Wednesday 27th of November 2024

business as usual .....

business as usual .....

Today, hundreds of workers, clergy members, community leaders, and other taxpayers converged on the Washington, D.C. headquarters of Goldman Sachs to demand the bank put an end to multi-billion dollar bonuses, reject the Too Big To Fail Doctrine, and use their anticipated $23 billion bonus pool to help families facing foreclosure. Taxpayers also called on Congress to take immediate action on real financial reform.

"Lloyd Blankfein and Goldman Sachs have rightfully earned the leading role in the story of 'all that is wrong with Wall Street,'" said George Goehl, Executive Director of the National People's Action. "Now is the time for them to start making amends for past transgressions. A good first step would include showing a little holiday spirit by directing a significant portion of their estimated $23 billion-dollar bonus pool to a fund to prevent foreclosure. It's the least they could do."

Today's demonstration was the latest in a series of national mobilizations launched last month as 5,000 taxpayers from 20 states converged on the American Bankers Association convention in Chicago to demand Wall Street and big banks stop fighting reforms that would protect our families from the next economic crisis.

"Companies like Goldman Sachs seem to love their company more than their country," said Andy Stern, President of the Service Employees International Union. "And in the name of maximizing profits and their huge bonuses, they will foreclose on our homes and take jobs from our families while short selling America without a second thought. The $23 billion dollars Goldman is planning to pay out in bonuses could prevent every single expected foreclosure in America in 2010."

http://www.alternet.org/blogs/workplace/143997/hundreds_converge_on_goldman_sachs_dc_headquarters

elsewhere at the trough .....

Barclays is being sued by the trustees of Lehman Brothers for the return of a $5bn 'windfall' they claim was improperly pocketed by the British bank during its emergency purchase of Lehman last year.

Lawyers for the failed investment bank are seeking a trial to recover the money, plus damages. "The sale transaction was secretly structured from the outset to give Barclays an immediate and enormous windfall profit," lawyers for Lehman claim. Barclays also stands accused of failing to pay about $500m in bonuses and of meeting only $238m of $1.5bn in other obligations.

Barclays is now facing at least three lawsuits over its fire-sale purchase of Lehman with claims against the bank totalling $10bn.

The acquisition of Lehman - a sale that was pushed through rapidly for fear there wouldn't be anything left to sell - was widely regarded as a rare financial-crisis win for the London bank. The bank made a net gain of $4.2bn on the value of the assets it acquired through the sale.

But the central claim against Barclays is that it received Lehman securities valued at about $50bn for just $45bn in cash.

Included are accusations that Lehman executives who negotiated that deal knew they would receive offers to work at Barclays. It is claimed that one executive, who has now left the firm, was offered a compensation deal worth $37m.

So, Barclays, treated as a saviour at the time, is now being forced to answer accusations of profiteering. (Last week, Barclays CEO John Varley said that "profit is not satanic".)

http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/56209,news-comment,business,barclays-gets-slapped-with-5bn-lehman-suit?DCMP=NLC-daily

hail mammon .....

While top executives of Barclays, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs and other big investment houses were initially puzzled and hurt by the public's moral outrage, their audacious sense of personal worth and entitlement quickly kicked back in. So Europeans are now witnessing the spectacle of bankers draping themselves in radiant robes of ethical purity.

"Profit is not satanic," the CEO of Barclays recently proclaimed. "Size is not necessarily evil," asserted the head of Deutsche Bank.

But leave it to Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs (and the world's highest-paid banker -- $68 million in 2007 alone) to combine self-pity with self-adulation in a grandiose PR effort to reposition financial thieves as paragons of social altruism. "I know I could slit my writs and people would cheer," he acknowledged in an interview published Nov. 8 in London's Sunday Times. But, he said of himself and his big banking brethren," We're very important. We help companies to grow by helping them to raise capital. Companies that create more growth and more wealth. This, in turn, allows people to have jobs that create more growth and more wealth. It's a virtuous cycle."

And, just in case you missed the message of Blankfein's morality tale, he concluded by portraying himself as a mere banker "doing God's work."

Wow. What a wrathful god he must worship!

http://www.alternet.org/story/144026/hightower%3A_obscenely_rich_bankers_claim_to_do_god%27s_work_--_they_can_go_to_hell/

and Crikey on good old awstrayla .....

Bank exec bonuses helped by Rudd's rules

Adam Schwab writes:

For all the talk of alignment and skill, there appears to be one clear and dominant rationale which appears to underline executive remuneration -- a company's size. Despite the millions paid to remuneration consultants and hours spent by Remuneration Committees, the rule appears clear: the bigger the company, the more the CEO is paid, regardless of how difficult the job is, or how successful the executive's tenure has been.

The best example of this is the remuneration paid to banking executives. Unlike many other industries or small businesses which are often left to wither and die in the face of market forces, the banking sector remains a protected species. Last year it was virtually saved by taxpayers. In October 2008, during the height of the global financial crisis the Federal Government (upon the urgings of de facto advisors, Macquarie Bank), instituted a guarantee of wholesale funding and a subsequent guarantee on bank deposits.

The wholesale funding guarantee had a couple of fairly substantial benefits -- firstly, it allowed Australian banks to raise cheap debt via overseas sources. More importantly, it virtually wiped out any non-bank competition in the lending market (the smaller banks are required to pay a far greater premium to access the funds). The big four banks now write almost every home loan in the country. The deposit guarantee also served to further lower the banks' funding costs.

Fortunately for our bankers, Kevin Rudd and Wayne Sawn are far more generous than their United States-based counterparts. While recipients of TARP money in the US are being overseen by Pay Czar, Kenneth Feinberg, Australian banks are free to pay their executives as much as they desire - notwithstanding the fact that their very survival was paid for by Australian taxpayers. (Feinberg recently capped the remuneration received by various executives of Citigroup and the Bank of America).

Apart from the explicit assistance, Australian banks have also benefited from other government policies, such as the ill-conceived "first home owner's grant", which contributed to a housing bubble and boosted the banks' loan income. The grant also allowed the banks' largest security, Australian residential property, to substantially increase in value.

Given that their job has been made somewhat easy courtesy of the taxpayer guarantees and grant, bank shareholders may have expected senior management's remuneration to be reduced this year.

Alas, the four pillars have taken a vastly different approach to that of Macquarie Bank, which gave CEO, Nicholas Moore, a substantial pay cut in 2009.

ANZ boss, Mike Smith, who is spearheading the bank's foray into Asia (the graveyard of many Australian businesses) headed the pack, collecting $11 million last year. ANZ's net profit slumped by 10 percent.

Westpac's Gail Kelly, who led the bank's merger with St.George (a decision which has already cost Westpac shareholders $500 million) received $10.6 million. Just ahead of the Commonwealth Bank's Ralph Norris, who was paid $9.2 million. Even new boy, Cameron Clyne, head of NAB, managed to snare $5.2 million. The payment was especially generous given the former consultant has only been in the job since 1 January 2009.

Kevin Rudd may publicly deride extreme capitalism -- but the Federal Government's policies appear to be aiding and abetting it.