2012年3月31日星期六

Big banks: Too big to behave? - Fortune Management

Big banks: Too big to behave? - Fortune Management


Given the level of repeat offenses at some of the largest financial firms, it's clear that the SEC needs to change its approach.

By Eleanor Bloxham, CEO of The Value Alliance and Corporate Governance Alliance
SEC headquarters
SEC headquarters in Washington, D.C.
FORTUNE – Disclosure failuresrelated to mortgage offerings are again in the sights of the SEC, this time related to Goldman Sachs (GS) and Wells Fargo (WFC). And a recent court order describes potentialclient conflicts of interestinvolving advice provided by Morgan Stanley (MS) and Goldman Sachs (with the apparent knowledge and participation of CEO Lloyd Blankfein) related to the Kinder Morgan-El Paso acquisition. Are these and other large financial firms just too big to behave?
"These firms are enormous … [and] as we look at different areas of their business and we focus on different topics, we find problems over and over again," SEC Chair Mary Schapiro explained in late February at a media breakfast (which was filmed by FORA.tv). "People have short memories [and] we have to bring cases continuously … so people don't forget."
Schapiro appeared before Congress on Tuesday to defend the SEC's proposed 2013 budget. Hopefully, the proposed budget is sufficient, and Congress will meet the request and then hold the SEC accountable for "expanding and focusing the investigative function" and "strengthening the litigation function," as its budget proposal states.
Right now, however, whack-a-mole seems to be the name of the SEC's game as it attempts to police the large banks, one incident at a time. But this approach doesn't address the root causes of these incidents, so repeat offenses spring up in new locations. Are there ways to whip these problem companies into shape?
SEC-Citi Settlement
A full hearing into a proposed settlement between the SEC and Citigroup (C) offers an opportunity to explore possibilities. But it's unclear if that hearing will even take place. After federal judge Jed Rakoff ruled that the case should go to trial, the SEC promptlyappealed the decision late last year.
Court records show that sides are now forming in the appeals case. The unlikely bedfellows of the Business Roundtable, the SEC, and Citigroup (all of whom support the negotiated settlement) are on one side.
The other side includes William Michael Cunningham, owner of investment firm Creative Investment Research, who has argued "in support of the public interest" that the proposed settlement should be examined, rather than approved, and Better Markets, an organization "that promotes the public interest in the financial markets," which has also requested to weigh in against proposed settlement.
In court documents, the Business Roundtable says that if the settlement were to go to trial, it could put "courts in the position of micromanaging agencies' enforcement decisions." But Cunningham questions the SEC's "concern for expedience over justice … especially if a fairer settlement would help prevent recidivism, and … protect investors."
In addressing Rakoff and its critics, the SEC has used two major talking points, which Schapiro repeated on Tuesday. Settlements are less costly than litigation. If the SEC can secure a settlement similar to what they would get through a trial, without the uncertainty of litigation and the delay of investigation, it's a good deal for everyone, Schapiro said. Yet financial institutions won't settle with the SEC if they have to admit wrongdoing, she argued.
But the SEC has not addressed other solutions that might cost the agency even less in the long term.
Judgments against repeat offenders
There is one practical solution (which I pointed out two years ago in a similar caseinvolving Goldman Sachs). The SEC could start taking Citi and other financial institutions to court when they violate injunctions they have agreed to in previous settlements. But the SEC doesn't track such violations and spokesperson John Nester says nothing worthwhile would happen if the regulator brought the cases involving large firms back to court anyway. If a large firm commits the same wrong act in its different operations (like the Boston and then the Philadelphia office), a judge would treat them as two separate incidents because two different people were involved, Nester says. Because of the way incidents are viewed by judges, showing an ongoing violation at these large institutions isn't possible, he says.
But at a November 9 hearing in the Citi case, Judge Rakoff argued that bringing these violations before the court is an efficient and cost effective way to handle repeat offenses, and could result in criminal prosecutions. Yet "in the last ten years [the SEC hasn't] brought any contempt proceedings against any large institutions, even though they have repeatedly violated previous injunctions," Rakoff said. If a federal judge is saying it's a viable option to hold the largest firms accountable, why not determine who is right by at least giving it a try?
Giving settlements some fighting words
While the SEC has defended its settlements based on the dollars and cents it's bringing in, the agency has not responded to the idea of coming up with settlement terms that have broader and stronger requirements. Taking this route could also help put an end to the SEC's whack-a-mole-like approach. At the November 9 hearing, Rakoff questioned whether the proposed Citi settlement terms were merely "window dressing."
Another angle for the agency to pursue is getting some admissions in settlements. Former SEC Chair Arthur Levitt told Bloomberg TV in December that while companies in the future may not admit to everything, "some of these companies are going to admit some things." But to make that happen, of course, the SEC must believe that it is possible.
Taking it to the judge
On Tuesday, Schapiro told Congress that the SEC is going to court more than it had been. This is a welcome move because while it's more costly for the SEC to litigate(rather than settle) individual cases, using the courtroom to hold companies and individuals at the highest levels accountable could improve memory retention among problematic firms, which just might be less costly over the long term.
An independently funded SEC?
The SEC says its budget is hampering its ability to act more boldly. Not only is its technology way out of date, last spring the regulator had to stop hiring expert witnesses for court cases and skimp on airfare to stay within its budget, Nester says. One way to address the funding issue would be to allow the SEC to determine its own funding requirements along the lines of the FDIC, a suggestion University of Rochester President Joel Seligman made in a New York Times op-ed two years ago.
Currently, Congress determines the SEC's budget -- and then fees are set on securities transactions to cover those costs (so taxpayers never pick up the tab). But even with an increase, beginning in April, Wall Street firms (who continue to tax the regulator's resources) will pay a significantly lower rate than they had to pay in 2000, Nester says. The irony is that by not fully funding the SEC, Congress is rewarding the very firms that continue to operate with abandon. (Corporate registration fee rates,which are also significantly lower than in 2000, don't currently even fund SEC activities but instead go to the Treasury, Nester says.)
If the SEC were allowed to determine its own funding requirements, the fee structure could be designed to impose larger corporate registration fees on problematic firms that pose a greater risk to the securities markets, ensuring that firms that demand additional oversight and litigation pay for the extra burden they create. Ongoing, predictable funding at the level the SEC says it needs would also eliminate the regulator's excuse that it lacks sufficient funds to do its job well.
If the will does not exist to implement these remedies, it is time to reconsider a break-up of the enormous repeat offenders, as U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio proposed in 2010. It means that at least some of the large banks are not only too big to behave, they are also simply too big to be overseen.
Eleanor Bloxham is CEO of The Value Alliance and Corporate Governance Alliance(http://thevaluealliance.com

