Here Is The FT’s Gold Price Manipulation Article That Was Removed

Two days ago the FT released a clear, informative and fact-based article, titled simply enough “Gold price rigging fears put investors on alert” in which author Madison Marriage, citing a report by the Fideres consultancy, revealed that global gold prices may have been manipulated on 50 per cent of occasions between January 2010 and December 2013.

To those who hve been following the price action of gold in the past four years, gold manipulation is not only not surprising, but accepted and widely appreciated (because like the Chinese those who buy gold would rather do so at artificially low rather than artificially high fiat prices) and at this point, after every other product has been exposed to be blatantly and maliciously manipulated by the banking estate, it is taken for granted that the central banks’ primary fiat alternative, and biggest threat to the monetary status quo, has not avoided a comparable fate.

What is surprising is that where the FT article once was, readers can now find only this:

 

 

And since we can only assume the article has been lost to FT readers due to some server glitch, and not due to post-editorial consorship or certainly an angry phone call from the Bank of England or some comparable institution, we are happy to recreate it in its entirety. Just in case someone is curious why gold price rigging fears should put investors on alert.

Gold price rigging fears put investors on alert

By Madison Marriage

Global gold prices may have been manipulated on 50 per cent of occasions between January 2010 and December 2013, according to analysis by Fideres, a consultancy.

The findings come amid a probe by German and UK regulators into alleged manipulation of the gold price, which is set twice a day by Deutsche Bank, HSBC, Barclays, Bank of Nova Scotia and Société Générale in a process known as the “London gold fixing”.

Fideres’ research found the gold price frequently climbs (or falls) once a twice-daily conference call between the five banks begins, peaks (or troughs) almost exactly as the call ends and then experiences a sharp reversal, a pattern it alleged may be evidence of “collusive behaviour”.

“[This] is indicative of panel banks pushing the gold price upwards on the basis of a strategy that was likely predetermined before the start of the call in order to benefit their existing positions or pending orders,” Fideres concluded.

“The behaviour of the gold price is very suspicious in 50 per cent of cases. This is not something you would expect to see if you take into account normal market factors,“ said Alberto Thomas, a partner at Fideres.

Alasdair Macleod, head of research at GoldMoney, a dealer in physical gold, added: “When the banks fix the price, the advantage they have is that they know what orders they have in the pocket. There is a possibility that they are gaming the system.”

Pension funds, hedge funds, commodity trading advisers and futures traders are most likely to have suffered losses as a result, according to Mr Thomas, who said that many of these groups were “definitely ready” to file lawsuits.

Daniel Brockett, a partner at law firm Quinn Emanuel, also said he had spoken to several investors concerned about potential losses.

“It is fair to say that economic work suggests there are certain days when [the five banks] are not only tipping their clients off, but also colluding with one another,” he said.

Matt Johnson, head of distribution at ETF Securities, one of the largest providers of exchange traded products, said that if gold price collusion is proven, “investors in products with an expiry price based around the fixing could have been badly impacted”.

Gregory Asciolla, a partner at Labaton Sucharow, a US law firm, added: “There are certainly good reasons for investors to be concerned. They are paying close attention to this and if the investigations go somewhere, it would not surprise me if there were lawsuits filed around the world.”

All five banks declined to comment on the findings, which come amid growing regulatory scrutiny of gold and precious metal benchmarks.

BaFin, the German regulator, has launched an investigation into gold-price manipulation and demanded documents from Deutsche Bank. The bank last month decided to end its role in gold and silver pricing. The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority is also examining how the price of gold and other precious metals is set as part of a wider probe into benchmark manipulation following findings of wrongdoing with respect to Libor and similar allegations with respect to the foreign exchange market.

The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission has reportedly held private meetings to discuss gold manipulation, but declined to confirm or deny that an investigation was ongoing.

h/t Noel


    



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10 Things That Worry Quants

Fundamentally oriented investors tend to think that quants, like blondes, have all the fun. As ConvergEx's Nick Colas notes – it all looks like easy money – scalping trades with lightning fast computers, front running news with preferential access to press releases, or managing leveraged portfolios with thousands of small but profitable positions – but quants face their own significant challenges. Finding common rule sets that work in a wide array of stocks is not easy, and markets adapt quickly to close opportunities that seem historically profitable – the number of potential signals is seemingly endless; and regulators are now aware of quantitative investing and, in some cases, don't like what they see. Here are 10 reasons why why "it's not easy being a quant."

