events.

Nebraska-based Buffett has built a vast army of US followers who admire his flair for picking successful investments and acquisitions. His fortune is estimated at $37bn (£22.5bn), ranking second only to Bill Gates's $40bn on Forbes magazine's annual ranking of the world's richest people. Buffett said the credit crunch served as a reminder of the need to teach children about money: "What better time to help educate our kids about financial responsibility."


http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/jul/24/warren-buffett-secret-millionaires-club

This Is Wall Street on Speed…..


Robert Kuttner writes that the New York Times recently reported that the latest scheme--or scam--on Wall Street is something called High Frequency Trading. Very sophisticated financial firms, such as Goldman Sachs, are tipped off by the New York Stock Exchange's own computers to pending buy and sell orders. Armed with ultra sophisticated computer algorithms, the insiders anticipate the direction of the market based on what they learn about supply and demand for a given security.

"Nearly everyone on Wall Street is wondering how hedge funds and large banks like Goldman Sachs are making so much money so soon after the financial system nearly collapsed," wrote the Times' Charles Duhigg in a front page piece that was the talk of New York and Washington. "High-frequency trading is one answer."

As debates in the blogosphere in the last couple of days have made clear, there are a couple of possibilities of what is at work here. One is that Goldman and others are literally using privileged information to make trades ahead of markets, in which case they are committing a felony. Specifically, the abuse is known as "front-running," or trading ahead of customers, and it is an explicitly illegal form of market manipulation.

The other possibility is that the Goldmans of the world have found themselves a nice loophole. Tapping into the Stock Exchange's own computers and other sources of trading activity is something that anyone in theory could do, but only a few privileged insiders have the sophistication to exploit what they find. Often orders are placed, only to be cancelled. Their purpose is to figure out what the market is willing to pay, and then get in ahead of it. But suppose that High Frequency Trading doesn't violate any law….

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-kuttner/wall-street-on-speed_b_245121.html

CalPERS goes from the frying pan into the fire

Calpers, the US’s biggest pension fund, which this week unveiled the steepest drop in its assets in its 80-year history, has agreed to buy back a portfolio of 86 US shopping centres for $1.73bn, about $1bn less than it sold it for four years ago.

Calpers, the California Public Employees’ Retirement System, and its joint venture partner First Washington Realty, will buy a majority stake in the shopping centres from Macquarie CountryWide Trust, the indebted Australian group that bought the portfolio for just over $2.7bn in 2005.

The deal – Calpers’ first significant real estate transaction for more than a year – came within days of the pension fund revealing that its property assets had fallen 36 per cent and its total asset value had dropped 23 per cent to $180.9bn since the end of June last year. Its total property portfolio is worth $20bn.

Joe Dear, chief investment officer, who joined Calpers in March, warned that further falls in the value of the real estate portfolio were expected as prices caught up with the fund during the quarter. He said the writedowns by the time the fund reported audited results in the autumn would be “significant”. Indeed.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/eeae40ae-7a05-11de-b86f-00144feabdc0.html

Guess Which Hedge Got Subpoenaed By SEC?

The Securities & Exchange Commission today subpoenaed NIR Group, the Long Island hedge fund firm run by Corey Ribotsky, in an investigation focusing on the performance valuations of its family of hedge funds and communications NIR made to investors.

The SEC requested from NIR yearly, monthly and quarterly performance returns from January 2004 till the present and all documents related to NIR's internal performance calculation process. In the seven-page document, NIR has also been asked to provide "the beginning and ending asset values for all NIR Funds for each year, month or quarter in the relevant time period, including all documents and information used by Ribotsky."

It is a sweeping request that includes pitch books, one-on-one presentations and documents concerning NIR's efforts to inform or solicit investors for the last five or so years. In addition, the SEC is looking for e-mail and opinions concerning the calculation of Ribotsky's management fees and "the calculation of performance returns for each N.I.R. Fund." The SEC also requested all documented communication concerning valuations that NIR has had with its accountancy, Marcum & Kliegman, and its valuation service, WTAS. NIR is being told to provide documents sufficient to identify all capital additions and withdrawals to and from NIR Funds.

Reached late Friday, the company said "NIR is fully cooperating with the SEC.


http://www.forbes.com/2009/07/24/nir-group-corey-ribotsky-business-wall-street-hedge-fund.html?feed=rss_news

Ex-Hedge Fund Employees Holding Topless Pics Of Boss's Wife For Ransom


The question is why, since it kind of makes them sound insane (or at least seriously lacking in judgment) when in fact their boss is the shady mother but we'll get to that in a sec. At left, Danielle Pecile and Cristina Culicea, former assistants at the Titan Capital Group. They're suing boss their boss, Russell Abrams, who asked Danielle to print out some photos he took of his wife, Sandra, on their honeymoon. Sandra is posing on yacht in the pics, with her rack on full display, which apparently made Danielle uncomfortable, as did the smirk Abrams gave his underling as she handed pics over, and when he asked "You liked them, didn't you?"

Oh no she di'int.

The girls decided to leave the firm soon after the incident, feeling that they'd been sexually harassed on account of having to look at the boss's wife naked (Culicea was not part of TitYacht-gate, but was asked to print other classy shots from the trip, of the newlyweds taking a bath). After they resigned, Russel's brother Marc, who is a Vice-President at the Titan, left a few psycho emails and voicemails for Danielle who, oh, btw, he used to date, calling her "a dirty pig thief," a "rotten bitch," and a "whore." That detail is not part of the suit, but was just something Danielle wanted to get out there.

Now ladies are asking for $2.5 million, saying they were sexually harassed and deeply disturbed by the topless shots, which for some reason they're holding on to. Not for their personal files, but insurance, to make sure they get their money. Their lawyer, Douglas Wigdor, perhaps not familiar with a little thing called extortion, is totally backing them up, telling the Post that the pics will not be returned until the case is settled with a check for a couple mill and a half, opening the door for a countersuit by Sandra Abrams, who claims the girls' demand "is nothing short of blackmail," which, yeah, it kind of is! Sandra wants the pics back, and $1 million for emotional distress.

http://dealbreaker.com/2009/07/ex-hedge-fund-employees-holdin.php

Friday, July 24, 2009

Wall Street’s Secret Weapon


It is the hot new thing on Wall Street, a way for a handful of traders to master the stock market, peek at investors’ orders and, critics say, even subtly manipulate share prices. It is called high-frequency trading — and it is suddenly one of the most talked-about and mysterious forces in the markets.

Powerful computers, some housed right next to the machines that drive marketplaces like the New York Stock Exchange, enable high-frequency traders to transmit millions of orders at lightning speed and, their detractors contend, reap billions at everyone else’s expense.

These systems are so fast they can outsmart or outrun other investors, humans and computers alike. And after growing in the shadows for years, they are generating lots of talk.

Nearly everyone on Wall Street is wondering how hedge funds and large banks like Goldman Sachs are making so much money so soon after the financial system nearly collapsed. High-frequency trading is one answer.

And when a former Goldman Sachs programmer was accused this month of stealing secret computer codes — software that a federal prosecutor said could “manipulate markets in unfair ways” — it only added to the mystery. Goldman acknowledges that it profits from high-frequency trading, but disputes that it has an unfair advantage.

Yet high-frequency specialists clearly have an edge over typical traders, let alone ordinary investors. The Securities and Exchange Commission says it is examining certain aspects of the strategy.

“This is where all the money is getting made,” said William H. Donaldson, former chairman and chief executive of the New York Stock Exchange and today an adviser to a big hedge fund. “If an individual investor doesn’t have the means to keep up, they’re at a huge disadvantage.”

For most of Wall Street’s history, stock trading was fairly straightforward: buyers and sellers gathered on exchange floors and dickered until they struck a deal. Then, in 1998, the Securities and Exchange Commission authorized electronic exchanges to compete with marketplaces like the New York Stock Exchange. The intent was to open markets to anyone with a desktop computer and a fresh idea.

But as new marketplaces have emerged, PCs have been unable to compete with Wall Street’s computers. Powerful algorithms — “algos,” in industry parlance — execute millions of orders a second and scan dozens of public and private marketplaces simultaneously. They can spot trends before other investors can blink, changing orders and strategies within milliseconds.

High-frequency traders often confound other investors by issuing and then canceling orders almost simultaneously. Loopholes in market rules give high-speed investors an early glance at how others are trading. And their computers can essentially bully slower investors into giving up profits — and then disappear before anyone even knows they were there.

High-frequency traders also benefit from competition among the various exchanges, which pay small fees that are often collected by the biggest and most active traders — typically a quarter of a cent per share to whoever arrives first. Those small payments, spread over millions of shares, help high-speed investors profit simply by trading enormous numbers of shares, even if they buy or sell at a modest loss.

“It’s become a technological arms race, and what separates winners and losers is how fast they can move,” said Joseph M. Mecane of NYSE Euronext, which operates the New York Stock Exchange. “Markets need liquidity, and high-frequency traders provide opportunities for other investors to buy and sell.”

The rise of high-frequency trading helps explain why activity on the nation’s stock exchanges has exploded. Average daily volume has soared by 164 percent since 2005, according to data from NYSE. Although precise figures are elusive, stock exchanges say that a handful of high-frequency traders now account for a more than half of all trades. To understand this high-speed world, consider what happened when slow-moving traders went up against high-frequency robots earlier this month, and ended up handing spoils to lightning-fast computers.

It was July 15, and Intel, the computer chip giant, had reporting robust earnings the night before. Some investors, smelling opportunity, set out to buy shares in the semiconductor company Broadcom. (Their activities were described by an investor at a major Wall Street firm who spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect his job.) The slower traders faced a quandary: If they sought to buy a large number of shares at once, they would tip their hand and risk driving up Broadcom’s price. So, as is often the case on Wall Street, they divided their orders into dozens of small batches, hoping to cover their tracks. One second after the market opened, shares of Broadcom started changing hands at $26.20.

The slower traders began issuing buy orders. But rather than being shown to all potential sellers at the same time, some of those orders were most likely routed to a collection of high-frequency traders for just 30 milliseconds — 0.03 seconds — in what are known as flash orders. While markets are supposed to ensure transparency by showing orders to everyone simultaneously, a loophole in regulations allows marketplaces like Nasdaq to show traders some orders ahead of everyone else in exchange for a fee.

In less than half a second, high-frequency traders gained a valuable insight: the hunger for Broadcom was growing. Their computers began buying up Broadcom shares and then reselling them to the slower investors at higher prices. The overall price of Broadcom began to rise.

Soon, thousands of orders began flooding the markets as high-frequency software went into high gear. Automatic programs began issuing and canceling tiny orders within milliseconds to determine how much the slower traders were willing to pay. The high-frequency computers quickly determined that some investors’ upper limit was $26.40. The price shot to $26.39, and high-frequency programs began offering to sell hundreds of thousands of shares.

The result is that the slower-moving investors paid $1.4 million for about 56,000 shares, or $7,800 more than if they had been able to move as quickly as the high-frequency traders.

Multiply such trades across thousands of stocks a day, and the profits are substantial. High-frequency traders generated about $21 billion in profits last year, the Tabb Group, a research firm, estimates.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/24/business/24trading.html?_r=2&hp

Chump Change From Goldman?


Goldman Sachs just bought back its TARP warrants for $1.1 billion. There was a collective sigh of relief after Wednesday’s announcement, as it appears that the price was a good one for the American taxpayer.

For those who are catching up to this story, here’s a recap: In connection with its $10 billion capital injection under the Troubled Asset Relief Program, Goldman issued a warrant to the United States Treasury to purchase 12,205,045 shares of Goldman Sachs common stock at an exercise price of $122.90 a share. The warrants had a 10-year window that was to expire on Oct. 28, 2018.

…So it seems the price Goldman paid is truly the fair value, and much more than they should have paid given the probability of the warrant being partially cancelled. In particular — and this is why there was a huge sigh of relief — it is fully priced, unlike prior TARP warrant repurchases. There was a big fear that Goldman would try to drive a hard bargain.

http://dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/23/chump-change-from-goldman/?hp

CalPERS’ Last Resort: More Better Risk

Here comes trouble. The fund, known as Calpers, lost nearly $60 billion in the financial markets last year. Though it has more than enough money to make its payments to retirees for many years, it has a serious long-term shortfall. Meanwhile, local governments in the state are pleading poverty and saying they cannot make the contributions that would be needed to shore it up.

Those problems now rest largely on the slim shoulders of Joseph A. Dear, the fund’s new head of investments. He is not an investment seer by training, but he thinks he has the cure for what ails Calpers, or the California Public Employees’ Retirement System, the largest in the nation with $180 billion in assets.

Dear wants to embrace some potentially high-risk investments in hopes of higher returns. He aims to pour billions more into beaten-down private equity and hedge funds. Junk bonds and California real estate also ride high on his list. And then there are timber, commodities and infrastructure. Dear remains a true believer. Private investments, he asserts, will over the long haul outperform stocks by three percentage points a year, and that is necessary to keep Calpers on track to returning its goal of 7.75 percent annual returns…..

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/24/business/24calpers.html?ref=business

HSBC’s hedge fund great white hope

Here, courtesy of the FT’s new hedge fund correspondent, is the internal memo on HSBC’s new prime brokerage services.

Intriguingly enough, we’re told there will be no rehypothecation in this one — which in theory should mean that hedgies’ assets are kept in segregated accounts, and therefore wouldn’t be frozen should HSBC encounter sudden liquidity or funding problems — something that happened when Lehman collapsed. When the doomed bank went under, hundreds of hedgies found their assets suddenly stuck at the failed financial institution. The rehypothecation process — and prime brokerages — haven’t really recovered since. So it’s interesting to see HSBC trying to push through a new model.

Here, in any case, is the memo:

Formation of HSBC Prime Services

We are pleased to announce the formation of HSBC Prime Services, a new Joint Venture between Global Markets and HSBC Securities Services (HSS).

HSBC Prime Services will bring together and leverage the HSS ‘Custody Plus’ proposition and Global Markets products and distribution platform to offer clients an integrated and seamless capability for their custody, financing, execution, collateral management, clearing and reporting needs. In today’s market environment, our ability to provide clients with full security and transparency over their assets in segregated accounts, together with the opportunity to use some of these assets as security for financing, will further enhance our product offering to leading hedge funds and fund managers. With our global footprint, local market knowledge, quality of services and financial strength, we are well positioned to grow market share in this area.

HSBC Prime Services will be headed by Cian Burke, currently CFO and Global Business Manager for Global Markets. He will be responsible for developing our Prime Services business, initially focusing on our equity and fixed income platforms, and delivering an enhanced range of services and products to our clients. In his new role, Cian will report jointly to Samir Assaf and Tim Howell. Further announcements on Cian’s successor and on the structure of HSBC Prime Services will follow.

Please join us in wishing Cian every success in leading this new venture.

Samir Assaf
Head of Global Markets

Tim Howell
Global Head, HSBC Securities Services

http://ftalphaville.ft.com/blog/2009/07/23/63426/hsbcs-hedge-fund-hope/

Fortress goes on a shopping spree

Daniel Mudd, appointed this week chief executive of Fortress Investment Group, plans to spearhead an acquisition strategy that could see the hedge fund buy other financial companies including banks, insurers, traditional money management groups and other hedge funds.

Mudd, former Fannie Mae CEO, joins Fortress as the hedge fund industry looks for signs that outflows, or investor withdrawals, are beginning to slow.

Fortress manages $27bn but some smaller hedge funds have been left vulnerable by the recession.

Wes Edens, Fortress founder, told staff this week that the group could pounce on smaller rivals by buying other hedge funds and the assets of funds that are being wound down.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/775c39ca-77cb-11de-9713-00144feabdc0.html?nclick_check=1

More Merrill Lynch Bankers Bail

Four more former Merrill Lynch managing directors have joined the exodus at Bank of America, taking another team of bankers with them.

James Boylan, a managing director in Merrill’s health-care investment-banking unit, recently left the firm and will become head of investment banking at Leerink Swann, a boutique investment bank in Boston that specializes in middle-market health-care deals. Joining Boylan are former Merrill managing directors Bryan Giraudo, Tony Gibney and Mark Page, each of whom had been with Merrill for several years working on pharmaceutical, biotechnology and medical-device deals.

Boylan, who spent 12 years at Merrill, is taking an additional dozen vice presidents and associates from the former Merrill health-care group. He worked on deals including the sale of bio-surgery firm Lifecell for $1.7 billion to Kinetic Concepts in early 2008 and biotechnology concern Celgene’s $2.9 billion purchase of Pharmion in late 2007.

“The dislocation we’ve all seen has created an opportunity for the specialty firms,” said Boylan, 42 years old, who left Merrill in May. “I was not of the mindset I had to leave. But this firm is known for its health-care knowledge.”

The move comes amid some turbulence in Bank of America’s integration of Merrill, which it acquired late last year. About 20 managing directors have departed in recent months, of about 300 managing directors in Merrill’s investment bank at the end of 2008. Among those to leave were health-care banker Alan Hartman, who worked on Pfizer’s $68-billion purchase of Wyeth and jumped to boutique investment bank Centerview, and William Rifkin, former Merrill co-chairman of mergers and acquisitions, who left this summer for J.P. Morgan Chase.

