Stock Market Collapse: Another Goldman Market Rigging?

by: Ellen Brown, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Two weeks ago, Goldman Sachs was on the Congressional hot seat, grilled for fraud in its sale of complicated financial products called "synthetic CDOs." Last week the heat was off, as all eyes turned to the attack of the shorts (bets that a stock will decline in value) on Greek sovereign debt and the dire threat of a sovereign Greek default. By Thursday, Goldman's fraud had slipped from the headlines and Congress had been cowed into throwing in the towel on its campaign to break up the too-big-to-fail banks. On Friday, Goldman was in settlement talks with the SEC.

Goldman and Wall Street reign. Congress appears helpless to discipline the big banks, just as the European Central Bank (ECB) appears helpless to prevent the collapse of the European Union.... Or are they?

Suspicious Market Maneuverings

The shorts circled like sharks in the Greek bond market, following a highly suspicious downgrade of Greek debt by Moody's on Monday. Ratings by private ratings agencies, long suspected of being in the pocket of Wall Street, often seem to be timed to cause stocks or bonds to jump or tumble, causing extreme reactions in the market. The Greek downgrade was suspicious and unexpected because the ECB and International Monetary Fund had just pledged 120 billion euros to avoid a debt default in Greece.

Markets were roiled further on Thursday, when the US stock market suddenly lost 999 points, and just as suddenly recovered two-thirds of that loss. It appeared to be such a clear case of tampering that Maria Bartiromo  blurted out on "CNBC," "That is ridiculous. This really sounds like market manipulation to me."

Manipulation by whom? Markets can be rigged with computers using high-frequency trading programs  (HFT), which now compose 70 percent of market trading; and Goldman Sachs is the undisputed leader  in this new gaming technique. Matt Taibbi  maintained that Goldman Sachs has been "engineering every market manipulation since the Great Depression." When Goldman does not get its way, it is in a position to throw a tantrum and crash the market.

Goldman was an investment firm until September 2008 when it became a "bank holding company" overnight in order to capitalize on the bank bailout, including borrowing virtually interest free from the Federal Reserve and other banks. In January, when President Obama backed Paul Volcker in his plan to reinstate a form of the Glass-Steagall Act that would separate investment banking from commercial banking, the market collapsed  on cue, and the Volcker Rule faded from the headlines.

When Goldman got dragged before Congress and the SEC in April, the Greek crisis arose  as a "counterpoint," diverting attention to that growing conflagration. Greece appears to be the sacrificial play in the EU just as Lehman Brothers was in the US, "the hostage the kidnappers shoot to prove they mean business."

The Nuclear Option

It is still possible, however, for the ECB to snatch Greece from the fire and rout the shorts. It can do this with what has been called the nuclear option  - "monetizing" the debt of Greece and other debt-laden EU countries by effectively "printing money" (quantitative easing) and buying the debt itself at very low interest rates. This is called the "nuclear option" because it would blow up the hedge funds and electronic sharks operated by Goldman and other Wall Street heavies, which specialize in bringing down corporations and whole countries for strategic and exploitative ends. Will the ECB proceed with this plan? Perhaps,  say some experts. It could just be waiting for the German election on Sunday, which the ECB cannot be seen to be influencing.

The US Congress, too, could solve its debt crisis by "monetizing" its debt. It could do this either by issuing dollars directly or by borrowing them from its own central bank. Ideally, Congress would nationalize the Fed first, making it truly an arm of Congress, as it should have been all along; but that would not actually be necessary in order to turn its debt into dollars that are essentially interest free. The Federal Reserve says on its web site that it rebates its profits to Congress after deducting its costs.

What invariably stops countries from this obvious solution to their debt problems is the perceived threat of hyperinflation; but that need not be a concern any time soon, since the world is now in a deflationary crisis, following the collapse of the housing market. The vast majority of the money supply today is created as a debt to private banks; and when debt collapses, the money supply collapses. There is insufficient money to run businesses, pay workers and buy products, so collapse of the economy follows. To say that adding money to the system would lead to hyperinflation in this situation is equivalent to withholding food from a starving patient to prevent him from getting fat.

Price is a function of supply and demand. Adding "demand" (money) without increasing "supply" (goods and services) will drive prices up; but when a country is at less than full employment and the money is added in a way that actually feeds the producing economy, increasing demand will increase productivity, increasing supply. And when supply and demand increase together, prices remain stable.

The only way we will be able to turn the tables on the banks and recapture our sovereignty is to tap into our own sovereign credit engines, with the US government borrowing from its own central bank, US states setting up state-owned banks,  and EU countries tapping into the low interest rates offered by the ECB.
 

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Ellen Brown developed her research skills as an attorney practicing civil litigation in Los Angeles. In "Web of Debt," her latest book, she turns those skills to an analysis of the Federal Reserve and “the money trust.” She shows how this private cartel has usurped the power to create money from the people themselves, and how we the people can get it back. Her eleven books include Forbidden Medicine, Nature’s Pharmacy (co-authored with Dr. Lynne Walker), and The Key to Ultimate Health (co-authored with Dr. Richard Hansen). Her websites are www.webofdebt.com, www.ellenbrown.com, and www.public-banking.com.