In summary, Colas points out, the fundamental/quant investor divide is a case of “The grass is always greener on the other side of the fence.”

Via ConvergEx's Nick Colas,

Have you ever had one of those dreams where you are out in public and suddenly realize you’ve forgotten to put on your pants?  Everyone is staring at you, and for a while you just wonder why.  Do you look especially attractive today?  No, that can’t be it; some people are laughing at you.  Then you realize: no pants!  General embarrassment ensues.  And then, hopefully, you wake up.

I had an analog experience today while presenting at a conference entitled “Quantitative Investing with News & Sentiment Analysis” hosted by Deltix and RavenPack, two preeminent vendors in the front-page world of quant investing.  The organizers asked me to give the lead-off talk to the room of about 100 number-crunchers, the topic of which was basically “What does the rest of the investment world think about quants?”   My message was as follows:

Capital markets connect investors, managements, employees, retirees and other savers – basically everyone in society – together into one economic ecosystem.  As such, markets are hugely important and their credibility is a lynchpin social issue.

 

Fundamental investors – I used famed Fidelity Magellan Fund manager Peter Lynch as one example – are useful spokespeople for capital markets.  They connect what goes on in asset prices, especially equities, to economic outcomes in a way people can understand.  And, if they do as well as Peter Lynch did for his investors, these “Heroes” of capital markets can act to give the broad population some confidence that market-based capitalism really is a sensible way to organize the allocation of scarce resources.

 

The issue quant investors face is that their newer approach to capital allocation, based on technology and math and speed, hasn’t yet developed the utility of their narrative back to society as whole.  Indeed, its opaque and fragmented nature can engender suspicion from existing capital markets participants and regulators.

The whole “Hero” narrative, I thought, was a neat way to explain both why fundamentally minded investors have trouble with quant investors and to recommend some solutions to bring this Hatfield – McCoy style divide a bit closer together.  Perhaps it was the fact that I was the first speaker, or perhaps the coffee didn’t kick in, but at the close of my brief chat it took a little while to get some questions from the audience.  Always an embarrassing moment, that part where you say ‘Any questions?’ in a chirpy voice but only hear crickets in return.  I checked to see if the whole pants thing was the problem, but no…  They even matched the jacket.

Later, as I listened to several presentations by other speakers and the very lively discussions about their back tests, mathematical equations and statistical regressions, it struck me just how truly different the quantitative approach to investing is from the fundamental school.  As a long time adherent of the latter, I have always been a bit jealous of the former.  As it turns out, the grass isn’t necessarily greener on the quant side of the fence.  Come to think of it, It might not even be grass over there…

Later in the day, I jotted a quick Top 10 list of ‘Why it is actually tough to be a quant after all”:

1. They are just as lost as any fundamental investor.  As I listened to the morning’s presentations, I expected to hear about wildly successful algorithms and quantitative processes that had excellent back tested results and were delivering outsized returns with minimal risk.  The gating element I expected to hear about was computing power, or execution speed, or access to large and complex datasets.

 

The reality is that quant investing is still in a relative infancy, with debates like “How much does news really move a stock?”  Fundamental investors simply try to forecast specific events like better than expected earnings or revenue shortfalls.  Quants need to know that, plus how much, on average, will such news change the stock price?  Not easy stuff, and the targets change frequently.

 

2. Developing common rule sets for different stocks in various sectors/markets is difficult.  Imagine coming up with a common set of trading guidelines that could apply to all the stocks you know well.  Some are easy – a big earnings beat, or a surprise dividend boost.  But how about news in the supply chain?  Or the customer base?  The former, as it turns out, has less impact than the latter.  But figuring that out takes time.  A lot of time.

 

3. The relationships between stocks, fundamentals, and news changes constantly.  Remember the move off the 2009 lows for U.S. stocks, as low-quality companies had much larger returns than their high-quality peers?    Makes all the sense in the world to a fundamental investors, since the highly leveraged third-tier player in a tough industry with a $3 stock will bounce to $10 long before the #1 company in a great industry will even double.  To a quant that killed it from 2006-2009, however, that’s nightmare material.  Worse than the pants dream.  Their model was likely tuned to own quality companies and short the bad ones.  How do know when to flip the whole process on its head?  And would your investors forgive you if you got it wrong?