Lehman, Taylor Bean, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley in Court News - Businessweek

Lehman, Taylor Bean, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley in Court News - Businessweek


U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner agreed to answer questions in writing in Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), which claims the bank contributed to Lehman’s collapse in 2008.
Geithner’s agreement, noted in a March 16 filing by the U.S. in federal court in Washington, forestalls a judge’s ruling on whether he could be compelled to testify in the case. U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton yesterday accepted the arrangement and ordered both sides to update him by April 3.
“If the parties should reach an impasse or plaintiff is otherwise dissatisfied with the written responses, the parties shall so notify the court,” Assistant U.S. Attorney John Interrante said in the filing.
Lehman sued Geithner in February, alleging that the Treasury Department “has for many months delayed and ultimately refused” to allow testimony by the secretary. His testimony is key to Lehman’s contention that JPMorgan siphoned off $8.6 billion during the 2008 credit crisis, according to a court filing in Washington.
Geithner, at the time president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, discussed the collateral JPMorgan was demanding for its loans with Richard Fuld and Jamie Dimon, Lehman’s and JPMorgan’s chief executive officers, in the week before Lehman’s bankruptcy, according to the filing. He also met with Dimon and Henry Paulson, then Treasury Secretary, to discuss “concerns” that Dimon was using the crisis to strengthen his bank at Lehman’s expense, they said.
Paulson, according to the March 16 filing, has also agreed to answer questions in writing.
Lehman claims in court papers to have interviewed more than 200 witnesses.
JPMorgan, which lent $70 billion to Lehman’s brokerage around the time of the 2008 bankruptcy, sued Lehman back after the $8.6 billion suit, alleging Lehman defrauded its lender into making the loan. JPMorgan has asked a judge to dismiss Lehman’s suit.
Lehman filed the biggest bankruptcy in U.S. history in 2008, listing $613 billion in debt.
The testimony case is Official Committee on Unsecured Creditors of Lehman Brothers Holdings In., 12-00098, U.S. District Court, District of Columbia (Washington). The main case is In reLehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (LEHMQ), 08-13555, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan). The lawsuit is Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. v. JPMorgan Chase Bank NA, 10-03266, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan).

