Deep Capture (intro)

Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff

Re: Some Comments

Postby Brentos » Wed Mar 25, 2009 5:36 pm

JD wrote: I don't think it is as big of deal as the overstock.com President does.


Hmmn, I dunno, alernatively it may be the tip of a very large iceberg. The crossover with DTCC especially. Not sure if you have read up on DTCC and its subsidiary 'Cede & Company'. Here is some background:

http://ming.tv/flemming2.php/__show_art ... 000999.htm

Particularly interesting is the link to the transcript of a letter on the sec's website from a transfer agent regarding the nature of the DTCC:

"Many Issuers have come forward with their opinions and interest in joining the
exodus from DTC. They are frustrated by dramatic unexplained price movements,
confounded when in a single day, in companies with a high percentage of shares
held by insiders, more than the number of shares outstanding for their company
are traded,
and they are frustrated by their inability to access the information
they need to determine the cause. The company is essentially cutoff from the
majority of stock transactions that take place behind the closed doors of DTC
in book entry movements of shares. Should the Issuer request information it is
only available to them at the prices that are determined by DTC.

"

Cede & Co's relationship to the stock you 'buy' through brokerages seems to very fishy too, buts thats a whole other can of worms.

As far as the principle of short selling goes I liked this analogy from: http://portal.theporch.net/index.php?op ... 8&Itemid=1 :


"A Kentucky View Of Short Selling
Written by Kent
Friday, 19 September 2008

Well, short selling of stocks is a hot topic again. If you have any interest in what it means, see the Wikipedia article. If that's too much trouble, let me give you a Kentucky version of short selling.

Melvin Middleclass lives next door to me and has a motorhome with a 135 gallon gas tank. Melvin is a conspiracy theorist and always keeps the gas tank full in the event of nuclear warfare, government drugging by chemtrails, and such like. So, as Hurricane Ike approaches the petroleum coast, I watch the price of gasoline skyrocket to $4.25/gallon. I began scheming ... hmmmm ... Melvin has a gold mine in that gas tank adjacent to my driveway. And I just know that the price will fall once the weather media hype retreats and the gasoline pipeline starts flowing again. Click to read on, brother ...

So, I sez to myself, "Self, we could put two of those 55-gallon drums in the back of our trusty pickup, get one of those cheap gas transfer pumps and just borrow about 110 gallons of gasoline for a few days." I coerce my buddy, Brutus, to help me -- mainly to make sure Melvin stays asleep as we suck his RV's tank nearly dry. In forty-five minutes, we have about $470 worth of Melvin's gasoline in the back of the truck, then commence to the conglomeration of beer joints at the county line.

Around 1AM, we locate a good spot and begin selling gas to the exiting patrons for the bargain rate of $4.22/gallon. At 2AM, we go back to the house with two empty drums and $465 in my pocket. (I trust Brutus, but not that much!)

On Tuesday morning, I converse jovially with Melvin in the driveway and he is none the wiser to our antics. The price of gas has now fallen to $3.49/gallon, so I think the time is ripe to repay Melvin. I navigate the trusty pickup to the truck stop and fill the two 55-gallon drums with $384 worth of gasoline using the $470 we pocketed Saturday nite at the beer joint. Tuesday night, I pump 110 gallons back into Melvin's RV and we're all even. Melvin has his tank full of gas; and I have $81 dollars in my pocket because gas went down in price in that small amount of time.

That is the essence of short selling. A quick recap: I knew that the price of a commodity would fall. I found someone who had invested in this commodity, borrowed a quantity of the commodity and sold it for a decent price. When the market price for the commodity fell, I repurchased the same quantity of the commodity to repay the borrower -- at some profit for me.

Ok, the Wall Street types will loft all kinda words at me, like liquidity, 'Making a Market', and other such blatherings, but that is it in a nutshell. Except for one thing. Melvin. Melvin. I really didn't get permission to borrow his gas -- it was just convenient to do so and he never knew. (Note to self -> Slip a $20 to Brutus to keep him quiet.) I took control of his gasoline tank without his knowledge and profited from it.

