Saturday, November 10, 2007

Following the money in the Subprime loan scandal.





(h/t Crooks and Liars)


Bloomberg News via International Herald Tribune (h/t to the Europe-touring Mike)


Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson says that the United States is examining the subprime mortgage crisis to ensure that “yesterday’s excesses” are not repeated. He could be talking about himself and his former firm, Goldman Sachs.


Paulson does not mention that Goldman still has on the market an estimated $13 billion of almost $37 billion in bonds backed by subprime loans or second mortgages that it created while he was its chief executive. Those bonds have an average delinquency rate of almost 22 percent, higher than the average of other subprime bonds from the period, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.


Goldman, the most profitable investment bank, was one of 14 primary dealers of U.S. Treasury notes that contributed to a three-year binge as $1 trillion worth of subprime mortgages were packaged and sold to investors. The value of its remaining subprime bonds trails the $33 billion at Lehman Brothers, out of $106.8 billion created during the time Paulson was at Goldman, and $28.8 billion at Morgan Stanley, out of $82.5 billion.


Read more….

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

http://www.mindbox.com/NewsEvents/PressReleases/01DEC2003.pdf

Anonymous said...

A group of 40 of the world's largest banks lent Countrywide Financial Corp. ... $11.5 billion this week under credit agreements .. committed to as far back as 2006 .. may help relieve credit market squeeze on the nation's largest provider of home mortgages. But .. tough time for banks involved, [including Rockefeller's J.P. Morgan Chase and John Deutch's Citigroup] .. banks couldn't back out of the loans, as long as Countrywide complied with all conditions of agreements [by using MindBox rules manipulated by Desmarais' agents at Macdonald Dettwiler and Associates].. Banks .. made loans to mortgage originators .. hold mortgage-related securities on their balance sheet .. lent money to hedge funds that trade mortgage securities .. also committed to finance big leveraged buyouts .. a few banks left holding so-called hung loans."
http://www.marketwatch.com/tools/quotes/profile.asp?symb=JPM

Anonymous said...

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20071109/wl_canada_nm/canada_mulroney_col_2
http://acepilots.com/unscam/archives/001890.html

Anonymous said...

http://youtube.com/watch?v=LYdgXCo4aYE