Probably a fine Goldmans legal team would allow.
Quote from nickdes:
If what they did was as bad as they say for the investors, then all of the fine should go to make the investors whole. The real crooks here are the SEC and the Federal government.
Quote from brownegg:
Goldman always wins!
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On a more serious note, what a bunch of useless pussies the SEC is.
Quote from kinggyppo:
they can do no wrong, nice runup on the stock though. I hear the sec will take the fee and spend it all on state of the art porn, they may even fly a few of the gals in.
)Quote from krazykarl:
You guys don't seem to get it: the SEC had no case from the beginning. This is not about the SEC being pussies, it's about them filing a suit where they had no legal basis for winning.
The equity transfer in this case is almost totally related to PR. GS finally got a clue and instead of destroying the SEC in court(they would have, but the bad blood/PR from it would be enormous) and making them look more incompetent, GS is paying their "fine" and moving on.
Quote from atticus:
Yeah, I think that's pretty light, and the mkt seems to agree. Long from 151.60. I'll cover on a touch of 155 tomorrow.
That is 100% correct.Quote from krazykarl:
You guys don't seem to get it: the SEC had no case from the beginning. This is not about the SEC being pussies, it's about them filing a suit where they had no legal basis for winning.
The outcome is therefore as I expected.Quote from Cheese:
My experience at this level is that the SEC case is weak and as is often the case the charges make allegations that seem highly damaging and very compelling. They are of course heavily slanted.
The portfolio of mortgage securites either met or did not meet ACA's independent criteria. That is the question? But ACA would not vouch for a portfolio that did not meet their own independent criteria. Paulson shorting it by buying corresponding credit default swaps is irrelevant. Paulsons at the time were taking a small minority view that a big housing bust was coming up.
Tacticly the SEC has already done the damage to Goldman Sachs. And it would appear to have been intentional tactics. Media, commentators and so-called experts are supporting the SEC charges. So GS may eventially settle it rather than fight it. Sometimes when you are not guilty you can choose to settle such charges because of the advantage gained in bringing the matter to an end.
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