HSBC Receives Slap on the Wrist for Helping to Finance Terrorists

The “Too Big Too Jail” nonsense that surrounds large U.S. banks and their above the law employees has been glaringly obvious and thoroughly documented for quite some time now. Yet what represents an even larger slap in the face to millions of hard-working, law-abiding citizens, is how relentlessly the “justice” system goes after small time criminals, while merely fining oligarch thieves for far worse crimes. I first covered this theme earlier this year in my piece Some Money Launderers are “More Equal” than Others, which discussed how HSBC was caught laundering billions of dollars for Mexican drug cartels.

Well HSBC is back in the news. This time it relates to their transferring funds on the behalf of financiers for the militant group Hezbollah. If transactions such as these had even the slightest link to Bitcoin, there would be endless uproar, calls for countless Congressional hearings and demands to stop the currency at all costs. But when HSBC is caught doing it, what happens? A $32,400 settlement.

More from The Huffington Post:

A major U.S. bank has agreed to a settlement for transferring funds on the behalf of financiers for the militant group Hezbollah, the Treasury Department announced on Tuesday.

Concluding that HSBC’s actions “were not the result of willful or reckless conduct,” Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control accepted a $32,400 settlement from the bank. Treasury noted, as did HSBC in a statement to HuffPost, that the violations were voluntarily reported.

Everett Stern, a former HSBC compliance officer who complained to his supervisors about the Hezbollah-linked transactions, told HuffPost he was “ecstatic and depressed at the same time.”

“Those are my transactions, I reported them,” he said, satisfied that the government was taking action. But, he added, “Where I am upset was those were a handful of transactions, and I saw hundreds of millions of dollars” being transferred.

Stern said he hopes the government’s enforcement actions against HSBC have not come to an end with the latest settlement. “They admit to financing terrorism and they get fined $32,000. Where if I were to do that, I would go to jail for life,” he said.

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from A Lightning War for Liberty http://libertyblitzkrieg.com/2013/12/19/hsbc-receives-slap-on-the-wrist-for-helping-to-finance-terrorists/
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Guest Post: Do We Even Need a Banking Sector? Not Any More

Submitted by Charles Hugh Smith from Of Two Minds

Do We Even Need a Banking Sector? Not Any More
 

An automated banking utility has no need for parasitic bankers or politicos or indeed, a central bank.

Do we need a banking sector dominated by politically untouchable “Too Big to Fail” (TBTF) banks? Thanks to fast-advancing technology, the answer is a resounding no. Not only do we not need a banking sector, we would be immensely better off were the banking sector to wither and vanish from the face of the Earth, along with its parasitic class of political enablers, toadies and Federal Reserve apparatchiks.

The key to understanding why big banks have outlived their purpose is to grasp the implications of computing power, self-organizing networks and crowdsourcing. Banks came into existence to manage the accumulation of capital (savings) and distribute the capital to borrowers in a prudent manner that minimized risk and still yielded a return for savers and the bank’s investors/owners.

Back in the pre-computer era, the record-keeping and risk management processes of these two core functions required a complex bureaucracy and a concentration of accounting skills and lending experience. The costs of operating this record-keeping and risk management bureaucracy was high, and these costs justified the bank’s fees and interest rate spread. In an idealized scenario, a bank might pay depositors 3% annual yield on their savings and charge borrowers 5%. The 2% spread was the bank’s to keep for performing the accounting, collection and risk management functions.

Today, computers running scripts/programs can perform these functions with minimal human oversight and at very low cost. The tracking and recording of millions of transactions and accounts no longer requires thousands of clerks and a large institutional bureaucracy; a relative handful of software engineers are all that’s needed to maintain these services, which are in effect a low-cost utility.

Risk management and lending are also computerized; the human interface of a banker is a bow to tradition, not necessity. Crowdsourced funding is entirely computerized: those with money/capital choose to join a pool of lenders who accept the risk of lending to an individual, household, project or enterprise for a specified return.