A Merrill representative declined to comment. Bank of America Merrill Lynch still has about 60 bankers in the health-care sector in the Americas.

http://blogs.wsj.com/deals/2009/07/22/more-merrill-lynch-bankers-leave-bofa/

Weekend Weirdness: Indian farmers fight bad monsoon with frog marriage

Indian farmers are falling back on a trusted local method to bring badly needed monsoon rains -- marrying off two frogs.

Villagers in West Bengal state pooled their money together this week to marry Ram and Sita, two frogs named after India's most revered mythological couple from the epic Ramayana.

Following an ancient Hindu belief, the frogs' heads were smeared with vermilion paint and the pair were held up in the air in a ritual in front of a traditional clay candle.

"We feted about 3,000 villagers and solemnised the marriage with every single ritual," Shobin Ray, head of a local council in Madhya Baragari village, about 750 km (470 miles) north of state capital Kolkata, told Reuters by phone.

The women at the wedding fasted beforehand and then invited the river to join the ceremony and give its blessing, as is customary in Bengali tradition, he said.

India this year suffered its worst start to the vital monsoon rains in eight decades, causing drought in some states.

http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUKTRE56K2ST20090721?feedType=nl&feedName=ukoddlyenough

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Dow 9,000!


All these old benchmarks Dow 10,000... Dow 8,000... Dow 9,000, we've crashed through all of these so many times in various directions, it's easy to lose track.

But once again, we've broken back through (going up), Dow 9,000, gaining 132, to 9012 (as of about 10:55). The NASDAQ, which is up nearly 30, is about to turn in an improbably 12th straight day of green.

Judged solely by market action, this has been a stellar earnings season so far. And in case you thought that the market reflected the economy, so far this has been a relearning experience, hasn’t it.

http://www.businessinsider.com/dow-9000-2009-7

Black Swans Are Way Overpriced


Nassim Taleb has become a popular, though I don't think he has anything really profound to say. Indeed, a reviewer of my book Finding Alpha lamented I did not mention Taleb, but I did not see the point because I was making a serious point about asset pricing theory and Taleb is a pedestrian populizer, who like all populizers, is successful at convincing a lot of people he is saying something new and true. This is not the same as actually saying something new and true. The basic premise is that financial economists, and investors, systematically neglect improbable events. The result is that out-of-the-money options, especially qualitative analogues like unconventional investment ideas picked up at cocktail parties, offer the best reward-to-risk ratio. Let's consider these.

You can invest in a Black Swan fund that buys out-of-the-money options such as Universa Investments run by his former partner Mark Spitznagel. Taleb, and Spitznagel, would argue their implementation is much more sophisticated than merely buying out-of-the-money options in that it also takes advantage of 'behavioral biases'. Now, as 'prospect theory' implies people ignore, or overweight, improbable events, such 'behavioral biases' allow a strategy a great deal of latitude. In practice simple ideas, such as the underpricing of out-of-the-money options is too simple to sell, so the vendor feels compelled to confabulate a pretentious but useless tweak. In this case, that just means one sells in-the-money options to lighten the expense (more gamma, less vega). Do the math, and this strategy simply shifts your payoff distribution so it has a funky nonlinearity, shifting returns from the [-10%,0] space to the [-∞,-10%] and [0,∞] space, but the same expected return. That is, say you pay $2 to buy an out of the money put option, and sell a $1 in-the-money put option. This means you still hit a home run in the extreme event like 2008 (which was, statistically, improbable); you make less in the more probable adverse event; you lose less if the market rises.

Clearly in big moves such as 2008 this strategy outperforms. Yet on average, I doubt it. That is, much was made of the "65% to 115%" return reported in October of some Black Swan Funds (see WSJ here), but the VIX peaked then at 80, and is now at 23, while the market has rebounded. It would be interesting to know the subsequent returns, but everyone merely quotes the hearsay (always, 'a person close to the fund reported...') reported on their top tic. As Taleb is insistent that too many investors naively chase last year's winners, it would only be consistent to not make too much of one year's returns. Indeed, Empirica Kurtosis, his earlier hedge fund, also started out with a widely reported 60% return in 2000, but then folded quietly in 2004. I earlier said I would donate $10k USD to his favorite charity if he sends me audited financials showing the cumulative Sharpe ratio of Empirica Kurtosis LLP over its lifetime was greater than 0.5 (which is a poor hedge fund return, consistent with exit), and the offer still stands. Thus, over the long run, not a sequence of 2008s, this is a crappy strategy.

The other problem with out-of-the-money strategies is that option market makers hate being naked low-delta options. You don't have to buy too many to move the price, implying market impact is high. This makes these strategies even more expensive than any simulation when done in size. That doesn't bode well for these now-popular strategies…….

http://www.businessinsider.com/black-swans-are-overpriced-2009-7

Morgan Stanley Channels its Inner Hamlet???

“We didn’t take as much risk as we could have done,’’ said Morgan Stanley CFO, Colm Kelleher in explaining the firm’s trading revenues on Wednesday.

As wudda, cudda, shuddas go, this one neatly captures Morgan Stanley’s inner Hamlet on the subject of risk. The Wall Street firm has been locked in a seemingly eternal struggle about what risks to take and when to take them. Its second quarter results were a sign that yet again the bank failed to time things correctly.

In the second quarter, Morgan Stanley has largely missed the boat by failing to increase its proprietary trading in fixed income and equities trading to capture the huge profits logged by Goldman Sachs. Morgan Stanley now plans to “gradually increase its risk,” Kelleher said in an interview with Dow Jones Newswires earlier on Wednesday. It also made a special announcement on Monday to say that it had hired a former hedge fund manager to run its bond and currency trading operation, a move that suggests an embrace of that old bugaboo — risk…….

http://blogs.wsj.com/deals/2009/07/22/morgan-stanley-channels-its-inner-hamlet/

Ex-Man Group honcho reboots Bayswater

Revere Capital Advisers, which was set up by a group of former Man directors to help start-up hedge funds, has seeded Bayswater with an initial $10m and also plans to buy an equity stake in the firm. Revere will also assist with Bayswater's sales and marketing.

San-Francisco-based Bayswater sustained heavy losses during the first half of last year and returned money to investors in August 2008 after being caught out by a vicious circle of deleveraging. It had initially been backed at its launch in 2004 with $25m from Man Global Strategies, part of Man Group.

Daniel Barnett, former Man finance director, John Kinder, former head of sugar trading, and Mr McGrath, who is also chairman of Prudential, the insurance giant, are behind Revere.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/banksandfinance/5888405/Harvery-McGrath-ex-Man-Group-boss-reboots-Bayswater.html

Top Firm’s employees 'win' legal battle for bonuses

More than a dozen suits were filed by former Dresdner staff in London and Frankfurt over withheld bonus and severance pay

High flying former Dresdner bankers were contesting Commerzbank's decision to slash compensation payouts in court and a number have now reached settlements. News of their partial success is likely to spur on former colleagues, dozens of whom believe they have been cheated by the new owner.

German insurer Allianz, Dresdner Kleinwort's previous parent, put aside a €400m (£345m) bonus pot for the investment bank last summer. However, Commerzbank slashed the size of the pot by 90pc after invoking a material adverse change clause following its €18.2bn bailout by the German government.

According to court filings, Michael Adams, former head of emerging markets at Dresdner, settled his suit seeking £1.8m earlier this month. Stephan Holzinger, a spokesman for three other bankers, told Bloomberg some had also settled with Commerzbank. Terms of the deals were not disclosed.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/banksandfinance/5888798/Dresdner-Kleinwort-bankers-win-court-battle-for-bonuses.html

Buffett dumps Moody’s

It was bound to happen sooner or later. Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. reduced its stake in Moody’s Corp. by 17 percent after the ratings firm reported seven straight quarterly profit declines. Moody’s shares fell 11 percent late yesterday. Buffett’s firm sold about 7.99 million shares of the ratings company on the open market this week, Omaha, Nebraska- based Berkshire said in a regulatory filing. Berkshire remains Moody’s largest shareholder, according to Bloomberg data.

Moody’s and rival firms Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings have been targets of criticism from investors and lawmakers including Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd, who says the companies wrongly assigned top credit rankings to subprime-mortgage bonds just before that market collapsed. Buffett himself has said Moody’s damaged its brand as ratings proved inaccurate.

“Their business is their reputation, and that reputation has been tarnished,” said Glenn Tongue, a partner at T2 Partners LLC, which is selling Moody’s shares short and counts Berkshire as its largest holding. “The importance of their ratings has diminished over time.”

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=aiMFFknuYb3A

Hedge Fund CFO Says Boss Made Him Fall Guy

The founder and general partner of a $5 billion hedge fund used the company's CFO as a scapegoat when investors found out he used their money to buy a private Gulfstream jet, the former CFO claims in Federal Court. Perry Gruss claims that Daniel Zwirn, of D.B. Zwirn & Co., told him he had to leave the company so Zwirn could remain "pearly white" and "bullet proof."

Zwirn & Co. once managed more than $5 billion in assets. Gruss claims its founder began to live the life of an "investment magnate," including the private jet, "scores of professional and personal assistants" and a vacation home on the East End of Long Island. Gruss claims that Zwirn had to "borrow heavily from commercial banks, the management company that ran his hedge fund business and even his limited partners" to maintain his lifestyle.

That was enough to spook investors, who demanded $2 billion of their money back, and D.B. Zwirn & Co. had to shut down its two largest offerings, Gruss says.
Before the revelations became public, Zwirn allegedly selected his fall guy.
"Zwirn needed a scapegoat, someone upon whom he could pin the blame for these problems, giving himself plausible deniability while appeasing and reassuring investors," the complaint alleges.

http://www.courthousenews.com/2009/07/22/Hedge_Fund_CFO_Says_Boss_Made_Him_Fall_Guy.htm

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Holy Hannah! Morgan Stanley Compensation Soars To 72% Of Revenues


Wow. Morgan Stanley revealed today that it had setting aside 72 percent of its second-quarter revenue for compensation and benefits. This might just be a new record.

The average compensation for Wall Street firms hovered around 48 percent his decade, according to Bloomberg. Many thought that compensation on Wall Street might actually diminish thanks to government bailouts. But instead firms have been increasing the share of revenues that they pay themselves.

So what's behind it. Bloomber quotes Morgan Stanley's chief financial officer pointing to "the war for talent." The only problem is that the casualties in this war seem to be the shareholders.

At 72% of revenues, Bear Stearns compensation looks a lot like looting.

http://www.businessinsider.com/morgan-stanley-compensation-soars-to-72-of-revenues-2009-7

PIMCO forecasts “new normal"

PIMCO, the multi-billion dollar US bond fund manager has forecast a “new normal” in the global economy that will include new government regulation, lower consumption and slower growth in the coming years. US growth rates will slow to 2 percent or less over the next five years, according to the Newport, California-based firm. In a research note published this week, the firm forecasts a W-shaped recovery in the US.

"While government involvement was clearly necessary to stabilize the financial system, the global economy is now highly vulnerable to policy mistakes," such as protectionism and mismanagement of public finances, the fund manager says.

The note titled - - PIMCO Secular Outlook: A 'New Normal' - - says the US economy may be blessed with "tailwinds" for the rest of the year from monetary and fiscal stimulus as well as a rebuilding of inventories. But PIMCO says these positive effects will begin to fade in 2010, while at the same time consumer spending will remain constrained by high debt levels, thus leading to a W-shaped recovery.

Given the weak economic outlook, the Federal Reserve is unlikely to tighten before summer 2010, and policy makers in many countries are likely to "overstay with loose monetary policy."

http://www.finfacts.ie/irishfinancenews/article_1017227.shtml

Fund Accused Of Bogus Returns

Great shades of Bernie Madoff! A Long Island hedge fund known for making controversial deals in penny stocks continues to be accused by its investors of making up its returns.

The latest accusations against NIR Group's $770 million family of hedge funds, run from Roslyn, N.Y., by 38-year-old Corey Ribotsky, come from investor Steven Mizel, who in a lawsuit against Ribotsky and one of his funds claims they "appear to have provided investors with valuations of the Fund's securities which are wholly fanciful."
Article Controls

Redemption battles between hedge funds and their investors have raged during the credit crisis amid efforts by hedge funds to slow the outflow of cash. Big hedge fund firms like Cerberus Capital Management have imposed redemption restrictions, and some investor redemption efforts at firms like Highland Capital Management have become contentious and wound up in court (see Hedge Hell). But it has been rare for hedge fund investors trying to redeem money to accuse their fund managers of fabricating return numbers.

NIR Group has moved to try to get the lawsuit dismissed and claims Mizel is using the litigation in an effort to get around redemption provisions that Mizel agreed to when he originally made his investment…...

http://www.forbes.com/2009/07/21/nir-group-corey-ribotsky-business-wall-street-nir-group.html

Hedge Funds Assets Surge $100 billion

Hedge funds had net inflows of $6.2 billion and returned an average 0.2 percent in June, rounding off a record three-month rally, Eurekahedge Pte said. The advance by the Eurekahedge Hedge Fund Index, tracking more than 2,000 funds, follows 3.2 percent and 5 percent gains in April and May, respectively, and brings its 2009 advance to 9.5 percent, according to a report by the Singapore-based research firm.

Hedge fund managers are making a comeback after suffering their worst year on record in 2008, outperforming global benchmarks including the MSCI World Index, which rose 4.8 percent in the first six months. Hedge-fund assets rose for the second consecutive month in June, the first back-to-back increase in a year, bringing total assets under management to $1.33 trillion, the report said.

Gross inflows to the industry totaled $19.2 billion last month, compared with $13 billion in redemptions that were mainly from so-called funds of hedge funds, as investors sought to lower fees and optimize returns by investing directly, the report said.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=asDyCIJaWDKo

Goldman Isn't the Only Firm Thriving….

Hedge fund assets ballooned by $100 billion in the second quarter, but most of the increase came from investment gains rather than new money flowing into the industry, according to the latest report from Hedge Fund Research.

Following the increase in the second quarter, total assets managed by the hedge fund industry stand at about $1.43 trillion, a far cry from their peak of $1.93 trillion a year ago. The growth in the quarter was fueled primarily by investment gains as the HFR Fund Weighted Composite Index, a measure of hedge fund returns, rose 9.14 percent, the best quarterly return since the fourth quarter of 1999.

Despite the good performance, investors continued to withdraw capital from hedge funds, albeit at a slower pace. According to HFR’s numbers, investors withdrew $42.8 billion from hedge funds in the second quarter, compared with the $103 billion that was redeemed in the first quarter.

Hedge funds of funds, which charge an additional layer of fees for access to multiple hedge funds, continued to experience withdrawals, which totaled about $33 billion in the second quarter. Assets in hedge funds contributed by the fund-of-funds industry stand at about $530 billion, down 37 percent from the peak in mid-2008, according to HFR.

http://dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/21/hedge-fund-assets-surge-in-second-quarter/

Which College's Grads Make the Most Money?

Is it Harvard? Stanford? MIT? A website called PayScale has collected data from college grads on their jobs and salaries and put together a fascinating chart ranking the highest median graduate salaries by school. How tantalizing! And the college whose graduates earn the most money is...

Dartmouth University College*. At least, to be specific, Dartmouth graduates self-reported the highest median mid-career salary.

Before I go on, a disclaimer about the study. The pool of respondents is not randomized, but rather self-selected and the statistics are self-reported online. PayScale only included respondents whose highest degree was a bachelors, which counts out lawyers, doctors and other jobs that require a degree. As Al Lee, PayScale's director of quantitative analysis, told Catherine Rampell:

"You're thinking of buying a college, if that's all you buy -- and undergraduate -without having to spend more money and time and effort to get another degree," Mr. Lee said, "you want to know what the return on that investment is."

And as for that return on investment, here are the top colleges ranked by highest median mid-career salary (first graph) and median starting salary (second graph):

Let's talk about what's not surprising: Engineers making bank. Check out the school types in the second graph. After Loma Linda (a Seventh-Day Adventist health services institution in southern California), you get a waterfall of engineering schools sprinkled with three Ivies.

Also unsurprising is the presence of Ivies in the first, mid-career list -- five out of the top 10 earning grads come from the Ivy League. And those numbers are obviously being depressed by the exclusion of doctors, lawyers, and academics.

Rampell serves up more graphs with a healthy dose of skepticism, and I'd just like to steal one more observation from her. Research has shown that attending one highly ranked college instead of another has, in the aggregate, very little impact over the students' future income, if you control for the ambition and work ethic of the student. As Alan B. Krueger explained in a nutshell: "'The best school that turned you down is a better predictor of your future income than the school you actually attended.''

*Update: If Dartmouth University's graduates were today the country's highest earners, that would be the least remarkable thing about the school's alumni, considering that "Dartmouth University" has not existed for 190 years and its bachelor holders would be about as old as the state of Vermont. What I meant to say was Dartmouth College. Thanks to Dylan Matthews for correction..

Check it all out (and eyeball the graphs) at:

http://business.theatlantic.com/2009/07/which_colleges_graduates_make_the_most_money.php

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Robert Reich Predicts an X-Shaped Recovery


Anyone looking for the economy to "recover" is going to be disappointed, according to Robert Reich. The problem is that the old economy was built on sand--rising spending, falling wages, mounting debt, housing bubble--and it's gone forever. If we are ever going to see prosperity again, it will have to be because we build it on a new basis.

Here's Reich: The so-called "green shoots" of recovery are turning brown in the scorching summer sun. In fact, the whole debate about when and how a recovery will begin is wrongly framed. On one side are the V-shapers who look back at prior recessions and conclude that the faster an economy drops, the faster it gets back on track. And because this economy fell off a cliff late last fall, they expect it to roar to life early next year. Hence the V shape.

