Accountants, Washington Helping Banks Fluff Profits

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First Posted: 05-28-09 12:20 PM   |   Updated: 06-28-09 05:12 AM

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Look for another rosy round of profits when banks turn in their numbers for the second quarter ending in June when it will be legal for them to improve their balance sheets by shifting losses into the future, thanks to new accounting rules passed by a one-vote margin by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB).

It's just one in a series of changes made to accounting rules that allow banks to shift or ignore losses or pretend that liabilities aren't liabilities. The struggle for control of the financial recovery -- where the money goes, how it's counted and who survives -- is nothing short of war. Truth has been the first casualty.

The latest rule change allows banks to split losses into ones that they recognize immediately and others that are pushed down the road and may pop up on the books later. It passed in April with barely any notice from the press. The accounting tricks allow banks, which may otherwise be deemed insolvent, to continue to operate. It's a hell of a time to be an accountant.

"It's more fascinating than it's ever been before," says Rick Martin, head of technical accounting at Pluris Valuation Advisors LLC, who specializes in derivatives and securitized assets, the type of products that brought down the economy. "Accounting used to be kind of dry. The last year or two it's just been unbelievably exciting, as I've seen auditors and companies and accounting standards setters go head to head."

Even the FASB, a quasi-public board with authority to establishes financial accounting standards, has consistently split three to two -- three board members with corporate backgrounds standing with banks and an academic and a former investor objecting to loosening the rules.

Making banks' books less transparent is a Bizarro-World response to a global financial collapse that began when markets froze in reaction to concerns about the solvency of banks and the true value of their assets.

Rep. Alan Grayson (D-Fla.) says the push to change accounting rules is a logical result of allowing insolvent banks to stay open. The short-term motivation is to stay in business as long as they can, but it'll backfire in the not-too-long run.

"When we talked about the credit system freezing up, what we were really talking about is the fact that banks stopped believing in each others' credit worthiness. Playing games with accounting rules is certainly not going to make people feel any differently about that," he says. "It's happening because insolvent banks are pressuring people in Washington to give them relief."

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It's the kind of financial gimmick that works until it doesn't. Subprime loans bundled and sold as AAA securities rose in value as long as people believed they were worth something. Then reality intervened.

"These companies are trying to kill the messenger...What they don't seem to realize is that changing accounting rules does not make them solvent," says Grayson. "Frankly, it doesn't make any difference whether FASB blesses those games or not. People who invest sums in the hundreds of millions or billions of dollars are sophisticated enough to be able to understand when the rules are being bent."

The games with accounting rules began last fall when the first serious signs emerged that the economy was about to crater. When the government decided to bail out the financial sector, it had a Catch-22 on its hands: It didn't want to just give the money away, so the government needed collateral from the banks.

The collateral took the form of warrants, which represent a future claim on earnings. The problem was that normal accounting rules require warrants to be listed on balance sheets as liabilities. Doing so would have further weighed down the already-struggling banking sector.

So the Bush administration's Treasury Department asked the SEC and FASB -- pronounced FAZ-bee in the number-crunching world -- if banks could just go ahead and ignore that rule.

"When you issue warrants it's a liability to you because the guy that's holding the warrants is going to exercise it at some point. But in this case, with the government warrants, the FASB and the SEC didn't even put in a new rule, all they did was issue a letter to the government," says Martin. "The paraphrase of the letter is, we'll turn the other way."

The exact wording of the October 24th letter says, "...we would not object if the Warrants, as defined in the documents provided, were to be classified as permanent equity."

The accountants suggested that the banks should get shareholder approval before fudging the balance sheet, but added that if they couldn't, it was still okay.

"If an issuer does not have required shareholder approval, including shareholder approval for sufficient authorized but unissued shares of the class of stock that may be required for settlement, we would also not object to classification of such Warrants as permanent equity provided that the issuer takes the necessary action to secure sufficient approvals prior to the end of the fiscal quarter in which such Warrants are issued," wrote Russell Golden, technical director for FASB; and James Kroeker, deputy chief accountant at SEC.

The Treasury Department proudly displayed the letter on its website in November, inviting banks to kick their liabilities off their balance sheets.

The simple issuance of the letter doesn't allow skeptical board members to dissent,which two of the five have been doing with a regularity unusual to the consensus-driven atmosphere accounting usually lives in.

