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May 13, 2008 at 23:48:24

Headlined on 5/13/08:
DID BEAR STEARNS FALL OR WAS IT PUSHED? HOW INSIDER TRADING SAVED JPMORGAN AND LOOTED TAXPAYERS

by Ellen Brown     Page 2 of 2 page(s)

www.opednews.com

 

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"The fact that the requests were made on March 10 or earlier that those new series be opened and those requests were accommodated together with the subsequent massive open positions in those newly opened series is conclusive proof that there were some who knew about the collapse in advance . . . . This was no case of a sudden development on the 13 or 14th, where things changed dramatically making it such that they needed a bail-out immediately. The collapse was anticipated and prepared for. . . .

"Apparently it is claimed that some people have the ability to start false rumors about Bear Stearns' and other banks' liquidity, which then starts a 'run on the bank.' These rumor mongers allegedly were able to influence companies like Goldman Sachs to terminate doing business with Bear Stearns, notwithstanding that Goldman et al. believed that Bear Stearns balance sheet was in good shape. . . . The idea that rumors caused a 'run on the bank' at Bear Stearns is 100% ridiculous. Perhaps that's the reason why every witness was so guarded and hesitant and looked so mighty strained in answering questions . . . .

"To prove the case of illegal insider trading, all the Feds have to do is ask a few questions of the persons who bought puts on Bear Stearns or shorted stock during the week before March 17, 2008 and before. All the records are easily available. If they bought puts or shorted stock, just ask them why."5

Suspicions Mount

Other commentators point to other issues that might be probed by investigators. Chris Cook, a British consultant and the former Compliance Director for the International Petroleum Exchange, wrote in an April 24 blog:

"As a former regulator myself, I would be crawling all over these trades. . . . One question that occurs to me is who actually sold these Put Options? And why aren't they creating merry hell about the losses? Where is Spitzer when we need him?"6

In an April 23 article in LeMetropoleCafe.com, Rob Kirby agreed with Olagues that it was not Bear Stearns but JPMorgan that was bankrupt and needed to be "recapitalized" with massive loans from the Federal Reserve. Kirby pointed to the huge losses from derivatives (bets on the future price of assets) carried on JPMorgan's books:

". . . J.P. Morgan's derivatives book is 2-3 times bigger than Citibank's – and it was derivatives that caused losses of more than 30 billion at Citibank . . . . So, it only made common sense that J.P. Morgan had to be a little more than 'knee deep' in the same stuff that Citibank was – but how do you tell the market that a bank – any bank – needs to be recapitalized to the tune of 50 - 80 billion?"7

Kirby wrote in an April 30 article:

"According to the NYSE there are only 240 million shares of Bear outstanding . . . [Yet] 188 million traded on Mar. 14 alone? Doesn't this strike you as being odd? . . . What percentage of the firm was owned by insiders that categorically did not sell their shares? . . . Bear Stearns employees held 30 % of the company's stock . . . 30 % of 240 million is 72 million. If you subtract 72 from 240 you end up with approximately 170 million. Don't you think it's a stretch to believe that 186+ million real shares traded on Friday Mar. 14? Or do you believe that rank-and-file Bear employees, worried about their jobs, were pitching their stocks on the Friday before the company collapsed knowing their company was toast? But that would be insider trading – wouldn't it? No bloody wonder the SEC does not want to probe J.P. Morgan's 'rescue' of Bear Stearns . . ."8

If real shares weren't trading, someone must have been engaging in "naked" short selling – selling stock short without first borrowing the shares or ensuring that the shares could be borrowed. Short selling, a technique used by investors to try to profit from the falling price of a stock, involves borrowing a stock from a broker and selling it, with the understanding that the stock must later be bought back and returned to the broker. Naked short selling is normally illegal; but in the interest of "liquid markets," a truck-sized loophole exists for "market makers" (those people who match buyers with sellers, set the price, and follow through with the trade). Even market makers, however, are supposed to cover within three days by actually coming up with the stock; and where would they have gotten enough Bear Stearns stock to cover 75% of the company's outstanding shares? In any case, naked short selling is illegal if the intent is to drive down a stock's share price; and that was certainly the result here.9

On May 10, 2008, in weekly market commentary on FinancialSense.com, Jim Puplava observed that naked short selling has become so pervasive that the number of shares sold "short" far exceeds the shares actually issued by the underlying companies. Yet regulators are turning a blind eye, perhaps because the situation has now gotten so far out of hand that it can't be corrected without major stock upheaval. He noted that naked short selling is basically the counterfeiting of stock, and that it has reached epidemic proportions since the "uptick" rule was revoked last summer to help the floundering hedge funds. The uptick rule allowed short selling only if the stock price were going up, preventing a cascade of short sales that would take the stock price much lower. But that brake on manipulation has been eliminated by the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC), leaving the market in unregulated chaos.