Comments

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I have no problem with your

I have no problem with your suggestion to run national and state-owned banks but I'm surprised you don't state the obvious solution here: close down Goldman Sachs. As you point out GS has engaged in very clear frauds that affect entire nations and they have done so at every opportunity. GS is nothing more than a criminal enterprise and should be put out of business immediately. In addition, all current and previous management going back to the beginning of the financial bubble should be prosecuted under the RICO laws. The Mafia had nothing on these guys, this is racketeering, pure and simple.



Well, I completely agree

Well, I completely agree with that! The problem is that Congress seems to be at the mercy of Wall Street rather than the reverse. I'm just trying to throw light on what happened, to stir up outrage!



This article was submitted

This article was submitted last week. Note the EMU DID exercise the nuclear option -- that's what turned the market around this week.



Thanks Ellen, people are

Thanks Ellen, people are outraged they just don't have useful options for quick action. GS (and other BIG-BIS) are running our country into the ground for profit.



You'd have to be a real

You'd have to be a real idiot to not KNOW that Goldman Sachs and other bankers manipulate the market according to their whim and use it as a threat against politicians to get what they want. Unfortunately, Obama adopts that market based philosophy where all matters relating to the public are measured in terms of their monetary or economic values -- only. Obama is just as much an anti-big government politician as any Republican today, which is why is he always looking for them to finally see and appreciate what an economic conservative he is.



That reminds me of something

That reminds me of something GATA complained about recently. They spent years trying to prove manipulation in the gold market, and they find did it with some shocking evidence, and some commentator said, "Well, everybody knows the gold market is rigged, along with every other market." Chris Powell, the GATA man, said it was old news before it even touched the ground.



The other night I watched

The other night I watched "Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room". I see way too many similarities between that situation then and today's larger financial scene between Goldman, banks-too-big-to-fail, corporate greed, Congressional choice of blindness +++... When will we ever learn? How deep must we go before awakening and making REAL shifts?



This article belongs in a

This article belongs in a tabloid in the supermarket. Purely speculative reporting.
The rating agencies were right to downgrade Greece's debt. Even if the EU paid for the debt out of its own pocket that would not help a country with national strikes on a weekly basis.

To even consider the option of a European central bank monetizing the debt is crazy. Monetizing that much debt would cause rampart inflation throughout all of Europe. It would be the same as when the Spanish were bringing back boatloads of gold from the new world, which wrecked their very impressive world empire.



Europe, like the U.S., has

Europe, like the U.S., has suffered a massive monetary deflation. Virtually all money today is created as a debt to banks, and when loans collapse, the money supply collapses. When private debt shrinks, public debt must fill the breach. It's not inflationary to add money to the system when the country is in a deflationary collapse.



So now we're blaming

So now we're blaming algorithms for the debacle. How convenient.

No, we need to stop the toxic "hedge funds" (Europe should BAN them before more harm is done), and the CDOs (whatever they are) in Europe, and here right away.

And then, here in the U.S. we need to restore Glass-Steagall, enforce the Sherman antitrust Act (monopolies very bad for us), and jail the banksters that have brought us to this point. It's not that hard. The laws are already in place. They need to be REVIVED. They worked well for this country for 1933-1980. Reagan and his followers drove this country into the ditch that we're in now.

Obama isn't going to do it, but will a Bernie Sanders '12 for President do?



Ellen Brown, I respect you

Ellen Brown,

I respect you very much. I wasn't dissing you when I called "blaming algorithms" a convenient explanation. It is true that algorithms have caused this mess.

I am very worried about Europe, and the "Masters of the Universe" that are orchestrating its ... demise.

Thank you for your honesty.



Permit me to issue and

Permit me to issue and control the money of a nation, and I care not who makes its laws. - Mayer Amschel Rothschild

Since almost all money is electronic now, who is the new Rothschild?



Good question! Who is

Good question! Who is pulling the strings these days? The Rockefellers and the Morgans used to be rivals; are they now aligned against Goldman and the young HFT turks? Are the strings pulled by the BIS in Europe, or are they the conservative old guard putting the brakes on their wild offspring? Is it the City? The IMF? To follow the plot, you need a playbook!



When Goldman was dying and

When Goldman was dying and tanked to less than 50 buck a share, people like Buffett stepped in to give it air and money to live , with very good returns for Warren. Goldman deserves to die for what they did. They will never be poor but they deserve to go to their own funeral for what they have done to the markets, globally included. They make the Mafia look like boy scouts helping Seniors crossing the street.
The entire Obama administration is full of Goldman alumni...more of that" change" stuff jokes.



Regarding the "market

Regarding the "market manipulation" that caused the 999 point drop: I sent my printout of Ellens previous article on High frequency trading to my financial planner with a tag saying I would not re-enter the market till regulation was in place. She wrote back quickly that Regulations are in place to prevent "Front running". Is that the same as High frequency trading? Why is that unregulated and Front running is regulated and what is the difference, I wonder. Any one know? Ellen?