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Paulson's Swindle Revealed

by: William Greider  |  Visit article original @ The Nation

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A protester in front of the New York Stock Exchange. The United Steelworkers conducted its own financial analysis of the $700 billion bailout and concluded, in a letter to Secretary Paulson, that the bailout constituted a $350 billion gift from the American taxpayers. (Photo: Getty Images)

    The swindle of American taxpayers is proceeding more or less in broad daylight, as the unwitting voters are preoccupied with the national election. Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson agreed to invest $125 billion in the nine largest banks, including $10 billion for Goldman Sachs, his old firm. But, if you look more closely at Paulson's transaction, the taxpayers were taken for a ride - a very expensive ride. They paid $125 billion for bank stock that a private investor could purchase for $62.5 billion. That means half of the public's money was a straight-out gift to Wall Street, for which taxpayers got nothing in return.

    These are dynamite facts that demand immediate action to halt the bailout deal and correct its giveaway terms. Stop payment on the Treasury checks before the bankers can cash them. Open an immediate Congressional investigation into how Paulson and his staff determined such a sweetheart deal for leading players in the financial sector and for their own former employer. Paulson's bailout staff is heavily populated with Goldman Sachs veterans and individuals from other Wall Street firms. Yet we do not know whether these financiers have fully divested their own Wall Street holdings. Were they perhaps enriching themselves as they engineered this generous distribution of public wealth to embattled private banks and their shareholders?

    Leo W. Gerard, president of the United Steelworkers, raised these explosive questions in a stinging letter sent to Paulson this week. The union did what any private investor would do. Its finance experts vetted the terms of the bailout investment and calculated the real value of what Treasury bought with the public's money. In the case of Goldman Sachs, the analysis could conveniently rely on a comparable sale twenty days earlier. Billionaire Warren Buffett invested $5 billion in Goldman Sachs and bought the same types of securities - preferred stock and warrants to purchase common stock in the future. Only Buffett's preferred shares pay a 10 percent dividend, while the public gets only 5 percent. Dollar for dollar, Buffett "received at least seven and perhaps up to 14 times more warrants than Treasury did and his warrants have more favorable terms," Gerard pointed out.

    "I am sure that someone at Treasury saw the terms of Buffett's investment," the union president wrote. "In fact, my suspicion is that you studied it pretty closely and knew exactly what you were doing. The 50-50 deal - 50 percent invested and 50 percent as a gift - is quite consistent with the Republican version of spread-the-wealth-around philosophy."

    The Steelworkers' close analysis was done by Ron W. Bloom, director of the union's corporate research and a Wall Street veteran himself who worked at Larzard Freres, the investment house. Bloom applied standard valuation techniques to establish the market price Buffett paid per share compared to Treasury's price. "The analysis is based on the assumption that Warren Buffett is an intelligent third party investor who paid no more for his investment than he had to," Bloom's report explained. "It also assumes that Gold Sachs' job is to protect its existing shareholders so that it extracted from Mr. Buffett the most that it could.... Further, it is assumed that Henry Paulson is likewise an intelligent man and that if he paid any more than Mr. Buffett - if he paid $1 for something for which Mr. Buffett would have paid 50 cents - that the difference is a gift from the taxpayers of the United States to the shareholders of Goldman Sachs."

    The implications are staggering. Leo Gerard told Paulson: "If the result of our analysis is applied to the deals that you made at the other eight institutions - which on average most would view as being less well positioned than Goldman and therefore requiring an even greater rate of return - you paid a$125 billion for securities for which a disinterested party would have paid $62.5 billion. That means you gifted the other $62.5 billion to the shareholders of these nine institutions."

    If the same rule of thumb is applied to Paulson's grand $700 billion bailout fund, Gerard said this will constitute a gift of $350 billion from the American taxpayers "to reward the institutions that have driven our nation and it now appears the whole world into its most serious economic crisis in 75 years."

    Is anyone angry? Will anyone look into these very serious accusations? Congress is off campaigning. The financiers at Treasury probably assume any public outrage will be lost in the election returns. I hope they are mistaken.