When the accounting board decided earlier this year to reform mark-to-market accounting rules, two board members dissented. Robert Herz, the board chairman, joined with two other industry representatives and cas the deciding vote in favor of the change. The holdouts were Thomas Linsmeier and Marc Siegel. They tried to stop the board again in April when it pushed through the rule allowing banks to split losses off and push them into the future. Board meeting minutes indicate an intense debate, with Linsmeier and Siegel repeatedly casting two no votes and being overridden by the other three.

"Messrs. Linsmeier and Siegel believe that accounting standards should be focused on serving the needs of investors, who did not request this urgent change," read the minutes of the meeting. The two also objected that the rule was passed "on an expedited basis with limited due process."

The caving came after an intense round of lobbying from Wall Street banks and Washington. In March, a House financial services subcommittee held a public browbeating of FASB chair Robert Herz and other regulators, giving the board three weeks to change accounting rules or have Congress do it instead.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner publicly called for reform of the mark-to-market rule, placing himself on the side of banks.

Three weeks after the hearing, just as Congress had demanded, the mark-to-market rule was changed; Herz told reporters not to question the board's motivation, always a good reason to start questioning motivations. (Especially considering Herz' own remarks at the hearing.)

Congressional Republicans have long called for accounting rule changes, but the behind-the-scenes support has been bipartisan. Bank lobbyists meet with members of Congress and those members pressure FASB and other regulators to go easy.

"The pressure from these insolvent institutions is entirely bipartisan. Both Democrats and Republicans get the same sort of entreaties from people whining about their own enormous mistakes and the consequences thereof," says Grayson.

Martin sees the latest rule, allowing losses to be pushed into the future, as doing particular violence to accounting transparency.

"A loss is a loss is a loss is a loss," he says. "In accounting theory you match your losses with the period in which they occur. And what we're doing here is saying, you know what, some of these losses, they might turn around, they might not really be losses, we're just going to hang them up on the balance sheet until the dust settles from this economic storm. If good things happen later on down the road, we'll report those good things happening on our books at that time."

What, after all, is the point of reporting quarterly profits if the losses in that quarter aren't counted?

There's a practical problem, too. By allowing banks to classify some losses as present losses and others as some future something-or-other, the rule becomes difficult to police.

"It's going to be impossible. It's not going to be practicable to audit. It's going to be a nightmare to put this into practice consistently," says Martin.

The mark-to-market and the latest rule change generated nearly a thousand letters, many from investors and community banks arguing that the change would make balance sheets less believable, according to meeting minutes. Investors form a powerful political bloc against the banks. Most pensions fund the retirement of union workers and government employees, teachers, cops and firefighters. They want honest accounting.

Martin says that the Big Four accounting firms are allied with investors and have backed up Linsmeier and Siegel's efforts to stand firm. Calls to the Big Four yielded no comment.

Linsmeier and Siegel, through FASB's communication's shop, declined to comment, saying they'd let their dissents in the meeting minutes stand for themselves.

Allowing struggling banks to kick losses to the future requires investors to believe that those banks will exist in the future. And the new FASB rules don't give investors confidence, especially with banks collapsing all around, the rules dissenters said.

"[T]he rapid disappearance of certain financial institutions that appeared able to hold such instruments to recovery has reduced investors' confidence in whether impairments are not being recognized in earnings based on questionable assertions that the entity can withstand market conditions for a sufficient time period to recover the estimated cash flows," they warned.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation's list of "problem" institutions is up to 305, the most since 1994. In the first quarter of the year, it took over 21 banks and another 15 in the second quarter.

Banks that attack auditors and accountants are only hurting themselves in the long run. "The system that we have is meant to inform people on an objective basis who is solvent who is not so they can, among other things, raise capital," says Grayson. "And so fiddling with accounting rules and pressuring people in Washington who administer those rules, what they're really doing in the end is impairing their own ability to raise capital. Nobody -- and I mean nobody -- is going to be willing to invest in banks that play games with their books."

If you're an accountant with expertise in this area, write me at ryan@huffingtonpost.com.

Ryan Grim is the author of the forthcoming book This Is Your Country On Drugs: The Secret History of Getting High in America

Look for another rosy round of profits when banks turn in their numbers for the second quarter ending in June when it will be legal for them to improve their balance sheets by shifting losses into the...
Look for another rosy round of profits when banks turn in their numbers for the second quarter ending in June when it will be legal for them to improve their balance sheets by shifting losses into the...
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Not surprised the big 4 accounting firms have no comment---they don't want to lose business.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:39 PM on 05/28/2009
- bandit09 I'm a Fan of bandit09 9 fans permalink

It is about time the Big 4 accounting firms didn't do something that was a 'yes man' affirmation of their big clients or the FASB. They are siding with investors.