What does this have to do with shares of stock? Like it or not, you do not have control of your shares of stock that are sitting in your 401K or other account. The day you buy it, Cede & Co., the nominee for the Depository Trust Company, gains control of your stock. Yes, you retain the title of "beneficial owner", but you in essence have no control over those shares until you sell them. In the meantime, this clearinghouse, Cede & Co., is loaning out your shares left and right so the guys that make their living off the ups and downs of stock prices can generate their income. Why do we tolerate this?

Back to Melvin; a real good neighbor would have 'fessed up and told Melvin what he had done, and compensated Melvin with a portion of the profit-taking. Is it not logical that a short seller should be required to compensate the real owner -- the beneficial owner -- for the temporary use of those shares of stock? As certain as I am that Melvin did not purchase that gasoline so that I could make money off it, I can assure you that most individuals do not purchase shares of stock so a trader can profit from the buyers assets.

Where do we go from here? I dunno. It is clear to me we have a system that serves those who work in the financial industry rather than serving the "beneficial" owners of the shares of stock. I found a document today in the Wikipedia links ... a nice, focused history of the technolological changes on Wall Street and a summary of how we got ourselves into this situation. Feel free to comment in the ShoutBox in left side panel or at the email address on the contact page.
"
User avatar
Brentos
 
Posts: 515
Joined: Thu Dec 21, 2006 5:01 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby JD » Wed Mar 25, 2009 9:06 pm

Brentos said:

Hmmn, I dunno, alernatively it may be the tip of a very large iceberg.


Note I'm not saying it isn't a really big problem. But "Crime of the Century" I think not.

Hell Moody's and Standard and Poor's ratings of the mortgage bundles likely bigger.

My issue with the deepcapture hypothesis is that they present it as the end of the world that a generic company gets its equity value whacked by a short attack.

Sure, not fun to happen. But for most companies that run real businesses, not the end of the world. In fact a good time for managmement to get cheap options and buy more stock. LOL.

For a business like Bear Stearns though, it is indeed a death blow. If your equity value plumments and counterparties won't do business with you it is the end.

If you are a company that relies on issuing equity to fund massive capital obligations, like a junior pharmaceutical, junior miner, junior oil and gas it is also wildly crippling but can be managed.

Again; when I look at the numbers of shares that are short in companies I never see numbers over 100%. Yet it clearly happens as evidenced by Taser. Actually I'm baffled by the proxy votes. I know when we do a proxy vote that we track the votes carefully and know who is getting the proxies. All "friendlies" are locked up with their vote; and we know exactly how many "unknowns" are out there. No possible way that we'd send out more than 100% of shares to vote. Maybe on some exchanges proxies are administered differently? So as I said before; wtf.

As per:

[quote]more than the number of shares outstanding for their company
are traded,[/
quote]

of course a share can be bought and sold multiple times in a day; so this isn't the same smoking gun the greater than 100% of shares voting in a proxy fight is; LOL.

The DTCC is a profoundly disturbing institution, and all I can say to all the learnings of Byrne et al is damned good work guys and keep it up.

Yes and Cede is another (scary!) matter. Does one even own the stocks in their brokerages? Or will they ultimately be swindled away?

Anyone note the connection of Weiss to Middle Eastern politics and where his sympathies lie? Plus the (presumably?) false Anti-Semite charges that were being pushed? What a piece of work. Byrne may indeed have come upon a very interesting confluence of Middle Eastern politics, media, finance, and presumably governement control all linked up and demonstrated in one neat package. Yikes; suggestive of gnomes indeed.

Again it is interesting that overstock.com still exists as a public entity, and Byrne is still President. If the "Naked Shorts" and DTCC were so powerful in so many matters; it is surprising his company hasn't been crushed. Imagine the burden that the SEC could place on the company, for example. They could essentially make it impossible to operate or trade. The fact they aren't suggests either DTCC isn't "all powerful" as the deepcapture.com hypothesis says, or that Byrne isn't a true dissident of the system.

