Finance commentators are alternately shocked, skeptical, and jubilant.
- 'TRIAL OF THE CENTURY,' shouts the Financial Times' Joseph Coterill from an Alphaville team liveblog of the suit.
- Big and Little: An Explanation Economics blogger James Kwak
identifies some of the challenges of this
case, which focuses on Goldman's failure "to disclose the role that
John Paulson's hedge fund played in selecting residential
mortgage-backed securities that went into a CDO created by Goldman."
Kwak reiterates the position he's held all along, that "the financial
crisis was not caused by criminal behavior." Though there may have been
much behavior that "rose to the level of criminal liability," the
crisis would have happened anyway. He also thinks the "vast majority"
of banks will be hard to prosecute.
- Congrats, Bloggers Columbia Journalism Review's business writer Ryan Chittum tweets that it's "worth emphasizing the role of bloggers here in Goldman story. Yves Smith, Zero Hedge, and Janet Tavakoli all emphasized Abacus before NYT."
- 'Oooh, Things Are Starting to Get Interesting,' writes Yves Smith, one of the bloggers Ryan Chittum identifies and a former Goldman employee herself. She's particularly fascinated by the fact that "the SEC is suing Goldman and one of its employees, and not the collateral manager, ACA Management."
- 'Explosive Stuff,' says Reuters finance blogger Felix Salmon.
"With this suit, the SEC has finally uncovered the real scandal behind
the Abacus deals," which he says The New York Times attempted to do
back in December, without success:
The scandal here is not that Goldman was short[ing] the subprime market at the same time as marketing the Abacus deal. The scandal is that Goldman sold the contents of Abacus as being handpicked by managers at ACA when in fact it was handpicked by Paulson; and that it told ACA that Paulson had a long position in the deal when in fact he was entirely short.
Goldman Sachs has lost more than $10 billion in market capitalization today, in the wake of these revelations. Good. It can go long markets and it can go short markets. But it can't lie to its clients. That's well beyond the pale.
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Heather Horn


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