The American Institute of CPAs and the Big 4 in the past have been little more than rubber stamps for big business. Perhaps the CPA's are moving back to what they should be--that is independent professionals being a watch dog for financial statement users. I believe that the CPAs auditing financial statements produced using accounting standards that are actually standard would have alerted investors, lenders, and the government of the house of cards our banking system turned into.

I am a 60 year old CPA who has watched the AICPA parrott any position taken by the FASB thereby disembowelling itself of professional integrity. Perhaps this will bring about substantive change to the reliability of financial statement, unfortunately my sense is big business' constant effort to maintain the status quo will eventually turn the CPAs into jello.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:19 PM on 05/28/2009
- anoise I'm a Fan of anoise 2 fans permalink
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Why is FASB so lopsided? It should be 2 corporate, 2 Investment and 1 Academic.
Corporations really do run the world

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:06 PM on 05/28/2009
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That's a good regulatory step to take. It adresses motive in making accounting rules or resisting the whims of congress. Maybe there could be a better benefit structure for regulators as well so that uncovering fraud is more profitable than ignoring it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:10 PM on 05/28/2009
- bandit09 I'm a Fan of bandit09 9 fans permalink

The FASB is a shill for business. Public companies were dissatisfied with the pace that generally accepted accounting principles were changed and set up FASB in the 70s to be more responsive to what business wants. So we ended up with GAAP that changes when big business wants it changed. One of the underlying doctrines of accounting is conservatism which by itself mandates very few changes in accounting principles take place and then only after much time and study.

When I was a young CPA I remember professional literature expounding on what a disaster it would be for CPAs be remiss in setting and enforcing standards since if CPAs couldn't set them the government would. As a consequence we get politicians jumping in after a mess was made and attempting to clean up something in which they have little understananding. We can thank FASB for and AICPA for this crap.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:33 PM on 05/28/2009
- Artos I'm a Fan of Artos 85 fans permalink

First they lied about their Profits and the risk of their derivatives, now they're lying about their liabilities. And the Government is helping to promote this lying by acquiescing and making bills that enable it. This I would thing makes them accessories to larceny. Were we the average American to do this we would end up in Prison. It's as I have said time and time again. There are two kinds of standards in America, one for the Corporations and the wealthy while we the average joes and janes get the harsher standard. There is no justice in America. Our entire Country and it's so called ideals are nothing but lies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:49 PM on 05/28/2009
- mjtaylor22 I'm a Fan of mjtaylor22 39 fans permalink
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how about transparency and accountability for fraud and deception againsts shareholders.
the two options you present are virtually the same. I like to know when people are lying to me, not to have them present fake numbers as the truth only to find out years later, they had been hiding billoins in losese and I never should have done business with them in the first place.
sounds like a HUGE PONZI SCHEME.
it is AN ENOURMOUS PONZI SCHEME,
what, they will contiune to pay divs based on overinflated stock prices, basically continueing the destabilization of our financial markets. and guaranteeing the destruction of our nation
these rules are for the banks protections, they do not protect nor accurately inform the shareholder or consumer.
We might as well allow lead based paint and asbestos to be used in building materials once again and jsut don' tell anyone they are hazardous to your health and the health of your children.
GET IT !!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:44 PM on 05/28/2009
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We're not talking about dividends or stock prices. We're talking about the fair value of an asset that pays out over time. The big hoo-haw over the Gaussian copula formula is justified not because the formula doesn't do a good job predicting defaults but because the people who applied the formula only used data from markets where home prices were increasing. Regulators can easily check that. Using a model is not fraud in itself.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:53 PM on 05/28/2009
- petef59 I'm a Fan of petef59 20 fans permalink

Bought and paid for by the Financial Industry lobbyists.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:54 PM on 05/28/2009
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the simply fact is that the models are wrong. but even if they were right, the wrong assumptions were made which led to wrong predictions. the assumptions had no basis in reality and only served to enrich a chosen few. the assumptions used and predictions generated with the model were geared to only one goal: Make the elite rich.
So we return to the intent to defraud, which IS a crime, regardless of the formula used to justify it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:16 AM on 05/29/2009
- jmpurser I'm a Fan of jmpurser 164 fans permalink

For those of you without an accounting background what he's describing in this column is the tossing out of one of the oldest cornerstones of accounting: Recognize losses when PROBABLE.