Verdicts/Settlements

Ex-Taylor Bean Finance Chief Admits Role in $3 Billion Fraud

Taylor, Bean & Whitaker Mortgage Corp.’s former finance chief admitted to helping his boss, Lee Farkas, commit what prosecutors say was one of the largest bank frauds in U.S. history.
Delton de Armas, 41, pleaded guilty March 20 in federal court in Alexandria, Virginia, to one count of conspiracy to commit bank and wire fraud and one count of false statements in a scheme that contributed to the failures of Montgomery, Alabama-based Colonial Bank and its parent, Colonial BancGroup, once among the nation’s 25 biggest depository banks.
He faces as many as 10 years in prison when he’s sentenced by U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema on June 15.
“As CFO, Mr. de Armas could have put a stop to the fraud the moment he discovered it,” U.S. Attorney Neil MacBride said in an e-mailed statement. “Instead, the hole in Ocala Funding grew to $1.5 billion on his watch, and as it grew, so did his lies to investors and the government.”
From 2005 through August 2009, de Armas helped Farkas and other conspirators misappropriate more than $1.5 billion from Ocala Funding LLC, a financing vehicle used and controlled by Taylor Bean, according to a statement of facts filed by prosecutors and signed by de Armas. De Armas issued false financial reports that masked shortfalls at Ocala Funding in order to keep auditors at bay and investors on board, the document states.
“I regret I didn’t speak up more,” de Armas, of Carrollton, Texas, told Brinkema yesterday after being asked about his role in covering up Taylor Bean and Ocala Funding’s financial problems.
Farkas, the ex-chairman of Taylor Bean, is serving a 30- year sentence after being convicted in April of 14 counts of conspiracy and bank, wire and securities fraud in what prosecutors said was a $3 billion scheme involving fake mortgage assets.
The case is U.S. v. Armas, 12-00096, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Virginia (Alexandria).
For more, click here.

JPMorgan Chase Settles AFTRA Pension Suit for $150 Million

JPMorgan Chase & Co. will pay $150 million to settle a lawsuit claiming losses from the bank’s securities lending program, according to court papers.
The suit was filed by three union pension funds, which represented a class of all investors in a group of structured debt securities. The settlement was announced last month. The parties disclosed the terms of the agreement in a filing in Manhattan federal court March 16.
The funds claim they lost money that New York-based JPMorgan invested for them in medium-term notes issued by Sigma Finance Corp., a structured investment vehicle that collapsed in 2008.

2012年3月29日星期四

Another case of bank frauds cover up by HK government with Department of Justice as police never searched the banks as I requested three years ago in Minibonds case

雷曼苦主大聯盟 - 雷曼苦主大聯盟, Alliance of Lehman Brothers Victims - 媒體報導


Thousands of Lehman cases dumped

The police have stopped investigations into all but five of the thousands of complaints over sales of Lehman Brothers financial products.
The Commercial Crime Bureau did not have sufficient evidence to pursue prosecution in most of the complaints, which alleged misleading sales by the now-defunct US investment bank, a spokesman said.
It decided to close the files on those cases after seeking legal advice from the Department of Justice and reviewing the evidence, he said.
As it is considered that there is no reasonable prospect of a conviction against anyone, no criminal prosecution will be instituted, he said.
Hong Kong investors lost billions of US dollars on minibonds guaranteed by Lehman Brothers when it went belly up in September 2008. Minibonds are not corporatebonds, but consist of high-risk, credit-linked derivatives marketed as a proxy investment in well-known companies.
The police had received about 3,100 complaints, mostly from investors claiming they had been duped into buying the bonds.
Among the reports were 39 allegations of forgery, in which 33 cases did not have enough evidence to warrant prosecution, police said. The complainants had been notified of the decision. Officers are still working on five cases.
So far, only one case has ended in conviction. A former financial services manager at Dah Sing Bank was found guilty of faking a customer's signature in sales documents for Lehman minibonds and sentenced to 200 hours of community service in November 2010.
Two employees of Bank of China (Hong Kong) were acquitted last year after being charged with misleading people into buying the financial products in April 2010. A third employee was also arrested but the charge against her was dropped.
Eddie Chan Ho-wai, convenor of the Alliance for Lehman Brothers Victims, said the police's decision was definitely unreasonable and accused the force of carelessness in collecting evidence.
They required the banks to hand in evidence by themselves, so the banks might have destroyed any evidence, he said.A