 

4. Math both helps and gets in the way.  Make no mistake – quants know numbers.  And models.  And they have access to a myriad of financial information.  But they also only have 24 hours in a day – the same as the rest of us.   They can be caught in analysis paralysis the same as a fundamental investor can feel the need to visit every single operation of a complex company before they make a recommendation.

 

5. The good stuff is very difficult to use.  Twitter is a big topic in quant land at the moment.  Everyone in the room seemed excited by the prospect of this fire hose of information.  At the same time, there was general agreement that social media generally is very heavy lifting indeed if you want to include it in an investment process.  How do you know a tweet is positive, or sarcastic?  Sure, a 12 year old knows.  But a computerized algo reading it?  As if…

 

6. It doesn’t work all the time.  Good investors of any stripe – fundamental or quantitative – know they are playing a numbers game.  If you can win 66% of the time, you are doing a great job.  However, unlike their fundy-counterparts, quants rarely hold a stock long enough to make a huge return.  So they must rely on their process to grind out steady returns with generally short-ish holding periods, without the benefit of a +100% return on the sheet from a long term anchor investment.

 

7. Everything starts with a back test.  Most things, anyway.  Back tests, where you show that your idea for an investment process or data set worked in the past, is a big part of the quant world.  But every quant is keenly aware that past is not always prologue.

 

8. Signals are everywhere… And nowhere.  In the modern information age, data is everywhere.  Want an hour-by-hour weather report for every Wal-mart story location?  No problem.  Daily pings to Google Trends to see what the world is searching for?  No problem.  Data on search term traffic for popular momentum stocks?  No problem.  But knowing where to prioritize your time and efforts?  Not so easy.

 

9. Quant investing is now in the regulators’ crosshairs.  While it didn’t come up in the sessions I listened to, conference attendees must have been aware of the recent decision by Warren Buffett’s Business Wire to cease selling high-speed access to their news flow.  Now, not all quants are high frequency traders, so perhaps it didn’t matter all that much to them.  Still, one of the original advantages to quantitative investing was the inherently compliance-friendly nature of the process.  Take publicly available information, crunch the numbers better than the next computerized trader, and make money with little risk of stepping across any regulatory lines.  Now, how quickly quants get information is clearly a front-and-center issue for regulators.  What might be next for their focus?  Hard to say.

 

10. More and more competition.  Attendance at the Deltix/RavenPack conference was excellent.  Standing room only in a large venue.  No mid-morning fade, and no post-lunch dropoff in headcount.  Quant-oriented investing is still clearly popular, and therein lays a challenge for everyone in the room.  Just as when hedge funds started to run rings around the long-only community in the 1990s, only to see returns fade in the 2000s, managing money with computerized algorithms and ever more complex datasets is getting very competitive.

In summary, my short time living in the quant world gave me a renewed appreciation for just how difficult investing in highly competitive markets has become, regardless of your discipline.  Their super-fast computers and programmers and Russian accents and high math does, at first blush, seem like something akin to magic.  But the quant world, to borrow from an old saying, has to put its pants on one leg at a time, just like the rest of us. 


    



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The Economic Roadmap Ahead: “It Isn’t That Complicated”

Submitted by Gordon T. Long of GordonTLong.com,

Global Economics is not as complicated as the Ivy-league-trained Keynesian economists would have you believe.

As Goldman Sachs gleefully illustrates, the world is presently divided into two financially warring camps.

  1. The Emerging Markets (EM) who have Inflation problems and
  2. The Developed Markets (DM) that have a Disinflation to Deflation problem.

DON'T BE CONFUSED BY THE MIS-DIRECTING LABELS

It actually is not an "Emerging Markets" problem but rather a "Peripheral Nations" problem.

The Peripheral nations are those nations who are not yet fully "Industrial" nations but rather still "Resource" nations. Industrial nations consume Resources and hence "Resource" nations are very dependent on the economies of the "Industrial" economies and are desperately trying to get there because it historically offered higher levels of employment (a big political problem in Resource nations), higher value add product pricing and economic stability (versus the roller coaster commodity cycles).

THE EMERGING MARKETS HAVE BECOME THE ECONOMY

But something has quietly happened over the last decade other than continuous financial turmoil and "bubble" economics.

