By Ed Brayton
As the U.S. Senate prepares to debate several financial industry regulation bills and the SEC has brought charges against Goldman Sachs for fraud, Sen. Carl Levin has fired a shot across the bow of the giant investment firm by releasing a series of emails that show the company profiting by betting against the American housing market.
The Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, which Levin chairs, will hold hearings on Tuesday looking at how investment banks exacerbated the mortgage foreclosure crisis. A press release from the committee says:
“Investment banks such as Goldman Sachs were not simply market-makers, they were self-interested promoters of risky and complicated financial schemes that helped trigger the crisis,” said Sen. Levin. “They bundled toxic mortgages into complex financial instruments, got the credit rating agencies to label them as AAA securities, and sold them to investors, magnifying and spreading risk throughout the financial system, and all too often betting against the instruments they sold and profiting at the expense of their clients.” The 2009 Goldman Sachs annual report stated that the firm “did not generate enormous net revenues by betting against residential related products.” Levin said, “These e-mails show that, in fact, Goldman made a lot of money by betting against the mortgage market.”
The four exhibits released today are Goldman Sachs internal e-mails that address practices involving residential mortgage-backed securities and collateralized debt obligations (CDOs), financial instruments that were key in the financial crisis…
In one of the e-mails released today, Mr. Blankfein stated that the firm came out ahead in the mortgage crisis by taking short positions. In an e-mail exchange with other top Goldman Sachs executives, Mr. Blankfein wrote: “Of course we didn’t dodge the mortgage mess. We lost money, then made more than we lost because of shorts.”
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