Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Goldman’s Orphan Month
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8 comments:
Now, where did the AIG money go?
It did not go to Goldman Sachs.
It went through Goldman Sachs to Goldman Sachs counterparties.
I believe those counterparties to be life insurance companies.
In other words the AIG bailout was ultimately a main street bailout.
Now that is more favourable than you will hear on most blogs.
J
With the mainstream press and blogosphere so credulous, I guess you can imagine it pays off to pull tricks like this with your accounts.
So, without the fees from "unwinding" it would have been a lot worse?
Interest income is down year over year, another weird one...
Main St is the life insurance business. Going through the iterations....
john, they booked a 850mio loss on lyondellbasell loans in dec. which i think is when the company went broke, but i'm not 100pct sure.
best
To CNBC's credit, they mentioned the absence of December for GS this morning, and mentioned that it was a baaad month. Then it was back to blah blah blah.
john...you don't know what you are talking about. why don't you actually look at an sec filing every once in a while instead of cherry picking and taking things out of context?
no matter, you're just another lemming.
I've seen a lot of posts that the lost month was mandatory and it had been known for months. That may be, but to me the point is that they surely tried to juggle losses to Dec and revenue to their new Q1 so they could crush earnings and get their secondary priced. I'm not saying conspiracy, I'm just saying this should have been more obvious to people.
So when WSJ says they doubt the move was deliberate, then sure, it probably wasn't a well orchestrated scheme. But I'm guessing Goldman took full advantage of this opportunity.
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