The willingness of the Emerging Markets (Peripheral Nations) to accept the currency that is being endlessly printed to finance economies, that consume more than they produce, has allowed an over expansion and over-reach by these EM's trying to become Industrial nations.

EXCESS CAPACITY & INSUFFICIENT AGGREGRATE DEMAND

As a consequence today we are left with Output Gaps in the DM's and Current Account payment deficits in the Peripheral nations.

A PATHWAY TO A GLOBALIZATION TRAP

All of this has placed the world on a destructive path towards what can best be termed a "Globalization Trap" and eventually a global fiat currency crisis. The roadmap is easy to discern and quite evident if you actually study the sign posts without wearing Keynesian filtering glasses and a dose of common sense

Click to Expand

PROFOUND IMPLICATIONS TO GLOBAL FINANCIAL MARKETS

The roadmap has profound implications for the financial markets as ecomomies of both the Developed and Emerging Economies move through an almost preordained cycle shown and labeled in the chart below.

Click to Expand

 

For more detail signup for your FREE copy of the GordonTLong 2014 THESIS PAPER


    



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Tonight on The Independents: President Garrett Walker, Arizona’s Gay Discrimination Law, BitCoin’s Bummer, Young Americans for Liberty’s PAC, George W. Bush’s Art, Ask a Commie About Venezuela, and Sexy Aftershow!

Tonight’s live episode of The
Independents
(Fox Business Network 9 pm ET, 6 pm PT, with
repeats three hours later), will start with a discussion of
Arizona’s
controversial Senate Bill 1062
, which would allow businesses in
the Copper State to discriminate against gays, even though they can
totally
already discriminate against gays
. Chewing on the matter will
be party panelists Deroy
Murdock
of National Review Online and Jehmu Greene of Define American.
The two will also square off on the California hedge fund manager
reportedly ready to throw
$100 million of climate-change money
into the U.S. political
process, and a
petition to get Charles Krauthammer removed
from the
Washington Post op-ed page for crimes against climate
opinionizing.

President Garrett Walker, also known as House of Cards
actor Michel
Gill
, will be on to talk about his show, and cynicism in
politics. Young Americans for Liberty Executive Director and former
Ron Paul campaign official Jeff Frazee will talk about his
political action committee’s efforts to
influence the 2014 elections
. And everyone’s (least?) favorite
commie, Jesse Myerson,
will be on for another Ask a Communist segment, this time with more
Venezuela.

Send your tweets to @IndependentsFBN
throughout, hashtag #indFBN, and remember to
stay tuned for the sexy online-only after show, streamed on the
show
website
 just after 10 pm.

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A Normal Day for Bitcoin, A Currency That Dies Every Day

People should know better by now that to judge the future of
Bitcoin or cryptocurrencies in general on what is happening today,
or this week, or any arbitrary but short time period. Yet, just
like with the initial collapse of Silk Road late last year–where
“everyone knew” all Bitcoins were spent and yet whose death seemed
to spur an enormous rise in Bitcoin market value–so is the

collapse and disappearance of prominent Bitcoin exchange Mt.
Gox
, with lots of people likely losing lots of money, you are
hearing the Bitcoin is over.

Bitcoin may indeed someday be over, though the enormous
advantages of its protocol for many of the things people want out
of money (and other things, as Jerry Brito explained
in the December Reason
) make me think that’s an
unlikely bet. But past results are no performance of
future guarantees, or whatever it is they say in the world of High
Finance.


This article from

Businessweek
has some nice perspective on why Bitcoin
believers aren’t ready to give up yet:

Some bitcoin believers are cheering the development, hailing it
as the end of amateur hour for the crypto-currency. “It purges the
final vestige of the first generation of infrastructure companies,”
says Jerry Brito, director of the technology research program
at Mercatus Center at George Mason University and a longtime
proponent of bitcoin. “Who’s left? It’s the serious people,
who are doing this right.”

Those people are working hard to assure the market that they
are, in fact, serious. Several prominent bitcoin companies
signed on to a statement vowing
to shore up the credibility of the
currency. The companies describe the need for bitcoin
companies to submit to independent audits, balance sheet
requirements, customer disclosures, and policies that don’t allow
companies to leverage customer assets for their own trading.

