Showing posts with label financial crisis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label financial crisis. Show all posts

7/18/2012

Bernanke to testify again after warning on economy

Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke pauses as he arrives to give a semiannual report to the Senate Banking Committee, Tuesday, July 17, 2012, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Bernanke's testimony comes as job growth has slumped, manufacturing has weakened and consumers have grown more cautious about spending 

Πηγή: Boston
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER (AP)
July 18 2012

WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will return to Capitol Hill on Wednesday, one day after sketching a bleak picture of the U.S. economy and warning it will darken further if Congress doesn’t reach agreement soon to avert a budget crisis.

Bernanke is giving his twice-a-year report to Congress on the state of the economy. He will testify to the House Financial Services Committee. On Tuesday, he spoke to the Senate Banking Committee.

Without a congressional agreement, tax increases and deep spending cuts would take effect at year’s end. Bernanke noted Tuesday what the Congressional Budget Office has warned: A recession would occur, and 1.25 million fewer jobs would be created in 2013.

The Fed is prepared to take further action to try to help the economy if unemployment stays high, he said. Bernanke didn’t signal what steps the Fed might take or whether any action was imminent. And he noted there’s only so much the Fed can do.

But the Fed chairman made clear his most urgent concern is what would happen to the economy if Congress can’t resolve its budget impasse before the year ends.

Cuts in taxes on income, dividends and capital gains would expire. So would this year’s Social Security tax cut and businesses tax reductions. Defense and domestic programs would be slashed. And emergency benefits for the long-term unemployed would run out.

All that ‘‘would greatly delay the recovery that we’re hoping to facilitate,’’ Bernanke said near the end of two hours of testimony to the Senate Banking Committee.

The economy is growing modestly but has weakened, Bernanke said. Manufacturing has slowed. Consumers are spending less. And job growth has slumped to an average of 75,000 a month in the April-June quarter from 226,000 a month from January through March. The unemployment rate is stuck at 8.2 percent.

Bernanke noted that the economy, after growing at a 2.5 percent annual rate in the second half of 2011, slowed to roughly 2 percent from January through March. And it likely weakened further in the April-June period.

Congress needs to resolve its impasse well before the year ends, Bernanke said.

‘‘Doing so would help reduce uncertainty and boost household and business confidence,’’ he said.

The cuts that would kick in next year could cost as many as 2 million jobs, a trade group that represents manufacturers said in a report released Tuesday. The report came from the Aerospace Industries Association.

A separate report Tuesday pointed to the budget crises many states are suffering, caused in part by shrinking revenue from the federal government. States are finding it harder to pay for basic services such as law enforcement, local schools and transportation, the report said. It was issued by the State Budget Crisis Task Force, a non-profit co-chaired by former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker and former New York Lieutenant Governor Richard Ravitch.

Republicans in Congress are demanding deeper spending cuts while extending income tax cuts for everyone. Democrats want to extend the tax cuts for middle- and lower-class Americans. But they want them to expire for people in the highest-income brackets.

Bernanke stopped short of telling Congress what steps to take. He challenged them to think broadly.

‘‘Congress is in charge here, not the Federal Reserve,’’ he said.

The economy’s challenges go beyond the budget impasse, Bernanke said. Lawmakers must also produce a long-term plan to shrink federal budget deficits. Otherwise, he said the United States could eventually suffer a financial crisis marked by rising interest rates. Consumers and businesses would have to pay more for mortgages and many other kinds of loans.

‘‘It would be very costly to our economy,’’ Bernanke said.

Stocks rose sharply despite Bernanke’s grim assessment. The Dow Jones industrial average climbed more than 90 points, and broader indexes also gained.

The Fed chairman also said Europe’s debt crisis poses a serious threat to the U.S. economy. He said the Fed has been working with U.S. banks to ensure they've taken steps to prepare for a crisis.

‘‘Although I have every hope and expectation that the European leaders will find solutions, there is a risk of a more serious financial blowup,’’ Bernanke said.

Investors had hoped Bernanke would signal another round of bond purchases, to drive down long-term interest rates and encourage more borrowing and spending. But they seemed to shrug off the downbeat outlook and focused on stronger earnings reported by Mattel, Coca-Cola and other big companies.

At least one senator implored Bernanke to take action now.

‘‘Given the political realities of this year’s election, I believe the Fed is the only game in town,’’ Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said. ‘‘I would urge you, now more than ever, to take whatever actions are warranted.’’

‘‘So get to work, Mr. Chairman,’’ Schumer added.

Even if the Fed announces another round of bond purchases, some economists question how much it might help. They note that mortgage rates and other key borrowing rates are already at record lows.

