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Thread: Market Manipulation(s)

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    Hot Market Manipulation(s)

    Articles like this are crazy...there are links galore into how big players in every one of these market games....games shit. "Banks" as in mega-banks like jpm, boa, any federal reserve bank, bank of england, bank of japan, peoples bank of china...

    Beginning with the end of the article,

    We can almost understand why Thomas Jefferson warned:

    And I sincerely believe, with you, that banking establishments are more dangerous than standing armies ….

    John Adams said:

    Banks have done more injury to religion, morality, tranquillity, prosperity, and even wealth of the nation than they have done or ever will do good.

    And Lord Acton argued:

    The issue which has swept down the centuries and which will have to be fought sooner or later is the people versus the banks.

    No wonder a stunning list of prominent economists, financial experts and bankers say we need to break up the big banks.
    Ron Paul was correct in talking about "sound money" over and over, and we have the worst of the worst with this situation where the government has a blank check, megabanks provide the liquidity mechanism and profit, and any semblance of check and balance on the system has been winked and nodded out of existence. And too many other things compounding it.

    Is anything short of revolution going to change this captured mechanism??? Will enough people knowing about this and making a stink be able to do it?

    if it gets done, a whoooooole lot of evidence points to things sucking a whooooole lot lesss for a whooooole lot of us.




    http://www.zerohedge.com/contributed...y-other-market

    The U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission says that JP Morgan has massively manipulated energy markets in California and the Midwest, obtaining tens of millions of dollars in overpayments from grid operators between September 2010 and June 2011.

    Pulitzer prize-winning reporter David Cay Johnston noted last week that Wall Street is trying to launch Enron 2.0:

    The price of electricity would soar under the latest scheme by Wall Street financial engineers to game the electricity markets.



    If regulators side with Wall Street — and indications are that they will — expect the cost of electricity to rise from Maine to California as others duplicate this scheme to manipulate the markets, as Enron did on the West Coast 14 years ago, before the electricity-trading company collapsed under allegations of accounting fraud and corruption.



    The test case is playing out in New England. Energy Capital Partners, an investment group that uses tax-avoiding offshore investing techniques and has deep ties to Goldman Sachs, paid $650 million last year to acquire three generating plant complexes, including the second largest electric power plant in New England, Brayton Point in Massachusetts.



    Five weeks after the deal closed, Energy partners moved to shutter Brayton Point. Why would anyone spend hundreds of millions of dollars to buy the second largest electric power plant in New England and then quickly take steps to shut it down?



    Energy partners says in regulatory filings that the plant is so old and prone to breakdowns that it is not worth operating, raising the question of why such sophisticated energy-industry investors bought it.



    The real answer is simple: Under the rules of the electricity markets, the best way to earn huge profits is by reducing the supply of power. That creates a shortage during peak demand periods, such as hot summer evenings and cold winter days, causing prices to rise. Under the rules of the electricity markets, even a tiny shortfall between the available supply of electricity and the demand from customers results in enormous price spikes.



    With Brayton Point closed, New England consumers and businesses will spend as much as $2.6 billion more per year for electricity, critics of the deal suggest in documents filed with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.



    That estimate will turn out to be conservative, I expect, based on what Enron traders did to California, Oregon and Washington electricity customers starting in 2000. In California alone the short-term market manipulations cost each resident more than $1,300, a total burden of about $45 billion.



    ***



    Public Citizen characterized the Energy partners explanation for the shutdown as absurd:

    In the world of business, a firm announcing that an asset purchased just 5 weeks ago is actually uneconomical to operate would be called incompetent, and such a firm would have difficulty attracting capital and staying in business. But the managing partners of Energy Capital Partners are a highly sophisticated all-star crew of former Wall Street financiers: four of the five managing partners are Goldman Sachs veterans, and the firm’s vice-presidents and principals are alumni of JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, Credit Suisse and other financial powerhouses. These are not your run-of-the-mill owners and operators of power plants. They are Wall Streeters highly motivated to exploit the intricacies of power markets to make as much money as possible for their Cayman Islands-based affiliates.