This is on the same order of magnitude as mothers being told the new rule is to teach your kids NOT to look both ways before crossing the street. It is HUGE and it's HORRIBLY irresponsible.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:43 PM on 05/28/2009
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But since we're talking about probablility of value over time, expected value more closely converges over the long run. Even if you have to mark the cash flow from mortgage payments to market right now, you still have to use a model to do it. The model is just less reliable in a shorter time frame, especially when market conditions are unusual or you don't have enough buyers to get a narrow range of quotes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:49 PM on 05/28/2009
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I recommend reading the book, The (Mis)Behaviour of Markets by Benoit Mandelbrot and Richard L. Hudson.
http://www.amazon.com/Misbehavior-Markets-Fractal-Financial-Turbulence/dp/0465043577/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1243599803&sr=1-1

You are assuming that the normal distribution in markets holds, which is mainstream thinking in economic circles, but is almost certainly wrong according to BM.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:28 AM on 05/29/2009
- jerrydenim I'm a Fan of jerrydenim 2 fans permalink

What the F are you talking about? Mark to market means CURRENT MARKET PRICE. Nothing else. Mark to market depends on the market to set the price of an asset and 'mark to model' depends on a model's projections to set the price for an asset. Two completely different accounting methods, quit trying to confuse the two. The market is fine. Banks just don't like what the market thinks their assets are worth. There is no other reason to abandon mark to market. Everything else is a lie.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 PM on 05/29/2009
- mjtaylor22 I'm a Fan of mjtaylor22 39 fans permalink
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THEY JSUT COMPLETELY LEGALIZED COOKED BOOKS,
AND MARK TO MODEL ACCOUNTING. which means I value and asset base upon a made up se of assumptions instead of what the market would bear, it truly fuzzy math. dang who knew that that idiot woudl say inti in the 2000 campaign become president and it be instilled in all our insititutions
so they can deceive us compeltley

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:07 PM on 05/28/2009
- jmpurser I'm a Fan of jmpurser 164 fans permalink

Agreed. This is really scary. America just became a third world banana republic as far as our financial books are concerned. Investor confidence should take a nose dive.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:44 PM on 05/28/2009
- Rog49Thomas I'm a Fan of Rog49Thomas 192 fans permalink

In defense of the change, its advocates point out that determining "fair value" by reference to market prices when the market isn't functioning doesn't make a lot of sense if you're trying to reflect real values.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:06 PM on 05/28/2009
- jmpurser I'm a Fan of jmpurser 164 fans permalink

As the Church Lady says: "Isn't that CONVENIENT?"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 05/28/2009
- Artos I'm a Fan of Artos 85 fans permalink

If they are so keen to show and reflect real values, then why didn't they do that when it came to showing their real profits before the recession. Why did they create so much fantasy profit prior to 2009, but suddenly they have this desire to reflect real values. Wow that sound exactly like the kind of machinations that got us into this mess in the first place.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:52 PM on 05/28/2009
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That is exactly the issue. Nobody will put money into a bank that lies about the value of its assets. But people invested and continue to invest in banks. A new model that tied derivative values to mortgage defaults was used incorrectly and failed to predict prices accurately. Regulators should have been able to see that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:03 PM on 05/28/2009
- mjtaylor22 I'm a Fan of mjtaylor22 39 fans permalink
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IF THEY DESTROYED THE MARKET THRU THERI MANIPULATION, and now there is no one willing to buy the item, it is worthless.­.........e
so u say it should be ok to make up a value. based on soem arbitrary moedl i design.
great, I want 20 million for my house that I live in.
it is only 1400 sq feet, but the lot is over 2,000
any takers....­..........­.......
i mean really
What are we all supposed to be
Stupid....­.no they just know we are not paying attention too busy avoiding homelessness
i am sorry i finished college got the student loans to prove it.
I finished high shcool before home schooling was popular and before 50 percent of our highschool students we freaking drop outs