This process of aligning excess capital (savings) with borrowers is already automated. Is there a role for regulation? Absolutely: such a system requires transparency that can be trusted. Those who violate this trust with cooked-books, lies, misinformation, etc. must suffer negative, long-lasting consequences, starting with being banned from the system.

It is an abiding irony that the present banking system’s secret portfolios and processes (shadow banking, derivatives designed to fail and trigger profitable defaults, etc.) are considered core competitive advantages: in other words, eliminating transparency generates the highest-return bank profits.

And let’s not overlook the political consequences of these immense profits: a political and regulatory order that is easily captured to serve the interests of big banks. The number one agenda item is of course to arrange Central State protection of the most profitable (i.e. the least transparent) parts of the banking sector’s operations.

This lack of transparency distorts the financial market, rendering it systemically vulnerable to malinvestments and risky speculations and the financial crashes that result from these systemic distortions.

The other top agenda item for bank lobbyists is to arrange Central State/Federal Reserve subsidies of bank profits. These subsidies are also known as financial repression, as the Central State/Bank rigs interest rates and regulations to favor bank profits at the expense of both savers and borrowers.

Thanks to the Federal Reserve’s Zero Interest Rate Policy (ZIRP), savers have been robbed of hundreds of billions of dollars in income–money that has been effectively transferred to the banks by the State. This is why I call our system State-Cartel capitalism, as the State and cartels rule in a mutually beneficial marriage at the expense of the real economy, the citizenry and especially what’s left of the dwindling middle class.

Since the core functions of banks can now be performed by cheap processors and software, we can get rid of the entire parasitic banking sector, once and for all. But what about investment banking? That too can be automated. What about wealth management? In a world where index funds beat 96% of money managers over a long time-frame, that too can be automated.

But what about the tens of millions of dollars in campaign contributions politicos skim from the bankers? Now we finally reach the real reason why the parasitic banking sector is allowed to exist, even though it has outlived its purpose and value: the political class of parasites benefits immensely from the banking sector’s giant state-rigged skimming machine.

An automated banking utility has no need for parasitic bankers or politicos or indeed, a central bank. The only legitimate regulatory function of the state is to enforce transparency; beyond that, its actions are all subsidies of one sort or another of politically powerful constituencies at the expense of the real economy’s productive people, communities and enterprises.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/ge5lWNT5Grg/story01.htm Tyler Durden

JPM’s Quiet Scramble To Refill Its Gold Vault

As we repoted consistently, at times on a daily basis, one of the more memorable stories of the summer of 2013, was the rampant and furious depletion of gold (both eligible and – mostly – registered) stored deep in the gold vault of JPMorgan located under 1 Chase Manhattan Plaza, since sold to a Chinese conglomerate (understandable considering China’s insatiable appetite for the yellow metal in physical, not paper form). This culminated with some truly impressive multi-way vault rearrangements in which the other 4 Comex members would provide gold to JPM on an almost daily basis (see here and here). But while Chinese demand may explain the outflow of physical, what is head-scratching is the just as furious scramble by JPM to obtain gold in the past few weeks.

As persistent trackers of the CME’s daily depository statistics update are well aware, over the past week, JPM has been accumulating an impressive amount of gold, and what is more curious, it has been precisely in increments of 64,300 ounces of eligible gold on a daily basis. Putting this scramble in context, two months ago JPM had only 181K ounces of eliglble gold. And yet, just today, the Comex announced that JPM’s eliglble vault gold rose by almost that amount, increasing by 125K to a reputable 1.2 million eligible ounces.

JPM’s total eligible holdings, and especially the recent surge, are shown below:

It bears pointing out that while eligible gold has been surging higher, JPM’s registered gold has once again contracted, and as of today, it closed at its lowest ever: just 87K ounces of gold!

So with gold plunging to multi-year lows, is JPM just taking advantage of the “blood on the streets” and becoming the helpful bidder of last (or first) resort and replenishing its record low depleted inventory by taking advantage of below production cost fire sales, or… is something else going on here?