    The record is clear that artificially reducing supply to jack up prices was the plan of Energy partners from the get-go. The strategy is obvious from auction records, as explained by Robert Clark of the Utility Workers Union of America Local 464.



    “Almost immediately after acquiring ownership of the Brayton Point Power Station late last year,” Clark said, “[Energy partners] intentionally withheld all of Brayton Point’s capacity from [auction] for the purpose of reducing capacity supply and intentionally raising the market prices” that Energy partners and its competitors could charge for other New England generating capacity they already owned.

    As shown below, Wall Street has manipulated virtually every other market as well – both in the financial sector and the real economy – and broken virtually every law on the books.

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    an interesting note about the fed's supposed "taper" - saw someone point out that belgium's increases in treasury purchases have been pretty much exactly the fed's "decrease" in pumping.

    this is the biggest reason why I think the federal reserve needs to be eliminated and the function as defined by the constitution be returned where it belongs, in the hands of congress. because this shit is like having members of other governments also serving on your government. dont want to do X within Y country's paradigm? no matter, we own country Y and Z too, so we'll just take some cash out of this pocket hyah, and put it in this pocket hyah.

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    bringing it back a little further, this is a good bit on central banking...and why it is a cancer, why it was set up in the first place.

    basically you had a bunch of people that saw the merits of england's mercantilist system, and decided it would be a good idea to replicate, with them at the top. (think Hamilton)
    vs
    people who saw through the charade and wanted none of that (think Jefferson)



    without central banks, no WWI, WWII, Korea, Vietnam, Cold War...

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    Good info






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    28:30 says it all






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    FBD (07-30-2014)

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    Really? The Magical Debt Disappearance

    http://www.acting-man.com/?p=36035

    Corporate Leverage Gets Corzined …

    A friend pointed us to a post by Macroman that discusses revisions to the flow of funds data published by the Fed that have apparently already been made a few months ago. Nothing about them seems remarkable, until one gets to corporate non-financial debt. Apparently, all that debt that has been taken on by companies in recent years has suddenly disappeared, as if by magic.




    We admittedly don’t know what motivated the revisions and why the data now show such a huge discrepancy to what they showed before, but the change is truly remarkable. Macroman shows a “before” and “after” chart combination of US non-financial corporate debt as a percentage of GDP that is really quite stunning. It looks like this:


    The new and improved corporate debt picture, following some “benchmark revision” data fiddling, compared to the previous, slightly more concerning debt picture – by Macroman.

    The Greenspan and Bernanke credit bubbles apparently never happened; it was all just a bad dream. From eyeballing the difference between the revised and the original data, some 14.5% of GDP, or $2.568 trillion in corporate debt have evaporated into thin air. They existed one day, and abracadabra, ceased to exist the next. Pure magic.

    As Macroman comments:
    “[…] it’s hard to know what to make of this, as the magnitude of the revision renders the data literally unbelievable. As the saying goes, there’s lies, damned lies, and statistics…


    Indeed, it is really extremely difficult to believe. How can almost $2.6 trillion in debt just vanish? It seems they been Corzined. Unfortunately, there is no good explanation to this we know of at this time. If anyone has one that sounds like it might make sense, we’d really love to hear it.

    As our friend remarked, in light of this sudden debt evaporation one can of course immediately stop worrying about all that junk debt out there (of which more than $2 trillion have reportedly been issued – or maybe not? – over the past several years). Buy as much junk as your heart desires, there is now a shortage of the stuff! We’re positively debt-starved!



    Conclusion:

    We’re actually not really sure yet what the proper conclusion is, but this is certainly quite astonishing, to say the least. The video excerpt below may by now be suffering a bit from over-exposure, but it seems rather appropriate to the situation.




    Addendum:

    We already noticed a few weeks ago that more than $3 trillion were suddenly missing from the Fed’s “total credit market debt owed” chart, which was just a tiny bit below the $60 trillion level previously (we even proposed to get those 60 trillion party hats out, which will now have to be postponed by a few months…). Evidently also a victim of this harmless little data revision.

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    welcome to the wonderful details of fascism, friends


    where big companies get to delete debts, and you.....well, you'll have to deal with incarceration or death if you tried deleting your debts.

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