Eliot Spitzer has also been eliminated from the scene, and it may be for similar reasons. Greg Palast suggested in a March 14 article that the "sin" of the former New York governor may have been something more serious than prostitution. Spitzer made the mistake of getting in the way of a $200 billion windfall from the Federal Reserve to the banks, guaranteeing the mortgage-backed junk bonds of the same banking predators responsible for the subprime debacle. While the Federal Reserve was trying to bail the banks out, Spitzer was trying to regulate them, bringing suit on behalf of consumers.10 But he was swiftly exposed and deposed; and the Treasury has now broached a new plan that would prevent such disruptions in the future. Like the Panic of 1907 that justified a "bankers' bank" to prevent future runs, the collapse of Bear Stearns has been used to justify a proposal giving vast new powers to the Federal Reserve to promote "financial market stability." The plan was unveiled by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, former head of Goldman Sachs, two weeks after Bear Stearns fell. It would "consolidate" the state regulators (who work for the fifty states) and the SEC (which works for the U.S. government) under the Federal Reserve (which works for the banks). Paulson conceded that the result would not be to increase regulation but to actually take away authority from state regulators and the SEC. All regulation would be subsumed under the Federal Reserve, the bank-owned entity set up by J. Pierpont Morgan in 1913 specifically to preserve the banks' own interests.

On April 29, a former top Federal Reserve official told The Wall Street Journal that by offering $30 billion in financing to JPMorgan for Bear's assets, the Fed had "eliminated forever the possibility [that it] could serve as an honest broker." Vincent Reinhart, formerly the Fed's director of monetary affairs and the secretary of its policy-making panel, said the Fed's bailout of Bear Stearns would come to be viewed as the "worst policy mistake in a generation." He noted that there were other viable options, such as looking for other suitors or removing some assets from Bear's portfolio, which had not been pursued by the Federal Reserve.11

Jim Puplava maintains that naked short selling has now become so pervasive that if the hedge funds were pressed to come in and cover their naked short positions, "they would actually trigger another financial crisis." The Fed and the SEC may be looking the other way on this widespread stock counterfeiting scheme because "if they did unravel it, everything really would unravel." Evidently "promoting market stability" means that whistle-blowers and the SEC must be silenced so that a grossly illegal situation can continue, since the crime is so pervasive that to expose it and prosecute the criminals would unravel the whole financial system. As Nathan Rothschild observed in 1838, when the issuance and control of a nation's money are in private hands, the laws and the people who make them become irrelevant.

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Ellen Brown, J.D., developed her research skills as an attorney practicing civil litigation in Los Angeles. In Web of Debt, her latest book, she turns those skills to an analysis of the Federal Reserve and "the money trust." She shows how this private cartel has usurped the power to create money from the people themselves and how we the people can get it back. Her eleven books include the bestselling "Nature's Pharmacy," co-authored with Dr. Lynne Walker, and "Forbidden Medicine." Her websites are webofdebt.com and ellenbrown.com.

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9 comments


Wolfie

THANK YOU, ELLEN.

The robbery was in the light of day and the gun was held by Paulson. This

is very interesting, but. I saw a news announcer mention the demise of

another young white woman. I guess that means that this boring economic

stuff will just have to be kept off the air.

 

Wolfie wants to hide his dog bones in the back yard, and take them out of

the bank vaults.

by Wolfie (8 articles, 0 quicklinks, 29 diaries, 1176 comments) on Wednesday, May 14, 2008 at 1:19:55 AM
 


I live in the heart of America, and am haunted by the saying:
"Evil succeeds because good men do nothing." by Edmund Burke.

Albert Einstein had another way of saying it:
"The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing."

So I do what I can.

Edward Ulysses CateI live in the heart of America, and am haunted by the saying:
"Evil succeeds because good men do nothing." by Edmund Burke.

