from the Working Life blog:
Citi Big Fish Skate, Leave Minnows and Workers Holding The Bagby Jonathan Tasini
Thursday 20 of October, 2011
Pardon me while I yawn. The measly fine that Citigroup is paying to settle civil complaints charging that the bank defrauded investors is really something else: it's a stay-out-of-jail, keep-your-reputation card for Robert Rubin and a lot of other senior Citi officials, past and present. Instead, this deal--as was true with the miniscule fines levied on JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs--is ultimately about letting the real culprits get away with a massive scheme, leaving minor actors holding the bag and workers' pensions out of luck.
So, first the fig-leaf:
Citigroup on Wednesday agreed to pay $285 million to settle a civil complaint by the Securities and Exchange Commission that it had defrauded investors who bought just such a deal. The transaction involved a $1 billion portfolio of mortgage-related investments, many of which were handpicked for the portfolio by Citigroup without telling investors of its role or that it had made bets that the investments would fall in value.
The settlement will refund investors with interest and include a $95 million fine — a relative pittance for a giant like Citigroup. On Monday, the company reported that in the third quarter alone it earned profits of $3.8 billion on revenue of $20.8 billion.
This is a pittance. And this is probably the only sentence worth reading:
But the case highlights a growing frustration felt by foreclosed homeowners, investors and Wall Street protesters alike that few, if any, senior banking executives have faced criminal charges for losses growing out of the financial crisis. (emphasis added)
Which brings us to Robert Rubin, a former vice-chair of Citi during the years leading up to the financial crisis. In March, I looked at Robert Rubin's rolein the financial crisis, a role that goes back to the Clinton Administration where he played a central part in undoing sane financial regulation. His whole persona and ego were wrapped up in his role as a major "fixer": a Wall Street Democrat who could be an emissary to all corners of the political and economic world. He was, along with his political patron, Bill Clinton, seen as the architect of the economic "good years" in the 1990s. ...........(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://www.workinglife.org/blogs/view_post.php?content_id=15320