2012年3月28日星期三

Hong Kong Monetary Authority - Progress of the HKMA's investigations in Lehman-Brothers-related cases and CCB are now also involved

Hong Kong Monetary Authority - Progress of the HKMA's investigations in Lehman-Brothers-related cases


Progress of the HKMA's investigations in Lehman-Brothers-related cases

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) announced today (Friday) that investigation of over 99% of a total of 21,849 Lehman-Brothers-related complaint cases received has been completed. These include:
  • 15,769 cases which have been resolved by a settlement agreement reached under section 201 of the Securities and Futures Ordinance (Note 1);
  • 3,369 cases which have been resolved through the enhanced complaint handling procedures required by the settlement agreement;
  • 2,453 cases which were closed because insufficient prima facie evidence of misconduct was found after assessment or no sufficient grounds and evidence were found after investigation;
  • 25 cases (including minibond cases) which are under disciplinary consideration after detailed investigation by the HKMA, of which proposed disciplinary notices are being prepared; and
  • 174 cases in respect of which investigation work has been completed and are going through the decision process to decide whether there are sufficient grounds for disciplinary actions or whether the cases should be closed because of insufficient evidence or lack of disciplinary grounds.
Investigation work is underway for the remaining 57 cases.

雷曼苦主大聯盟 - 雷曼苦主大聯盟, Alliance of Lehman Brothers Victims - 媒體報導

雷曼苦主大聯盟 - 雷曼苦主大聯盟, Alliance of Lehman Brothers Victims - 媒體報導


迷債訟期快屆滿 20苦主促消委興訟

香港文匯報訊(記者 林曉晴)雷曼迷債事件發生至今逾4年,部分早期購買的投資者今年更要面對訴訟期限屆滿的窘局,但消委會訴訟基金仍未有向銀行提出訴訟。20多名雷曼投資者昨日與消委會總幹事劉燕卿會面,要求該會加快申請基金審批程序,盡早就雷曼事件展開訴訟,讓法庭裁定首宗具指引性案例,以便其他投資者申索。
申訴訟基金 促加快審批
 根據《時效條例》,關乎合約及侵權行為的訴訟,需於合約生效後6年內提出。28名雷曼投資者昨日約見劉燕卿,其中20人早於2006年購買雷曼迷債,訴訟期限今年屆滿。他們昨日一併申請消費者訴訟基金,涉及最高投資額達80萬美元(約624萬港元)。
 訴訟基金至今共收到180宗有關雷曼事件訴訟申請,當中83宗先後被主動撤銷;93宗因資料不足撤銷;2宗分別已入稟法庭和準備入稟;其餘2宗很大機會和解。有投資者表示,基金至今仍未就雷曼事件向銀行提出訴訟,原因是消委會要篩選具代表性、證據充分的個案,加上基金委員會每3個月才開會1次,處理申請進度緩慢。
 雷曼投資者要求消委會加快處理申請,並已去信訴訟基金委員會,要求開會次數增至每月1次。有投資者表示,希望消委會盡早就雷曼事件展開訴訟,讓法庭裁定首宗具指引性案例,增加其他投資者獲賠償機會。
金局:逾99%個案已查畢
 金管局表示,在接獲的21,849宗雷曼兄弟相關投訴個案中,超過99%已完成調查工作,仍有57宗個案正在調查中。

