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Wall Street Journal Goes in the Tank for FINRA

When did real journalism move from asking the hard questions and demanding answers to the mere parroting of a party line? Recent polls indicate a lessened confidence in the media in our country. Why? Journalism has largely abdicated its responsibility to be the public conscience. I see evidence of this ‘parroting’ in today’s Wall Street Journal, which reports After 27% Fall, FINRA Plays It Safe.

FINRA has been under increasing pressure lately with the spotlight focused primarily on its investment portfolio activities. FINRA has provided virtually little to no transparency and, as such, currently faces 3 lawsuits by member firms. There is no doubt in my mind that today’s WSJ article is an attempt by FINRA to display a degree of transparency in order to keep the wolves at bay. Is FINRA fully transparent? Not in my opinion.

Did the WSJ pursue this story or was it conveniently placed to deflect the heavy criticism and charges FINRA faces in the lawsuits? Make no mistake, the WSJ has been largely absent in aggressively covering developments in and around FINRA. The returns generated by FINRA’s investment portfolio and its shift to a conservative strategy have been widely disseminated over the last few months and were highlighted on June 29th when I wrote “FINRA 2008 Annual Report: A Special Type of Hubris”:

I personally believe it is very important for a financial self-regulatory organization, such as FINRA, to be totally transparent in every regard. Why? Very simply, transparency promotes confidence and FINRA’s position as a financial regulator should begin and end with that goal.

Against that backdrop, FINRA should not directly manage any of their own funds. To do so is an open invitation for conflicts of interest. FINRA’s own investment portfolio, managed by an Investment Committee, generated a negative 26% return in 2008. In April 2009, the FINRA portfolio shifted to a lower volatility approach but in 2008 it continued to have exposure to hedge funds, fund of funds, and private equity. As much as I believe this is a very big deal, it pales in comparison to the major issue I, and others, have with FINRA: their involvement with Auction-Rate Securities.

Why do I feel so strongly that the WSJ is serving as a mouthpiece for FINRA rather than truly digging for total transparency? Let’s zero in on how the WSJ addresses this auction-rate securities angle. As we do this, please recall the following:

1. $165 billion ARS remain frozen in investor accounts

2. A federal judge has designated the sales and marketing of ARS to be a fraud

3. FINRA did not post on its own website the failing nature and ultimate total failure of the ARS market until 2008, well after it liquidated its own position.

The WSJ, a proud financial periodical, provides less than cursory coverage to this piece of the FINRA story, in writing:

Finra used an outside consultant, Jeffrey Slocum & Associates of Minneapolis, to help choose money managers. In 2006, Finra hired as chief investment officer Boris A. Wessely, then treasurer at the Rockefeller Brothers Fund. Ms. Schapiro succeeded Mr. Glauber as the agency’s CEO in mid-2006.

One early step by Mr. Wessely’s team was the mid-2007 sale of about $650 million of auction-rate securities. The sale wasn’t influenced by any sign of weakness in the auction-rate market, which froze in 2008, but instead was a move to diversify Finra’s short-term investments away from such a niche product, people with knowledge of the move say. (LD’s highlight)

People with knowledge of the move say?? That is the best the WSJ can do to pursue what truly happened with FINRA’s sale of ARS? That statement is the equivalent of FINRA or whomever the ‘people with knowledge’ stating, ‘you’ll have to trust us on this.’

I would put forth that the days of blind trust are over and that for the thousands of investors sitting with those $165 billion in frozen ARS the days of verification are upon us.

I reiterate my longstanding call that FINRA must reveal all the details surrounding its ARS liquidation. Those details include the date of liquidation, the proceeds, the dealer or dealers through whom FINRA liquidated the ARS, and most importantly whether FINRA possessed material, non-public information and acted upon it.

I fully appreciate that my writing and questions here are aggressive, but at this point in our country’s history the American public deserves nothing less than full and total transparency from its financial regulators. Regrettably, both FINRA and the WSJ fall woefully short in providing it.

Comments, questions, constructive criticisms always appreciated.

LD

  • http://www.vitabits.de/korperteile/ ohr

    I fully appreciate that your writing and questions here are aggressive, but at this point in our country’s history the American public deserves nothing less than full and total transparency from its financial regulators. Regrettably, both FINRA and the WSJ fall woefully short in providing it.

  • wbboei

    Great article Larry. Just like your prior one on Volker, the forgotten voice of this benighted administration.

  • oowawa

    Larry, thanks for opening up a topic of discussion about which I was totally ignorant. I had to look to get an inkling of what you were talking about:

    FINRA=Financial Industry Regulatory Authority

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FINRA

    ARS=Auction Rate Security

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auction_rate_securities

    It’s an inscrutable financial jungle out there!

  • wbboei

    Prime Obot says: If Obama gets no credit when our law enforcement and security personnel catch wannabe terrorists, would that mean he wouldn’t get the blame if they miss someone and we do get attacked?
    ——————————-
    No. That is sophistry.