So, may be more complex even than presented. All told really interesting, at least to me!!
JD
 
Posts: 515
Joined: Thu Oct 20, 2005 4:19 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby Brentos » Wed Mar 25, 2009 9:22 pm

JD wrote:
Again it is interesting that overstock.com still exists as a public entity, and Byrne is still President. If the "Naked Shorts" and DTCC were so powerful in so many matters; it is surprising his company hasn't been crushed. Imagine the burden that the SEC could place on the company, for example. They could essentially make it impossible to operate or trade. The fact they aren't suggests either DTCC isn't "all powerful" as the deepcapture.com hypothesis says, or that Byrne isn't a true dissident of the system.

So, may be more complex even than presented. All told really interesting, at least to me!!


Yes, I've entertained overstock.com's current existence as worthy of a future explanation from Byrne.
I agree its good to be open minded. But if its true re: dtcc & Cede (google 'Senator Metcalf Cede') Byrne may be very small fish...so far.
User avatar
Brentos
 
Posts: 515
Joined: Thu Dec 21, 2006 5:01 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

re: deep capture

Postby hanshan » Thu Mar 26, 2009 5:45 pm

...


Naked Short Sales Hint Fraud in Bringing Down Lehman (Update1)
Share | Email | Print | A A A

By Gary Matsumoto

March 19 (Bloomberg) -- The biggest bankruptcy in history might have

been avoided if Wall Street had been prevented from practicing one of its darkest arts.

As Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. struggled to survive last year, as many as 32.8 million shares in the company were sold and not delivered to buyers on time as of Sept. 11, according to data compiled by the Securities and Exchange Commission and Bloomberg. That was a more than 57-fold increase over the prior year’s peak of 567,518 failed trades on July 30.


http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=aB1jlqmFOTCA
Image

it happens

edited to add pic
...
hanshan
 
Posts: 1673
Joined: Fri Apr 22, 2005 5:04 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Deep Capture (intro)

Postby bks » Wed May 16, 2012 12:12 pm

per Taibbi, Goldman Sachs' internal documents show it engaged in naked short selling:

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/bl ... qus_thread

Accidentally Released - and Incredibly Embarrassing - Documents Show How Goldman et al Engaged in 'Naked Short Selling'

POSTED: May 15, 5:39 PM ET
Comment
48
overstock.com
AP Photo/Douglas C. Pizac

It doesn’t happen often, but sometimes God smiles on us. Last week, he smiled on investigative reporters everywhere, when the lawyers for Goldman, Sachs slipped on one whopper of a legal banana peel, inadvertently delivering some of the bank’s darker secrets into the hands of the public.

The lawyers for Goldman and Bank of America/Merrill Lynch have been involved in a legal battle for some time – primarily with the retail giant Overstock.com, but also with Rolling Stone, the Economist, Bloomberg, and the New York Times. The banks have been fighting us to keep sealed certain documents that surfaced in the discovery process of an ultimately unsuccessful lawsuit filed by Overstock against the banks.

Last week, in response to an Overstock.com motion to unseal certain documents, the banks’ lawyers, apparently accidentally, filed an unredacted version of Overstock’s motion as an exhibit in their declaration of opposition to that motion. In doing so, they inadvertently entered into the public record a sort of greatest-hits selection of the very material they’ve been fighting for years to keep sealed.

I contacted Morgan Lewis, the firm that represents Goldman in this matter, earlier today, but they haven’t commented as of yet. I wonder if the poor lawyer who FUBARred this thing has already had his organs harvested; his panic is almost palpable in the air. It is both terrible and hilarious to contemplate. The bank has spent a fortune in legal fees trying to keep this material out of the public eye, and here one of their own lawyers goes and dumps it out on the street.

The lawsuit between Overstock and the banks concerned a phenomenon called naked short-selling, a kind of high-finance counterfeiting that, especially prior to the introduction of new regulations in 2008, short-sellers could use to artificially depress the value of the stocks they’ve bet against. The subject of naked short-selling is a) highly technical, and b) very controversial on Wall Street, with many pundits in the financial press for years treating the phenomenon as the stuff of myths and conspiracy theories.

