- It shouldn’t come as a surprise that AIG’s reportedly considering suing Goldman Sachs (GS) and other Wall Street banks over soured mortgage assets, Yves Smith says. “Other shoes are starting to drop on the Goldman CDO front.”
- “The real scandal isn’t the Street’s unlawful acts (i.e., SEC vs. Goldman Sachs) but legal acts that have reaped the Street a bonanza and nearly sunk the rest of us,” former labor secretary Robert Reich writes.
- “The thing which struck me most about Goldman’s earnings call this morning was how guarded they were,” Felix Salmon says. “For a company which has happily been talking to the press and leaking the letters it sent to the SEC, no one on the call seemed to want to talk candidly.”
- Banks posting “favorable” earnings on lower loan-loss provisions isn’t necessarily cause for celebration, John Hussman writes. “Keep in mind that Enron and Worldcom were able to report outstanding earnings for a while by adjusting the manner by which revenues and expenses were accrued. I suspect that the US banking system has become a similar breeding ground for innovative accounting.”
- “For years, sophisticated investors and big financial institutions, all run by very well-paid individuals, invested huge sums of money on the basis of a few pearls of folk wisdom (‘housing prices never fall’) and the words of some highly conflicted players, like the ratings agencies,” James Surowiecki notes. “This was a recipe for disaster, and disaster was what we got.”
- “There are simply no social benefits to having banks with over $100 billion in total assets,” former IMF chief economist Simon Johnson asserts.
- Dept. of Transportation reports miles driven in February fell 2.9% from a year earlier. “If vehicle miles continues to decline on a year-over-year basis, it might suggest high gasoline prices are starting to impact the economy,” Calculated Risk says.
- “The key factor for a sustained recovery will be a continued improvement in job creation rates at existing firms and stabilization in the rate of new business formation,” Ellyn Terry writes on the Atlanta Fed’s macroblog.
- Citigroup shares once again toeing the $5 line.
- Lawmakers took aim at Lehman and federal regulators for the investment bank’s collapse, accusing the firm of manipulation and its watchdogs of negligence.