Albert Einstein had another way of saying it:
"The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing."

So I do what I can.

Well Said, Ellen!

This is exactly the reason I keep commenting about lyin', stealin' and killin'. First they lie, so they can steal. Killin' refers to the slow death caused by the stolen funds. Those who lost have less to buy food, clothing, shelter.

This is no different than putting a drop of poison in someone's coffee every day until they succumb. That is still murder, even if it takes a long period of time. This is why I don't understand why more folks aren't outraged about what is being done to them and their children. They worry so much about sexual predators and give them front page stories, and ignore the much more dangerous financial predators and keep silent about it.

by Edward Ulysses Cate (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 217 comments) on Wednesday, May 14, 2008 at 6:58:55 AM
 


Ellen Brown, J.D., developed her research skills as an attorney practicing civil litigation in Los Angeles. In Web of Debt, her latest book, she turns those skills to an analysis of the Federal Reserve and "the money trust." She shows how this private cartel has usurped the power to create money from the people themselves and how we the people can get it back. Her eleven books include the bestselling "Nature's Pharmacy," co-authored with Dr. Lynne Walker, and "Forbidden Medicine." Her websit...

to see more of bio, click on member name

Ellen BrownEllen Brown, J.D., developed her research skills as an attorney practicing civil litigation in Los Angeles. In Web of Debt, her latest book, she turns those skills to an analysis of the Federal Reserve and "the money trust." She shows how this private cartel has usurped the power to create money from the people themselves and how we the people can get it back. Her eleven books include the bestselling "Nature's Pharmacy," co-authored with Dr. Lynne Walker, and "Forbidden Medicine." Her websit...

to see more of bio, click on member name

controlled media and alternative news

Thanks, that's all I do really is say it well.  I just came across that shocking bit of data and was afraid it would get lost because it wouldn't make front page conventional news, and most people wouldn't understand it and would skip over it.  So I did my best to translate it into housewives' English and got it posted.  The Internet is an amazing resource!  It may save us yet.  Ellen

by Ellen Brown (20 articles, 0 quicklinks, 1 diaries, 35 comments) on Wednesday, May 14, 2008 at 9:06:18 AM
 


Ever since I learned to speak binary on a DIGIAC 3080 training computer, I've been involved with tech in one way or another, but there was always another part of me off exploring ideas and writing about them. Halfway to a BS in Space Technology at Florida Institute of Technology during the Apollo years, I ditched out and walked into a data center job with Franklin National Bank a few years before it made history. Software contract houses, like the one I signed up with after the layoff, not only ...

to see more of bio, click on member name

P. Orin ZackEver since I learned to speak binary on a DIGIAC 3080 training computer, I've been involved with tech in one way or another, but there was always another part of me off exploring ideas and writing about them. Halfway to a BS in Space Technology at Florida Institute of Technology during the Apollo years, I ditched out and walked into a data center job with Franklin National Bank a few years before it made history. Software contract houses, like the one I signed up with after the layoff, not only ...

to see more of bio, click on member name

Finish opening that can of worms

A great deal of money was made on short sales of airline stock based on the alleged use of hijacked airliners on 9/11/01. To date, the details of those trades has not been made public. If exposing the Bear Stearns trades have the potential to undermine the banking industry, following the money that changed hands after that event would bring down the entire 'military-industrial-congressional complex' which is how Ike intended to say it before he left office.

by P. Orin Zack (1 articles, 0 quicklinks, 1 diaries, 9 comments) on Wednesday, May 14, 2008 at 12:06:48 PM
 


August Adams is a CPA and holds a Masters Degree in Psychology. He is an activist striving to create a fair and just world for all.
August AdamsAugust Adams is a CPA and holds a Masters Degree in Psychology. He is an activist striving to create a fair and just world for all.

Yet another "Crime Worse then Enron"

Amazing how the people continue to get duped.  

Thanks for the information.  Now let's demand action by our Congressional co-conspirators.... 

by August Adams (10 articles, 0 quicklinks, 1 diaries, 442 comments) on Wednesday, May 14, 2008 at 1:20:22 PM
 


Songwriter/Producer, Legal Researcher with over 40,000+ hours in the branches of Banking & Finance, Commercial Law, Constitutional law, Civil Law, and Administrative Law.
Angelo TrotterSongwriter/Producer, Legal Researcher with over 40,000+ hours in the branches of Banking & Finance, Commercial Law, Constitutional law, Civil Law, and Administrative Law.