And as you
read
people telling
you it’s
all over
, it helps to remember that the
price in dollars of Bitcoin as of around right now
–around
$520, after a dip to below $460–is a low not seen since, wow,
mid-November, slightly more than three months ago.

A reminder: if you had invested $1,000 in the horrible mistake
of Bitcoin five months ago, that thousand would be worth about four
times that today. After this Mt. Gox news.

Certainly, that huge value increase is not proof of Bitcoin’s
eternal value as either investment or currency (and inflation in
the former isn’t that healthy for use as the latter). But it is a
sign that “it’s over, man” seems doubtful. People still believe.
And that’s important when it comes to either investment or
currency.

Some bonus Bitcoin science from September: why it
isn’t that easy
for the protocol and blockchain to trace or
block stolen coins.

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Pope Opens Vatican Bank Kimono

In a desperate attempt to distance itself from the widening corruption scandal linking the Vatican’s bank accounts to fund (and allegedly bribe) a 2007 acquisition by Monte dei Paschi of Antonventa, the Pope has taken an unprecedented step in open the Vatican’s finances to public view.

As Reuters reports, Pope Francis on Monday revolutionized the Vatican’s scandal-plagued finances by appointing an auditor-general stating that the Church must see its possessions and financial assets in the “light of its mission to evangelize, with particular concern for the most needy.

The auditor-general will have wide oversight powers “to conduct audits of any agency of the Holy See and Vatican City State at any time,” a statement said. Francis decreed that the changes have “immediate, full and stable effect,” abrogating any existing rules not compatible with them.

 

Via Reuters,

Pope Francis on Monday revolutionised the Vatican’s scandal-plagued finances, inviting outside experts into a world often seen as murky and secretive and saying the church must use its wealth to help the poor.

 

 

The auditor-general will have wide oversight powers “to conduct audits of any agency of the Holy See and Vatican City State at any time,” a statement said.

 

 

A Vatican statement said the changes “will enable more formal involvement of senior and experienced experts in financial administration, planning and reporting and will ensure better use of resources, improving the support available for various programmes, particularly our works with the poor and marginalised”.

 

 

Francis decreed that the changes have “immediate, full and stable effect,” abrogating any existing rules not compatible with them.

 

 

The role and structure of the separate Vatican bank, formally known as the Institute for Works of Religion (IOR), will not change for the time being, a spokesman said.

 

There was no mention of the IOR in Monday’s statements. Francis has not ruled out closing the bank, which primarily handles funds for religious orders and Vatican employees.

 

Both the IOR and APSA have been at the centre of scandals. Italian magistrates are investigating the IOR on allegations of money laundering. The Vatican dismisses the charges.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1hQzLYH Tyler Durden

Reddit Censors Big Story About Government Manipulation and Disruption of the Internet

The moderators at the giant r/news reddit (with over 2 million readers) repeatedly killed the Greenwald/Snowden story on government manipulation and disruption of the Internet … widely acknowledged to be one of the most important stories ever leaked by Snowden.

Similarly, the moderators at the even bigger r/worldnews reddit (over 5 million readers) repeatedly deleted the story, so that each new post had to start over at zero.

For example, here are a number of posts deleted from r/news (click any image for much larger/clearer version):

Related posts from other sites – like 21stCenturyWire – were deleted as well:

And here are a number of the posts deleted by the moderators of r/worldnews:

Write-ups of the same story from other sites – like Zero Hedge – were also deleted:

Two Redditors provide further information on the censorship of this story:

This isn’t the first time Reddit moderators have been caught censoring:

Source links: Here, here, here, here, here and here.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1hQzNzJ George Washington

How To Identify Economic Zombies

Via Monty Pelerin’s World,

Economics is not a difficult subject, unless you try to learn it from an economist. As described by John Kenneth Galbraith, who posed as an economist but was far better as a critic:

Economics is a subject profoundly conducive to cliche, resonant with boredom. On few topics is an American audience so practiced in turning off its ears and minds. And none can say that the response is ill advised.

Common sense is all that is required to be a good economist. Unfortunately, in order to get your union card, you must pretend to have none. Belief in fairy tales like more spending and “free lunches” is also necessary.

But that is of little import in regard to the title – How to identify economic zombies.
 
What Is A Zombie?

