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Don't Panic
- Joined
- Mar 1, 2004
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- Oregon
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- Basic Beliefs
- functional atheist; theoretical agnostic
Fun with swaps
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2013...entry-italy-stuck-with-derivative-losses.html
Greece wasn’t the only one cooking the books…and Mario Draghi (then director-general of the Italian Treasury) was deep into the shit before joining Goldman Sachs in 2002. Good thing he is now emperor of the ECB.Which books were cooked, specifically, and how were they cooked?
To apply for EU membership country must meet certain economic/financial requirements
show their books, etc. Greeks lied on their application and Goldman Sucks helped them to do that by moving money/debt around. And I have little doubt that Goldman Sucks took advantage of this inside info playing against greek bonds when shit started hitting the fan.
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2013...entry-italy-stuck-with-derivative-losses.html
A new story by Financial Times shows that Draghi and the ECB had far more to hide than the Greece scandal. It appears Draghi was directly involved in arranging similar, much larger transactions for Italy while Draghi was the director general of the Bank of Italy, in 1999. Draghi then went to Goldman. The FT also reports that Draghi’s deputy on these deals, who left the Bank of Italy in 2000, returned as director general in 2012 with Draghi’s support. Sure looks like payback time.
The scandal is coming to a head now because the Italian government is set to lose billions of euros as a result of restructuring of derivatives, including the 1999 derivatives, at the worst of the crisis. The FT stresses that all the details are not known, but the losses look to be troubling:
The report does not specify the potential losses Italy faces on the restructured contracts. But three independent experts consulted by the FT calculated the losses based on market prices on June 20 and concluded the Treasury was facing a potential loss at that moment of about €8bn, a surprisingly high figure based on a notional value of €31.7bn.
The names of the banks involved in these transactions have not been disclosed, but previous reports show that Morgan Stanley and JP Morgan have been among the Italy’s counterparties.