Goldman execs fire back against Senate
April 27th, 2010 admin
Top representatives from Goldman Sachs maintained Tuesday that the company did not engage in any questionable business deals leading up to the financial crisis.
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Top Goldman Sachs representatives — including CEO Lloyd Blankfein — attempted to deflect criticism Tuesday as they faced a blistering cross-examination from lawmakers about the firm’s role in the financial crisis.
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Nearly twenty financial firms including Citicorp and Goldman Sachs made $1.6 billion in “ill-advised” payments to executives during the peak of the financial crisis.
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Goldman Sachs officials knew that their bets against mortgages, whose dramatic decline sparked the financial crisis, profited the firm, according to documents released Saturday by a Senate panel investigating the crisis.
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Finally a journalist has placed the Goldman Sachs’s public flogging yesterday in perspective. Alain Sherter in his BNET column correctly points out that Congress, including Sen. Carl Levin, chairman of the subcommittee that pummeled Goldman, should have first confessed their sins in the financial crisis that came close to a global meltdown....
Goldman Sachs is likely to report a gaudy profit for the first quarter on Tuesday morning. Analysts currently expect Goldman to earn $2.4 billion, up 44% from a year ago.
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The financial sector led a broader stock market selloff Friday after U.S. regulators charged Goldman Sachs with defrauding investors by not telling them about conflicts of interest in subprime investments it sold.
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This, friends, is the Goldman Sachs story we’ve all been waiting for, the accusation that just might stick. The Securities and Exchange Commission has charged Goldman and a senior employee with deliberate deception of some customers in order to benefit others.
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If you can’t fight the federal government, you may as well pay ‘em. Especially if you’re Goldman Sachs.
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Goldman Sachs’ moment of public flogging is here.
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Goldman Sachs’ legal headaches don’t start and end with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
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