Now, however, through the magic of this unredacted document, the public will be able to see for itself what the banks’ attitudes are not just toward the “mythical” practice of naked short selling (hint: they volubly confess to the activity, in writing), but toward regulations and laws in general.

“Fuck the compliance area – procedures, schmecedures,” chirps Peter Melz, former president of Merrill Lynch Professional Clearing Corp. (a.k.a. Merrill Pro), when a subordinate worries about the company failing to comply with the rules governing short sales.

We also find out here how Wall Street professionals manipulated public opinion by buying off and/or intimidating experts in their respective fields. In one email made public in this document, a lobbyist for SIFMA, the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, tells a Goldman executive how to engage an expert who otherwise would go work for “our more powerful enemies,” i.e. would work with Overstock on the company’s lawsuit.

“He should be someone we can work with, especially if he sees that cooperation results in resources, both data and funding,” the lobbyist writes, “while resistance results in isolation.”

There are even more troubling passages, some of which should raise a few eyebrows, in light of former Goldman executive Greg Smith's recent public resignation, in which he complained that the firm routinely screwed its own clients and denigrated them (by calling them "Muppets," among other things).

Here, the plaintiff’s motion refers to an “exhibit 96,” which refers to “an email from [Goldman executive] John Masterson that sends nonpublic data concerning customer short positions in Overstock and four other hard-to-borrow stocks to Maverick Capital, a large hedge fund that sells stocks short.”

Was Goldman really disclosing “nonpublic data concerning customer short positions” to its big hedge fund clients? That would be something its smaller, “Muppet” customers would probably want to hear about.

When I contacted Goldman and asked if it was true that Masterson had shared nonpublic customer information with a big hedge fund client, their spokesperson Michael Duvally offered this explanation:

Among other services it provides, Securities Lending at Goldman provides market color information to clients regarding various activity in the securities lending marketplace on a security specific or sector specific basis. In accordance with the group's guidelines concerning the provision of market color, Mr. Masterson provided a client with certain aggregate information regarding short balances in certain securities. The information did not contain reference to any particular clients' short positions.

You can draw your own conclusions from that answer, but it's safe to say we'd like to hear more about these practices.

Anyway, the document is full of other interesting disclosures. Among the more compelling is the specter of executives from numerous companies admitting openly to engaging in naked short selling, a practice that, again, was often dismissed as mythical or unimportant.

A quick primer on what naked short selling is. First of all, short selling, which is a completely legal and often beneficial activity, is when an investor bets that the value of a stock will decline. You do this by first borrowing and then selling the stock at its current price, then returning the stock to your original lender after the price has gone down. You then earn a profit on the difference between the original price and the new, lower price.

What matters here is the technical issue of how you borrow the stock. Typically, if you’re a hedge fund and you want to short a company, you go to some big-shot investment bank like Goldman or Morgan Stanley and place the order. They then go out into the world, find the shares of the stock you want to short, borrow them for you, then physically settle the trade later.

But sometimes it’s not easy to find those shares to borrow. Sometimes the shares are controlled by investors who might have no interest in lending them out. Sometimes there’s such scarcity of borrowable shares that banks/brokers like Goldman have to pay a fee just to borrow the stock.

These hard-to-borrow stocks, stocks that cost money to borrow, are called negative rebate stocks. In some cases, these negative rebate stocks cost so much just to borrow that a short-seller would need to see a real price drop of 35 percent in the stock just to break even. So how do you short a stock when you can’t find shares to borrow? Well, one solution is, you don’t even bother to borrow them. And then, when the trade is done, you don’t bother to deliver them. You just do the trade anyway without physically locating the stock.

Thus in this document we have another former Merrill Pro president, Thomas Tranfaglia, saying in a 2005 email: “We are NOT borrowing negatives… I have made that clear from the beginning. Why would we want to borrow them? We want to fail them.”

