The New York Times' front page exposé on the role that Goldman Sachs has played in the Greek tragedy unfolding in Europe right now raises a huge number of concerns, both for the U.S. economy and the financial reform proposals now in Congress.
To recap, Greece and a number of other European Union (EU) countries are dangerously in debt. EU rules say member countries cannot have budget deficits that exceed three percent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Greece's debt is closer to 12 percent. Other countries including Spain, Ireland, Italy and Portugal are also in trouble. These countries are "too big to fail." A default by any one of them would put an end to the nascent EU recovery and possibly lead to a "double dip" recession here in the United States.
Greece has been hiding the extent of its debt for years, with the aid of big U.S. banks. Der Spiegel broke the story that Greece did a billion-dollar currency swap with Goldman Sachs in 2002 that did not show up on the nation's books as debt. Without it, Greece may not have been accepted into the common currency "Eurozone."
Yesterday, the Times provided more details about these deals. Those chuckleheads at Goldman called one of the deals Aeolos, after the god of the winds.
"Aeolos, a legal entity created in 2001, helped Greece reduce the debt on its balance sheet that year. As part of the deal, Greece got cash up front in return for pledging future landing fees at the country's airports. A similar deal in 2000 called Ariadne devoured the revenue that the government collected from its national lottery. Greece, however, classified those transactions as sales, not loans, despite doubts by many critics," reports the Times.
It walks like a loan and talks like a loan, but because it was actually a complex derivative swap, it was secret, bilateral, and off-book. The people of Greece knew nothing, and at the current moment, no one knows how many of these deals are out there masking EU debt, or U.S. debt for that matter.
What the Times story missed is that right now neither the House financial reform bill nor the Senate proposal cover these types of currency swaps. Why not? Well, this is a bit odd: the U.S. Federal Reserve does not want these deals covered.
Although there is no evidence that the Fed is engaging in these types of currency swaps with banks from other nations, their objections to placing these deals on open exchanges should ring some alarm bells. The United States also has substantial debt. Why leave the door open for this type of highly risky accounting?
Congress and the Obama administration need to stop listening to Ben Bernanke and start listening to Gary Gensler, the head of the Commodity Future Trading Commission, who has been pushing a reluctant administration and Congress to drag every aspect of the $605 trillion derivative market out of the shadows.
Like Icarus, Goldman and other big banks who have engaged in these massive deals are flying a little to close to the sun. To prevent the next meltdown, Senate Banking Chair Chris Dodd must clip Goldman's wings, and make sure that all derivatives, without exception, are cleared by regulators and traded on an open exchange to provide the maximum level of transparency for the United States and the world.
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Congress Needs to Clip Goldman's Wings
Hi gentlemen,
I am writing to you (from Europe) because by chance I found your website and I must tell you we watch GOLDMAN SACHS not only since the crash in 2008 when we were on a great Harley tour through your fantastic country.
We got the negative impression that this big and powerful bank is more or less an assembly of arrogant, misanthropic, shameless, insulting and let's say it with the best suiting word: criminal banksters, only in for profit regardless of the fates of all concerned customers and people depending on them.
Wherever you can find criminal manipulations or intrigues during the last 10 years one can be 80 percent sure that Goldman Sachs seems to have its dirty fingers in them. We think meanwhile the whole world is seriously screwed by such people like GS and the many Blankfeins; even the US government is now officially serving GS, not the people of the United States. You people are now pariah of this new country of Banker Usurpation. A very sad story. Try to get rid of this Blankfeins asap!
No company to be proud of,
good luck
BERNIE
Swaps
The swaps in question were done to swap newly issued Greek debt back into the Euro.If the debt is issued in pound sterling the Greeks have to convert into Euro to use it at home.where the distortion happens.is in the off market exchange rate that made the debt appear.smaller.The EU knew about these as early as 2003 and approved them.It is going to be just about impossible to put all swaps on an exchange as most are written for a specific transaction.Most of the people commenting on derivitives really don't understand this product. This results in distortions that are repeated and distorted to the point where they are just untrue statements.Washington loves this as it let's them scapegoat the banks and deflect blame from themselves. Fact is Goldman did not cause the problems of Greece, the Greeks did.This problem was set up from the moment the PIIGS were allowed into the EU.All of these countries benefited from a better exchange rate that allowed them to buy goods not available to them before and to finance them at better rates due to the ease in borrowing in Euro..