Unfortunately, V-shapers are looking back at the wrong recessions. Focus on those that started with the bursting of a giant speculative bubble and you see slow recoveries. The reason is asset values at bottom are so low that investor confidence returns only gradually.

That's where the more sober U-shapers come in. They predict a more gradual recovery, as investors slowly tiptoe back into the market.

Personally, I don't buy into either camp. In a recession this deep, recovery doesn't depend on investors. It depends on consumers who, after all, are 70 percent of the U.S. economy. And this time consumers got really whacked. Until consumers start spending again, you can forget any recovery, V or U shaped.

Problem is, consumers won't start spending until they have money in their pockets and feel reasonably secure. But they don't have the money, and it's hard to see where it will come from. They can't borrow. Their homes are worth a fraction of what they were before, so say goodbye to home equity loans and refinancings. One out of ten home owners is under water -- owing more on their homes than their homes are worth. Unemployment continues to rise, and number of hours at work continues to drop. Those who can are saving. Those who can't are hunkering down, as they must.

Eventually consumers will replace cars and appliances and other stuff that wears out, but a recovery can't be built on replacements. Don't expect businesses to invest much more without lots of consumers hankering after lots of new stuff. And don't rely on exports. The global economy is contracting.

My prediction, then? Not a V, not a U. But an X. This economy can't get back on track because the track we were on for years -- featuring flat or declining median wages, mounting consumer debt, and widening insecurity, not to mention increasing carbon in the atmosphere -- simply cannot be sustained.

P.S. Has this guy ever been right about his predictions? We mean ever? Get a grip, little dude.

http://www.businessinsider.com/robert-reich-the-economy-will-never-recover-2009-7

The World's Highest-Paid Investment Banker Bails

The Mail-on-Sunday reported that Roger Jenkins, the man who heads up Barclays Bank's principal investments business and chairs the firm's Middle East investment banking division, is to quit.

Jenkins, who is thought to have earned £40m ($65m) last year, despite the financial crisis, (and is believed to have raked in £75m ($122m) in his best year at Barclays), is also known for his ability to help clients (legally) reduce their tax bills. And his decision to quit Barclays now to start his own advisory firm (which will have offices in London, Los Angeles and the Mid-East) will leave many wondering if the move may have been engineered for his own tax reasons, prompting further speculation that Jenkins may be among the first of many high-earners to quit the UK for less repressive tax regimes.

http://news.hereisthecity.com/news/business_news/9242.cntns

Boone Pickens takes another crack at the Hedge Fund biz

Well, here we go again. After his energy fund lost 98% and his equities fund lost 64% in 2008, Boone Pickens is back for more. Yep, he is raising money for new iterations of essentially the same hedge funds that his hedge fund BP Capital previously ran. Well, we don't even really need to say "essentially" because they literally are the same funds just with a "II" at the end of the name, signaling their second incarnation.

His Energy fund will trade futures and his Equities fund will trade energy related equities and some futures as well. His "II" Energy Fund started trading back in February and is already up a whopping 79%. It's funny how they are undoubtedly using that as marketing material and you can't blame them. However, investors should be aware that the exact same types of funds were obliterated last year. So, a 79% gain this year is not much when you consider how much they were down the year prior. According to fund documents, Pickens will aim to hold investments between 3 months and two years. If you're curious as to what his firm owns, check out http://www.marketfolly.com/2009/06/boone-pickens-hedge-fund-bp-capital.html

http://www.marketfolly.com/2009/07/boone-pickens-seeks-investors-for-hedge.html

Calpers To Report Huge Annual Decline

In addition to everything else that's wrong with California these days, the California Public Employees' Retirement System is expected to report this week a decline of roughly 23% for its latest fiscal year, the worst return in decades for the largest public pension fund in the U.S. as it struggles with other problems.

The decline for the fiscal year ended June 30, based on a preliminary figure posted that day on the pension fund's Web site and the previous year's audited results, is equivalent to the loss of about $55 billion in assets. Returns have improved somewhat since early March but remain battered by the turbulent stock market, frozen credit markets and sinking real-estate values, because Calpers is exposed to all those asset types.

The fiscal 2009 results at Calpers "would definitely give an indication of how other big funds will have performed over the fiscal year," said Mark Ruloff, director of asset allocation for consulting firm Watson Wyatt Worldwide Inc.

Calpers estimated last fall that an investment decline of 20% would take a significant toll on its funding status, which is its assets divided by its liabilities, dropping that figure to 68%, based on the market value of assets.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124814051199267159.html

Top Hedges: Whatever institutional investors want, they get….

Some top hedge fund managers — including Renaissance, Citadel and Diamondback — are heeding the call from institutional investors, setting up new funds, share classes or better-priced offerings.

Quantitative hedge fund heavyweight Renaissance Technologies Corp., New York, plans to introduce an institutional-only hedge fund within the next two to three months, said Matthew Scanlan, chairman and CEO of Renaissance Institutional Management, the firm's institutional subsidiary.

Another big industry player, Citadel Investment Group LLC, Chicago, this year is introducing a family of single-strategy hedge funds with more modest management charges than those on its flagship Wellington and Kensington multistrategy funds.

The Citadel Global Macro Fund, for example, charges a 2% management fee and a 20% performance fee, while the management fee for the older funds is based on the actual cost of running the fund, which varies from year to year and has strayed well above the industry standard of 2%.

Sources said firms such as Diamondback Capital Management LLC, Stamford, Conn., are among the most recent hedge fund managers to meet institutional investor demand for lower fees by adding a share class that offers a lower fee in exchange for a longer lockup period before investors can redeem their assets.

http://www.pionline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090713/PRINTSUB/307139979&AssignSessionID=37336095449651

Hedge fund manager placed in receivership

An Ontario Superior Court of Justice endorsed PricewaterhouseCoopers Inc. as receiver and manager of the assets of Sextant Strategic Opportunities Hedge Fund L.P. and other Sextant funds on Friday.

The other funds are Sextant Capital Management Inc. and Sextant Capital GP Inc. The funds are caught up in an investigation by the Ontario Securities Commission.

In their submission to the Superior Court of Justice on April 30, 2009, OSC staff said they “had significant concerns with respect to Sextant and that these problems include potential fraud, potential misappropriation of investor money, misrepresentations, self-dealing by the fund managers, and numerous and significant recordkeeping inaccuracies and apparent record manipulation.”

In statement released the OSC said, the court concluded “a receiver is necessary as being in the best interests of the Sextant Canadian Fund security holders (its investors), appropriate for the due administration of Ontario securities law and to ensure that investors’ funds are managed and potentially distributed, in an orderly fashion.”

http://www.investmentexecutive.com/client/en/News/DetailNews.asp?IdSection=8&cat=8&id=50111

Introducing Lehman: The Store


Yes people, Lehman will open a retail shop next week at its 1271 Sixth Ave. office in Manhattan to sell similar branded merchandise to employees.

So far, top sellers among the 75 items currently available are the duffel bag and umbrella. New products are added daily. Supplies are limited to what is in Lehman’s warehouse.

“They will never be made again, and they are available until we run out,” Macleod said.

For the trust-fund baby who no longer has a trust fund, there’s a silver-plated rattle at $14.99 or a teddy bear wearing a sweater emblazoned “Lehman Brothers,” at $15. The unemployed with less stringent wardrobe needs will appreciate logo-stitched navy Nike windbreakers for $29.99, peach golf shirts for $24.99 and a set of four white baseball hats for $19.99.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601093&sid=aPcIy7cUDDbk

Bernie Madoff A Hero In Jail For Not Ratting


Remember all that talk about how inmates might want to “off” Bernie Madoff because they would stupidly blame him for ruining our economy? Well, it turns out that’s not happening. Instead, Madoff is popular with other inmates.

..But other convicts have no beef with Madoff and are even a bit impressed by him and the way he has handled himself since arriving at the Butner, NC, prison complex, the source said.

Some of his fellow inmates, in fact, respect him for being a stand-up guy who pleaded guilty without implicating any of the other people strongly suspected of helping him pull off the fraud that swindled more than 1,000 people out of more than $65 billion over two decades.

"He got a lot of respect from other inmates because he didn't tell on anybody, he didn't take everybody down with him," the source said.

"Some of the inmates admired that."

http://www.nypost.com/seven/07202009/news/nationalnews/bernie_in_thugs_sights_180267.htm

Monday, July 20, 2009

Harvard, Yale sink investment hopes


A group of investors in Munich-based Nordwind Capital, including the Harvard and Yale university endowments, blocked a deal where the private equity group wanted to invest in a start-up aiming to consolidate in the in-vitro fertilization industry, the Financial Times said.

Nordwind had agreed to invest in Global Fertility AG, a start-up which was looking at acquiring fertility clinics in the United States and Germany but the deal fell through after the Munich-based buyout-fund asked its investors for the money, according to the paper.

Some investors objected to the deal on the grounds that heavy investment in U.S. clinics did not match Nordwind's strategy of investing in German, Swiss and Austrian turnarounds, the paper said.

Nordwind-founder Hans Albrecht told the paper that he decided to cancel the deal and send the money back to those investors who funded the deal instead of trying to put some investors into default. Harvard and Yale declined to comment to the paper.

http://www.reuters.com/article/innovationNews/idUSTRE56J0PR20090720

Wanted: Hedge Fund Star

Company Name Emerging Hedge Fund Manager
• Location Dallas, TX
• Date Posted 07/18/2009
• Job Type Full-Time
• Compensation $500K+
If you are looking for an equity stake in a fund that has a very reputable and solid foundation of 15 million and wants to grow to gain institutional recognition. This is your opportunity. Very solid commissions and equity position for someone with solid relationships. We have a fantastic recurring revenue plan. Need someone with strong existing relationships in the high net worth, family office, and RIA space. Needs to be an entrepreneur that wants to build a business and have SUBSTANTIAL equity. Prefer candidates with existing book of business. This position is performance based. Compensation is directly related to assets raised. As assets are raised portions of that revenue will be allocated toward expenses. Must be a true go-getter. Ability to walk on water, and turn water to wine a plus.
http://www.cfo.com/careers/jobdetail.cfm?id=103415&f=hp_career_tout

MEET THE MAN WHO BEATS BUFFETT AT HIS OWN GAME

A little-known Miami-based finance guru, who 10 years ago set up a mutual fund to mimic the value investing style of his hero, Warren Buffett, had outperformed the Oracle of Omaha over the decade -- and by a wide margin. Bruce Berkowitz, who owns and runs the $8.6 billion Fairholme Fund has averaged a whopping 12 percent annual return since he opened its doors Dec. 29, 1999.

Buffett, who invests through his Berkshire Hathaway conglomerate, has posted an average annual return of 23 percent over a 30-year period ending in the 1990s, but has returned just 3 percent annual returns over the last decade. By comparison, the S&P 500 index has averaged a 2 percent annual decline over the last 10 years.

How has Berkowitz, a longtime financial professional with little or none of Buffett's love of the spotlight, bested his hero? Well, for starters, he cashed in on highly profitable sectors -- like financial and energy stocks -- and knew when to bolt…...

"He got into financials [early in this decade], made a lot of money and then got out before they blew up," said Michael Breen, an analyst with Morningstar. "He did the same with energy stocks in early 2002, then got out before they had problems.".

By contrast, Buffett stayed too long at the financials and energy party and was burned......

http://www.nypost.com/seven/07192009/business/meet_the_man_who_beats_buffett_at_his_ow_180133.htm

How a Top firm “lost” 700 traders

The Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) has lost more than 700 of its top investment bankers to rivals who are offering to pay guaranteed cash bonuses and higher salaries. The most profitable parts of the group’s global banking and markets division have been hit by the poaching raids, including its teams in commodities, fixed income and credit derivatives.

Traders are being offered at least one year’s salary in cash as a signing-on fee, according to headhunters. The deals fly in the face of guidance in Sir David Walker’s report on remuneration, published last week.

A handful of other RBS investment bankers have resigned with no job to go to, in protest at the tax-payer-backed bank’s commitment to pay no cash bonuses this year. Many of the RBS executives would have been in line for record handouts under the bank’s previous remuneration policies. Booming profits in many areas of investment banking have sparked a new wave of pay rises in the City.

The defections have created further problems for Stephen Hester, RBS’s chief executive, who is relying on profits from the group’s investment-banking business to prop up its balance sheet. According to sources close to the bank, RBS has been forced to give pay rises to key execs who were offered jobs by competitors, including Barclays Capital and Nomura.

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/banking_and_finance/article6719045.ece

I'm Off - This Place Is History'

Is the UK destined to become an investment banking backwater, where bankers are sent over as punishment, or rock up when they have no place else to go ? Sure looks that way, as new proposals on bankers' pay would result in banks being forced to pay up to 50% of bonuses in stock deferred for up to 5 years. Oh, and senior bankers / traders may also see their compensation details published, in pay bands, in their annual report. Although bankers will not be individually identified, senior bankers are concerned that it will be fairly easy to work out who they are.

One senior banker told Here Is The City: 'So let's get this right. If I stay in the UK, I will get taxed up to the hilt, have to wait for a large portion of my bonus for years, and also could have my privacy invaded, as members of the public work out what I am earning. Now, if I move to Asia, I'll pay significantly less tax, will not have anywhere as much deferred compensation, and won't face the possibility of being subjected to the fury of the angry mob every time my firm's annual report comes out. What time does the plane leave ? I'm off - this place is finished!'.

Not all UK bankers are, however, viewing the proposals in such a negative light. Another banker told us: 'The law of unintended consequences means that these proposals will actually result in higher bonus payouts. By publishing more compensation details in annual reports, there will be much greater transparency. Bankers will see exactly what rival firms are paying, and the star talent will gravitate to those firms which reward employees the best. For top bankers, this proposal could be very good news'.

http://news.hereisthecity.com/news/business_news/9236.cntns

China Ready to Place Bets on Hedges

China Investment Corp. is poised to invest $500 million in a Blackstone Group hedge-fund unit as part of a broad effort to put cash to work while global markets are rallying but remain below earlier peaks.

A hefty injection from China would be welcome news for hedge funds, eager to raise fresh capital after brutal markets and an exodus of investors hurt the industry. It also would offer another sign that some big money is stepping off the sidelines as markets stabilize world-wide.

Companies and investors are watching to see if sovereign-wealth funds will once again channel significant money into ...

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124535652071428705.html

Citi's Latest Stumble: One Fund Shuts, Another One Struggles

New problems are flaring up in Citigroup Inc.'s private-investments division, this time involving two funds overseen by an executive who left this year to join the Obama administration. Clients of a private-equity fund that amassed $3.4 billion to invest in airports, roads and other infrastructure projects last month voted to bar it from making new investments after its co-head quit and several high-profile deals collapsed, according to people familiar with the matter. A second, smaller fund geared toward sustainable development projects failed to attract clients and was shelved late last year.

The funds were the progeny of Michael Froman, former operations chief of Citigroup Alternative Investments, who left in January to become a senior White House aide focused jointly on national security and international economic affairs. Mr. Froman started the infrastructure fund, and its two co-heads -- one of whom recently left -- reported to him before Mr. Froman left. Mr. Froman's departure generated a high-level internal debate over how his stake in the infrastructure fund should be valued.

A Citigroup spokeswoman described the Alternative Investments unit, which includes hedge funds, private equity and real estate, as "a highly valued part of Citi's core franchise" and said the freeze on new infrastructure investments doesn't derail that fund.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124804574208263605.html

When Things Got Tough Hank Paulson Went Skiing (This you call humorous?)

Hank Paulson said the unimaginable last week. He testified that he was off on skiing when he had his famous telephone call with Ken Lewis where he strong armed Lewis and Bank of America to complete the acquisition of Merrill Lynch. Lewis had previously testified that he thought that Paulson was on a bike ride but as it turns out Lewis was wrong and Paulson corrected the record.

During his testimony Paulson made it clear that in December the United States financial system was teetering on the edge of collapse and that if Bank of America didn’t follow through with its planned acquisition of Merrill Lynch the economy could have been destroyed. According to Paulson it was impossible to underestimate the stakes involved in a bad outcome for Merrill Lynch.

But, with the nation’s financial survival in question, Hank Paulson, Secretary of the Treasury, went skiing. He wasn’t in Washington leading his staff, briefing the President or figuring out a good solution to the problem. When he was needed most, Hank Paulson was hitting the slopes.

I almost fell off my chair when I heard Paulson correct the Congressman that was questioning him about where he was when he spoke to Ken Lewis. Paulson had to repeat it a few times; after all everyone “knew” that he did the call from a bike ride and was only out of the office for some quick exercise.

Of course, Paulson was in good company on the slopes. Apparently neither Ken Lewis nor John Thain thought the merger needed their full time attention. John Thain, CEO of Merrill Lynch was off skiing in Vail for most of the last half of December. Thain defends his decision to not be in the office because he was able to stay in touch through a Blackberry. It’s a wonder he wasn’t fired by Blackberry while enjoying himself at après ski.

Ken Lewis spent time during this critical period in December at Reynolds Plantation, a Ritz-Carlton hotel in rural Georgia. He also wasn’t a full time CEO during this critical time in Bank of America’s history.