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    William Greider has been a political journalist for more than thirty-five years. A former Rolling Stone and Washington Post editor, he is the author of the national bestsellers One World, Ready or Not, Secrets of the Temple, Who Will Tell The People, The Soul of Capitalism (Simon & Schuster) and - due out in February from Rodale - Come Home, America.

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Comments

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The financial fleecing of

The financial fleecing of Americans is far and away the most important issue not being addressed today. As the dollar melts down, the US transitions from second world status to third world. And by their enormous grab of wealth, The Fed itself is refilling its coffers of devalued dollars with...more dollars. Which their owner banks will soon convert to other currencies or overseas investments to ditch the United States. We've allowed the multinational corporations to turn us into a bad investment. And this is the biggest theft in US history. It's certainly no surprise that current financial and political powers are charging through with all their last-minute plans (Hey, let's invade Syria!) during the Election Season. Because, heck, who's noticing? Me. And no one cares. But an important question is where is President Obama on all of these issues? In the pocket of the Fed and the Banks and Wall Street who saw these events orchestrated - and supported Obama with much larger financial donations than McCain. I'd hope Obama steps away from this cabal once he takes office so he can serve the interests of the American people. And not the corporate aims which reduced us to a global workface chumming for the bottom dollar - and led us to the Second Great Depression.

I told you it was a terrible

I told you it was a terrible idea!

This is the grandest fraud

This is the grandest fraud there ever was. They lied and should be held liable for their crimes. I WANT MY MONEY BACK!!!

Well, if the mavericks had

Well, if the mavericks had any chance of winning on Tuesday, this might, just MIGHT, have been different. But as it stands, Bush and Paulson have less than 3 months to give away the national wealth to their buddies/benefactors before handing over to President Obama the keys to the empty treasury.

Mr. Gerard of the

Mr. Gerard of the Steelworkers Union would be surprised to learn that Paulson is the man the Democrats demanded for the Treasury post, after they stiff-armed Bush on economic issues for the first six years of his administration. And Paulson has destroyed the economy and Bush during a mere two years on the job. Manipulated oil price more than doubles the price of gasoline. Fraudulent stock trading by Wall Street hedge funds and investment banks destroy major mortgage and financial firms, all with Paulson acting to make sure the fraudulent naked short sellers get the lowest possible share price. Check out Paulson's role in Bear Stearns, IndyMac, Fannie, Freddie, Merrill, Lehman, AIG, WaMu, Wachovia - in every one, he made sure that shareholders were wiped out and naked short sellers made billions. Here's the real kick-in-the-teeth for Gerard and other Democrats. Paulson's Wall Street and hedge fund friends own the leadership of the Democratic Party. Dodd, Schumer, Reed, Pelosi and, yes, Obama. But Gerard is on the right track about one thing: these are the biggest financial crimes in history, at least the ones we know about.

" Is anyone angry?" Hell

" Is anyone angry?" Hell yes. "The financiers at Treasury probably assume any public outrage will be lost in the election returns", probably true-so lets make Wednesday, November 5 the start of a massive, non-stop protest.

What is it going to take for

What is it going to take for Americans to realize our countries conflict is between the rich and poor not the Democrats and Republicans? If your health insurance is through your job how can you demonstrate or strike? Please watch the film The Corporation.

Whether Barack is supported

Whether Barack is supported by the Fed and Fannie and Freddie is less important, I hope, than that his campaign also raised money from almost 3 million donors, and depended on many more to get to the voters and get out the vote. Why is that important? Because, if we can raise their awareness, after Barack is elected (crossed fingers) then they, or rather the Obama Movement, should have a heavy impact on the President-elect. They/we should bring as much pressure to bear on Obama as we can, to hold Paulson accountable, and to take back our money with direct executive action when he takes office. In other words, it depends upon US, with thanks to Bill Greider.

I'm pissed.

I'm pissed.

I'm angry, and why don't the

I'm angry, and why don't the right wing pundits who hate socialism and re-distribution of wealth acknowledge that our so called free market, capitalist economy is nothing but socialism for the super rich. I don't put much faith in Obama but maybe is army of supporters will demand more if he could reform as well as he can speak, but why is no one talking about this?????? in the word of pink floyd, "it fills me with the urge..."

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