The economy was already sputtering when the Fed’s policymaking committee last met June 19-20. At that meeting, the Fed decided to extend a program that shifts its bond portfolio to try to lower long-term interest rates. The Fed also reiterated its plan to keep its key short-term interest rate near zero until at least late 2014.

Minutes of the June meeting show that Fed officials were open to taking further action — but were divided over whether the economy needs help now.
Former Fed official Roberto Perli, managing director at the research firm International Strategy & Investment, doubts the Fed will take action at its next meeting July 31-Aug. 1, preferring to wait for more evidence of where the economy is headed.

But if growth and job creation continue to weaken, he says, Fed policymakers might unveil another round of bond purchases at its Sept. 12-13 meeting.




8/24/2011

Goldman Sachs braced for legal battles over financial crisis

Goldman Sachs chief Lloyd Blankfein seen at a Senate hearing last year, has hired top defence lawyer Reid Weingarten. Photograph Charles Dharapak/AP


Πηγή: The Guardian
By Simon Goodley and Graeme Wearden
Tuesday 23 August 2011 20.13 BST


Goldman Sachs, the embattled investment bank, will face an array of legal claims focusing on its conduct during the financial crisis, one of Wall Street's most feared lawyers warned last night.

The prediction of an escalation in cases is being made by Jake Zamansky, the US attorney nicknamed "Jaws" who spearheaded the successful pursuit of the investment banks after the dotcom crash. It follows a move by Lloyd Blankfein, the chief executive of Goldman Sachs, to hire Reid Weingarten, one of America's top criminal defence lawyers, to help him address claims that the bank misled clients in the run-up to the financial crisis and, afterwards, Congress.

"I consider this to be a very significant event. For Lloyd Blankfein to be hiring a top criminal lawyer indicates that there may be allegations of wrongdoing forthcoming from the Department of Justice [DoJ]," Zamansky said. "Investors are asking why there have been no criminal cases against Goldman Sachs or any investment bank arising from the financial crisis. This may be a sign of more cases to come. It may be the beginning of a series of cases against Wall Street firms".

Back in 2001, as the internet bubble was bursting, Zamansky filed the very first lawsuit against Merrill Lynch's Henry Blodget, then a top-rated technology analyst caught pushing shares to investors which internal emails showed he actually rated as "dogs". The case proved to be a catalyst for a legal assault on Wall Street which resulted in the banks signing some huge cheques.

Zamansky is representing a group of un-named investors suing Goldman, although the case is unrelated to the bank's battles with the DoJ.

However, other moves to pursue the investment bank and its directors are under way, with court documents showing that Blankfein and his fellow directors have been named in a derivative court action filed in New York by an individual investor called Michael Brautigam. Counsel for the defendants, who also include Goldman non-executive and steel tycoon Lakshmi Mittal, have been asked by District Judge William H Pauley III to appear in court next month for a pre-trial conference. As this is a civil case, Weingarten will not be representing Blankfein. The derivative action formed part of a 12-page report detailing the current legal cases the bank is facing, which Goldman outlined in a regulatory filing this month.

The document goes on to admit: "The firm expects to be the subject of additional putative shareholder derivative actions, purported class actions, rescission and 'put back' claims and other litigation, additional investor and shareholder demands, and additional regulatory and other investigations and actions with respect to mortgage-related offerings, loan sales, CDOs [collateralized debt obligations] and servicing and foreclosure activities".

Shares in Goldman fell in late trading on Monday after Weingarten's appointment emerged – shedding 4.7% to $104.25, their lowest level since April 2009.They had dropped again on Tuesday.

Blankfein turned to the high profile lawyer after the DoJ began investigating the way Goldman sold subprime mortgages – the toxic investments that triggered the credit crunch. The banker has also been accused of misleading a Senate committee – a claim that is emphatically denied by Goldman. Blankfein has not been charged with any offence. Goldman itself was charged in April 2010 with defrauding investors of more than $1bn (£606m), and later paid a $550m fine. In June, the bank was served with a subpoena by the Manhattan prosecutor.

"As is common in such situations, Mr Blankfein and other individuals who were expected to be interviewed in connection with the justice department's inquiry into certain matters raised in the [Senate] report hired counsel at the outset," said a Goldman spokesman.

Weingarten specialises in white-collar criminal defence, and has represented former WorldCom chief executive Bernard Ebbers and former Enron accounting officer Richard Causey. Both men are incarcerated after being convicted of fraud charges.

The website of Steptoe and Johnson, the firm where Weingarten is a partner, states that the lawyer "is part of the firm's white-collar criminal defence group". It continues: "Weingarten represents clients in complex criminal matters in both state and federal courts at the pre-trial, trial, and post-trial stages, including cases involving public corruption, the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, bank fraud, bribery, government procurement fraud, antitrust, healthcare fraud, and tax and securities fraud."