Unbelievably, neither Ken Lewis, John Thain or Hank Paulson stayed at their desks until January when the merger would have been closed. I guess they decided that their leisure time was more important than the economic future of a few billion people.

http://www.firstcapital.com/blogs/mark_sunshine/?p=347

Deep Thought for the Week: Washington's Dilemma: This Isn't a Recession, It's a Collapse


Washington is bluffing that it will not bail out California, and every other state suffering from collapsed revenues and massive job losses. If cuts in police and schools don’t force DC off from its current position, then the math will. Because in many states the aggregate revenue losses and looming cuts to state payrolls will largely render the intended effects of federal stimulus as moot. Frankly, unless Washington prints money and bails out every state that needs capital, including California, federal power will decline amidst this severe economic recession, and the process of a soft American devolution will begin. If you think this idea is outrageous, then you’ve still not come to terms with a core reality of our current situation: the structure of this financial crisis is wholly different than any in our post-war era. This isn’t a recession. This is collapse.

In Recession vs. Collapse published in March, this blog explained that in a normal recession existing savings are used to support government debt issuance and that those who remain employed increase their savings to also support government debt issuance. Neither phenomenon is at work today. Yes, the savings rate has soared in the US. But this has not resulted in any actual accrued savings. Because private sector debt came to define the internal structure of the US system, savings currently is little more than debt service. Also, bank purchases of US Treasuries are really just a result of the circularity of monetization. It’s just money from the FED being recycled into Treasuries. There is no privately driven growth of bank deposits, in the aggregate. Americans as a class are broke. What the savings rate more accurately measures is a collapse of consumer spending.

The internal composition of the US economic and financial system when it hit 2007/8 was very different than in previous recessions, even the severe recession of 1980/82. It’s this internal composition that’s now determinative, to the outcome. The sawdust of debt, and the monetization of assets rather than the production of goods, continually came to define the internal composition of the system. The economy cannot, therefore, express the same kind of resilience it has done so often, since WW2.

This is the core problem of this collapse and why the prospect for recovery is dim. Americans can’t actually rebuild the savings that the banking system needs to escape from the current mess. Individually, Americans are trapped by debt and cannot spend. In The Seigniorage Curse, I explain that one of the primary mechanisms for the hollowing out of the American economy over many years was the dollar advantage, which at first was earned. And then, came to be un-earned. By the time the US reached the 21st century, our primary manufactured product was debt, and dollars. Is it any wonder that once that system collapsed, that we quickly gave up 100% of the phantom job growth that had been sitting on top of the debt bubble? The current level of employment in the United States has now returned to the levels of June 2000. Enough said.

Washington apparently has a fresh dilemma on its hands, just inside of 6 months after the new administration came to power. Clearly the economic team, even though they were given almost 18 months to study the nature of the current crisis (starting in the Summer of 2007), incorrectly judged this recession to be of the post-war variety. Is that any surprise?

Nothing in the public record since the year 2000 indicates that Larry Summers, Ben Bernanke, or Tim Geithner understood that we had been building a skyscraper of private sector debt in textbook blow-off style, since the deflation scare of 2001. Now, two years after FED repair operations began on the broken credit system, and over 3 years since US real estate topped in price, major portions of the country are staring at further home price declines in most major markets. Indeed, it appears that the same macro cycle of the last two Autumns is about to repeat, with more waves of foreclosure, more withdrawals from savings and investment to pay for living expenses, and the attendant bailouts of financial institutions that comes around each time.

Washington can’t really take a pass on this situation. If the federal government decides it can wait while “the states rebuild their balance sheets and clean up their payrolls” (as in past recessions) they’ll be waiting forever. None of that is underway.

It’s no surprise therefore that the country is already being prepped for a second stimulus. Sure, Washington would like to act tough and tell the States to clean up their act. This is the moral hectoring version of Ben Bernanke saying in 2006 he doubts US real estate will ever decline year over year, or Treasury Secty Paulson saying that the front-end of the crisis was just a problem contained to sub-prime. We’ve seen this script before. If California issuing IOUs in a state where banks refuse to accept them doesn’t get the message across, nothing will. We are on the front end, not the back end, of a crisis within the States.

http://seekingalpha.com/article/148526-washington-s-dilemma-this-isn-t-a-recession-it-s-a-collapse

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Hedgefinger's Fav Memo of the Week (As If)


Internal Memorandum No. 8121b

ATTN: Employees of Goldman Sachs

We did it. Bottom of the ninth, down by three, bases loaded, and we cranked another grand slam to the moon. They may have shot Lennon, but nothing can kill the Beatles.

I admit things looked bleak for a minute there. We had to convert to a bank holding company and were forced to accept a taxpayer bailout. It felt un-American. Terribly unbanksmanly. But we accepted the money, knowing that we could magically weave it into a much larger mountain of money.

We had a few hard months there, didn’t we? They regulated our corporate jet so that we could no longer use it to fly from hole to hole on the green. Dave had to drain his money pool to half capacity. I stopped injecting gold into my blood. They don’t call it a recession for nothing. One day, we’ll look back on the year we received only five-figure bonuses and laugh.

Wanting to celebrate our renewed success is natural, but it’s important that we don’t go crazy here. Remember, ten per cent of the non-bank country is unemployed, and even those who are working have “real” jobs, where payment is proportional to the creation of a “product” or a “service.” Those poor bastards. So I ask that, in celebrating our raping of the stock market, we show restraint in the following ways:

* Please limit high-fives and chest bumps to a dozen a day.
* Don’t wear your crowns, except around the office.
* Stop paying for things in Monopoly money—I understand it is the same as real money to us, but there have been some complaints.
* For now, let’s take down the giant scoreboard that reads “Main Street: zero. Wall Street: a billion gazillion bajillion.”

Furthermore, to avoid drawing criticism from the press, this year the bonuses, expected to be comically large, will be distributed in blood diamonds, which can be easily concealed in a briefcase so it looks like we’re working.

I’d like to thank everyone who made this possible—for a second time. Respect to President Obama for keeping us in the green. Thanks to the big guy upstairs (me). And let’s not forget all the ordinary Americans, the great unwashed, who, for some unfathomable reason, have refused to put us behind bars. We are literally taking money out of their wallets. Seriously, with these returns we are making Madoff look like a little kid with his hand caught in the cookie jar. Amateur!

Yours in money,

Lloyd Blankfein, C.E.O., Goldman Sachs

http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/cartoonlounge/2009/07/goldman-sachs-internal-memo.html

Saturday, July 18, 2009

A tale of two banking systems: a warning


It is morning in America for the large US investment banks, which posted strong results this week. Meanwhile, more conventional lenders are having a decidedly European moment.

Goldman Sachs, ever the alpha male of Wall Street, set the tone with net quarterly earnings of $3.4bn – its best ever as a public company. JPMorgan followed with $2.7bn. After the banks’ spell in the governmental intensive care unit, it must again feel good to be their shareholder. Goldman’s gain means a 23 per cent annual return on equity; JPMorgan’s investment bank arm achieved 18 per cent.

Such returns are stunning – and much higher than what one would expect from bread-and-butter sectors of the economy. They should not surprise as there is nothing bread-and-butter about finance these days. Risk aversion is still severe and spreads are large, creating a fertile field for those prepared to deploy their funds.

In truth such results are nothing new for the banks. Throughout the boom, high leverage boosted profits to levels that should have raised red flags. Sustained high returns usually indicate one of two things: insufficient competition or high risk. Both are plain to see in investment banking these days. The crisis cleared out much competition – and has taught us how risky banks’ activities really are.

Take a few steps away from Wall Street and the last quarter looks a lot different. Citigroup and Bank of America only got into the black on proceeds from selling off business units. Even at JPMorgan, retail banking reduced overall return on equity to 6 per cent.

The savaging of US securitisation markets, it is said, was only the first act; now the financial drama turns to bank lending in Europe. But there is old-fashioned banking in the US, too, which is now smarting from bad loans as the recession tightens its grip on family finances. CIT’s travails suggest the worst may yet be to come.

Investment banks’ profits may reignite popular outrage; still, they bring an important advantage. The more profits they make, the faster they get recapitalised – in a politically more palatable manner than through public bail-outs. But at a high cost: banks’ gain from large spreads and fees is a loss to those on the other side of the transactions. And since governments still protect the biggest banks against failure, any premium they earn is for risk carried by the taxpayer.

This is a dangerous situation. If one side of the banking system stays under water, the public will not long help the other stay afloat.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/0ef38cc8-72fb-11de-ad98-00144feabdc0.html

Friday, July 17, 2009

Get Real: Earnings Have Been Horrific


Early into reporting season, earnings have been running 20% ahead of estimates. That's good news, as far as it goes. But really, as Karl Denninger notes, the numbers are still godawful:

Revenues were down 17% - another double-digit contraction, and this is particularly troublesome in what it says about the global economy, given GE's global reach.

Again, we continue to see the same sort of theme in industrial and consumer products reporting - Harley Davidson reported units shipped down 30% year over year yesterday, and now GE out with a 17% year over year revenue decline.

Stocks are, at their core, priced on earnings growth, with the most-common ratio used for such metrics being P/E/G, or Price-to-earnings-growth.

But earnings are not growing, they're contracting - dramatically - in percentage terms over year-ago levels. How can it be otherwise? Even with no inefficiencies due to firms having too many employees for the revenue contraction that is occurring, a 30% reduction in business done should lead to a 30% decline in profits earned.

We don't know how long we have to continue to put up numbers like this before people wake up, but wake up they eventually will. When Harley Davidson ships 30% fewer motorcycles, when GE sells 17% less "stuff" (including their financial cooking) and when company after company, including Intel, IBM and others come out with revenue numbers that are down double-digit percentages on an annualized basis, there is no possible way you can justify the multiples that these firms are selling at.

When The Port of Long Beach shows container shipments down nearly 30%, when freight carloadings are down nearly 25% year over year, when sales tax receipts are down in the double digits and when income tax collections, both personal and corporate have effectively collapsed there is simply no argument that "the recession is over" or that "trend growth is around the corner."

The fact of the matter is that port, rail and tax receipts are not subject to being "gamed" by government number-crunchers, they do not play "seasonal adjustments" (since they're year-over-year numbers), they do not represent wishes, dreams, or desires.

They represent real-time, high-frequency, "right now and in your face" economic performance metrics and are impossible to argue with.

http://www.businessinsider.com/get-real-earnings-have-been-horrific-2009-7

Harvard Business School Still Teaching Dangerous BS About Leverage! How dumb can you get?

We remarked after Goldman Sachs came out with earnings, that analysts were already pestering the company about its mere 14x leverage ratio, wondering when they might start to get more aggressive -- this after the financial system nearly collapsed due to too much leverage.

Nobody's learned anything.

Felix Salmon points to this hilarious statement on one of Harvard Business School's blog regarding Google's earnings:

It would not be rational for a public company to be funded only by equity. It’s too inefficient. Debt is a lower cost source of funds and allows a higher return to the equity investors by leveraging their money…

Back to Google. It’s a nearly $22 billion company with no debt, which is inefficient. The problem for Google is that their cash flow and profit are so strong that they can finance the business with retained earnings. But I predict that as Google matures and growth slows, debt will become an important source of funding.

Yes, you can never be too rich, too thin or too leveraged, at least in the minds of our highly-trained financial geniuses. No matter what the environment, analysts are always pestering the companies are doing about buybacks or dividends (up, please!). We were at a media banking conference in early 2008 (!) and we heard companies being asked about their buyback strategy.

Heck -- just to give you a sense of how thoroughly colonized the financial industry mind is -- even Meredith Whitney, who to her credit is pretty keenly attuned to the problems of the industry, asked Goldman Sachs a question about their stock buyback schedule. And she's long-term bearish (still) on the industry!

Almost nobody is innocent here. Management spent the years before the bust doing share buybacks at a crazy pace, proving that they're horrible traders of their own stock. Activist investors without any real ideas tried their best to oust management that didn't get with the program of leverage.

And here we are in July, 2009 and HBS students are being told that Google (Google!) ought to be borrowing more to finance itself. We're officially getting nowhere.

http://www.businessinsider.com/harvard-business-school-teaching-dangerous-nonsense-about-leverage-2009-7

Guess Who is Emerging From the Wall Street Ruins….


A new new order is emerging on Wall Street after the worst crisis since the Great Depression — one in which just a couple of victors are starting to tower over the handful of financial titans that used to dominate the industry.

On Thursday, JPMorgan Chase became the latest big bank to announce stellar second-quarter earnings. Its $2.7 billion profit, after record gains for Goldman Sachs, underscores how the government’s effort to halt a collapse has also set the stage for a narrowing concentration of financial power.

“One theme here is that Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan really have emerged as the winners, as the last of the survivors,” said Robert Reich, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, who was secretary of labor in the Clinton administration.

Both banks now stand astride post-bailout Wall Street, having benefited from billions of dollars in taxpayer support and cheap government financing to climb over banks that continue to struggle. They are capitalizing on the turmoil in financial markets and their rivals’ weakness to pull in billions in trading profits.

http://www.nytimes.com/pages/business/

Chinese GDP:'fake it ‘til you make it'

China’s GDP figures might show that the world’s third-largest economy is coming out of its funk. But few economists will take Thursday’s report at face value. While their caution is wise, the Middle Kingdom probably is recovering – tentatively.

The country’s leadership has set a target of 8pc growth for 2009. Most economists believe the magic number will be hit, as do 88pc of investors in China, according to an ING survey. Reported growth in the first quarter was 6.1pc, and a 7.1pc “print” is expected for the second quarter, followed by above-trend growth in the second half.

But the GDP growth rate in China is too important a number politically to be reliable. From the bottom to the top of the data chain, everyone has a reason to report numbers that look politically correct. As economist Charles Goodhart pointed out, when leaders turn a measurement into a target, it stops being a good measurement.

Still, simpler indicators also point to recovery. Car sales rose 37pc in June. Electricity consumption rose 3.7pc, reversing May’s decline. Production of steel, diesel, speciality chemicals and even fridges are all back at pre-downturn levels. Exports are still falling, but a slower fall in imports suggests China's domestic consumption is recovering faster than that of its trade partners.

None of these indicators is perfect. Sales can rise because prices are cut to unsustainably low levels. Industrial production counts what's made, not what's sold. And rising imports could be a sign of firms buying materials to make products that as yet have no buyers.

Either way, financial aid has certainly helped make this recovery, if there is one, look healthier. The central bank has pumped three times more money into the economy so far this year than in the same period last year. A record rise in the country’s foreign exchange holdings in June suggests speculative foreign money is now adding to the wall of liquidity.

Whatever the GDP figures show, China remains an unbalanced economy. Real private consumption is immature. Only time can change that. The export engine remains dormant. Only a recovery in the US and Europe can get it moving. Over those things, Beijing has next to no control……


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/breakingviewscom/5835072/Chinese-GDP-a-case-of-fake-it-til-you-make-it.html

Laffs: Staff Evacuated From HQ - To Make Room For Bonus Cash!

Those wags over at Dealbreaker were enjoying themselves yesterday. The website points out that Goldman staff evacuated the firm's 85 Broad Street NY headquarters building Wednesday (some say due to another low-flying aircraft, although Goldman insists it was merely a routine fire drill).

But Dealbreaker speculates that the real reason behind the evacuation was that Goldman was shipping in the staff bonus pot late last night (in $20 bills), and that employees had to exit the building simply to make room for all the cash! Speculation that Goldman had employed additional security guards to thwart plans Congresswoman Maxine Waters allegedly had of storming the building in an audacious bid to reclaim the money is thought, however, to be untrue…..

http://news.hereisthecity.com/news/business_news/9233.cntns

….And More Laffs:: Pack of cigs - $23 quadrillion How much???

True story. A US man bought a packet of cigarettes from his local petrol station - only to find his card charged $23 quadrillion.The exact amount was $23,148,855,308,184,500 - equivalent to £14,138,265,398,942,298 - many times the US national debt.

"I thought somebody had bought Europe with my credit card," said Josh Muszynski, from New Hampshire.

He says his appeals to his bank first met with little understanding, though it eventually corrected the error.

"It was all back to normal," Mr Muszynski told his local television station, WMUR. "They reversed the negative balance fee, which was nice."

His nightmare began when he checked his online bank account a few hours after buying the cigarettes.

"It is a lot of money in the negative," he said. "Something I could never, ever, afford to pay back. My children could not afford it, grandchildren, nothing like that."

Mr Muszynski rushed back to the petrol station, but they were unable to help. He says he then spent two hours on the phone with the Bank of America before it was finally resolved.

http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_3403617.html?menu=

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Dr. Doom: The Media Screwed Up, I'm Still Predicting No-Growth, Nada, Zilch, Niente!


So Cramer lashed out at Roubini for "capitulating" and there were a host of stories today about how the rally was due to Dr. Doom changing his mind. But Roubini wants you to know: The reporting has been wrong, ans he sees no growth this year. He even put out a press release:

“It has been widely reported today that I have stated that the recession will be over “this year” and that I have “improved” my economic outlook. Despite those reports - however – my views expressed today are no different than the views I have expressed previously. If anything my views were taken out of context.

“I have said on numerous occasions that the recession would last roughly 24 months. Therefore, we are 19months into that recession. If as I predicted the recession is over by year end, it will have lasted 24 months with a recovery only beginning in 2010. Simply put I am not forecasting economic growth before year’s end.

