Compliance

  • The collateralized debt obligation at the center of the fraud case against Goldman Sachs is known as ABACUS 2007-AC1, and a class of its debt was cut to "D" from "CCC-" by Standard and Poor’s in May 2009.

    April 19
  • More than 18 months after the largest bank failure in U.S. history, regulators of the collapsed Washington Mutual Inc. faced a day of reckoning Friday, with a key lawmaker accusing them of gross incompetence.

    April 19
  • The political pressure to enact financial reform intensified Friday as the government accused Goldman Sachs Group Inc. of defrauding investors and the Senate concluded two days of hearings highlighting the assertedly lax supervision that preceded the largest bank failure in the country's history.

    April 19
  • SEC Charges Goldman With Civil FraudRegulator alleges misleading statements and omissions regarding subprime securities.By Lee Conrad, On Wall StreetThe Securities & Exchange Commission sued Goldman Sachs for securities fraud today, saying that the financial powerhouse made “materially misleading statements and omissions” regarding a structured product sold to investors.The product was tied to the performance of subprime residential mortgages and was structured and marketed in early 2007, just when the U.S. housing market first showed signs of strain, the suit said.The SEC alleged that investors were not told that hedge fund Paulson & Co. had a hand in the selection of residential mortgages that were part of the structured product. Paulson subsequently made a profit of about $1 billion from this product by betting that the housing market would fall.After the selection of the portfolio for this product, Paulson effectively shorted the residential mortgage backed market by using credit default swaps. The suit says that “Paulson had an economic incentive to choose [residential mortgages] that it expected to experience credit events in the near future.” And Goldman’s product did not disclose Paulson’s contrarian economic interests. Indeed, Paulson’s selection process for this product favored borrowers with adjustable rate mortgages, relatively low FICO scores, and who were located in states like Arizona, California, Florida and Nevada, which had recently experienced steep inclines in home value.Goldman said in a statement that the SEC’s charges are “completely unfounded in law and fact and we will vigorously contest them and defend the firm and its reputation.”The Securities & Exchange Commission sued Goldman Sachs for securities fraud Friday, saying the financial powerhouse made “materially misleading statements and omissions” regarding a structured product sold to investors.

    April 19
  • Morgan Keegan Reassures InvestorsFraud probe won't harm accounts, CEO says.JMIn a letter to investors, Morgan Keegan & Co. CEO John Carson said that recent fraud charges against the company by state and federal regulators won't harm its accounts and added that the firm intends to defend itself against the charges."First and foremost, I want to reassure you of the safety of your accounts held with Morgan Keegan," Carson said last week. "These charges, which relate to a mutual fund management business that was sold in 2008, should not be construed as claims against the business of the firm as a whole."Morgan Keegan has been accused by the Securities and Exchange Commission, Financial Industry Regulatory Authority and a number of states of manipulating prices on subprime securities.In a letter to investors, Morgan Keegan & Co. CEO John Carson said that recent fraud charges against the company by state and federal regulators won't harm its accounts and added that the firm intends to defend itself against the charges.

    April 19
  • The financial powerhouse allowed a short-selling hedge fund to help structure a product it then sold to investors, the SEC announced.

    April 16
  • A lawmaker and a Treasury Department official Thursday pushed for a permanent extension of the Build America Bond program, but acknowledged that the greatest obstacle is finding a way to pay for it.

    April 16
  • Database would give the SEC details on each trade

    April 16
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission task force on hedge funds, buyout funds and mutual funds is looking to hire five fund managers, chief operating officers or executives with “direct exposure to trading and operations,” according to a help-wanted ad it placed last month.

    April 16
  • The Office of Thrift Supervision was more focused on blocking the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. from reining in Washington Mutual Inc. than it was in regulating the thrift company itself, congressional investigators and two watchdogs said Thursday.

    April 16
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission task force on hedge funds, buyout funds and mutual funds is looking to hire five fund managers, chief operating officers or executives with “direct exposure to trading and operations,” according to a help-wanted ad it placed last month. The SEC has also retained executive search firm Korn/Ferry International.

    April 15
  • Sen. Ron Wyden, who recently caused a stir in the municipal bond market by proposing a tax-reform bill that would eliminate tax-exempt bonds and replace them with tax-credit bonds, said yesterday he is open to discussing possible modifications to the legislation with critics.

    April 15
  • While the subject continues to be hotly contested, at least one regulator, FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair, is satisfied that the pending regulatory reform bill would put eila Bair, is satisfied that the pending regulatory reform bill would put a stop to government bailouts.

    April 15
  • Republicans and Democrats escalated the rhetorical war over regulatory reform on Wednesday, with each side accusing the other of playing politics.

    April 15
  • Over the past few months, the Obama administration has gradually backed away from providing a near-term plan for Fannie and Freddie after missing a self-set February deadline.

    April 15
  • One defendant claimed he didn’t know his associate’s last name because “you do not ask a comrade for a last name.”

    April 14
  • Democrats and Republicans escalated the war of words over regulatory reform on Tuesday, with the GOP saying the current bill is unacceptable and the White House objecting to any compromise.

    April 14
  • Four years after the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. launched an elaborate deposit insurance pricing system, the agency has gone back to the drawing board.

    April 14
  • At MetLife’s sixth annual benefits symposium in Washington this week, Treasury and Department of Labor officials discussed the difficulties of including annuities in 401(k)s. The two agencies have asked the public for comments through May 3 on including lifetime income solutions in employer plans.

    April 13
  • Regulator calls for tracking individual loans to increase transparency of private deals.

    April 13