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October 19, 1987 — October 19, 2009: Deja Vu All Over Again?

TIME magazine cover December 1, 1986. What has really changed on Wall Street?

Twenty-two years ago today the equity markets crashed. The Dow Jones Industrial average cratered by a whopping 22%!!

Have our markets, economy, and financial regulatory oversight progressed, regressed, or is it merely “deja vu all over again?” Well, with the markets up 1% on the day and 50% off the lows in March of this year, clearly today is vastly different than 22 years ago, right? Honestly, I would maintain that from a grand perspective very little has changed. Why? How?

As much as we may have made technological progress on a number of fronts both on and off Wall Street, the fraud implicit in the illegal use of information is still very much central to the corruption that occurs on Wall Street.

Back in the mid to late ’80s, insider trading activity was rampant in a number of hedge funds and leveraged buyout activities. The so-called king of Wall Street at that time was Ivan Boesky. As it turns out, Boesky was nothing more than a common criminal involved in a massive insider trading scandal. When Boesky was confronted with the evidence of his criminal activities, he turned on his cronies and sang like a canary. In relatively short order, some of Wall Street’s titans fell like dominoes. Who were some of these titans? Dennis Levine, Robert Freeman, Martin Siegel, and Michael Milken. These masters of the universe were nothing more than white collar criminals.

Fast forward to 2009. The markets are rebounding and Wall Street is back to ‘business as usual.’ In a manner of speaking, the ‘business as usual’ is no different than the business that occurred back in the ’80s. What business is that? Insider trading.

The story that broke on Friday in which a number of individuals at a few hedge funds supported by corporate insiders at IBM and Intel is certainly only the tip of the iceberg of insider trading circa 2009. Bloomberg addresses this certainty in writing, U.S. Said to Target Waves of Insider-Trading Activities:

Federal investigators are gearing up to file charges against a wider array of insider-trading networks, some linked to the criminal case against billionaire hedge-fund manager Raj Rajaratnam that shook Wall Street last week, people familiar with the matter said.

The pending crackdown, based on at least two years of investigation, targets securities professionals including hedge- fund managers, lawyers and other Wall Street players, the people said, declining to be identified because the cases aren’t public. Some probes, like the one focused on Rajaratnam, rely on wiretaps. Others stem from a secret Securities and Exchange Commission data-mining project set up to pinpoint clusters of people who make similar well-timed stock investments.

I am sure there are individuals going home today wondering if their illicit activities will be, or already have been, detected.

Fraud driven by greed is a timeless activity made only more prevalent by an industry which has corrupted itself by diluting its regulatory oversight.

October 19, 2009 . . . deja vu all over again.

LD

  • Doc99
  • John Smith

    These people are on the verge of destroying the US economy with the help of the FED and DC.

    The FED was clueless or implicit in the mortgage crisis. Now we have business as usual developing. The bubble is being inflated all over again.

    I am afraid that the next bubble won’t deflate but explode and take the entire us economy with it and there will be nothing left to inflate.

    Maybe the people who are starting to stack up on food are not all that crazy anymore.

  • John Smith

    my comments are not going through

  • Peggy Sue

    Everything old is new again, Larry. And regulatory oversight? A bad joke, at best.

    We are literally eating ourselves alive.

    This is “not” going to end well.

  • Tammy

    Tick tock.
    Tick tock.

    I expect the market to implode by the end of this month.
    Only 12 days left.
    I don’t WANT it to crash, but it just seems inevitable.

    Nothings been fixed, and the fox is in the henhouse.

    • http://noquarter foxyladi14

      i.m afraid you could be right

  • tek

    The only way to stop crashes and Great Depressions is through regulations. Republicans don’t like regulations. They rescind regulations and when the economy plummets, they blame Democrats. Now Obama is doing the same stupid stuff.

    You wouldn’t live your own life without rules. Financial institutions need rules.

  • candymarl

    We could have had a close second to a FDR in Hillary. Obviously the powers that be didn’t want that.

    But it’s okay. Obama will continue to win awards while Wall Street pillages the public.

    How did it come to this? Bueller? Anyone?

    • Doc99

      Maybe not a second FDR, but perhaps a second TR?

  • elaine

    Watched Charlie Rose interview NYTimes writer Andrew Ross Sorkin tonight on his new 539 page book “Too Big to Fail” & found out Neil Kashmari wrote the TARP back in April, months before the crash & W really didn’t know what was going on & if all the stuff that went down during that time was legal than I can’t be bothered worrying about Raj & his hedge fund…the companies hire their own rating agencies, naked shorting is still going on & the whole thing is a house of cards, the man who crashed Britan’s currency is bank rolling the POTUS & the party in power, debt is our finest product, we all have to pay for other people’s absurd loans & derivative securitizations, taxes are going up so even if I make $$$ Obama will just snatch it to make things fairer..the progressives fill me with way more fear than Raj ever could. At least Raj is a capitalist, maybe a crooked one, but a capitalist none the less, better he scamp off with the money than some Maoist or Marxist groupie get it. ObamaCare & Cap n Trade will cost me way more than a dozen Raji.

  • elaine

    People go to jail for shoplifting & petty theft, some people go to prison for years for stealing a flat screen tv, laptop computer, cars or even a slice of pizza but other people can get filthy rich crashing the economy of an entire country, creating chaos throughout the entire world, even causing mass starvation & somehow that’s not a crime. A moron could of seen that demanding the banks extend loans to people who could never repay them & then securitizing that debt, monetizing it, flim flaming it off on the world, whatever you want to call it, that’s not a crime, huh? Lowering the prime rate to zero thereby eroding the life savings of savers both through inflation & increased taxation but that isn’t a crime? Social engineers change the rules whenever it suits them, they turned the commercial banks into casinos, but that’s not a crime? Devastated entire regions of the country by shipping entire industries over seas, I could rave on but nothing they do is ever a crime no matter how many people are ripped off. We have such odd values.