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Saturday, December 13, 2008

The effect of the 'Madoff Mess' on the Markets

On Friday December 12 the news broke that the ex-Nasdaq Chairman Bernard Madoff was arrested and charged with operating a multibillion-dollar Ponzi scheme from his investment advisory business.
The total amount of the fraud is yet unclear but can easily reach 50.- Billion U.S. Dollar which makes it a record amount ever for a Ponzi Scheme.
Bernard Madoff was heavily involved with the $1.5 Trillion hedge fund industry and had wealthy clients from all over the world.
It took a while before the news spread around but already rumors are circulating about funds that will be wiped out in the next future.
With the world stock markets in a shaky condition and the recession deepening we can expect in the days, weeks and months ahead, investors running for the exit and even some 'classic panic scenes' emerging.

This latest affair, 'The Madoff Mess' is beginning to raise seroius questions about the mental health of - generally- very trusted people like; finanicial authorities, stock brokers, bankers, advisors and so on.
Bernard Madoff, an Ex-Nasdaq chairman with obviously the status of a Very Trusted Person (VTP), simply turned out to be a fraud.
At the same time it raises questions about the mental health of the people trusting their money to him.

Good stuff for a book anyway: "The Financial World runned by a Bunch of Egocentric Lolly Loonies"

(Dec 14) Reports are circulating about Swiss Banks being hit for 4 Billion U.S. Dollar by the Madoff Fraud. A fair amount of wealthy and distinghuised instutions from the American East Coast are among the victims as well. The list of victims is growing, not only among the wealthy and powerful.

December 26. What drove Bernie Madoff? (Article on CNN Money)
An intense competitive streak may have fueled the flames of one of Wall Street's greatest frauds.
But inside was the drive of an intensely competitive person.
"There's a need to prove to the world that I am somebody powerful -- I am so intelligent," said psychologist Alden Cass, president of Competitive Streak Consulting, who has counseled and studied Wall Street personalities.


(Reuters) Madoff's alleged $50 billion fraud hits other investors

(CNN Money/Fortune)'Financial psychopaths' wreak havoc
The damage done in cases of Bernard Madoff and Marc Dreier doesn't end with investors.

Wall Street's Latest Downfall: Madoff Charged with Fraud (Time.com)
Bernard Madoff, the former Nasdaq chairman who was charged on Thursday with massive fraud, was long considered to be quirky. Employees at the offices of his eponymously named brokerage firm in midtown Manhattan's Lipstick Building had to follow strict rules for what they kept on their desk. Family photos were allowed but only if they were displayed in a simple black frame.

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