http://www.deepcapture.com/
Letâs pick up âThe Story of Deep Captureâ where it left off â with the demise of Bear Stearns and the near collapse of the American financial system.
Itâs April 2, 2008, and CNBC reporter Charlie Gasparino has just reported that Lehman Brothers CEO Richard Fuld claims to have evidence that short-sellers, who profit from falling stock prices, actively colluded to bring down Bear Stearns.
Indeed, the SEC is already investigating precisely this possibility. The regulator has said that it would like to know whether short-sellers circulated false rumors about Bear Stearnsâ liquidity and credit risk in order to spark a run on the bank. And it has announced that it is investigating allegations that hedge funds engaged in ânaked short sellingâ to drive down Bear Stearnsâ stock. This isnât surprising considering that SEC numbers show, for example, that in the week of Bear Stearnsâ destruction, up to 13 million of its shares were shorted naked â ie. sold and not yet delivered. Thatâs 13 million shares of phantom stock â and most experts assume there was much more of it, perhaps 100 millions fake shares, in parts of the system that the SEC doesnât monitor.
Live on CNBC with Gasparino is reporter Herb Greenberg. Herb is a dishonest journalist. He has quite literally made a career out of taking dictation from a small group of closely affiliated short-selling hedge funds. Virtually every story he has ever written or broadcast has come from these people. He protects his hedge fund friends by repeatedly denying that phantom stock is a problem. And a former employee of a financial research shop called Gradient Analytics claims to have witnessed Herb conspiring with at least one short-seller, David Rocker, to hold his negative stories until Rocker could establish short positions. This is called front-running â a jailable offense.
CNBC is not concerned about this. Nor is it concerned that, in addition to his duties as a âjournalist,â Herb is now also running his own financial research shop that caters to short-sellers. Yes, after years of denying that he has too-cozy relationships with short-sellers, Herb is now seeking to profit from those very relationships. His new companyâs slogan is âbridging financial journalism and forensic analysis.â Anybody who believes that media and money donât mix should be appalled.
Anyway, it is unsurprising that Herb is live on CNBC reporting that short-sellers had nothing to do with the demise of Bear Stearns. Instead, Herb says, Bear Stearns was taken down by a âcrisis of confidence.â Could short-sellers have caused the âcrisis of confidence?â Herb thinks not.
Herb says, ââ¦.if you take a look at [fellow CNBC reporter] David Faberâs reporting which was very interestingâ¦â
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Letâs pick up âThe Story of Deep Captureâ where it left off â with the demise of Bear Stearns and the near collapse of the American financial system.
Itâs April 2, 2008, and CNBC reporter Charlie Gasparino has just reported that Lehman Brothers CEO Richard Fuld claims to have evidence that short-sellers, who profit from falling stock prices, actively colluded to bring down Bear Stearns.
Indeed, the SEC is already investigating precisely this possibility. The regulator has said that it would like to know whether short-sellers circulated false rumors about Bear Stearnsâ liquidity and credit risk in order to spark a run on the bank. And it has announced that it is investigating allegations that hedge funds engaged in ânaked short sellingâ to drive down Bear Stearnsâ stock. This isnât surprising considering that SEC numbers show, for example, that in the week of Bear Stearnsâ destruction, up to 13 million of its shares were shorted naked â ie. sold and not yet delivered. Thatâs 13 million shares of phantom stock â and most experts assume there was much more of it, perhaps 100 millions fake shares, in parts of the system that the SEC doesnât monitor.
Live on CNBC with Gasparino is reporter Herb Greenberg. Herb is a dishonest journalist. He has quite literally made a career out of taking dictation from a small group of closely affiliated short-selling hedge funds. Virtually every story he has ever written or broadcast has come from these people. He protects his hedge fund friends by repeatedly denying that phantom stock is a problem. And a former employee of a financial research shop called Gradient Analytics claims to have witnessed Herb conspiring with at least one short-seller, David Rocker, to hold his negative stories until Rocker could establish short positions. This is called front-running â a jailable offense.
CNBC is not concerned about this. Nor is it concerned that, in addition to his duties as a âjournalist,â Herb is now also running his own financial research shop that caters to short-sellers. Yes, after years of denying that he has too-cozy relationships with short-sellers, Herb is now seeking to profit from those very relationships. His new companyâs slogan is âbridging financial journalism and forensic analysis.â Anybody who believes that media and money donât mix should be appalled.
Anyway, it is unsurprising that Herb is live on CNBC reporting that short-sellers had nothing to do with the demise of Bear Stearns. Instead, Herb says, Bear Stearns was taken down by a âcrisis of confidence.â Could short-sellers have caused the âcrisis of confidence?â Herb thinks not.
Herb says, ââ¦.if you take a look at [fellow CNBC reporter] David Faberâs reporting which was very interestingâ¦â
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