Archive for October, 2011

Charges against insider hint at culture of fraud

Posted by Al Lewis on October 29, 2011
Wall Street / Comments Off

Former Goldman Sachs director Rajat Gupta is the latest to be criminally charged in an insider trading case.

The charges against Gupta are particularly alarming given the number of large U.S. companies where he had access to priviledged information. The  former head of giant global accounting firm McKinsey & Co. had his tenatacles just about everywhere.

Click here to read my column in The Sunday Wall Street Journal.  And click here to read the press release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Manhattan.

The Maestro spoke; I could barely understand him

Posted by Al Lewis on October 28, 2011
Economy / Comments Off

Besides screwing up the U.S. economy, Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan is famous for obsuring all meaning from any words he utters.

On this he did not dissapoint at the Buttonwood Gathering sponspored by the Economist Magazine at the National Museum of the American Indian in New York City earlier this week.

The topic was “The rearview mirror: A critique of public policy.” Panelists were supposed to address such questions asWhich response to the financial crisis has proven more effective—government spending or belt-tightening?” and “Has enough been done to tackle America’s high unemployment rate?” But they mostly talked about the debt crisis in Europe instead.

I went back to my digital recorder and replayed some of the things Greenspan said several times. It was difficult to tell where to put the commas.

“Actually, history looked very different back years ago and from that perpsective, what happened then, now, in order to view what we knew about the past as useful input into the future means that, let us state where we are right now.”

Don’t ask me what that means.

Among the more coherent things Greenpans said was that the main problem in the U.S. economy “is an extraordinary aversion to taking long-term risk.” No one wants to buy a home, invest in bonds or start a company, anymore. Go figure.

And jobs? Don’t expect companies to bring back jobs.

“When you sit on an executive body session within a corporation, the issues on the agenda is not how you create jobs, but how you destroy them. They don’t like to hire unless they have to,” he said.

“They’re not in the jobs creating business. They’re in the productivity-creating business, where their earnings come from … You have to get aggregate demand up.”

Yep. If we just had demand we might not have a malaise. Which is a bit like telling a man in the desert that if he only had water, he might not be thirsty.

Too Late For Debate on Obama’s Jobs Plan

Posted by Al Lewis on October 28, 2011
Economy Stupid / Comments Off

Debate: CONGRESS SHOULD PASS OBAMA’S JOBS PLAN – PIECE BY PIECE from Intelligence Squared U.S. on Vimeo.

President Obama’s Jobs Plan was dead on arrival weeks ago, so why is anybody still debating it?

The topic was “Congress Should Pass Obama’s Jobs Plan — Piece By Piece.” at the Intelligence Squared U.S. Debate Series at the New York University’s Skirball Center on Tuesday night. It was a slow night, so I went, and it seemed that the only conclusion I could come to was if we don’t pass a new stimulus plan we may be headed back into a recession, and if we do pass one we still may be headed back.

Click here to read my column on MarketWatch.

Occupy Wall Street neighbors on edge

Posted by Al Lewis on October 26, 2011
Main Street / Comments Off

Yes, it’s noisy. Yes, it’s messy.

It’s no wonder neighbors near New York’s Zuccotti Park are getting testy about the Occupy Wall Street, but Skip Blumberg who lives a few blocks away from the protest, says anyone who moved into this neighborhood should have known it’s been the site of many a ruckus throughout its history. “You should see what it’s like when the Yankees win the World Series,” Blumberg said.

Click here to read my column on MarketWatch. And watch me discuss the movement on the Wall Street Journal’s web show:

Holy Tarpaulines, Batman!

Posted by Al Lewis on October 25, 2011
Main Street / Comments Off

“Come on, Robin, to the Bat Cave! There’s not a moment to lose!” – Batman.

“Holy Handouts, Batman. I thought the bankers got TARP. These people have tarps! – Robin.

“Gotham City may never be the same. What began in Zuccotti Park, as cheap sidewalk chalk art, has spread throughout the City!” – Batman.

“Wait til they getta loada me! – Joker.

“Loada you? You idiot, Joker. There’s nothing left to steal in the whole country. Wah, Wah. Wah.” – Penguin.

“I’m afraid we’re all going out of business.” – Batman.

“Is this really the end for the dynamic duo? Tune in again. Same bat time, Same bat channel.” – Narrator.

Libyan war atrocities and other news

Posted by Al Lewis on October 25, 2011
Al On TV / 1 Comment

Thanks to Kelsey Hubbard and crew for allowing me to co-host the Wall Street Journal’s show.

Occupy Lego Land Fights For Little Guys

Posted by Al Lewis on October 24, 2011
Trends / Comments Off

I have dutifully reported the Wall Street protest from Occupy San Francisco, Occupy Denver, Occupy Chicago and the original Occupy movement from Zuccotti Park in New York.

Now, I’m giving you a glimpse of Occupy Lego Land – which is drawing quite a following on Twitter (@OccupyLegoLand) and Facebook. Click here to read the group’s Facebook page.

I shot this photo at Zuccotti Park on Sunday night. Boy. are the little people getting tired of getting the shaft from their big corporate oppressors.

“With all of the angst currently going on in the USA and the world, attention must also be brought to the people of Lego Land,” the group’s Facebook page declares. “Lego Land has one of the smallest per-capita incomes on earth. Lego Land people are practically slaves.”

One Good Thing About The NBA Lockout

Posted by Al Lewis on October 24, 2011
Al On TV / Comments Off

I talk with Matt Flener of Denver’s NBC affiliate 9News about the NBA lockout and ongoing community bank failures.

Another insider trading convict off to prison

Posted by Al Lewis on October 22, 2011
Wall Street / Comments Off

Denver hedge fund manager Bo Brownstein is headed to prison after pleading guilty to insider trading charges.

For $2.5 million in illegal trading gains, he’s likely to lose three to four years of  his freedom. And it’s not like the 35-year-old son of prominent Denver attorney and powerbroker, Norm Brownstein, needed the money.

“I’ve severely disappointed my family, colleagues, investors and friends,” the junior Brownstein told U.S. District Judge Robert Patterson in Manhattan federal court.

Amid a rash of similar cases, insider trading is starting to seem like the standard operating procedure for hedge fund managers. Billionaire Galleon Group CEO Raj Rajaratnam, for one, was recently sentenced to 11 years.

Some people on Wall Street are just so  enamored with their own success, they think they can get away with it. The Justice Department has done a pretty good job showing some of them otherwise. But with all these big guys breaking the rules, does the little guy even stand a chance in the stock market?

Click here to read more about Browstein in The Denver Post. And click here to see a press release  from the Justice Department.

A Stand-Up Guy

Posted by Al Lewis on October 22, 2011
Celebrities / Comments Off

Earl Boykins is the only player in the NBA that I can stand back-to-back with and not have to stand on a crate.

I used to in the stands with my son at games, listening to him cheer for Boykins. These days, I’m with Boykins at games, listening to him cheer for  my son.

In the throes of a lockout that has so-far cancelled the first two weeks of the NBA season, Boykins has generously committed his time to coaching the Colorado Miners. His son and my son both play for the team.

Click here to read my column in The Sunday Wall Street Journal.

At 5’5″, Boykins is the shortest player in the NBA. And I’ll have to add that it’s short, even for a journalist. Heck, I’m not even as  tall as Rocky, the Denver Nuggets Mascot. But as Boykins has consistently demonstrated with his career, you don’t have to be tall, you just have to be determined.