“Indeed, last year I argued that this will be a long and deep and protracted U-shaped recession that would last 24 months. Meanwhile, the consensus argued that this would be a short and shallow V-shaped 8 months long recession (like those in 1990-91 and 2001). That debate is over today as we are in the 19th month of a severe recession; so the V is out of the window and we are in a deep U-shaped recession. If that recession were to be over by year end – as I have consistently predicted – it would have lasted 24 months and thus been three times longer than the previous two and five times deeper – in terms of cumulative GDP contraction – than the previous two. So, there is nothing new in my remarks today about the recession being over at the end of this year.

http://www.businessinsider.com/roubini-reuters-screwed-up-im-not-predicting-growth-2009-7

Wow! Madoff Victim Does The Absolutely Unthinkable


In a tale almost to bizarre to be true, one of King Ponz's victims is stepping up to the plate and covering his employees' Bernie-related losses with his own money. Robert Lappin is shelling out $5 million to cover the fraud related 401(k) losses for the 60 employees that work for him at Shetland Properties Inc and his private charity, the Robert I. Lappin Charitable Foundation.

"I wanted to do the right thing,'' Lappin said. "And, I feel, I've done the right thing and that to me is my reward.''

http://dealbreaker.com/

California IOUs Are Gonna Pump You Up!


A market is set to emerge this week in Californian IOUs as the persistence of the state's budget crisis is making it increasingly difficult to exchange these emergency instruments for cash.

California is printing $3bn of IOUs for businesses, individual taxpayers and local counties in lieu of cash. It has sent $588m of them to court-appointed attorneys, county-run health schemes and taxpayers awaiting rebates, among others.

IOUs will continue to be issued until Arnold Schwarzenegger, California governor, and the state legislature agree a deal to close a $26bn budget deficit. The state began issuing the IOUs early this month.

SecondMarket, a New York firm that trades illiquid assets, yesterday launched a platform for trading the IOUs. A decision last week by large banks, such as Wells Fargo and Bank of America, to stop accepting the IOUs has paved the way for some initial trading although volumes are expected to be very thin.

Citigroup, Bank of the West, credit unions and some community banks still are accepting the IOUs for their customers.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/fec02a24-71a0-11de-a821-00144feabdc0.html

Regulators to BofA: Obey or Else

Bank of America Corp. is operating under a secret regulatory sanction that requires it to overhaul its board and address perceived problems with risk and liquidity management, according to people familiar with the situation.

Rarely disclosed publicly, the so-called memorandum of understanding gives banks a chance to work out their problems without the glare of outside attention. Financial institutions that fail to address deficiencies can be slapped with harsher penalties that include a publicly announced cease-and-desist order.

The order was imposed in early May, shortly after shareholders of the Charlotte, N.C., bank stripped Chief Executive Kenneth Lewis of his duties ..

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124771415436449393.html

NYTimes: The Fat Lady Sings


The New York Times is unloading its classical radio station, WQXR-FM, in a complex $45 million deal as the struggling publisher sheds assets to stay afloat.

The deal with Univision Communications and public radio broadcaster WNYC calls for WQXR to move from 96.3 FM to a weaker signal higher up the dial at 105.9 FM.

Univision's Spanish-language station, WCAA, will become 96.3 FM and have a better spot in the middle of the FM band with which to serve its growing Hispanic audience in exchange for $33.5 million.

Meanwhile, WNYC will chip in $11.5 million for the license to 105.9 and the WQXR call letters, along with the station's equipment and Web site

http://www.nypost.com/seven/07152009/business/the_fat_lady_sings_179311.htm

BONUS GRAVY TRAIN: BANKS GIRD THEIR LOINS FOR A FIGHT

Some bankers could soon learn that what their employer giveth, it can taketh away.

As a growing number of shareholders threaten to sue financial firms that doled out fat bonuses to bankers who created securities triggering the financial crisis, several of those firms, including PNC Financial Services, are setting up committees to examine past pay practices, sources told The Post.

Meanwhile, other financial firms are hiring lawyers and hunting for compensation consultants to help them review claims that past bonus payments were unreasonable in light of last year's staggering losses.

Sparking the concern at PNC and other firms is the threat of litigation by the $1.3 billion SEIU Master Trust, a consortium of Service Employees International Union pension funds.

http://www.nypost.com/seven/07152009/business/the_fat_lady_sings_179311.htm

Sam Israel Gets More Time for Faking Suicide

Hedge-fund scammer Samuel Israel will spend an extra two years behind bars for trying to skip out on serving his 20-year sentence for fraud.

Federal Judge Kenneth Karas blasted Israel during today's sentencing in White Plains for "thumbing his nose at the system."

Israel apologized, saying "I know what I did was wrong and I'm sorry."

His prison term begins after he serves his first 20 years.

In March, Israel admitted that he faked his suicide. He wanted to avoid doing time for taking hundreds of millions from investors in his Stamford, Conn.-based Bayou hedge funds. He eventually surrendered to federal authorities in Massachusetts.

http://www.nypost.com/seven/07152009/news/regionalnews/convicted_swindler_gets_2_extra_years_fo_179405.htm

Gov’t to CIT: Drop Dead

CIT Group Inc, a leading provider of financing to small businesses and middle market companies, today announced that it has been advised that there is no appreciable likelihood of additional government support being provided over the near term.

The Company’s Board of Directors and management, in consultation with its advisors, are evaluating alternatives.

So what's the play here? Do they think all those small businesses will find alternative financing? Will there be some other kind of bailout for the customers? CIT's mistake: They should've been a lot bigger.

http://www.businessinsider.com/no-bailout-for-cit-2009-7

Madoff Trustee Hits Up HSBC and Funds to Recover $431 Million

The trustee liquidating Bernard Madoff’s business sued HSBC Holdings Plc and several funds in three lawsuits seeking to recover a combined total of as much as $431 million for Madoff’s victims.

Trustee Irving Picard sued HSBC and Cayman Islands-based Primeo Fund yesterday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York, seeking as much as $150 million that the convicted con man transferred to Primeo.

“Hedge funds and funds of funds like Primeo were sophisticated investors” and they “knew or should have known that Madoff’s investment advisory business was predicated on fraud,” according to the complaint.

In a separate complaint yesterday, Picard sued Bermuda- based Alpha Prime Fund Ltd. claiming the hedge fund received almost $213 million in transfers from the convicted conman’s firm in the past two years. That suit also named London-based HSBC Bank Plc and a Luxembourg-based unit, which he alleged were conduits for the shifting of money from Madoff to Alpha Prime.

Also yesterday, Picard sued Thybo Asset Management Ltd. and three related funds to recover $62 million that the investment firm received from Madoff’s Ponzi scheme. Thybo Asset Management knew or should have known that New York-based Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC was based on fraud, Picard said.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=av3AncTeeFrs

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Hedgefinger's Worst Memo of the Week


New York Times Company (NYT) staffers got a memo in their inboxes this afternoon from chairman Arthur Sulzberger and CEO Janet Robinson titled "On the Record . . . From Arthur + Janet, Vol. 2 The Story of Our Debt." The memo observes that the NYT has done enough financial engineering in the last year to avoid immediate bankruptcy--which, in fact, it has.


On the Record . . . From Arthur + Janet

Vol. 2 The Story of Our Debt

July 15, 2009

To Our Colleagues,

As many of you read, yesterday we announced the sale of WQXR, “The Radio Station of The New York Times.” This is another step in the realignment of our portfolio of properties and our initiative to reduce our debt.

Over the past six months or so, one question that we have heard time and time again from employees and others is: “What is the state of the Company’s debt?” Given that and the news about WQXR, we thought it would be worthwhile to discuss it with you today.

The Company carries approximately $1 billion in debt but of that amount only about $45 million matures before 2011, and we expect to repay that in November with cash flow from operations and our revolving credit agreement. The majority of our debt isn’t due until more than five years from now – in 2015. As a recent article in AdAge (http://adage.com/mediaworks/article?article_id=137628) asked, “But can it [the Times Company] last through 2011? As it turns out, we think the answer is yes, and then some.”

We couldn’t agree more. Let us walk you through the recent steps that give us such confidence.

At the end of 2008, we had approximately $1.1 billion in debt outstanding. That included debt under two revolving credit agreements. These are agreements with banks that allowed us to borrow up to $400 million under each agreement, or $800 million in total, whenever we needed it. On an ongoing basis, we repay what we borrow as cash comes in and the amount we can borrow is then replenished. Revolving credit agreements are commonly used by companies to manage their day-to-day cash requirements.

One of these agreements expired in May 2009. The other agreement will expire in June 2011.

At the end of last year, we had borrowed about $400 million under these two agreements. We also had approximately $100 million in bonds due to be paid in November 2009 and another $250 million due in March 2010.

Knowing that this debt was coming due, last fall we started to explore a transaction with Carlos Slim, one of our largest shareholders. In January we arranged for a loan for $250 million due in 2015 with Banco Inbursa and Inmobiliaria Carso, which are part of Mr. Slim’s holdings.

Both our Board of Directors and our outside financial advisors supported this transaction. With the proceeds from it, we paid off the borrowings under our May 2009 agreement, which then expired. We also repurchased roughly half of the $100 million in bonds due in November, which leaves about $45 million that we plan to repay with cash flow from operations and our revolving credit agreement.
We are paying an interest rate of 14% on the Inbursa debt. Yes, it’s a high rate, but given the state of our economy, our industry and the credit markets at the time we did the transaction, we believe it’s both fair and financially sound.

The transaction also includes warrants, which are like options, and give Mr. Slim the right to purchase 15.9 million Class A shares at approximately $6.36 a share. He has not asked for nor been offered a Board seat and does not have a history of activism in the companies in which he invests. This transaction in no way changes the control of the Company since that continues to reside in the Class B shares held by the Ochs-Sulzberger Trust.

After we completed the Inbursa transaction, we did a sale-leaseback of the majority of the space we own in our headquarters building. We sold this space to W. P. Carey and, in turn, they gave us $225 million. We simultaneously leased back the space and pay them rent. At the end of 10 years, we can buy back the space we sold them for approximately $250 million. With the proceeds from this transaction and other funds, we paid off all of the $250 million in bonds due in March 2010.

Going forward, we plan to use the proceeds from divestitures, such as WQXR and the potential sale of our interest in the Boston Red Sox, to bring our debt level down even more. This is what we did in 2007 when we sold our Broadcast Media Group.

We have been pro-active and disciplined in addressing our long-term debt obligations. So, again, the short answer to the question on the state of our debt is that we strongly believe we have the financial strength and flexibility to manage through this difficult time.

We hope all of this is helpful in better understanding our finances. You can find more information about the Company in its annual and other reports at www.nytco.com.

If you have any questions on this or other issues, please send us an e-mail at: arthur_and_janet@nytimes.com

Arthur & Janet

Gary Shilling: Stock Market Will Crash as US Consumers Retrench (Any gamblers with deep pockets out there?)

We’re glad we had our seatbelts fastened having Gary Shilling on TechTicker this morning. Here's a quick overview of Gary's outlook on things, along with a gallery of exhibits from his recent monthly Insight.

* The economy won't start to recovery until 2010 (versus the current consensus of now). It will recover because the government will be forced into a second stimulus.
* The US consumer rules the world...and the US consumer is cutting back fast
* Consumer spending will drop from 70% of GDP to 60% as consumers pay down debt and go on a saving spree.
* Most recessions have a positive quarter or two of GDP, so if we get one, it won't mean anything.
* The S&P will plunge 35% to 600 by the end of the year.
* Buy Treasuries…

http://www.businessinsider.com/henry-blodget-gary-shilling-still-filled-with-unrelenting-gloom-2009-7

Never mind their record profits. Even a Chimp Could Run Goldman


Sure, today Goldman is partying like it's 2007. Goldman Sachs is, by definition, too big to fail. This means that it will always be guaranteed by the taxpayer. This means that they operate, effectively, with no downside risk. If their downside risk is limited by guarantees offered by the taxpayer, their upside profiteering potential must be similarly limited. You cannot have your cake and eat it.

Whether Goldman would factually have required the taxpayer support or not is completely irrelevant. Their upside profiteering potential should have been, and should be, limited regardless of whether or not they received a penny in taxpayer support. First, had the support not been there, Goldman would have gone under with the rest of the sector. Second, because of the systemic nature of the risk, merely the fact that any bank received support meant that every bank benefited, regardless of whether they themselves received direct support or not.

Goldman Sachs is profitable, not because of the talent and merit of its management, but because of the structural position it occupies in one of the vital sectors of the economy. Even a chimpanzee could run Goldman Sachs because of its structural position. Goldman's profitability, therefore, is based on structural and market inefficiency, and not on the ability of its management. Rewards should be paid for personal merit and not for inherited positional advantage in an inefficient market.

Even though, relatively speaking, Goldman has been better managed than some of its peers, it cannot simultaneously benefit from taxpayer support and its inherited structural position and continue rewarding its managers as if its profitability were entirely the result of inspired management exercised in free, competitive markets where risks and rewards are inalienably linked'.

http://news.hereisthecity.com/news/business_news/9227.cntns

BROKE CIT IN FREEFALL

The White House is "in advanced talks" trying to extinguish a sudden financial wildfire that could swallow CIT Group, the financial firm that bankrolls the nation's small businesses.

Facing financial collapse, CIT shares sank to a tragic $1 level in a sell-off panic yesterday, prodding regulators to scramble in search of a way to prop up the company without having to deplete their rescue coffers.

Hundreds of thousands of small businesses, shops and restaurants -- CIT CEO Jeff Peek estimates some 760 manufacturing companies and another 300,000 retailers -- could be shut down overnight in a collapse of CIT, their main lifeline to cash and credit…..

http://www.nypost.com/seven/07142009/business/broke_cit_in_freefall_179171.htm

Raters Sued by Calpers Over Losses

Calpers filed a lawsuit against the three biggest credit-ratings agencies, accusing them of issuing "wildly inaccurate and unreasonably high" ratings on structured investment vehicles that saddled the California pension fund with at least hundreds of millions of dollars in losses.

The suit, filed last week in California Superior Court in San Francisco by the nation's largest public pension fund, ratchets up the unflattering scrutiny of Moody's Corp.'s Moody's Investors Service, the Standard & Poor's unit of McGraw-Hill Cos. and Fimalac SA's Fitch Ratings over their culpability for the financial crisis.

The California Public Employees' Retirement System alleges that the methodology used by all three companies to rate the complicated mortgage-backed securities was "seriously flawed in conception and incompetently applied," according to the suit. In 2006, Calpers invested $1.3 billion in three separate SIVs, all of them awarded top triple-A ratings by the ratings agencies.

Calpers didn't indicate how much in damages it is seeking. A cover sheet filed by a lawyer representing the pension fund indicated only that the amount "exceeds $25,000." Moody's, S&P and Fitch officials couldn't be reached for comment late Tuesday nigh..

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124763258772743653.html

BlackRock's Fat Fat Fed Fees

Money-management firm BlackRock Inc. is set to earn tens of millions of dollars for managing assets that once belonged to Bear Stearns Cos. and American International Group Inc. BlackRock will earn minimum asset-management fees of $42 million in the first year for running three vehicles holding mortgage-related securities and other investments, according to agreements recently posted on the Federal Reserve Bank of New York's Web site. The money manager also will get one-time advisory, analytics and structuring fees of $13.5 million, according to the agreements.

The first vehicle, Maiden Lane, was established by the Federal Reserve to fund the purchase of mortgage-related holdings from Bear Stearns. The other two vehicles, Maiden Lane II and III, were set up as part of the Fed's support for AIG.

BlackRock is playing a role in a number of government programs designed to stabilize the financial system. The company was one of nine managers tapped by the Treasury to buy toxic securities from financial institutions as part of the Public-Private Investment Program.

Lawmakers have raised questions about the lack of competition in awarding contracts to manage the Bear Stearns and AIG assets……

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124761495944242195.html

Merrill Meltdown Continues: Mitch Cox Hits the Road

The cultural clash at Merrill Lynch - Bank of America has sent another powerful senior exec out the door. Mitchell Cox, a senior vice president in the Wealth Management group, is leaving. And we hear he's taking a large team with him.

Merrill Lynch's wealth management unit has actually been in turmoil for over a year, when Mac Gardner departed. The firm named Dan Sontag to be its head of Americas wealth management. Sontag then got tapped to run the brokerage business at Merrill after Bob McCann left following the acquisiton by Bank of America.

It's not clear where Cox is headed. In fact, that's a mystery that has many heads ascratched this morning. Cox reported to Sontag

http://www.businessinsider.com/merrill-meltdown-continues-mitch-cox-hits-the-road-2009-7

Why Ugly Men Always Come Out on Top


Forget all those romantic-coms flogging the likes of Mr Big, or the impossibly up-himself Matthew McConaughey, not to mention the Dolce & Gabbana models bulging out of their boxers. Smart girls know that if you want solid gold, you need a man who’s less than perfect. And there is nothing that holds quite as much promise as an ugly man.
I'm thinking along the lines of Rhys Ifans over Brad Pitt (minus those horrid Y-fronts he wore in Notting Hill, of course). Or Daniel Craig over Pierce Brosnan. Someone a little rough around the edges, a little lopsided - none of that cartoonishly-perfect bone structure.

The fact is life is easy for the beautiful ones, and a lot harder for those who fell out of the ugly tree and hit a few branches on the way down. From nursery to boardroom, the Uglies have to fight harder. They haven't glided along a carpet of admiration provided by fawning teachers, adoring parents, and salivating secretaries. They have had to develop charm, wit, drive, and manners to open every door.