Inquiring minds want to know.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/E1usp_6fW1U/story01.htm Tyler Durden

JPM's Quiet Scramble To Refill Its Gold Vault

As we repoted consistently, at times on a daily basis, one of the more memorable stories of the summer of 2013, was the rampant and furious depletion of gold (both eligible and – mostly – registered) stored deep in the gold vault of JPMorgan located under 1 Chase Manhattan Plaza, since sold to a Chinese conglomerate (understandable considering China’s insatiable appetite for the yellow metal in physical, not paper form). This culminated with some truly impressive multi-way vault rearrangements in which the other 4 Comex members would provide gold to JPM on an almost daily basis (see here and here). But while Chinese demand may explain the outflow of physical, what is head-scratching is the just as furious scramble by JPM to obtain gold in the past few weeks.

As persistent trackers of the CME’s daily depository statistics update are well aware, over the past week, JPM has been accumulating an impressive amount of gold, and what is more curious, it has been precisely in increments of 64,300 ounces of eligible gold on a daily basis. Putting this scramble in context, two months ago JPM had only 181K ounces of eliglble gold. And yet, just today, the Comex announced that JPM’s eliglble vault gold rose by almost that amount, increasing by 125K to a reputable 1.2 million eligible ounces.

JPM’s total eligible holdings, and especially the recent surge, are shown below:

It bears pointing out that while eligible gold has been surging higher, JPM’s registered gold has once again contracted, and as of today, it closed at its lowest ever: just 87K ounces of gold!

So with gold plunging to multi-year lows, is JPM just taking advantage of the “blood on the streets” and becoming the helpful bidder of last (or first) resort and replenishing its record low depleted inventory by taking advantage of below production cost fire sales, or… is something else going on here?

Inquiring minds want to know.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/E1usp_6fW1U/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Fed’s Balance Sheet Rises To Record $4.01 Trillion

Dear Federal Reserve: happy 100th birthday! What better way to celebrate it than with a balance sheet that just crossed above $4 trillion, or $4.01 trillion to be precise, which represents 24% of the recently upward revised US GDP, for the first (but certainly not last) time in history. Fingers crossed that promptly after next year’s Untaper, the Fed can boast a $5 trillion balance sheet this time next year, and so on, and so forth.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/oF1vJJRZmWs/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Fed's Balance Sheet Rises To Record $4.01 Trillion

Dear Federal Reserve: happy 100th birthday! What better way to celebrate it than with a balance sheet that just crossed above $4 trillion, or $4.01 trillion to be precise, which represents 24% of the recently upward revised US GDP, for the first (but certainly not last) time in history. Fingers crossed that promptly after next year’s Untaper, the Fed can boast a $5 trillion balance sheet this time next year, and so on, and so forth.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/oF1vJJRZmWs/story01.htm Tyler Durden

New Mexico Supreme Court Rules Gay Marriage Constitutional, NYC Gym Teacher Claims Being Discriminated Against for Being Heterosexual, Transgendered Model to Feature in Elle Canada: P.M. Links

  • not a kardashianThe remaining imprisoned members of Pussy Riot
    are two of the thousands of Russians
    released
    or expected to be released after the passage of an
    amnesty law in the country. Meanwhile in the land of the free,
    President Obama
    commuted
    the sentence of eight people convicted of
    crack-cocaine offenses who had each spent at least 15 years in jail
    already.
  • Hillary Clinton says she will make a
    decision
    on running for president again sometime next
    year.
  • Moody’s
    downgraded
    the debt outlook for New Jersey from stable to
    negative over concerns about its ballooning pension obligations,
    despite Chris Christie’s efforts at reform.
  • New Mexico’s Supreme Court
    ruled
    the state could not prohibit same-sex marriages.
  • The city of Cleveland
    settled
    for $6,750 with a gun owner who accused the police
    department of seizing his firearm despite there being no charges
    filed against him.
  • A gym teacher at a private school in New York City
    claims
    in a lawsuit that he was discriminated against for his
    heterosexual lifestyle.
  • A transgendered model previously disqualified from
    participating in the Miss Universe competition for being born a man
    will
    feature
    in a photo spread for an upcoming issue of
    Elle Canada. She will also star in a reality show called
    Brave New Girls airing on E! Canada.