Just A Bit Of History Repeating, Repeating, Repeating

Sort of reminds me of the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 2005 and the subsequent fallout of the Housing Market failures happening now. Now the "banks" own MILLIONS of house that they obtained for basically free. Print the money to pay for the overhead, then manipulate the money supply so that it becomes difficult for anyone to perform their "obligations" (sic), then foreclose on substance.

What a great bunch. Must be nice.

by Angelo Trotter (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 6 comments) on Wednesday, May 14, 2008 at 1:39:41 PM
 


CSnet was born 1947 to a loving family in Haverford Pennsylvania, graduated from the same school as "War is a Racket" General Smedley Butler and has served variously as a railway brakeman and fireman, songwriter, audio technician, audio service company owner, sound reinforcement company owner, recording engineer, rock concert producer, database utility shareware author, software designer, consultant, loving husband, and servant of cats, who has lived in Petaluma California since 1987.

to see more of bio, click on member name

csnetCSnet was born 1947 to a loving family in Haverford Pennsylvania, graduated from the same school as "War is a Racket" General Smedley Butler and has served variously as a railway brakeman and fireman, songwriter, audio technician, audio service company owner, sound reinforcement company owner, recording engineer, rock concert producer, database utility shareware author, software designer, consultant, loving husband, and servant of cats, who has lived in Petaluma California since 1987.

to see more of bio, click on member name

Thanks Ellen, but that's covered by JPM's disclosure...

DISCLOSURE: JPM reserves the right to seize all public and private assets anywhere around the globe without prior notice. By breathing, you acknowledge that you have read and understood that JPM, at its sole discretion, shall determine the nature and size of the assets to be seized and the price that JPM shall be paid for seizing these assets. As a member in good standing of the on and offshore criminal financial interests who overthrew the U.S. Government and installed a puppet regime, JPM is not liable for any of its actions that result in the destruction of property and the death of millions around the globe. JPM appreciates your continued patronage and wishes you a wonderful day.

by csnet (0 articles, 2 quicklinks, 2 diaries, 77 comments) on Wednesday, May 14, 2008 at 2:32:47 PM
 


I'm a Licensed counselor working in OR, but I'm also aligned with Riane Eisler/Real Wealth of Nations...creating a caring economics.
Ann KramerI'm a Licensed counselor working in OR, but I'm also aligned with Riane Eisler/Real Wealth of Nations...creating a caring economics.

All victims to the same story...

Ellen,

Thanks for another wonderful exposure of the mess known as our banking systems....it seems amazing on one level--but on another, its  not because it just reflects the outcome of the "dominator value system" that is the story we're all playing out.

For the same reason that the 'few' who are obsessed with money (and controlling all of it) do what they do....and the passive group sits by and watches it happen...its all the same story.  We've all been trained to be part of an overlying value system known as the "dominator story"...ie, you are either the dominator (Morgan) or the dominated (most people).  This is so pervasive that when the little guy is being squashed by the few at the top, they think this is normal. Just as we once had the "Divine right of Kings" --who were allowed to kill people who didn't follow their rules..we now have the Divine right of Capital--anything 'money' (and those who control it) want to do is right. 

 People don't even see this..but we are trying to change this. Your work through your great book, Web of Debt (www.webofdebt.com) and Riane Eisler's book, The Real Wealth of Nations...creating a caring economics' does this  www.realwealtheconomy.com  www.partnershipway.org

 Its important that we all understand this pervasive story of 'domination', otherwise, this will just keep happening again and again.  If you don't change the premise on which these actions spill forth, any changes we try to make will be bandaids at best.

So, let's all keep exposing the story--and then the great news--stories can be changed. We can change our value systems--and if we do, the belief that our lives are dependent on green pieces of paper or chunks of gold can end as well.  Its time for a new story--that our lives and our survival are not dependent on little green pieces of paper--our lives and our survival are about caring for ourselves, our fellow humans and the planet. Imagine a world where every day you wake up to enhance life--and ensure that all others have this chance to.  Caring is the new story.

by Ann Kramer (8 articles, 0 quicklinks, 1 diaries, 15 comments) on Wednesday, May 14, 2008 at 6:47:14 PM
 

 

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