Posted on 10/29/2009 8:12:19 AM PDT by FromLori
Sounds like it to me.
Interesting info out of FT:
The Galleon hedge fund at the centre of an insider trading scandal paid hundreds of millions of dollars a year to its Wall Street banks and in return regularly received market information that would not have been disclosed to most investors, executives familiar with the matter say.
A person familiar with Galleon, whose founder, Raj Rajaratnam, was charged with insider trading this month, said it paid about $250m to its banks last year. Executives who dealt with the fund said it paid more in fees and other charges during the boom years of this decade.
Morgan Stanley, which counted Galleon as one of its top-five hedge fund clients, and Goldman Sachs were Galleons top providers of hedge-fund services or prime brokerage.
Galleon, which had about $7bn in assets at its peak, paid large amounts to banks because it specialised in short-term trading strategies, which put its officials in close contact with Wall Street traders and salespeople. As it grew, the hedge fund became known for pushing its contacts at banks for hints about market developments such as big buy and sell orders.
Although bank policies often prohibit employees from divulging specific information about orders, executives who dealt with Galleon said it regularly received colour on market developments, frequently delivered in Wall Street slang. One example would be traders discussing a page one seller of shares a reference to the first page of the Bloomberg list of top holders of listed companies...
However, market participants say the Galleon case could have a chilling effect on the distribution of market colour possibly affecting other hedge funds that trade frequently to make quick returns. High-velocity hedge funds arent really about investing, said one hedge fund founder. It is a cat and mouse kind of thing, a game.
Goldman, Morgan Stanley and a Galleon representative declined to comment.
The immediate question that comes to mind is: Were Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs providing "color" to Galleon on trades their other clients were making? Definitely sleazeball and unethical. OR are their computers somehow rigged with the exchanges so they see trades before other traders do? Definitely sleazeball and unethical.
The immediate question that comes to mind is: Were Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs providing "color" to Galleon on trades their other clients were making? Definitely sleazeball and unethical. OR are their computers somehow rigged with the exchanges so they see trades before other traders do? Definitely sleazeball and unethical.
It's very simple: the traders and managers at Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are too greedy not to cheat.
They are indeed sleazy just look at jp morgans funding of acorn and how well both those banks paid off obama. Then the clueless leftists are in Chicago trying to intimidate the decent bankers who had nothing to do with all this corruption!
Economic Jihad.
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