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from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/19/new-mexico-supreme-court-rules-gay-marri
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Brian Doherty Says Colorado’s New Gun Laws Didn’t Stop the Shooting

Pistol

Colorado’s gun laws made the news last week following a shooting
at Arapahoe High School in the city of Centennial. One student was
injured in an 80-second attack involving five gunshots and one
Molotov cocktail. Shooter Karl Pierson then killed himself with a
12-gauge pump action shotgun that he had legally purchased (As an
18-year-old he would not have been able to legally purchase a
handgun). He was reported to have been cornered by an armed deputy
on the school grounds before the suicide.

Pierson exhibited no known “warning signs.” He was a debater, a
track runner, strongly anti-Republican and anti-free market. There
was no easy or obvious way to mark him as a person who needed to be
kept away from guns. Some thought he seemed “weird” at times, he
was bullied a bit, and he went to Bible study. In other words,
writes Brian Doherty, he was just like many, many thousands of
other American teenagers. Better eyes, better programs, better laws
could not have prevented this particular shooting from
happening.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/19/brian-doherty-says-colorados-new-gun-law
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Brian Doherty Says Colorado's New Gun Laws Didn't Stop the Shooting

Pistol

Colorado’s gun laws made the news last week following a shooting
at Arapahoe High School in the city of Centennial. One student was
injured in an 80-second attack involving five gunshots and one
Molotov cocktail. Shooter Karl Pierson then killed himself with a
12-gauge pump action shotgun that he had legally purchased (As an
18-year-old he would not have been able to legally purchase a
handgun). He was reported to have been cornered by an armed deputy
on the school grounds before the suicide.

Pierson exhibited no known “warning signs.” He was a debater, a
track runner, strongly anti-Republican and anti-free market. There
was no easy or obvious way to mark him as a person who needed to be
kept away from guns. Some thought he seemed “weird” at times, he
was bullied a bit, and he went to Bible study. In other words,
writes Brian Doherty, he was just like many, many thousands of
other American teenagers. Better eyes, better programs, better laws
could not have prevented this particular shooting from
happening.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/19/brian-doherty-says-colorados-new-gun-law
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Even Massachusetts Is Having Trouble With Its Obamacare Exchange

How difficult was it to
successfully build and launch one Obamacare’s health insurance
exchanges? So difficult that the one state that had already built a
functional health insurance exchange couldn’t do it. Via
Politico, Massachusetts has
struggled to get its new exchange technology to work
properly
:

Massachusetts created a Romneycare-inspired template for
President Barack Obama’s health reform effort. Now, as the Bay
State is struggling to upgrade for the Obamacare era, its
enrollment system is buckling under technical glitches like those
that hobbled HealthCare.gov.

State officials are increasingly concerned that thousands of
Massachusetts residents seeking coverage are lost in a wilderness
of misfiled applications and cybermalfunctions. Now, they’re moving
ahead with a labor-intensive backup plan aimed at making sure that
no one loses coverage when Obamacare starts in January.

Part of the problem here seems to be that Massachusetts relied
on CGI, the same contractor that botched the federal system, to
build its new exchange.

Even so, this further undercuts the popular notion that
Obamacare is working in the states that weren’t opposed to its
goals, and the related idea that if Republican governors had just
agreed to build exchanges on their own. Yes, officials in
Massachusetts asked for some exemptions from the law’s exchange
requirements. But its political class was not broadly politically
opposed to the Obamacare project, its goals, or its methods. The
same goes for Maryland, Oregon, and Vermont which have also had
significant troubles getting their health insurance exchanges to
work smoothly.

Back in September, I noted that prior to Obamacare, the
Massachusetts exchange didn’t attempt
some of the more complex real-time functionality
that the
federal health law required. 

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/19/even-massachusetts-is-having-trouble-wit
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