It may tbe court of public opinion today; but it could well be a court of law in the near future.AZGrizFan wrote:In the court of public opinion you don't even need a preponderance of evidence.∞∞∞ wrote: So because they're Wall Street multi millionaires, they have no principles? What about the ones that worked hard to get there, without stepping on anyone in the process? We probably don't hear about them, but why not, let's just claim they have no principles. Sucks that we can't become rich in America without being second-guessed on how we got there, even if you did nothin'. Guilty until proven innocent seems to be the way this country is headin'...politically, religiously, and socially.![]()
The SEC case against Goldman Sachs threatens to publicly expose the dark underbelly of Wall Street opportunism and unprincipled greed. A steady drumbeat of negative news will dampen the propsects of the current market recovery; we are a major news story away from a significant market adjustment.
Remember the way th Microsoft anti-trust verdict in May 2000 killed any hope of a recovery in the beaten down tech sector? Any really bad Goldman news will ahev the same effect market-wide.
Goldman will offer its strident denials; but I expect that it will look to settle fast for a remakably princely sum to avoid continued scrutiny (without, of course, any acknowledgement of guilt).
And someone in Washington with oversight authority over the SEC will demand that the SEC take the deal: because the only thing worse than being wrong about Goldman would be to be right about Goldman.







