Wall Street Business Practices Category
By: Jack Waymire | January 19, 2012 | Illegal Schemes & Scams, Wall Street Business Practices, Wall Street Ethics, Wall Street Executives
According to 24/7 Wall St.’s research, Goldman Sachs has made it onto its 10 Most Hated companies list.
I am not surprised. The greed of GS executives has become legendary and their actions severely damaged investors and the U.S. economy. Exposure started in 2010 when the company was sued for fraud and settled for $550 million [...]
Read full article | No Comments »
By: Jack Waymire | November 30, 2011 | Investor Information, The Politicians, Wall Street Business Practices, Wall Street Ethics, Wall Street Executives
I have been blogging for months about the SEC’s practice of letting Wall Street companies pay fines for committing fraudulent acts.
Finally, Jed Rakoff, a U.S. District Court judge rejected a $285 million settlement between Citigroup and the SEC. Citigroup was accused of mortgage fraud – in this case, a $1 billion CDO that cost investors [...]
Read full article | No Comments »
By: Jack Waymire | November 28, 2011 | Conflicts of Interest, Wall Street Business Practices, Wall Street Executives
It is about time! A Forbes article recently reported the market share of major Wall Street firms for retail (individual investors) assets under management has fallen from 49.7% to 42.8%.
It appears investors are finally waking up to the fact that Wall Street firms put their needs for profits, rising share prices, and executive bonuses way [...]
Read full article | No Comments »
By: Jack Waymire | November 9, 2011 | Wall Street Business Practices, Wall Street Executives
A recent UK study showed even bankers believe bankers are paid too much.
What is true in England should also be true in the U.S.
What blurs the facts in the U.S. is our definition of bankers. In the good old days, they provided traditional bank products: Savings, checking, loans, etc. Also, In the past, bankers [...]
Read full article | No Comments »
By: Jack Waymire | November 8, 2011 | Wall Street Business Practices, Wall Street Ethics, Wall Street Executives
This is a great question that has no easy answer.
We know investors need the services that are provided by the financial services industry. We also know, compared to Wall Street, investors really are powerless. This does not bode well for meaningful change.
Wall Street executives are protected by influential politicians who pass regulations that protect the [...]
Read full article | No Comments »






