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MF Global > Corzinne > Tree > Rope

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    #13
    There are millions of pissed of americans who are
    fully awake to the situation,and they are armed to the
    teeth.

    There is an interesting conspiracy theory floating
    around that 10,000 law enforcement people have
    been organized to make a mass arrest-i don't believe
    it but we are living in bizzaro world

    Time to get the popcorn out,its going to be quite the
    show

    Comment


      #14
      Yes indeed, Aug, Sept, Oct, & Nov will be one wild ride in the realm of politics and media, that will be incredible enough without the parallel story in how all that reflects on economics and markets. I think it will be unprecedented. Also I think if Obama is NOT reelected, the period between the Nov. election and inauguration in Jan will also be an amazing time, maybe even breathtaking.

      Comment


        #15
        http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fmJhex67NxA

        Comment


          #16
          Pars,

          The only promise Obama made... was to 'save' the world! Make it new and different!

          It really should be no surprise... that he is rolling down this hill!

          Japan did this for 20 years... the EU nations other than Germany/GB followed... should anyone be surprised?

          THen everyone stops and takes a drink of the Waters of China... somehow we think China will save the Western World?

          Obama bought it... do we?

          Comment


            #17
            Good post, cott. More effective than parsley
            bitching and whining for the last four months. LOL
            Pars.

            Comment


              #18
              China has played political dress-up for centuries
              but how have their people fared, Tom? Masses of
              them, growing, hungry, and still poor, and trying
              desperately to escape.

              Like I said, ....we have one hell of a good thing
              going here...in Western Canada, in our
              communities, our neighbors, our CULTURE.

              Let's appreciate it. Protect it. And not be bought
              off with some sonofabitch singing a song that
              turns out to be offkey. Pars

              Comment


                #19
                Courtesy of wd9........


                Comment


                  #20
                  Someone should strap Corzinne in that contraption and let Pars program it's movements;-)

                  Comment


                    #21
                    Corzinne: "I want this suit made with black silk."

                    Hong Kong taylor: "Silk it is, sir. You realize you
                    will no longer be able to dress on either the right
                    OR on the left side of your trousers?"

                    Corzinne: "Yes, your assistant told me. How did
                    you solve the problem?"

                    Hong Kong taylor : " Your stretched appendages
                    will fit loosley into a soft silk pouch fashioned on
                    the inside hem of the trousers. We'll enlarge the
                    cuff to disguise your , er, individuality."

                    Corzinne: "Will I trip on them?"

                    Hong Kong talor: "I wouldnt if I were you."
                    Pars

                    Comment


                      #22
                      From the Chicago Tribune :
                      "For months we've wondered when the powers-
                      that-be in the futures industry would explain how
                      their biggest trading firm could lose a billion or so
                      dollars in customer funds that supposedly were
                      secured in separate, regulated accounts.

                      Finally, we got an answer: Edith 

                      Edith O'Brien? Let us explain:
                      O'Brien served as a treasury official at MF Global.
                      Its collapse last fall left thousands of blameless
                      customers holding the bag. Many are still owed
                      large amounts of money.
                      For decades, the futures industry promised to
                      keep customer funds safe. For decades, it did.
                      Then when MF went down, the industry reneged
                      on its promise. Customers were not made whole.
                      Their funds apparently could just walk off,
                      assurances to the contrary notwithstanding.

                      MF set a terrible precedent for a business vital to
                      Chicago's economic future. Getting to the bottom
                      of what happened is crucially important. The
                      systemic flaws that enabled MF to swipe its
                      customers' money must be corrected. Only then
                      can the futures industry begin to rebuild its
                      damaged credibility.

                      Which brings us to O'Brien.

                      Many powerful people and institutions have
                      stopped short of accepting responsibility for MF.
                      Those same people and institutions, it seems, are
                      pointing the finger at O'Brien and her back-office
                      colleagues at the firm. Her name has come up
                      dozens of times in media coverage, congressional
                      testimony and even, reportedly, in grand jury
                      proceedings. No one connected to MF has been
                      accused of wrongdoing.

                      No one knows yet exactly what O'Brien did in
                      MF's back office during the crucial moments last
                      October. That's when the firm ran out of cash,
                      after months of financial strain had given ample
                      warning to its regulators.

                      MF boss Jon Corzine, the former New Jersey
                      governor, U.S. senator and big-shot financier, has
                      said that he called the back office in Chicago as
                      his firm's troubles mounted. On Oct. 28, he
                      directed O'Brien to transfer $175 million to one of
                      the firm's London bank accounts, which had been
                      overdrawn. If customer funds were used to cover
                      the overdraft, he has said, no one alerted him.
                      When the bank asked O'Brien to sign a document
                      verifying that the fund transfer did not compromise
                      customer accounts, however, O'Brien reportedly
                      refused to sign.

                      We know what happened next: MF failed. Its
                      collapse occurred under the noses of CME Group,
                      its primary regulator and the first line of defense
                      for its customers, as well as the Commodity
                      Futures Trading Commission, the federal agency
                      responsible for overseeing CME and the rest of
                      the industry.

                      Blaming O'Brien and the back-office staff for MF's
                      shortfall in customer funds sounds to us like
                      blaming Mrs. O'Leary's cow for the Great Chicago
                      Fire.

                      Never mind the dry weather, high wind and lax
                      building codes that made the city a tinderbox.
                      Blame the cow.

                      Over the last few days, a leaked House Financial
                      Services Committee memo added to confusion by
                      suggesting Corzine knew customer funds were
                      included when he ordered the $175 million
                      transfer. That, though, apparently has not been
                      established. Not all the evidence is yet available
                      for public scrutiny. The focus will fall back on
                      O'Brien this week, when she and other MF Global
                      execs are scheduled to appear before a Financial
                      Services subcommittee.

                      Much like Chicago in 1871, dangerous conditions
                      were allowed to prevail at MF. To avert the next
                      disaster, this homegrown Chicago industry needs
                      an honest appraisal of its regulatory failure. It
                      needs to adopt a new regulatory scheme that will
                      prevent any future MF Globals.

                      The leaders of the futures business need to
                      consider how another debacle — or the rumor of
                      an impending debacle — would send their
                      remaining customers scrambling for the exits.
                      CME, in particular, would be better off in the long
                      run by making its customers whole, instead of
                      trying to prop up its stock price through a massive
                      dividend increase, as it recently approved.
                      Change is necessary, and it will be costly."

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