As a consequence, when you date a man who's not an oil painting, he puts in the effort. He knows how much harder he has to work to woo you. Doubtless he'll have clawed his way up the career ladder, because without wallet power he'll always be losing out to the moody French artist with lacerating cheekbones scraping a living in an attic somewhere. Mr Ugly never stops trying - from boardroom to bedroom - and you've got to love him for it.

If his imperfections really bother you, then take heart. There's a whole arsenal at your disposal if you want to turn him into Brad Pitt or David Beckham (although God knows why you would). This is known as The Project, and starts with a decent haircut and a few hours with a personal shopper. You can take it to the next level with a personal trainer, some good dental work, and even a few strategic cosmetic re-touches. And there you have it - a hottie on the outside, but the same down to earth guy on the inside. When you show him off (and it'll be hard not to), your friends will wish they'd had your foresight and patience.

http://news.hereisthecity.com/news/business_news/9223.cntns

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

How Buffet missed the boat


Warren Buffett is wrong about cap and trade legislation, writes Eric Pooley at Bloomberg.

Pooley, a former editor at Fortune, who is working on a book about global warming and politics, explains three flaws in arguments regularly trotted out by the Oracle:

1. It's regressive. The CBO's analysis of the bill says by 2020, the average annual cost is $175. The poorest people in the contry actually end up with a $40 rebate annually.

2. It's a tax. It's not a tax. It produces credits for CO2 which fall over time. As the allowable emissions decrease, money flows to more efficient producers. As Pooley puts it, "A new tax means more work for accountants. Cap and trade unleashes the engineers." A real tax would just be "old school regulation."

3. It costs $110 a month. David Sokol, chairman of MidAmerica said that would be cost for his company to buy emissions. Since then he's adjusted his math. He says the number isn't "terribly useful," because his math assumed that residential customers would buy all the allowances and commercial and industrial users wouldn't pay a dime. That's unrealistic Sokol admits.

Here's Pooley's take on MidAmerica, Sokol and Buffett:

Cutting carbon emissions won’t be free, but Sokol hasn’t helped his case by hyping the costs for Iowa consumers, who have gone 14 years without a rate increase. His revised estimate for the allowance costs comes to an average of $30 per month per customer -- residential, commercial, and industrial.

That’s a far cry from $110, but even it is too high, according to economist Nat Keohane of the Environmental Defense Fund, because it assumes that rate payers will foot the bill for all of MidAmerican’s allowance costs -- including the 30 percent of its power it sells into the deregulated wholesale market.

MidAmerican wouldn’t get free allowances for that wholesale power under the bill, and I think that’s the real reason Buffett and Sokol are against it. The system is designed so that free permits flow downstream to the people who pay for the power. That’s good for consumers, but could hurt MidAmerican shareholders, meaning Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc.

Bottom line: MidAmerican made some bad calls. It turned on a huge new coal-fired plant in 2007. It chose not to spin off its wholesale power business. And when other utilities were hammering out their allocation deals with Congress, Sokol and Buffett sat out the negotiation.

http://www.businessinsider.com/warren-buffett-gets-it-wrong-on-cap-and-trade-2009-7

The Ultimate Insider Trading Scheme

Yes, Virginia, there really is a Santa. It looks like the longest running insider trading scheme may be in jeopardy. Now that government agencies are major stakeholders in a variety of companies and the tidal wave of regulation is getting closer to the shore, the time has finally come to consider a prohibition on lawmakers using non-public information (learned on-the-job) for investment decisions. Accumulating an impressive portfolio of battered banks and auto makers has led at least some lawmakers to question the ability of politicians to avoid doing something unethical.

Congress and the federal government are now so enmeshed in the operations of our financial markets that the potential for abuse by members of Congress, congressional staff and federal employees is staggering," Rep. Louise Slaughter (D-N.Y.) said at a hearing of the oversight and investigations subcommittee of the House Committee on Financial Services.

No stranger to the appearance of impropriety themselves, SEC Inspector General David Kotz remarked

The SEC had essentially no compliance system in place to ensure that its own employees, with tremendous amounts of nonpublic information at their disposal, did not engage in insider trading themselves

A 2004 study revealed senators made approximately 25% more on investments than the average Joe. Assuming the legislation passes and lawmakers have to take their trading ethics pledge, that number might get chopped down to 20%.

Go ahead. Don't take our word(s) for it. Read it for yourself.
Congress Mulls Trading Curbs for Its Own
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/13/AR2009071303123.html


http://dealbreaker.com/

The Year’s Biggest Losers


Fortune magazine has a list of the Top 50 money losing firms in 2008. Here's the financial institution entries.

1. Fannie Mae- $58.7bn
2. Royal Bank of Scotland - $43.1bn
3. Citigroup - $27.6bn
4. UBS - $19.3bn
5. HBOS - $13.7bn
6. Credit Suisse - $7.59bn
7. Bayeriche Landesbank - $7.44bn
8. Mizuho Financial Group - $5.8b
9. Deutsche Bank - $5.6bn
10. Dexia Group - $4.8bn
11. KFW Bankengruppe - $3.89bn
12. Sumitomo Mitsui Financila Group - $3.7bn
13. KBC Group - $3.6bn
14. Allianz - $3.5bn
15. TIAA-CREF - $3.3bn
16. Landesbank Baden-Wurttemberg $2.97bn
17. Group Caisse D'Epargne - $2.95bn
18. Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group - $2.5bn
19. DZ Bank - $1.7bn

http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2009/fortune/0904/gallery.f500_biggestlosers.fortune/index.html

Hedge Funders Are Back In the Money!

Hedge fund titans like Steve Cohen could soon be partying like it's 1999. That's because for the first six months of 2009, hedge funds overall turned in their best performance in a decade, with funds up 12 percent through the end of June, according to Hennessee Group, a consultant to direct investors in hedge funds.

That's the second-strongest half-year gain since 1999, when the Hennessee hedge fund index rose close to 15 percent in the first half of that year.

The index, which represents returns of more than 1,000 hedge funds, was up a whopping 31 percent by the end of 1999 -- also the top return for the past decade.

To be sure, 2009 isn't over. But a repeat of 1999 would be more than welcome news for the industry, which emerged from a tumultuous 2008 battered and bruised.

The average fund was down 20 percent last year -- the industry's worst performance ever -- and several once-highflying funds shut their doors in defeat. Indeed, just this week, John Meriwether, who was famously at the center of the blow-up of Long Term Capital Management in 1998, threw in the towel, shutting down his hedge-fund firm JWM Partners.

Among top managers in the black this year include Ken Griffin of Citadel Investment Group and Phil Falcone of Harbinger Capital Partners.

Griffin's Kensington fund is up 32 percent through June on the comeback in so-called convertible securities.

Meanwhile, Falcone has seen his flagship fund jump roughly 12 percent this year, and his newly launched credit fund, the Credit Distressed Blue Line fund, is up 19.5 percent, The Post has learned.

The infamous John Paulson, one of the few hedge fund managers to do well last year, is continuing that success in 2009. His two event arbitrage funds are up between 8 percent and 12 percent, while his Credit Opportunity fund is up close to 11 percent, sources said.

http://www.nypost.com/seven/07112009/business/theyre_in_the_money_178648.htm

Fund managers pull a rabbit out of a hat to win new investors

With a new regulatory regime hanging over the industry's head and a field of shellshocked investors looking for safety, it may seem that hedge fund managers are poised to make a rush into the mutual fund arena. But there's a disagreement over how many hedge fund managers will follow AQR Capital Management LLC of Greenwich and others into mutual funds.

Ben Alpert, a hedge fund analyst at Morningstar Inc., said he expects the move will be significant. But David Kabiller, founding principal and head of client strategies for AQR Capital Management, said he wouldn't bet it will be very big.

AQR, an 11-year-old asset management firm that offers hedge fund strategies primarily to institutional investors, recently unveiled three mutual funds: AQR Momentum Fund, AQR Small Cap Momentum Fund and AQR International Momentum Fund. The new funds and their accompanying indexes follow the February launch of AQR's first mutual fund, AQR Diversified Arbitrage.

Is everyone going to follow? Stay tuned sportsfans….

http://www.connpost.com/ci_12829323

JPMorgan-Chase’s Trillion Dollar Man

One private equity executive who describes himself as having a lot of respect for Lee and says he has played golf with him declined to comment about Lee's scorekeeping. When pressed, he finally added, "Look -- he's a competitive guy and he likes to win."

Lee's hard work has enabled him to keep ringing the cash register for JPMorgan even in a relatively quiet time for deals. For example, he helped lead a deal where JPMorgan helped finance DirecTV Group (DTV Quote) parent Liberty Media's $530 million investment in Sirius XM Radio (SIRI Quote) to keep it out of bankruptcy court.

Lee's fans are not restricted to the private equity realm, however. News Corp.'s Murdoch says he consults regularly with Lee, and gives him a great deal of credit for helping him buy Dow Jones in 2007 -- a deal many believed was impossible, because the Bancroft family that had owned the company for 105 years was thought to be totally opposed to the idea.

JPMorgan watchers say it is hard to imagine Lee, whose office is next to Dimon's, going anywhere else. One year, after Lee organized the firm's annual CEO schmoozing event in Deer Valley, Utah, he received a thank you note from Dimon's wife and hung it on a wall in his office.

http://www.thestreet.com/story/10519279/5/jpmorgans-trillion-dollar-man.html

Madoff's New Slammer Is the Fed’s "Crown Jewel"


Just in case you were worried, Bernie won’t be serving his life sentence in a hellhole. The North Carolina prison where the convicted Ponzi schemer has been to serve his life sentence is considered "the crown jewel" of the federal prison system. It’s a place where many convicts hope to be sent. It may not be "club Fed" but it is the closest thing that exists in the federal prison system to a country club prison.

The Butner Federal Correctional Complex is about 45 minutes northeast of Durham. From the outside you could mistake it for a college campus, except perhaps for the barb-wire.

It’s often sought after by convicts because its staff and facilities have a good reputation. There are no hardcore maximum security type criminals there. It’s all minimum, low and medium security. Former Enron CEO Jeff Skilling requested he be allowed to serve his sentence there.

Butner is also known for having excellent medical facilities, especially its cancer-treament programs. There have been rumors that Madoff has been diagnosed with cancer.

Butner houses about 3,600 inmates. Notables include former U.S. Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham, former Adelphi CEO John Rigas, and former Navy intelligence analyst Jonathan Pollard. In the past the Butner prison has housed would be presidential assassin John Hinckley Jr. and televangelist Jim Bakker.

It’s not totally safe for prisoners, however. Madoff may well find himself in fights with other inmates. As the saying goes, in minimum security prisons you get punched, and in medium security prisons you get knifed.

It’s not clear whether Madoff will be in low or medium security. The length of Madoff's sentence would typically preclude him from being housed in the minimum-security prison.

http://www.businessinsider.com/madoffs-butner-prison-is-the-crown-jewel-of-federal-prison-system-2009-7

Monday, July 13, 2009

Dr Doom: Recession will last 6 months more ….


….In an interview with James Fallows of the Atlantic Monthly, Roubini outlined three possibilities for what we might see, and possibly regret, in 2012.

The first is that so-called zombie banks, banks that are propped up with government bailout money despite being insolvent, may continue to plague the recovery. He feels government should nationalize them, clean them up and return them to private ownership to expedite their recovery.

Second, Roubini addressed the massive public debt, half of which he says has been monetized: the Fed has created money and pumped it into the economy. The worry, according to Roubini, is that all that extra circulating money will create yet another bubble if it is not reeled back in after the recovery in 2011, or another recession if it is reeled back in too soon or too quickly.

Thirdly, Roubini sees a difficult time ahead as Americans adjust to the new economy post-recession:

We’ve been growing through a period of time of repeated big bubbles,” he said. “We’ve had a model of ‘growth’ based on overconsumption and lack of savings. And now that model has broken down, because we borrowed too much. We’ve had a model of growth in which over the last 15 or 20 years, too much human capital went into finance rather than more-productive activities. It was a growth model where we overinvested in the most unproductive form of capital, meaning housing. [...] the potential for our future growth is going to be lower, because of the excesses we’ve had. Sustainable growth may mean investing slowly in infrastructures for the future, and rebuilding our human capital. Renewable resources. Maybe nanotechnology? We don’t know what it’s going to be…..

http://www.examiner.com/x-9404-Menlo-Park-Progressive-Examiner~y2009m7d10-Economist-says-recession-will-last-6-months-longer-outlines-what-to-expect-in-2012

Trading: Who’s the Patsy?

Who's on first? What's on second....For the past several years Street operators have assumed that the computer jockeys who were being employed by proprietary trading departments on The Street were developing algorithms that would find other algorithms that represented buyside orders so prop desks could trade against those orders.

Another trading prop that has been occurring for years is certain firms feed their electronic trading systems into prop desks so traders can see in real time money flows into and out of stocks and groups.

However recent revelations are forcing the Street to consider the possibility of automated front-running on an unfathomable scale. The two ‘front-running’ issues are: 1) ‘queuing’ [of orders] – finding orders loaded into a system, particularly limit orders, and trading against them; and 2) ‘latency’ – discovering and then front-running electronic orders or a penny or more by exploding the latency or lag in execution.

HFT (high frequency trading) is being done on every electronically traded item on a global basis. Ergo, firms could be making pennies a few billions times per day…It was imperative for the NYSE and other exchanges to price securities in pennies to disguise ‘HFT’ & to provide ample trading opportunities.

While the Street is percolating with anger and curiosity about ‘High Frequency Trading’ there is also frustration and astonishment that the media, regulators and our duly elected are not addressing what could be the biggest financial abuse story of our times, if not history…...

http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2009/07/king-report-hft/

Could Goldman’s Record Earnings Be Too Good?

Under normal circumstances, Goldman Sachs Group Inc might be afforded a moment of gloating as it struts toward what could be a banner earnings announcement just nine months after being roiled by Wall Street's worse crisis since the Great Depression. But these aren't ordinary times for the biggest U.S. investment bank, which lately has faced a torrent of unwanted publicity stemming from employee theft allegations and an unflattering spread in Rolling Stone magazine.

Now Goldman, expected to announced second-quarter earnings on Tuesday, finds itself in a no-win situation. If earnings are too good critics may lambaste it for ramping up risk too much and embracing a hedge fund-like model that could make it vulnerable to big market swings. If they fall short, investors may accuse the firm of failing to live up to its reputation for being more aggressive and intelligent than its rivals.

"They are between a rock and a hard place," said Walter Todd, a portfolio manager with Greenwood Capital Associates, which owns shares of rival Morgan Stanley …..

http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSTRE56969Y20090710

Hedge fund star to launch new fund

Lansdowne Patners, one of Mayfair’s largest hedge funds, is to open its doors to fund manager Patrick Degorce, a former French navy officer who split from the high-profile activist investor Christopher Hohn earlier this year.

Degorce, who co-founded The Children’s Investment fund (TCI) with Hohn in 2004, is expected to launch a global equities fund on the Lansdowne platform this autumn. Under the proposed arrangement, a small team will share Lansdowne’s office and use its back office and administrative support systems.Degorce is planning to raise $1.5 billion (£925m) for the new fund, to be called Theleme.

“The attraction for Lansdowne is simple: Degorce is one of the most intelligent managers around and now they’ll have that intellect on their doorstep,” said one industry analyst. The venture will be marketed and run separately to Lansdowne, which manages $12.5 billion of assets…..

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/banking_and_finance/article6690517.ece

Wells Fargo Shoots Itself in the Foot

According to Al Lewis, you can't expect a bank that is dumb enough to sue itself to know why it is suing itself. Yet I could not resist asking Wells Fargo Bank NA why it filed a civil complaint against itself in a mortgage foreclosure case in Hillsborough County, Fla.

"Due to state foreclosure laws, lenders are obligated to name and notify subordinate lien holders," said Wells Fargo spokesman Kevin Waetke.

Being a taxpayer-subsidized, too-big-to-fail institution, it's possible that one of the few ways for Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC) to know what it is doing is to notify itself with a court filing. In this particular case, Wells Fargo holds the first and second mortgages on a condominium, according to Sarasota, Fla., attorney Dan McKillop, who represents the condo owner. As holder of the first, Wells Fargo is suing all other lien holders, including the holder of the second, which is itself.

"The primary reason is to clear title and ownership interest in a property to prepare it for sale," Waetke said in an email exchange. "So it really is not Wells Fargo vs. Wells Fargo." Yet court documents clearly label "Wells Fargo Bank NA" as the plaintiff and "Wells Fargo Bank NA" as a defendant.

http://www.foxbusiness.com/story/markets/al-lewis-wells-fargo-bank-sues/

UBS: The Swisspocalpse will be rescheduled!

It looks like UBS and the US government are moving closer to settling their differences. The Swiss bank and the Justice Department jointly asked a federal court in Miami to postpone a hearing scheduled for Monday say they can negotiate a settlement. This is a major change from late last week, when prosecutors were talking about really putting the screws to UBS.

As issue is the US demand that UBS turn over thousands of client names to the IRS as part of the government's investigation into tax-evasion.

