Archive for mutual fund scandals

Keystone Kops: Watchdog Bites Watchdog

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , on October 31, 2011 by economicwarrior

As the financial-self regulator Finra tries to expand its regulatory empire, the Securities & Exchange Commission last week slapped Finra with a settlement for its role in doctoring documents and violating securities laws. Watchdog bites watchdog.

Current SEC chairman Mary Shapiro was the chief executive of Finra in 2008 when the violatioin allegedly occurred. The 2008 incident was the third time, which included its predecessor the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), where the regulator provided altered or misleading documents to the SEC, who Finra is supposed to answer to.

The Keystone Kops nature of financial regulation continues. The SEC has allegedly mishandled roughly 19 referrals it received from Finra of suspicious trading activities of SAC Capital Advisors LP, one of the country’s largest unregulated hedge funds run by billionaire Steve Cohen.

The dysfunctional nature of securities oversight came into Technicolor last week when U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff questioned the $285 million settlement Citigroup made with the SEC over fraud charges for its failed mortgage bond deal. Rakoff was questioning why Citigroup was being let off the hook so lightly, when Goldman Sachs paid a $535 million fine for a similar exploding  mortgage bond deal known as Abacus in 2007. Rakoff has been a frequent critic of Wall Street violations, perhaps best known for questioning the purchase of Merrill Lynch by Bank of America for a similar $33 million, a slap on the wrist in 2009 when Merrill Lynch executives helped themselves to $3.6 billion in bonuses after $27 billion in losses–all backed by the taxpayer. In 2010, Rakoff approved a $150 million settlement, calling it “half-baked justice at best.”

Even after all of these bailouts, the cozy relationships between Wall Street and their regulators endure, and no one goes to jail. As the usual case, the companies avoid going to trial by neither admitting nor denying any wrongdoing.  Your eyes will open up even more inThe Pirates of Manhattan II: Highway to Serfdom. www.thepiratesofmanhattan.com

Absolute Returns Are An Absolute Joke

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , on October 28, 2011 by economicwarrior

“The mutual fund industry offers investors a remarkably wide range of strategies to suit their investment needs. The absolute-return strategy is one of many offered for investors to choose from.  As with all funds, the strategy’s approach and risks described in detail in fund disclosures.”  Rachel McTague, InvestmentNews, October 24, 2011

The greater fool theory is alive and well on Wall Street. The asset management industrial complex–who I call The Pirates of Manhattan, in its continual obsession to sell consumers financial products of questionable value have led the consumer into another maze of blatant misrepresentation.

Absolute, according to the American Heritage Dictionary. means 1. perfect in quality or nature; complete 2. Not mixed; pure: absolute alcohol.

The asset management industrial complex are master wordsmiths, spin doctors extraordinare. Calling mutual funds an absolute return is a scam, there is no absolute returns in the market, yet The Pirates of Manhattan continue to play God. Absolute return funds, which lifted the branding name from the hedge fund industry, maintains that they can achieve a positive return no matter the market will do. Of course everyone would want to achieve positive returns, we all want to be rich, good looking and have are children become Rhodes scholars. This of course is a blatant lie, promoting the greater fool theory is alive and well on Wall Street for the masses.

According to Morningstar, the average absolute-return fund it tracked up to the end of September 30, 2011, was a drop of -4.4%, not bad as the -10% drop in the S&P 500, but certainly not positive. And although this market reaches new zeniths on the chimera of a recovery of the European debt crisis, no doubt more pain is in store as the problems of the welfare-state and a dysfunctional banking system remain alive, a sickness so strong it is doing push ups in the parking lot.

Of course, the holy water for Wall Street is greater disclosure of the risks in prospectuses which no one reads. But this absolute scam of absolute return mutual funds is nothing in comparison to the complete transfer of wealth with target-date mutual funds, which make collateralized debt obligations and derivatives a game of marbles. The Pirates of Manhattan II: Highway to Serfdom is coming soon. www.thepiratesofmanhattan.com

Check out the article in InvestmentNews www.investmentnews.com, ‘Absolute return’ is absolute nonsense’ by Jeff Benjamin

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