Trafaglia, in other words, didn’t want to bother paying the high cost of borrowing “negative rebate” stocks. Instead, he preferred to just sell stock he didn’t actually possess. That is what is meant by, “We want to fail them.” Trafaglia was talking about creating “fails” or “failed trades,” which is what happens when you don’t actually locate and borrow the stock within the time the law allows for trades to be settled.

If this sounds complicated, just focus on this: naked short selling, in essence, is selling stock you do not have. If you don’t have to actually locate and borrow stock before you short it, you’re creating an artificial supply of stock shares.

In this case, that resulted in absurdities like the following disclosure in this document, in which a Goldman executive admits in a 2006 email that just a little bit too much trading in Overstock was going on: “Two months ago 107% of the floating was short!”

In other words, 107% of all Overstock shares available for trade were short – a physical impossibility, unless someone was somehow creating artificial supply in the stock.

Goldman clearly knew there was a discrepancy between what it was telling regulators, and what it was actually doing. “We have to be careful not to link locates to fails [because] we have told the regulators we can’t,” one executive is quoted as saying, in the document.

One of the companies Goldman used to facilitate these trades was called SBA Trading, whose chief, Scott Arenstein, was fined $3.6 million in 2007 by the former American Stock Exchange for naked short selling.

The process of how banks circumvented federal clearing regulations is highly technical and incredibly difficult to follow. These companies were using obscure loopholes in regulations that allowed them to short companies by trading in shadows, or echoes, of real shares in their stock. They manipulated rules to avoid having to disclose these “failed” trades to regulators.

The import of this is that it made it cheaper and easier to bet down the value of a stock, while simultaneously devaluing the same stock by adding fake supply. This makes it easier to make money by destroying value, and is another example of how the over-financialization of the economy makes real, job-creating growth more difficult.

In any case, this document all by itself shows numerous executives from companies like Goldman Sachs Execution and Clearing (GSEC) and Merrill Pro talking about a conscious strategy of “failing” trades – in other words, not bothering to locate, borrow, and deliver stock within the time alotted for legal settlement. For instance, in one email, GSEC tells a client, Wolverine Trading, “We will let you fail.”

More damning is an email from a Goldman, Sachs hedge fund client, who remarked that when wanting to “short an impossible name and fully expecting not to receive it” he would then be “shocked to learn that [Goldman’s representative] could get it for us.”

Meaning: when an experienced hedge funder wanted to trade a very hard-to-find stock, he was continually surprised to find that Goldman, magically, could locate the stock. Obviously, it is not hard to locate a stock if you’re just saying you located it, without really doing it.

As a hilarious side-note: when I contacted Goldman about this story, they couldn't resist using their usual P.R. playbook. In this case, Goldman hastened to point out that Overstock lost this lawsuit (it was dismissed because of a jurisdictional issue), and then had this to say about Overstock:

Overstock pursued the lawsuit as part of its longstanding self-described "Jihad" designed to distract attention from its own failure to meet its projected growth and profitability goals and the resulting sharp drop in its stock price during the 2005-2006 period.

Good old Goldman -- they can't answer any criticism without describing their critics as losers, conspiracy theorists, or, most frequently, both. Incidentally, Overstock rebounded from the 2005-2006 short attack to become a profitable company again, during the same period when Goldman was needing hundreds of billions of dollars in emergency Fed lending and federal bailouts to stave off extinction.

Anyway, this galactic screwup by usually-slick banker lawyers gives us a rare peek into the internal mindset of these companies, and their attitude toward regulations, the markets, even their own clients. The fact that they wanted to keep all of this information sealed is not surprising, since it’s incredibly embarrassing stuff, if you understand the context.

More to come: until then, here’s the motion, and pay particular attention to pages 14-19.

UPDATE: Well, I guess I shouldn't feel too badly for the lawyer who stepped on this land mine. For Morgan Lewis counsel Joe Floren, karma, it seems, really is a bitch.

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/bl ... z1v396xKet
bks
 
Posts: 1093
Joined: Thu Jul 19, 2007 2:44 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Previous

Return to General Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 164 guests