So how is UBS going to settle the matter with the government? That's still unclear. UBS may offer to pay billions in taxes for its clients. We've heard that this could be as high as $4 billion. It is also possible that UBS may be forced to spin-off the business into a new entity. At minimum, UBS will most certainly agree to deliver part of the information on the 52,000 account holders the IRS is seeking.

http://www.businessinsider.com/ubs-moves-closer-to-settlement-with-us-government-2009-7

Platypus Hedge Funds Poop in ‘Post-Madoff World’

Platypus Capital Management is liquidating its long-short Asian and Australian hedge funds, citing difficulties in a “post-Madoff world.” The Sydney-based firm, with about $42 million in assets, will return funds to investors, saying it didn’t have a “viable size in the industry as it currently exists,” partners Chris Talbot, Derek Sicklen and Charles Magri wrote in a letter to investors obtained by Bloomberg. Sicklen confirmed the contents in a telephone interview today.

“The industry has been given a good shake and we have been contemplating the future for ourselves as a small, independent specialist manager based in Sydney, with all that that implies in a post-Madoff world,” the partners wrote.

Platypus joins more than 370 hedge funds that closed in the first half of the year according to data from Singapore-based Eurekahedge Pte. Hedge funds lost an average 19 percent last year while investors pulled $155 billion, the worst performance since Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research Inc. started keeping records.

Platypus Capital has no relationship to Platypus Asset Management, the Sydney-based long-only equities manager.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601081&sid=a1FsVOLH13sE

Risky Business: Buffett’s Berkshire’s Brinkmanship

Berkshire Hathaway's reinsurance business, a big profit center for the diversified company, has pulled back from one of the more volatile corners of the reinsurance market: catastrophic property damage.

In recent years, Berkshire Hathaway Reinsurance Group made a push into the profitable business, in essence writing insurance for other insurers that wished to offload some exposure to big losses like hurricane damage. Just a few years ago, Berkshire pulled in $2.2 billion in premiums on a year that saw no major storms. But recently, Berkshire has become more cash-constrained. Its retreat in "cat" reinsurance suggests it has become more risk averse amid a recent downgrade to its credit rating, a series of hits to Berkshire's bottom line and ongoing turmoil in the economy…..

. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124744026506929743.html

Spare a Thought For Others Scarred By Banker's Death Leap

The focus of the articles written so far about the tragic death of 24-year-old Deutsche Bank equity salesperson Anjool Malde have understandably been on the banker himself. But there are many others who will be scarred by his suicide. First off, and most obviously, are his parents (one of whom is said to be a psychologist) and his friends, none of whom saw it coming. They are clearly all in shock, and many are left wondering whether there was anything they could, or should, have done that would have prevented this sad fatality.

But spare a thought, too, for the hedge fund client whose complaint to Deutsche Bank, over the alleged post Malde made in a (work-related) internet chat room, led to the chain of events that resulted in the banker's death. Did the complainant think for one moment that things would go this far ? Of course not. And how must he / she be feeling now ?

And then there's the member of staff over at Deutsche Bank (either Malde's line manager or a member of HR) who was obliged to send the banker home early the Friday before he took his life. That person was only doing their job, so that those charged with undertaking the investigation into Malde's alleged wrongdoing could take a look at his work PC. We hope that that person is getting some support of their own now.

Finally, there are the staff over at the Coq d'Argent restaurant in London, the place where Malde decided to end his life. Some of the staff there will have had to deal with the death of a guess in tragic circumstances twice in as many years now. They, too, will be scarred by the experience.

The sad truth at times like this, is that we often forget that there are many others, still living, whose lives will have been impacted by events like Malde's death. We need to be thinking about, and supporting, them too

http://news.hereisthecity.com/news/business_news/9221.cntns

Friday, July 10, 2009

P.S. Is your job killing you?


Every once in a while something comes along to shake us out of our anaesthesia, but this is just temporary, and we quickly revert to our cataleptic state.

In truth, the events in the financial markets over the last 15 months have had a numbing effect on the people who work there. Tens of thousands of job losses, the bankruptcy of a major securities firm, the almost systemic collapse of the banking system, a $65bn Ponzi scheme that wiped out thousands, and the suicides of market professionals who slit their wrists, shot themselves in the woods, or jumped to their deaths from an apartment building or a restaurant roof terrace, have left us all stunned. Everything that can go wrong, appears to have gone wrong. It's quite shocking, in fact, that nothing is shocking anymore.

Careers and lives have been lost, friendships and reputations have been ruined, marriages and relationships have been shattered. And yet those who work in the financial markets continue to compete aggressively and subject themselves to the huge pressures that led to the excesses that caused our troubles in the first place.

The exceptional events of the last 15 months have not, in truth, brought us closer together as a community - they have, in fact, driven us further apart. We are still focused on the culture of 'me' - 'my' job, 'my' base salary, 'my' career progression and 'my' bonus. And we are more competitive than ever - fighting harder for that elusive deal, striving harder for that overdue promotion, and pushing ourselves harder to achieve the things at work which we believe makes us a success. So, despite regulators and governments passing measures to encourage individuals to operate in a longer-term way for the general benefit of all stakeholders, there is no evidence to suggest that behaviours will change. We remain, at heart, self-absorbed, self-centered and egotistical.

And what is it about our industry that turns us into such monsters, and creates an environment where a 24-year-old man, with the world literally at his feet, takes his own life just because he fears that he might lose his job over a silly prank at work ? What is it about the financial markets that robs us of our identity and self-worth ? Why does our profession force us to lose our perspective, and lose sight of the things that are really important - like friends, laughter, health and family ?

What is sad about the financial crisis is not that bankers have lost their jobs and their self-esteem, it's that we have been unmasked as pathetic human beings who operate under the wrong value system, and have been chasing a self-destructive dream. We need to learn, and quickly, that you can be commercial and caring, that there's nothing wrong with being honest and coming in second, and that there's more to life than achieving at work. And we have to understand, before it is too late, that true success is not defined by what we do when we leave the sanctity of the place we call 'home'.

http://news.hereisthecity.com/news/business_news/9215.cntns

Funds of funds lose on gains. Go figure…..

Hedge funds continued to make money last month, but funds of funds have fared poorly at picking the best managers this year and have notched only about half the returns on average of the industry as a whole, according to research.

Hedge funds made 9.4% in the first half of this years, while funds of funds made only 5.2%, according to data provider Hedge Fund Research.

Convertible bond arbitrage funds made 30%, HFR said, eclipsing other prominent strategies including emerging markets hedge funds (up 20.4%), equity long/short (up 12%) and relative value hedge funds (up 13%).

Short sellers are the only hedge funds to have lost money so far this year, down 9.9%.
HFR's figures are fairly similar to those from peer Hennessee Group, whose index of industry performance is up 12%.

http://www.wealth-bulletin.com/portfolio/content/1054664326/

Are You Ready for the next Meriwether fund?

Actually, Meriwether already did try to raise money to reboot JWM earlier this year and struck out. But the first couple months of this year were probably the most difficult time ever to raise money for a hedge fund (it also turns out to have been one of the best times ever to put money into risky assets, which illustrates the basic dilemma of the money management business). At some point, when money's a little looser, I'm betting Meriwether will be able to raise enough money for a fund yet again.

Why is that so? Are investors really that dumb? Well, first, those who got in on the ground floor at LTCM and JWM and didn't reinvest all their gains through the years probably made out okay. At LTCM the partners even returned most of their investors' money not long before everything fell apart. They did this more out of greediness than concern for investors, but the end result was that a lot of those who put money into LTCM got it back and then some.

But I imagine the real attraction of investing with Meriwether had less to do with the returns than with, well, the attraction of investing with Meriwether…..

http://curiouscapitalist.blogs.time.com/2009/07/09/all-ready-to-sign-up-for-john-meriwethers-next-fund/?xid=rss-topstories

Behold, the Wrath of Citadel!

Citadel Investment Group, one of the world's most successful hedge fund firms, sued a former top exec in its highly successful quantitative trading unit and two others for setting up their own firm. Chicago-based Citadel, said in a lawsuit filed on Thursday that Mikhail Malyshev, 40, and two other former employees had violated their non-compete clauses by starting their own firm, Teza Technologies LLC. The lawsuit was filed in the the circuit court of Cook County, Illinois.

Teza Technologies made headlines this week when it was identified as the firm that had hired Sergey Aleynikov, a former Goldman Sachs Group Inc computer programmer whom federal prosecutors had accused of stealing trade secrets from the Wall Street investment bank.

Citadel said it zealously guards the secrecy of its own computer codes. The hedge fund firm said it spent hundreds of millions of dollars to develop strategies, software and hardware, or what is sometimes referred to as the "secret sauce" of the high frequency business, court papers show. If the information were obtained by someone else, the company, which has often been compared with Goldman Sachs for its trading prowess, said it would suffer irreparable harm…...

. http://www.chicagobusiness.com/cgi-bin/news.pl?id=34698

Holy Crap! Madoff Fraud Claims Total Over 15,400

The final tally of claims from victims of Bernard L. Madoff’s vast Ponzi scheme comes to more than 15,400, substantially higher than the 8,800 claims that had been filed by the first of June.

The total was included in an interim report filed on Thursday in Federal Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan by Irving H. Picard, the trustee overseeing the liquidation of Mr. Madoff’s estate.

The report, which covers the first six months of the trustee’s tenure, also provided some limited details about his independent examination of the Madoff fraud, which continues to be investigated by federal prosecutors and securities regulators.

More than 230 subpoenas and 90 additional letters seeking information have been issued in the trustee’s investigation, which he said had “unearthed a labyrinth of international funds, institutions and entities of almost unparalleled complexity.”

So far, more than 60 “potential corporate assets and interests” have been identified in the United States and in 11 countries or territories, from Switzerland to the Cayman Islands, according to the report.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/10/business/10madoff.html?_r=1&ref=business

Laffs: Want to make an extra 80K a year? Try casting a spell

Fancy 80,000 dollars a year on a stress-free job with flexible working hours and no need to wear a suit? Well, grab your black pointy hat, take out that rusty black hessian drape from the back of the wardrobe and refresh your memory on how to turn your grumpy neighbor into a mouse. Somerset tourist attraction Wookey Hole caves is advertising for a "witch" and has already received 100 applicants since the beginning of the week.

Legend has it that the caves, near Wells, were home to the Wookey Witch who was turned to stone by the medieval Abbott of Glastonbury to rid villagers of her curse.
The vacancy has arisen because the previous incumbent has retired.

The successful candidate, who will be living in a "spacious" cave, has to cackle, not be allergic to cats and will be asked to perform "a range of tasks" including magic at an open audition scheduled for July 28. But the appointee need not be scary.

"We want a friendly witch with a devilish element," said Gayle Pennington, marketing assistant at the caves said on Wednesday. "We're a family attractions place so we don't want to frighten the children."

http://www.reuters.com/article/oddlyEnoughNews/idUSTRE5683NL20090709

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Merrill Shaking Down BofA For Monster Paychecks


Merrill Lynch, frightened by the unending flood of people out of its doors, is planning on setting 2009 compensation levels back up to 2007 levels, according to a person familiar with the matter. Executives at the investment bank have been in talks with senior people at Bank of America, warning that the entire franchise could fall apart if compensation levels don't match those offered by, say, Citigroup. Last week, Citigroup revealed it would be paying 2007 compensation by raising salaries to make up for lower bonuses.

But don't go putting a downpayment on that Tribeca condo yet, Merrillistas. The situation remains fluid, and pressure from Charlotte and Washington DC could result in a reversal of these plans. None of this was confirmed with Merrill.

http://www.businessinsider.com/boom-year-paychecks-back-at-merrill-lynch-2009-7

So what should Goldman do?


Prediction: The case of the stolen Goldman Sachs trading software will leave more tarnish on Goldman reputation than take profits from its income statement. It will also provide lots of amusement for those of who don’t work there or own the company’s stock.

In case you have been having a Senior Moment, a former Goldman computer wiz and Russian immigrant was arrested by a team of FBI agents at Newark Airport on July 3. Sergey Aleynikov was charged with stealing and sending overseas secret computer code which the firm uses to automatically trade stocks and commodities. “The trades made…typically generate many millions of dollars of profits per year” for the firm, according to a criminal complaint filed in the case by Special Agent Michael G. McSwain of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The firm believes, the complaint said, that if the programs end up in the hands of competitors that its ability to profit from the strategies would be “significantly diminished.”

Maybe Goldman isn’t talking because the theft is not big enough to be a “material” event that it must be disclosed under federal law. Technically, that could well be true. After all, the FBI agent was talking in “millions” whereas Goldman counts trading revenues in billions—specifically $6.6 billion trading bonds, currencies and commodities and another $1 billion trading stocks in the last quarter. The agent describes the programs as guiding “high-volume automated trading.” That sounds like the kind of trading that can only take place with electronically-traded stocks and commodities contracts as opposed to big-dollar, personally-negotiated deals for derivatives and large blocks of stocks and bonds. Those big deals are probably where Goldman makes most of its trading profits, but Goldman won’t confirm that…..

http://www.businessweek.com/investing/wall_street_news_blog/archives/2009/07/the_secrets_of.html

Is this hedge fund wunderkind going down the tubes?

Peter Thiel, the PayPal co-founder who was also an angel investor in social-networking titan Facebook, could himself use an angel to help his struggling hedge fund firm, Clarium Capital Management.

After falling from hedge-fund stardom in the second half of 2008, Thiel's fund continues to struggle nearly one year later with poor performance and bailing investors.
In June, the fund fell another 4.4 percent, bringing total returns this year down 6 percent, according to data obtained by The Post.

What's worse, Clarium's assets under management have plummeted to just $1.9 billion -- a far cry from the end of June 2008, when the fund had swelled to $7.8 billion from $4 billion at the start of 2008.

The results mark a significant fall from grace for Thiel, who founded Clarium in 2002….

http://www.nypost.com/seven/07082009/business/fallen_angel_in_fix_178127.htm

Nice! Citadel Rises 9.5% in June

Citadel Investment Group LLC’s main funds gained 9.5 percent in June as corporate bonds rose, beating an industry indicator that was little changed.

The Wellington and Kensington funds returned 31 percent in the first six months of the year, said a person familiar with the results who asked not to be named because the information is private. Chicago-based Citadel, founded by Ken Griffin, manages $12 billion.

Hedge funds grew an average of less than 1 percent in June, according to Hedge Fund Research Inc., which compiles indexes to track industry performance. Its Weighted Composite Index rose 9.4 percent for the first six months of the year.

“Despite the strong performance, managers still feel there is opportunity to monetize some of the dislocation that occurred over last four months of 2008,” Kenneth Heinz, president of Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research, said in an interview today.

Devon Spurgeon, a spokeswoman for Citadel, declined to comment on the funds’ performance.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=aFwLwZGC7iqg

Sky Capital faces $140m fraud charges

Six former executives and brokers of Sky Capital, a New York brokerage, have been charged with a $140m transatlantic “boiler-room” fraud that law enforcers say reeled in UK and US investors, the FT said. According to a criminal indictment the individuals, including Sky’s “bad boy” founder and chief executive Ross Mandell, allegedly persuaded investors to buy shares through private placements in two related companies, Sky Capital Holdings and Sky Capital Enterprises, which traded on the LSE’s AIM. The indictment alleges the men used the funds to enrich themselves and to pay commissions to brokers, often disguised as loans or bonuses.

http://ftalphaville.ft.com/blog/2009/07/09/61096/sky-capital-staff-face-140m-fraud-charges/

Give UBS client data to US? Swiss say No Way Jose!

The Swiss government on Wednesday waded into the legal battle between UBS and the US authorities by saying it would forbid the bank from handing over confidential client information, if a crucial court case next week required it.

Bern warned it might go as far as confiscating the data, should a US court in Miami rule the bank was obliged to transfer the client names requested. The move marks a major escalation in the war of words between Bern and Washington over US demands that UBS hand over names of up to 52,000 US taxpayers holding offshore accounts in Switzerland.

Although the Swiss government is not directly involved, Bern is represented as a “friend of the court”. In a filing revealed Wednesday, the government warned it would issue a blocking order and, if necessary, confiscate all relevant material, to prevent UBS from complying, should the Miami court side with the US authorities.

“The enforcement of the summons would require UBS to violate Swiss law,” it said.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/93572724-6bbf-11de-9320-00144feabdc0.html

Harvard hit by fraud

The Massachusetts Attorney General’s office on Tuesday identified a nonprofit at the center of an alleged $780,000 swindle as Harvard University’s Hillel House, a Jewish student organization.

William O’Brien, 58, a Framingham resident and former Hillel House accountant, will be arraigned in Middlesex Superior Court this week on charges that he allegedly stole close to $780,000 from the religious nonprofit organization.

On Monday, the Boston Business Journal reported on the case, however the AG’s office refused to identify the name of the affected organization at that time.

In October 2008, the AG’s office launched an investigation after O’Brien’s alleged activities were reported by the nonprofit organization. O’Brien had been hired by the nonprofit to handle various accounting chores. The nonprofit eventually discovered that O’Brien had allegedly been diverting payments from the corporate account of the nonprofit’s American Express account, to another account in his name…

http://www.bizjournals.com/boston/stories/2009/07/06/daily29.html

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Hedgefinger's worst idea of the week: Bankslaughter


Stick failed bankers in the Big House?

Paul Collier is worried about the skewed incentives built in to any bonus system: the upside of taking risk — a big bonus — is much bigger than the downside if the risk blows up: The inherent problem facing shareholders is that incentive payments cannot go negative. However much damage a manager inflicts, wiping out both shareholders and depositors, the consequences cannot be remotely commensurate. Collier has a solution: a new crime, called bankslaughter.

