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Saturday, December 13, 2008

Thousands Of Investors Facing Serious Losses From Wall St. Trader's Massive Fraud

For years, investors, rivals and regulators all wondered how Bernard L. Madoff worked his magic.
But on Friday, less than 24 hours after this prominent Wall Street figure was arrested on charges connected with what authorities portrayed as the biggest Ponzi scheme in financial history, hard questions began to be raised about whether Mr. Madoff acted alone and why his suspected con game was not uncovered sooner.
As investors from Palm Beach to New York to London counted their losses on Friday in what Mr. Madoff himself described as a $50 billion fraud, federal authorities took control of what remained of his firm and began to pore over its books.
But some investors said they had questioned Mr. Madoff’s supposed investment prowess years ago, pointing to his unnaturally steady returns, his vague investment strategy and the obscure accounting firm that audited his books.
Despite these and other red flags, hedge fund companies kept promoting Mr. Madoff’s funds to other funds and individuals. More recently, banks like Nomura, the Japanese firm, began soliciting investors for Mr. Madoff internationally. The Securities and Exchange Commission, which investigated Mr. Madoff in 1992 but cleared him of wrongdoing, appears to have been completely surprised by the charges of fraud.
Now thousands, possibly tens of thousands, of investors confront losses that range from serious to devastating. Some families said on Friday that they believed they had lost all their savings. A charity in Massachusetts said it had lost essentially its entire endowment and would have to close.
According to an affidavit sworn out by federal agents, Mr. Madoff himself said the fraud had totaled approximately $50 billion, a figure that would dwarf any previous financial fraud.

2 Comments:

Blogger blogroller said...

He must have taught the principle parties of the "Bailout". Sprinkle tons of cash over the top of the dung heap of bankers and nobody will even look to see where it lands. Imagine if all the money was dispersed to the tax payers (who own it) and they bailed out the banks by paying their morgages up to date, or bought a new car, or payed their credit cards down, or maybe bought a present for the kids and propt up the retailers.....

13/12/08 11:17 AM  
Blogger Kangaroo Brisbane Australia said...

Amen to that, Unfrikingbelievable.

14/12/08 8:07 PM  

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