Webster defines zombie as

…a will-less and speechless human in the West Indies capable only of automatic movement who is held to have died and been supernaturally reanimated

An economic zombie can speak and is not dead in any physical sense. His defining feature is a focus almost solely on the present. He assumes tomorrow will be just like today. If his current behavior has not created trouble or hardship thus far, then it won’t tomorrow or on into the future. Linearity describes his thinking and world. The future will be just like today.

A Simple Test For Economic Zombie Determination

The test to determine whether you or your friends are zombies is simple. Answer the following question: How would you live if debt/credit were outlawed? The economic zombie has difficulty comprehending the question, no less answering it. If you or your friends do, then you are well on your way toward full zombie-hood, if in fact you are not already there.

The question is relevant because it identifies those too ignorant to comprehend the fact that you cannot consume more than your income will support, at least not forever.

Income for a period determines the amount you can spend that period, or it would in the absence of debt or savings. Borrowing this period enables spending to exceed income this period. But borrowing is nothing but advancing consumption that otherwise would occur in a later period. Whatever is borrowed raises consumption this period but reduces it next period when some of the income earned then cannot be spent because it must be used to service the prior debt. Total consumption for both periods is lower than it would have been without the borrowing. That is due to the paying the carrying cost of debt, interest.

If you cannot understand this concept or you believe that you can nullify it by borrowing again next period, you qualify as an economic zombie. If you answered that you could not live if debt/credit were outlawed, you are an economic zombie, and perhaps also an economic idiot. Osavi Osar-Emokpae colorfully described debt:

And don’t tell me debt is not a big deal. Debt will cut off your legs and laugh at you as you grovel in the dirt begging for mercy. If you don’t need it, don’t get it. If you can’t afford it, don’t get it. If you’re already in debt, get out quickly. If you think you’ll never get out, you’re right, you won’t.

If you are using your credit cards as loans (i.e., you are not paying in full the balance each month) then you are zombie-qualified.

Economic zombies are not born. They are made. They choose their lifestyle. Behind every economic zombie is someone who believes he should live better than his abilities allow. That may work for a time. Then the Osar-Emokpae quote takes over.

The reality is that negative borrowing, saving, should be occurring every year. Man has a finite lifespan and a finite earning career. The latter is shorter than the former. Part of life is to be responsible enough to prepare for the future when income stops. Borrowing is a sign of immaturity and ignorance. Occasionally borrowing is necessary to meet an unforeseen emergency. If it is routine, then you are an economic zombie!


    



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How Credit Suisse Helped Thousands Of Americans Avoid Paying Taxes

Just when the latest wave of litigation against banks seemed to be calming down with one after another fraudclosure-related settlement (which have cost JPM alone some $30 billion in the past four years), here comes the Senate Permanent Subcommittee chaired by Carl “Shitty Deal” Levin, and blows up the peace of Zurich’s nighttime air with a bombshell of a 175-page report which put Switzerland’s second largest bank, Credit Suisse, front and center in a brand news tax evasion scandal… not that there is anything inherently wrong with that: the last thing the US government needs is to be enabled to be even bigger, plus any money the Treasury needs, the Fed will simply print on its behalf. However, it is considered illegal, at least in polite company. And so among the accusations listed in the report, seen by FT, is that “Credit Suisse made false claims in US visa applications, conducted business with clients in secret elevators and shredded documents to help more than 22,000 American customers avoid US taxes, according to a scathing report by a US congressional committee.

It continues: “Credit Suisse handed account statements to one client tucked inside a Sports Illustrated magazine as part of their “cloak and dagger tactics”, according to Senator Carl Levin, chairman of the US Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations which drafted the report. The bank also helped clients create offshore shell entities to avoid taxes and aided them in structuring transactions so they fell below the $10,000 amount that would alert the government, according to the report, released on Tuesday.” In other words all in a day’s business for any self-respecting tax avoider. Which according to the report would be some 22,000 self-respecting tax avoiders.

Credit Suisse created an office at Zurich airport where more than 10,000 US accounts were held, known by the code name SIO85. Bankers made 150 trips to the US from 2002 to 2008 to aid in the tax evasion efforts. At its peak, the assets of the more than 22,000 customers totaled as much as $12bn.