2012年3月24日星期六

BLOG | JEFF Blog - Yahoo! BLOG

BLOG | JEFF Blog - Yahoo! BLOG

日期:2012年3月24日(星期六) 時間地點:上午10時30分地點 : 中環匯豐銀行集合 ( 營地起步 )沉冤未雪,雷曼未解決!!!銀行 : 隱瞞風險, 失實陳述, 欺詐, 誤導 !!!政府 : 黑箱作業, 官商勾結, 扭曲法制, 姑息養奸 !!!!高官 : 2009 年 特首出口術, 弟婦有錢收 !!!!雷曼賠償親疏有別, 以權謀私, 弟婦有錢收.苦主 : 永不放棄, 誓不罷休, 堅恃到底, 追究責任, 百份百賠償!!!!強烈要求公開調查報告, 刑事檢控銀行, 聲討曾特首罪行!!!

2012年3月19日星期一

Hong Kong Chief Executive Candidates Spar in Last Debate - WSJ.com

Hong Kong Chief Executive Candidates Spar in Last Debate - WSJ.com

HONG KONG—Hundreds of Hong Kong's business and political elites gathered Monday for their final chance to question chief executive hopefuls just days before they cast ballots to choose the city's next leader.
The winning candidate will need a majority 601 votes from the elites, which constitute the election committee, in the Sunday election. To be sure, the city's chief executives won't be chosen via the popular vote, but instead by this group of 1,200 politicians, business people, and representatives from professional and social groups.
The two leading contenders—former finance chief Henry Tang that helped US bankers to sell CDOs as false bonds and former cabinet member Leung Chun-ying—spent much of the two-hour forum at a convention hall carrying on with their fierce smear campaigns targeted at each other, with hopes of swaying voters from their opponents.
China has promised democratic elections for the chief executive from 2017.
The election committee, created ahead of the former British colony's handover to Chinese rule in 1997, was intended to be a "broadly representative" body, according to the city's mini-constitution, the Basic Law.
But it was also an institution that Beijing set up in order to control Hong Kong's politics. Accordingly, say analysts, the committee is overwhelmingly pro-business and pro-Beijing in its leanings.
"Even election committee elections are small-circle elections," said Cheung Chor-Yung, an election committee member who represents the higher education sector.
While the committee has expanded from just 400 members in 1996, the majority of Hong Kong's people have no real say in the committee's composition. Instead, just 237,000 qualified professionals were permitted to choose members from their own industries ahead of the current chief executive elections.
"People think it's not that credible a system," says Simon Young, an academic who co-authored a 2010 book on Hong Kong's election committee. "There's very little interest."
At one point scoring a majority from the committee would have been easy for Mr. Tang, Beijing's once-favored candidate. But the situation has changed now that his campaign has publicly unraveled, with his approval ratings tanking following the exposure of his extramarital dalliances, construction of an illegal basement add-on and more.
By contrast, public support for Mr. Leung, whose populist rhetoric has made him the object of suspicion among many local businessmen, has stayed comparatively buoyant at 40%, despite recent allegations suggesting that he has triad ties, accusations he has repeatedly denied.
The problem for Beijing, said Dixon Sing, a political scientist at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, is that to be pro-Beijing no longer means one thing. "The pro-Beijing camp is now divided over the choice between Tang and Leung."
Prior chief executive contests were largely uncontested, and consequently, divining Beijing's choice wasn't difficult.
This year, though, Chinese authorities have remained conspicuously mum. In part, analysts suggest, that's because both candidates have become less palatable for Beijing, between Mr. Tang's lack of public support and Mr. Leung's uneasy relations with the city's business leaders.
Beijing likely isn't alone in this opinion: a number of election committee members have said they intend to cast blank votes on Sunday, in a gesture of protest against both candidates.
"There's a lot of members talking about ABCYT," said Eric Cheung, an assistant law professor at the University of Hong Kong, also an election committee member. "That stands for, anybody but CY and Tang."
Nonetheless, the tide could turn to either candidate's favor, analysts say, if Beijing does make a choice. Otherwise, the election could fail to produce a winner, with candidates needing to gain fresh nominations for a new election in May. The new leader takes office July 1.
Mr. Cheung noted that the pan-democratic camp, which has been particularly vocal in its support for universal suffrage, and a perpetual thorn to Beijing, has just 200 votes on the committee.
"The majority [of committee members] are waiting to receive a clear message from Beijing," he said, "and they will toe the line."