Quote from Ronin08:
plus the gross incompetent failure of the SEC to regulate the biggest most astonish and longest fraud in the history of the US should be unacceptable to anyone watching.
Quote from atticus:
Yeah, imagine Simons duped by a synthetic bull vertical spread strategy.
Quote from Ronin08:
The indifference and apathy displayed by the general public in light of the Bernie Madoff Fraud Case and the devastating damage to the victims plus the gross incompetent failure of the SEC to regulate the biggest most astonish and longest fraud in the history of the US should be unacceptable to anyone watching.
The public should at least demonstrate in masses in front of the Court House or in front of the SEC Building in loud disgust.
ALL Investors in Wall Street and online trading should at least stop trading for 24 hours in sympathy to the victims of this horrendous crime with no precedent and in protest to the gross government failure to protect the common long term investor.
The fact that this indifference to react in mass clearly shows the DECADENCE and Mediocrity that is prevalent in our Society.
Decadent societies are often prosperous but usually have severe social and economic inequalities like ours, to such degree that the upper class becomes either complacent or greedy, while the lower classes become hopeless ignorant and apathetic.
Quote from Rearden Metal:
And now of course we see the gale of widespread support for piling strict new regulations upon the entire hedge fund industry.
Never mind the fact that the existing regulations already in place would have been more than sufficient to expose and imprison Madoff years ago, if only the SEC had bothered to lift a finger when presented with all the numerous red flags in this case.
I suppose they were too busy fucking with decent firms like Tuco to bother with such trivial issues as repeated warnings of multi-billion dollar fraud.
Incredible, isn't it?Quote from atticus:
Yeah, imagine Simons duped by a synthetic bull vertical spread strategy.
Yeah, he is a man and realized he made a mistake.Quote from trendlover:
Nitro, Simmons recommend the Madoff fund to Stony Brook in 1991. Then in 2000 Simmons is questioning the profit. He tells them to take all the money out, but they only take some money out of that fund. 1991 to 2000 was a bull market. So Simmons saw something wrong when a bear market happened and the fund was making alot of money still.
Did he go to the SEC to tell them what he sees? I am curious.
Quote from nitro:
Incredible, isn't it?
Jim Simons is a hero of mine. That said, it is so easy to convince oneself that because you are really smart, and you know trading, that you are then qualified to give advice on anything related to trading. Let this be a warning to us all.
I don't know, let me find out, is a good answer.