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:57 PM on 05/28/2009
- mjtaylor22 I'm a Fan of mjtaylor22 39 fans permalink
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I AM SIMPLY GOING TO PASTE THIS
CAUSE IT IS HOW I FEEL
Banks that attack auditors and accountants are only hurting themselves in the long run. "The system that we have is meant to inform people on an objective basis who is solvent who is not so they can, among other things, raise capital," says Grayson. "And so fiddling with accounting rules and pressuring people in Washington who administer those rules, what they're really doing in the end is impairing their own ability to raise capital. Nobody -- and I mean nobody -- is going to be willing to invest in banks that play games with their books."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:04 PM on 05/28/2009
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People are investing in banks.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:20 PM on 05/28/2009
- Artos I'm a Fan of Artos 85 fans permalink

Some people are, those who are greedy , those who are idiots, and those who are greedy idiots. That is all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:53 PM on 05/28/2009
- jerrydenim I'm a Fan of jerrydenim 2 fans permalink

Ever hear of 'pump and dump'?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:20 PM on 05/29/2009
- Rosewren I'm a Fan of Rosewren 22 fans permalink
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http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Global_Economy/KE28Dj03.html

The above article shows just how much the taxpayer is being swindled in the whole TARP bailout.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:04 PM on 05/28/2009
- x004Ronin I'm a Fan of x004Ronin 34 fans permalink

Great, rules that *literally* allow the banks to choose their profits.
"Hmm, I have $8 billion in real revenue, $13 billion in costs due to write-downs and warrant issues....­However, 3 is my lucky number, so I'll report $3 billion in profit ($8 billion - $5 billion in costs), and save the other $8 billion in costs for a later day...."

This is fraud. Period.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:04 PM on 05/28/2009
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The rule has nothing to do with reporting profit. It's an attempt to establish fair value for assets that pay out over time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:44 PM on 05/28/2009

The rule allows for hiding of Liability.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:42 PM on 05/28/2009
- Jeff Kreisler - Huffpost Blogger I'm a Fan of Jeff Kreisler 11 fans permalink

Well Duh.
Great Cheaters account however they want, because they can. Sure, there's this thing called "GAAP" - Generally Accepted Accounting Principles – but as any banker or CEO will tell you, GAAP is for sissies.
There's no law saying you have to adhere to accounting standards, so conforming is strictly a matter of personal integrity.
"Personal integrity?" Never heard of it.

Find out more: http://GetRichCheating.com
Get Rich Cheating from HarperCollins
"Just by reading this book you'll earn an asterisk next to your name. You'll be laughing all the way to the bank, assuming other cheaters haven't forced it into bankruptcy yet."
— Rachel Maddow (MSNBC)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:42 PM on 05/28/2009
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Marking an asset to a model is an accepted accounting practice. The only time it wasn't, things didn't seem to go well, financially speaking.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:45 PM on 05/28/2009
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precisely. you are making the discovery that prices had nothing to do with reality. they were marked to something other than what other people were prepared to pay for it.
the market usually prices correctly - if it doesn't than the models used are crap, because they rely on such an efficient market.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:24 AM on 05/29/2009
- jmpurser I'm a Fan of jmpurser 164 fans permalink

GAAP has evolved in to CRAP - Cleverly Rigged Accounting Principles

So much for Accounting 101. Apparently the rules have gone out the window.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:47 PM on 05/28/2009
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That was a nice CRACK - cleverly rigged acronym generation. The use of a model to determine fair value is a very standard accounting tool. Regulators need to make sure that the models are being applied correcly.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:57 PM on 05/28/2009
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Uh, CRAG, I guess. I wanted to make CRACK the acronym but I couldn't think of anything that fit.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:57 PM on 05/28/2009
- Artos I'm a Fan of Artos 85 fans permalink

Why do they even bother teaching accounting in College and why even have Accounting classes at all since they don't matter. The only thing I can see that one would gain from going to College for those degrees is to have one tack on the wall, otherwise I'm pretty sure the Mafia could teach those who are interested just about everything they need to fit into our Financial Investment, and Banking firms.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:57 PM on 05/28/2009
- DWX I'm a Fan of DWX permalink

If these same rules apply to companies, wouldn’t this leads to another phony economy and crashes the stock market again? Investor, beware of new Wall Street scam (fudging accounting rules).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:35 PM on 05/28/2009
- jsgaetano I'm a Fan of jsgaetano 206 fans permalink
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Another wonderful banking fraud, brought to the US economy courtesy of "Fiscal Conservatives".

Please ignore that it allowed them to steal trillions of dollars. That obviously had no bearing on anything.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:24 PM on 05/28/2009

Shorter version: we made $7 billion, as long as you don't count the $30 billion we lost.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:22 PM on 05/28/2009
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