That tax avoidance was (note: past tense – the days of Swiss bank secrecy are now long gone) one of the Swiss banking industry’s largest sources of incomes and jobs is not a surprise, however the magnitude of just the Credit Suisse involvement is quite stuning: In total, about 1,800 bankers were involved in helping clients avoid taxes, leading Senator John McCain, the top Republican on the subcommittee, to call the practices “systematic.” And since John McCain can’t really be bothered with much more than playing online poker these days, one wonders: just who stands to benefit from the complete unraveling of the Swiss banking sector, which without its secrecy shroud provides absolutely nothing of attraction: certainly 0% deposit rates can be found everywhere these days.

Amusingly, one entity that has fallen under the magnifying glass is the US department of justice, best known in recent years of having replaced its name to department of injustice, for arming Mexican drug gangs, for aiding and abetting the IRS with hunt of conservative groups, and for not prosecuting those it deems Too Big To Prosecute.

Mr McCain also criticised the US justice department for not holding high-level individuals accountable, adding that this seemed to be the common practice of the agency.

 

Mr Levin, a Democrat, accused the justice department of failing to “pierce the cocoon of bank secrecy” and not using all available legal tools to aggressively pursue the case. He said the DoJ obtained the names of only 238 clients out of more than 22,000.

 

“The battle against tax havens using secrecy laws to facilitate US tax evasion has bogged down, causing a huge loss to our Treasury,” Mr Levin said. “The Credit Suisse case study shows how a Swiss bank aided and abetted US tax evasion, not only from behind a veil of secrecy in Switzerland, but also on US soil by sending Swiss bankers here to open hidden accounts.”

So just how big will the next latest and greatest wristslap be? And just how intense will the tongue lashing be of Credit Suisse’s current batch of executives? Find out tomorrow at 9:30 am when the Senate Subcommittee on Investigations holds a hearing title “Offshore Tax Evasion: The Effort to Collect Unpaid Taxes on Billions in Hidden Offshore Accounts” and where everyone who is anyone at Credit Suisse will be present:

    BRADY W. DOUGAN
    Chief Executive Officer
    Credit Suisse Group AG, Credit Suisse AG
    New York, NY

    ROMEO CERUTTI
    General Counsel
    Credit Suisse Group AG, Credit Suisse AG
    Zürich, Switzerland

    HANS-ULRICH MEISTER
    Co Head, Private Banking and Wealth Management, Chief Executive Officer – Region Switzerland
    Credit Suisse Group AG, Credit Suisse AG
    Zürich, Switzerland

    ROBERT S. SHAFIR
    Co Head, Private Banking and Wealth Management, Chief Executive Officer – Region Americas
    Credit Suisse Group AG, Credit Suisse AG
    New York, NY

Of course, as everyone in finance has long since known, the real center of offshore bank account money laundering moved away from the Alpine nation some 5 years ago and is now located in Singapore. One can’t wait to see just how eager the US will be to pick on someone more its own size – say China – when it is done with this latest particular witch hunt, which incidentally global regulations helped enable and which tax authorities closed their eyes on for decades, or at least until the music was playing. It would appear the time to pay the piper has finally come.


    



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Heartbreaking Video Released of Woman Watching Cops Kill Her Husband in Oklahoma

As I
blogged earlier this month
, Luis Rodriguez was killed by cops
in an Oklahoma movie theater parking lot after running after his
wife after she got in a physical fight with their
daughter. 

Cops claim Rodriguez became “combative” and five of them set
upon him; by the time the interaction was over he was dead.

As I blogged, they initially took the video his wife took of the
incident. Now
the video is available
at Photography is not a Crime.
It’s what commenters call a “nutpunch,” a real heartbreaker, as she
realizes the man she calls “papa” tenderly is dead–a fact the cops
lie to her about.

She even gives pretty apt on the scene critique of their
technique, why it took five professionals to commit this crime.
“Why you came to all this?….Look how you treating him….Can
someone tell me why you come to this?…Five men! Training!”

Most interesting/terrible moments: a sort of Monty Pythonesque
“he’s just pining for the fjords” moment when a cop half-heartedly
says to the already completely motionless Rodriguez “calm down sir”
(one suspects he was aware of the camera) and the cops telling the
woman who just witnessed this that she should “not get herself in
trouble.” She saw what getting herself in trouble with cops leads
to.

Remember: watching that video at the link will upset you.

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