    Surely you realize there is a yawning gap between what Mr. Obama says, and what Mr. Obama does. This has been true with campaign finance, fisa, lobbyists, defense contractors, big pharma, Afghanistan and virtually everything else. It is rather excessive.

    That being the case, it is quite reasonable to insist as I do that Mr. Obama should get credit or blame for what he does, not what he says, and especially not for what his 24-7 media machine imputes to him which has no basis in fact, and lacks balanced assessment.

    If you can show me that the White House directed these sting operations, and there was no entrapment, then I will agree with Larry. But if there is no such evidence then there is no basis to credit Obama.

    On the question of whether he should be blamed or absolved if there is a terrorist attack upon our soil, again it will depend on the facts.

    If perchance that attack were launched by terrorists who entered the country through our porous southern border, then the following would bear on the question of whether Mr. Obama adequately protected the nation:

    (CNSNews.com) – Even though the Border Patrol now reports that almost 1,300 miles of the U.S.-Mexico border is not under effective control, and the Department of Justice says that vast stretches of the border are “easily breached,” and the Government Accountability Office has revealed that three persons “linked to terrorism” and 530 aliens from “special interest countries” were intercepted at Border Patrol checkpoints last year, the administration is nonetheless now planning to decrease the number of Border Patrol agents deployed on the U.S.-Mexico border.

    Border Patrol Director of Media Relations Lloyd Easterling confirmed this week–as I first reported in my column yesterday–that his agency is planning for a net decrease of 384 agents on the U.S.-Mexico border in fiscal 2010, which begins on October 1.

    A Department of Homeland Security annual performance review updated by the Obama administration on May 7 said the Border Patrol “plans to move several hundred Agents from the Southwest Border to the Northern Border to meet the FY 2010 staffing requirements, with only a small increase in new agents for the Southwest Border in the same year.

  • VinceP

    Ah if only humans were perfect…

    One should keep in mind that the “News Division” of the WSJ is as MSM-Left as any other MSM-Paper.

    It’s the Editorial Pages that are under a more sane leadership.

    I look at it this way… Like Fox News, I read things in the WSJ that I see no where else (and like Fox News, their editorial pages do offer both sides (I know this because I love mocking the Obama sycophant politicians who lamely try to advocate for their policy annihiliation of the country))

    The WSJ is a great resource.

    But they’re nuts when it comes to illegal immigration and amnesty…. and so it is with this.

    They’re lightyears ahead their peers though.

  • creeper

    Thanks, oowawa. I was just about to go look it up.

    This is just more proof that money is what rules everything in Washington and New York. The previous sources of money having dried up they’re trying to cover up the wreckage, all the while looking for new ones and they don’t want us questioning their setup.

    Larry, I appreciate your call for the transparency so loudly touted by candidate Obama but I won’t hold my breath till we get it. As for being aggressive, I don’t think it’s possible to be too aggressive in pursuit of the truth.

  • creeper

    “Prime Obot says: If Obama gets no credit when our law enforcement and security personnel catch wannabe terrorists, would that mean he wouldn’t get the blame if they miss someone and we do get attacked?”

    This is flawed from the get-go. You can’t even get to the question in the second part because the first phrase is misleading, if not downright invalid. There is no “credit” to be had for catching the goofballs they’re serving up to us as “terrorists” these days. If they want credit for catching terrorists, let’s start with the one who destroyed the WTC eight years ago instead of fooling around with those “wannabes” who couldn’t light a match on a dry day.

    That score remains unsettled and nobody seems to notice.

  • wbboei

    Vince, I agree. Their positions have no changed much since Peter Kahn was running the shop.

  • wbboei

    When did real journalism move from asking the hard questions and demanding answers to the mere parroting of a party line? Recent polls indicate a lessened confidence in the media in our country. Why? Journalism has largely abdicated its responsibility to be the public conscience.
    ————————
    Yes, that is very true. I have mentioned in the past the common ownership and control problem between this administration and big media by conglomerates. The secondary problem relates to the journalists themselves. In a word they are lazy. This White House reportedly sends them, and Associated Press an average of twelve emails per day, and it is much easier for pseudo reporters like Beth Fouhey to regurgitate what the White House has told them than to dig for the truth. The latter is hard work and it may be rebuffed by their superiors who are in the bag. Therefore the path of lease resistance is to become propandists, which is a slow death for a journalist, because at the end of the day no one with common sense believes them.

  • FrenchNail

    FINRA has very little credibility left and the fact that they now are letting brokers deal with window X (ARPS renamed and retooled just to make it more difficult for investors to go after this new version of an old fraud) is an ever more proof of this.

    The whole Wall Street setting of checks and counterbalances is just smoke and mirrors. We are going straight to another major collapse because the players refuse to show their game and still believe their delusion of grandor and profeciency.

    This administration is chicken soup for Wall Street, when sanitization and rehab is necessary.

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