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Thursday, September 09, 2010

£20 MILLION IS A PITTANCE TO PAY FOR ALOT MORE CONTROL OF THE US BANKING SYSTEM

Hurrah!
Huzzah!

Goldman Sachs is being fined £20 million by the FSA!

To me and you, the ordinary people of this world, this sounds like alot of money.

But Goldman Sachs received ten billion in TARP bailouts.

And has increased its market share due to the Great Bilderberg Derivative Bailout swindle.

And will further increase its market share and control of the US banking system under the new financial regulation and banking reform.

So bend over while Goldman Sachs and the rest of the Bilderberg bankstaz pull their trousers down.

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From http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-11238897

Wall Street giant Goldman Sachs fined £20m by UK's FSA
Financial professional stands in the Goldman Sachs booth at the New York Stock Exchange Goldmans Sachs was fined $550m in the US to settle fraud charges

Wall Street giant Goldman Sachs has been fined £20m ($31m) by the UK City regulator, the Financial Services Authority, the BBC has learned.

The fine is for failing to tell the FSA it was under investigation for fraud by the US financial watchdog this summer.

In July, Goldman settled the fraud charge with the Securities and Exchange Commission by paying $550m (£356m).

The £20m is one of the heaviest fines ever imposed by the FSA, said the BBC's business editor Robert Peston.

Both the FSA and Goldman Sachs declined to comment on the fine.

Goldman agreed to pay the US fine to settle civil fraud charges of misleading investors.

The charges concerned the bank's marketing of complex mortgage investments, just as the US housing market faltered.

The FSA said Goldman also did not tell them that Fabrice Tourre, the trader who helped to create these mortgage derivatives, was under investigation.

This it said was particularly relevant as Mr Tourre moved from the US to London, and therefore came under the auspices of the UK regulator.

Goldman has admitted that it made a mistake, our correspondent added.
Heavy losses

In April, the SEC charged Goldman with failing to disclose "vital information" that one of its clients, Paulson & Co, helped to choose which securities were packaged into a mortgage portfolio that was then sold to investors in 2007.

It claimed Goldman did not disclose that Paulson, one of the world's largest hedge funds, had bet that the value of the securities would fall.

The SEC alleged that investors in the mortgage securities, packaged into a vehicle called Abacus, lost more than $1bn (£646m) in the US housing market collapse.

In paying the SEC fine, Goldman did not admit legal wrongdoing but acknowledged that its marketing material for Abacus contained "incomplete information".

Many commentators felt at the time that the bank got off lightly.

The bank made a profit of $3.5bn in the first three months of this year, but saw its profits slump to $613m between April and June.

This was due to a drop in trading revenues, the $550m fine and a $600m hit from the bonus tax in the UK.

Despite the fall in profits and the fraud charges, Goldman Sachs is still considered by many to be world's preeminent investment bank.

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