With bankslaughter, when the bank blows up – even if it is a decade later – a criminal investigation traces back to determine whether crucial decisions were reckless. If a reasonable banker faced with the information available at the time would not have taken those risks, the person responsible is dragged off the golf course and jailed.

Once bankslaughter was on the books, bonuses would be less dangerous. Managers would have to weigh the balance between risk and return and take defensible decisions. I doubt hyper-caution would be a problem: the overly cautious would not get bonuses. Surely we can rely on our bankers to exhibit the necessary degree of greed.

Is it reasonable to hold professionals criminally liable if they take reckless risks with other people’s money? I don’t see why not. Especially if they work at a leveraged and systemically-important institution. After all, people can be jailed for insider trading, which is far more of a victimless crime than bankslaughter…..

http://blogs.reuters.com/felix-salmon/2009/07/07/bankslaughter/

Top Firm Accused Of 'Paranoia & Megalomania'

Der Spiegel magazine has reported that, according to a 150-report compiled by law firm Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton, and commissioned by Deutsche Bank CEO Josef Ackermann, several of the bank's 'management board members, supervisory board members and at least one shareholder' were spied on, as the German banking giant succumbed to 'paranoia and megalomania' and tried to deal with real and imagined security leaks.

Ackermann, who was unaware of the shenanigans, has already said that he has a 'zero tolerance' for things of this nature, and one senior employee responsible for security is already thought to have been let go as a result of the affair, which is also being investigated by Germany's financial regulator BaFin.

The magazine also reported that the bank used 'female bait' to expose the 'personal weaknesses of certain shareholders'. What fun.

http://news.hereisthecity.com/

Meriwether to Shutter Hedge Fund

John Meriwether plans to shut the hedge fund he started after the collapse of Long-Term Capital Management LP in 1998, Bloomberg reports, citing a person familiar with the matter.

The decline of Meriwether's current firm, JWM Partners LLC, played out over months, with its main fund losing 44% from September 2007 to February 2009, the news agency reports. The firm, based in Greenwich, Conn., managed about $1 billion at the beginning of 2008, according to Bloomberg. Meriwether didn't return a telephone call….

http://www.thestreet.com/story/10537001/1/meriwether-to-close-hedge-fund-report.html?puc=_tscrss

Found! Goldman Program Trading Case Suspect Works For Ex-Citadel Hedge

Sergey Aleynikov, the man arrested by the FBI Friday for allegedly stealing software code he designed for Goldman Sachs, is now employed by Teza Technologies, a start-up firm created by three former Citadel executives.

The Chicago-based Teza has now suspended Aleynikov. It’s not clear if Aleynikov had planned to deliver the Goldman code to Teza. Certainly, Teza would have probably had use for the code. One of its founders Misha Malyshev, the company's former head of "high frequency trading," the computer driven strategy that Aleynikov reportedly worked on at Goldman.

Teza apparently is just in a “formative” stage and isn’t yet actively trading. The company is still moving into an office on North Michigan Avenue in the Loop, according to the Chicago Tribune.

http://www.businessinsider.com/suspect-in-goldman-program-trading-case-works-for-citigroup-exile-hedge-fund-2009-7

Pssst! Wanna get into the hedge fund business?

Now prepare yourself. You are more than often, going to start out as a hedge fund analyst. There are many paths to become a hedge fund analyst. Let me just list some of the previous professions that friends of mine have engaged in before become a hedge fund analyst:

1. Leverage finance analyst / associate / vp ... particular favorite among my distressed debt investing friends.
2. Sell side publishing or desk analyst
3. Generalist investment banking analyst / associate / vp / director...I actually have never met an MD that made the jump
4. Newspaper / Magazine journalist (two of them to be exact)
5. Medical Doctor (Michael Burry, one of my "heroes" for lack of a better term, finished med school before starting out on his own with Scion Capital...Google that one will ya!)
6. A friend came from an actuarial job and is CRUSHING it
7. Lawyer (all sorts of types)
8. Broker salesman (Dan Loeb used to work for Jefferies as a salesman)
9. Architect
10. Military (actually quite a few)
11. Many people from bank credit analyst jobs
12. One or two accountants

http://www.howtogetahedgefundjob.com/2009/07/hedge-fund-careers.html

Poor Little Rich Kids: Hedge Fund Spawn Gets Palty $2.7 M. Duplex


Back when the New York real estate market was still so barbarically lush, the children of barons lived well. The Turkish billionaire Husnu Ozyegin’s son bought a $6.2 million apartment on East 66th Street, which was smaller than the $7.25 million Soho duplex that Time Warner magnate Steve Ross’ youngest child got, which was smaller than the new $16.5 million townhouse for Pittsburgh billionaire Henry Hillman’s grandson, which was smaller than the $32 million and $33.6 million co-ops Hummer magnate Ira Rennert’s two daughters got last year.

But hedge fund deity Steven A. Cohen, who was No. 97 on this March’s Forbes billionaire list, has a child who will be living slightly less sumptuously. According to city records, a pseudonymous corporation paid $2.7 million for a 1,921-square-foot duplex loft at 99 Warren Street. The billionaire’s wife, Alexandra, signed the deed as the corporation’s vice president, but a source said the apartment is for a 20-something son.

It’s appallingly ill-mannered to complain about $2.7 million duplex lofts, and yet the cost was barely a third of what Mr. Cohen spent on The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living, the formaldehyde-suspended Damien Hirst shark. Jonathan Gasthalter, a spokesperson for Mr. Cohen, had no comme


http://www.observer.com/2009/real-estate/poor-little-rich-kids-hedge-fund-spawn-gets-27-m-duplex-paltrier-princedoms-yore

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Here's The Real Reason The Dollar Is Screwed


Hedge fund manager Mark Dow says all the stories you tell about the dollar are wrong:

“Stories” that drive the dollar abound. They are usually easy to explain and intuitively appealing. Most of them turn out to be wrong. Excessively low interest rates in 2003, the Fed “printing money” today, large current account deficits, increasing budget deficits, Chinese concerns, all of these are given ample airtime. In short, the core story we have been hearing is that the dollar is now suffering a hangover from the fiscal, monetary and external account binge it has been on in recent years.

He goes on to point out how none of these stories adds up to much:

First, dollar weakness has not been as dramatic as the story that has accompanied it. The only big decline came in 2007 (red arrow in the chart below) when the world was in massive risk seeking mode, loading up on carry, reaching for yield, constructing CDOs and CDO-squareds, and using the dollar as a funding currency. Much of this decline was unwound over the past year as the world began to deleverage. In fact, the dollar is right about at the same level as it was when Lehman went bankrupt.

Second, much of the story centers on the Fed’s expansion of base money. This is wrong on many counts. To begin with, the Fed is not printing as much as you might be led to think from listening to financial commentators on TV. Base money (here) has been flat lining since early this year (total liabilities are in the leftmost column). Moreover, the money multiplier has continued to decline, as credit is destroyed and the private sector delevers. (I think many commentators end up confusing base money with the broader money supply, but there is no need to get into this now). In addition, when the expansion of base money was truly rapid, from September to December of last year, the dollar was getting stronger. Why? Because that’s when the demand for dollars was strongest. Memories of Econ 101 and quotes from Milton Friedman have encouraged an excessive focus on the supply of money, when the real driver has been the sharp changes in demand. As funding pressures in the financial system eased, the dollar started to decline again. It is not a coincidence that the DXY (dollar index) made a high in early March when the S&P made its lows. Lastly, there is an article in this week’s Economist, pointing out how the ECB has been as expansionary as the Fed, but have been lower profile about it. But I haven’t heard any talk about the debasing of the Euro. In sum, sexy though the story might be, I don’t think the “Fed-is-printing-money-like-Zimbabwe” theme is really driving anything but the psycology of a few.

So, then, what's the real reason to fear a dollar decline? It's that governments around the world are more stable and transparent than they used to be, meaning more currencies are worth "holding in the mattress." It still is, for the most part, that no matter where you are, it makes sense to hold some US Dollars as a reliable store of value. But maybe now you'll carry some Brazilian Real or Singapore Dollars. Basically, the real issue is current and growing Dollar competition, a trend that doesn't look likely to abate.

Granted, this doesn't absolve US policymakers in the slightest, as they've given investors all kinds of reasons to look for alternatives. A failure to control the fiscal situation, as well as the politicization of debt and lending come to mind.

Further thoughts: This idea that we've become addicted to our status of having the reserve currency has been discussed a lot. What's not frequently discussed is the extent to which is this case. How much profit do we derive from the each year in the form of cheaper funding costs, and whatnot. Are we more like AIG, which was wholly dependant on its AAA status, or more like Berkshire Hathaway, which can take a ratings hit and still keep chugging?

http://www.businessinsider.com/heres-the-real-reason-the-dollar-is-screwed-2009-7

Soros: Sure, the system sucks, but…

As the historic market collapse felled many investors, a handful set themselves apart by scoring big profits. Now, several of these money managers expect more bad times ahead, including struggles for consumers, limp earnings and a possible surge of inflation. They also see pockets of opportunity.

George Soros is bullish on China, India and Brazil. John Paulson is investing in distressed debt, residential mortgages, even companies in bankruptcy proceedings. Alan Fournier, a lesser-known investor with a strong track record, likes some health-care shares, while James Melcher, also successful lately, likes corporate bonds.

"We're trying to make hay while the sun's still shining," says Mr. Fournier, who runs $2.8 billion Pennant Capital. "Maybe we can rally through the summer, perhaps for another year, but there are a lot of difficult issues that we're going to have to deal with."

Mr. Soros is just as wary. The renowned 78-year-old investor and philanthropist calls the current terrain a "trading market," saying in a recent interview that investors should take profits when shares surge, even if they look promising long term.

"I'm not bearish but I don't see how we can have the kind of growth in profits that we had during the superbubble," says Mr. Soros, who these days leaves most day-to-day trading decisions at his $24 billion fund to Keith Anderson, a former BlackRock portfolio manager. The fund scored gains of 32% for 2007, 8% in 2008 and 17% so far in 2009. "He's the player, I'm the coach," Mr. Soros says.

Still, Mr. Soros remains on the lookout for investment ideas. Lately, he is identifying them in Brazil, India and China, even though last year his exposure to emerging markets weighed on returns.

"Maybe we're making the same mistake again by thinking that China and India will decouple from the developed world," Mr. Soros says. But "China is the major beneficiary of the collapse of the financial system. For them it was an external shock," he says. "Because China is in a position to stimulate its economy, it will be a motor for the global economy," partially replacing the U.S. consumer.

As for Brazil, Mr. Soros likes state-owned Brazilian oil giant Petroleo Brasileiro SA, for example. But the firm trimmed some of its position earlier this year in the company, known as Petrobras, which has seen a run-up in the share price.


http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124692380302602835.html

Top firm hired snoopers to spy on staff


Nice going, dudes! Deutsche Bank didn't just spy on members of its management and supervisory boards. It also snooped on the personal life of a troublesome shareholder, according to a report it commissioned to investigate the matter. Now officials at Germany's largest bank fear they may be facing a lawsuit.

An investigation commissioned by Deutsche Bank has revealed that Germany's largest bank spied on several of its management board members, supervisory board members and on at least one shareholder. The 150-page report was prepared by legal firm Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton.

Deutsche Bank CEO Josef Ackermann has been presiding over an internal investigation into a snooping scandal at his bank. Leading executives at the bank hired external "specialists" to solve their security problems -- some of them real, some of them imagined -- and those specialists in some cases resorted to dubious methods.

http://www.spiegel.de/international/business/0,1518,634561,00.html

The Great Goldman Black Box Heist

A Russian immigrant living in New Jersey has been accused of trying to steal proprietary computer trading codes from Goldman Sachs.

According to our sources, Sergey Aleynikov, who worked at Goldman as an IT programmer for two years until last month, allegedly uploaded computer codes that help the firm generate tens of millions in profits each year in automated stock and commodities trading. The firm quickly uncovered the threat, moved swiftly to neutralize it, and informed the proper authorities. Although some media outlets speculate that the alleged theft will impact Goldman's second-quarter earnings, our sources advise that the early detection of this incident has meant that the damage was contained, and the matter is not regarded as a major threat to the firm's businesses. Aleynikov is said to be safely in the custody of the FBI.

News of Mr. Aleynikov's arrest was originally reported Sunday by Reuters. Reportedly he bail was set at $750,000.

The distinct possibility exists that copies of the computer codes are out there and could be used to manipulate the market. Which leads to the next question, was that what Goldman was using them for. Hmmmm....

http://news.hereisthecity.com/news/business_news/9200.cntns

Madoff Trustee Demands $1 Billion from Hedge

The trustee liquidating Bernard Madoff’s investment-advisory business asked a judge for a default ruling against Harley International Ltd., arguing that the hedge fund failed to respond to a lawsuit accusing it of taking $1.07 billion in fake profit from Madoff’s firm.

If trustee Irving Picard’s July 2 request is granted, the hedge fund, run by Cayman Island-based Euro-Dutch Management Ltd., would be ordered to return money it allegedly withdrew during the six-year period before New York-based Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC collapsed in a $65 billion fraud. Harley is being liquidated in a Cayman Islands court.

“We will go wherever we believe it would be appropriate for us to pursue a judgment,” Picard said in an e-mail when asked how the money will be recovered if his motion is granted by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Burton Lifland in New York.

Harley, a so-called feeder fund that allegedly directed more than $2 billion of investor money to Madoff since 1996, didn’t respond to the trustee’s May 12 complaint, and a one- month deadline to do so wasn’t extended, according to a June 30 affidavit filed by Elizabeth Scully, one of Picard’s lawyers with the firm Baker & Hostetler LLP in New York.

If the motion is granted, Picard may end up battling Harley’s creditors for its remaining assets as they are sold. Kinetic Partners LLP, the company that’s liquidating Harley in the Cayman Islands, held a meeting of the hedge fund’s creditors on the Caribbean island on June 16, according to its Web site.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=avy7acAjv4vc

Is The Recession Over Already?

Who knew? Holden knows it might seem preposterous people, but some economists say it’s highly possible that the recession (which began in December 2007) ended months ago.

The latest to weigh in on the debate is Christopher Rupkey, the New York-based chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ. In a note this morning, he says a V-shaped recovery — in which the economy not only recovers but rebounds strongly — is “maybe not as far-fetched as you think”.

“Consumers and businesses have postponed purchases for six months, the population is still growing about 1.2% per year, and if the unemployment rate is close to peaking, then growth may be firmer than expected in the second half of 2009,” he writes….

http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2009/07/06/is-the-recession-already-over/

Here a Model, There a Model; The Real Trouble With Quants

Models are not reality. Can we tawk? When we model the world we simplify it, because we have to: to model the real-world accurately we’d need to have all the atoms in the universe and a few more. So, the globe of the world revolving gently on my desk afore me, is a highly simplified representation of the planet most of us live on, leaving out what many of us would consider to be most of the important details – stuff like people, beer, football, lively teenage daughters and the latest episode of House. You fill in your own details.

Quants, the purveyors of quantitative investment analysis, also model the world, although in a much more complex, mathematical way. Yet despite the sophistication and elegance of the mathematics they too make simplifications because they have to, and these matter to us all because they’ve brought the world to the point of financial meltdown thrice within a few years.

What quants bring to investment analysis is a set of metaphors about the way the world actually works, rather than any kind of accurate description of what’s really happening. In fact the world is run by such approximations – models of average life expectancy, mean time to failure of aerospace components, the probability of Michael Jackson’s chimp contesting his will – and, in general, these inaccuracies haven’t mattered much to humanity en-masse. However, we’re now in a world dominated by mass computing power and intricately interconnected such that small perturbations in one area can have dramatic ramifications elsewhere…..

http://www.psyfitec.com/2009/07/quibbles-with-quants.html

Say Hello to Hedge-funds 2.0

Yes, Virginia, there really are signs of life returning to the hedge-fund industry. Assets under management are rising. New funds are being launched. Some are even making money.

Reports of hedge funds' demise are exaggerated even if it isn't quite time to raise prices in Mayfair's fancy restaurants, or get into the interior-decoration business in the Hamptons. The industry is going to stick around as an important part of the financial universe.

It would be crazy to imagine that things will go back to the way they were before the markets collapsed in 2008.

Hedge-Fund Industry 2.0 - as one would say in computer-speak - will be very different from Hedge-Fund Industry 1.0. It will be less mysterious; investors will take more control; it will move into the space vacated by investment banks; and there will be fewer, but much larger, funds. Right now, there is plenty of evidence that investors are willing to put money into the funds again. About 150 new ones were started from January to March this year, according to statistics compiled by Hedge Fund Research Inc. Some of them are pretty big. Roc Capital Management, started by Arvind Raghunathan, raised $US1 billion.

Assets are on the rise as well. Barclays predicted in a recent report that assets managed by hedge funds would increase more than 8 per cent this year, as much of the wealth kept in cash during the collapse of 2008 moved back into markets.

http://business.theage.com.au/business/hedgefund-industry-20-taking-shape-20090707-dbdc.html

FSA ratchets up fines for City evildoers

Companies guilty of the biggest financial offences could be fined as much as £50 million after the Financial Services Authority (FSA) today announced a step change in the size of penalties it wants to mete out.

The City regulator said some fines could treble in size as it seeks to address concerns that penalties thus