Thursday, March 05, 2009

Winners, Losers

1 comment:

  1. From a _Fortune_ magazine I was leafing through the other
    day at the laundromat (the only place, I'm afraid, I ever
    read _Fortune_ magazine).

    (via http://securities.stanford.edu/news-archive/2009/
    20090105_Headline109262_Sloan.html )
    ----------------------------
    Don't Blame The SEC, You Shouldn't Expect Regulators
    To Catch Bigtime Financiopaths Like Bernie Madoff -
    That's Not How The World Works.
    by Allan Sloan
    _Fortune_, January 5, 2009


    Yes, there really are times when life imitates art. A case in point:
    the Bernie Madoff scandal, in which the disgraced investor bears a
    startling resemblance to Zero Mostel's sleazy theater promoter in
    one of my favorite flicks, "The Producers." What do the real-life
    Madoff and Mostel's fictional Max Bialystock have in common? They used
    the same principles to pull off a big-time financial fraud. These are:
    If you're going to steal, steal big. If you're going to cook the books,
    make up numbers of your own - don't try to doctor the real ones. […]

    How could the Securities and Exchange Commission, which admits it
    had gotten tips about Madoff for years, bring some penny-ante insider-trading
    claim against Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban while failing to see
    that Madoff was ripping off billions from the likes of Elie Wiesel's
    foundation? Not to prejudge the SEC's investigation of itself, but I'll
    bet the answer will turn out to be that things have always been this
    way and probably always will be. If commission enforcers get a bigger
    budget and are treated with respect rather than being dissed (including,
    I'll bet, by some of Madoff's victims) as an obstacle to free markets,
    things may improve. But don't expect a fraud-free era to ensue. I'm
    saying this not out of cynicism but because I know how regulators
    generally work. I've seen it for years, in fields ranging from
    department stores to oil-drilling partnerships. You're likely to
    get caught if you run a few inches outside the baseline, because
    regulators are set up to catch that. But run so far out that you're
    playing on a whole different ball field? You can get away with
    that if you're enough of a financiopath, and your luck holds.

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