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Showing posts with label financial. Show all posts
Showing posts with label financial. Show all posts

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Inside the Bear Stearns boiler room

Inside the Bear Stearns boiler room
Exclusive book excerpt: Bestselling author William Cohan uncovers the inner workings of the misadventure that brought down Bear Stearns and foreshadowed the financial crisis to come.

By William D. Cohan Last Updated: March 3, 2009: 9:45 AM ET

NEW YORK (Fortune) -- Years from now, when academics search for causes of the stock market crash of 2008, they will focus on the pivotal role of mortgage-backed securities. These exotic financial instruments allowed a downturn in U.S. home prices to morph into a contagion that brought down Bear Stearns a year ago this month - and more recently have brought the global banking system to its knees.
What scholars should not miss is the role that the human element - call it greed or ignorance - played in this tragedy. In an exclusive excerpt from William Cohan's new book, "House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street," to be published March 10 by Doubleday, the bestselling author sheds light on the bankers who thought they had mastered what Warren Buffett has called "financial weapons of mass destruction."


By looking back to the roots of the misadventure in which Bear Stearns traders Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin lost roughly $1.6 billion while allegedly misleading investors, Cohan illustrates how the missteps of the few can have consequences for the many.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Sony's profits tumbling

Sony's quarterly net profit plunges 95 percent as electronics division slides into red
TOKYO (AP) -- Sony said Thursday its net profit plunged 95 percent in the October-December quarter, as the holiday shopping season provided no respite for the struggling electronics giant and tepid sales of TVs, digital cameras and mobile phones hit its bottom line.
The Japanese manufacturing icon said its usually dependable electronics division posted its first-ever operating loss for the fiscal third quarter. It also reiterated its forecast for a net loss of 150 billion yen ($1.67 billion) for the full fiscal year through March -- its first loss in 14 years.
Sony Corp. said net profit shriveled to 10.4 billion yen ($115.6 million) in the third quarter from 200.2 billion yen a year earlier. Revenue fell 25 percent to 2.15 trillion yen from 2.86 trillion yen.

Sony Global - Press Release

(January 29, 2009). Consolidated Financial Results for the Third Quarter ... Statement Regarding Media Story on Sony's Financial Results ...


Earnings Release Download PDF

Thursday, December 18, 2008

The most important conclusion of 2008

It's not only a question of lessons to be learned from what happened in the World Economy and on the Stock Markets in 2008, but also a matter of conclusions to be drawn.
The most important conclusion just unexpectedly popped up last week when the Madoff story broke and this week when the effects of the Madoff maelstream begin to appear.

When 'very trusted people' (VTP) suddenly prove untrustworthy, people can begin to lose confidence in: authorities, a method or system, themselves or their fellow citizens.
This year we watched the failings and mistakes of: bankers, brokers, politicians, business leaders, bureaucrats, scientists, advisors, authorities and a lot more.
Even the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) failed to control and audit Madoff, although there were allegations of his financial wrongdoing since 1999. (See link beneath)
The latest results will ripple through and eventually calm will be restored, but it's worth thinking about the long term effects of loss of confidence and trust.
As a whole however, Investors and the Investment Community simply shrugg off the Madoff effect on the market, it is no more than a piece of rather shocking bad news. Next year the results will show or not. For the moment it only adds to the recession. And it all depends in how far the hedge funds will be hit.
Even the battered Fortis investors (in the Netherlands) do not seem to have sleepless nights after the news Fortis was hit by a possible 1 Billion Euro loss through the Madoff scam.
Anyway, the world has really changed in 2008! This is our preliminary conclusion by the way, an open door with unknown consequences and opportunities.

President-elect Obama says: 'Regulators have been asleep at the switch'.
This seems to be a common international problem we noticed.


See this link: Obama names 3 more for his financial team, says regulators have been 'asleep at the switch'

SEC chairman says agency failed to probe Madoff
December 17th, 2008

WASHINGTON (AP) — In a stunning rebuke, the Securities and Exchange Commission chairman blames his career regulators for a decade-long failure to investigate Wall Street money manager Bernard L. Madoff, now accused of running one of the largest Ponzi schemes ever.
On Tuesday night, SEC Chairman Christopher Cox ordered an internal investigation of what went wrong and offered a scathing critique of the conduct of his staff attorneys. He said they never bothered to seek a formal commission-approved investigation that would have forced Madoff to surrender vital information under subpoena. Instead, the staff relied on information voluntarily produced by Madoff and his firm.
Credible and specific allegations regarding Madoff’s financial wrongdoing going back to at least 1999 were repeatedly brought to the attention of SEC staff, said Cox.