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Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Insider Trading by Congress - Corruption Runs Deep

Wealthy Lobbyists, CEOs, Politicians, and Bankers vs the 99% (We've been so screwed all along.)

Will the shocking insider trading revelations that have come to light in recent days finally be enough to motivate the American people to start throwing all of the con men and charlatans out of Congress?

On Sunday, 60 Minutes opened up a huge can of worms when it did a feature story on insider trading by members of Congress. Up until now, the vast majority of Americans had no idea that insider trading was actually legal for members of Congress. In fact, as will be documented later on in this article, members of Congress have been using secrets that they have learned during the course of their duties to make huge amounts of money in the stock market.

If you can believe it, during the financial crisis of 2008 some members of Congress were making huge stock moves that would only pay off if the stock market crashed really hard at a time when they should have been focusing on creating legislation that would help the U.S. financial system survive. It is hard not to feel sick after learning how low some of our “leaders” have stooped to enrich themselves. Now that the American people are learning the truth, how can they ever trust Congress again?

Even before these revelations about insider trading by members of Congress came to light, the approval rating for Congress was sittingat about 11 percent. There is a widespread feeling in this country that our political system simply does not work any longer.

Nearly all of our “leaders” seem to be wealthy elitists that arerapidly becoming wealthier. Today, the average net worth for a member of Congress is approximately3.8 million dollars, and the collective net worth of all of the members of Congress increased by25 percent between 2008 and 2010.

It would be one thing is they were accumulating all of this wealth legitimately. However, it is just not right for members of Congress to use government secrets and inside information that is not available to the general public to make huge profits in the stock market.

If any of the rest of us engage in insider trading, it could get us thrown into jail. But as a recentCNBC article noted, members of Congress can pretty much get away with it as much as they want to….

When you buy and sell stocks based on secrets you learned at the office, it could be insider trading. But when a United States Senator does it, it’s probably perfectly legal. That’s because the SEC has largely determined that trading stocks based on advance knowledge of action in Congress is not insider trading.

But just because it is legal, that does not make it right.

Former Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff made headlines recently when he claimed that “a dozen members of Congress and their aides took part in insider trading“.

Well, it turns out that there has been a whole lot more insider trading going on than that.

If you have not seen the recent 60 Minutes report on this issue yet, you really should take a few minutes and watch it….

One of the politicians featured in the 60 Minutes story was Nancy Pelosi. Pelosi has been doing incredibly well financially in recent years. For example, her net worth soaredby 62 percent in 2010. If you can believe it, Nancy Pelosi is now worth 35.2 million dollars. That is a nice chunk of change.

So has she been getting a little bit of “extra help” along the way? According to a recentCNN article, one very preferential stock deal involving a credit card company went very well for her. It also turns out that there was credit card legislation that was pending in the House at the time….

Pelosi and her husband participated in an initial public offering of Visa in 2008, according to CBS. They bought 5,000 shares at the initial price of $44; two days later, shares were trading at $64, CBS said. The network reported the investment came at the same time a piece of legislation that was opposed by credit-card companies was making its way through the House.

But what is even worse is what many members of Congress did with secret information that they were told by U.S. Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke at the start of the financial crisis of 2008. On September 16, 2008 Paulson and Bernanke held “closed door meetings” with members of Congress and warned them that the financial system was about to totally collapse. But instead of racing out to save the financial system, author Peter Schweizer says that many of our representatives in Congress raced out to save their stock portfolios.

In his new book, Schweizer alleges the following….

  • Schweizer says that U.S. Senator Dick Durbin sold$74,715 worth of stock on September 17th and$42,000 worth of stock on September 18th.
  • Schweizer says that U.S. Representative Jim Moran sold off sharesin 90 different corporations on September 17th.
  • Schweizer says that U.S. Senator Sheldon Whitehouse sold offat least $250,000 worth of stock between September 18th and September 24th.
  • Schweizer says that U.S. Representative Spencer Bachusbet very heavily against the stock market in the days following the September 16th meeting and made tens of thousands of dollars doing so.
  • Schweizer says that U.S. Senator John Kerry bought up approximately$350,000of Bank of America stock and approximately$550,000 of Citigroup stock during October 2008 and November of 2008. It was during this time period that the bailout programs for the big banks were being developed and debated.

Are you feeling sick to your stomach yet?

But it isn’t just members of Congress that are using secrets to make money in the stock market.According to an article in the Wall Street Journal, quite a few Congressional staffers have also been making questionable trades….

“At least 72 aides on both sides of the aisle traded shares of companies that their bosses help oversee, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis of more than 3,000 disclosure forms covering trading activity by Capitol Hill staffers for 2008 and 2009.”

But nobody is getting into trouble for any of this. This is how corrupt our system has become. And there are scientific studies that show that members of Congress have been doing significantly better in the stock market than the general public has been doing.

For example,one study from 2004 found that members of Congress do even better in the stock market than corporate insiders do….

“A 2004 study of the results of stock trading by United States Senators during the 1990s found that that senators on average beat the market by 12% a year. In sharp contrast, U.S. households on average under-performed the market by 1.4% a year and even corporate insiders on average beat the market by only about 6% a year during that period. A reasonable inference is that some Senators had access to – and were using – material nonpublic information about the companies in whose stock they trade.”

A recentCNBC article mentioned another recent study that found that investments by members of the U.S. House of Representatives beat the market by about 6 percent a year….

In the 2011 study “Abnormal Returns From the Common Stock Investments of Members of the U.S. House of Representatives,” four university professors found that a portfolio that mimics the purchases of House Members beats the market by 55 basis points per month, or approximately 6 percent annually. That study looked at 16,000 common stock transactions made by approximately 300 House delegates from 1985 to 2001.

Clearly all of this is not just some huge coincidence. So why doesn’t Congress just pass a law to make it illegal for members of Congress to make trades based on insider information?

Well, a few members of Congress have actually tried to introduce such legislation, but it has never gone anywhere. It turns out that members of Congress like things just the way that they are. Being a member of Congress is one of the best jobs in the country. It is a great way to become famous, get rich andlive the high life.

As mentioned earlier, only 11 percent of the American people think that Congress is doing a good job, and yet we keep sending the same people back to Congress time after time. Since 1964, the reelection rate for members of the U.S. House of Representatives has never fallen below 85 percent.

Yes, our system is a joke, but the joke is on us. So do any of you out there actually believe that we have a chance of changing this deeply corrupt system? Why aren't the villagers storming the ramparts with torches and pitch forks>

Originally posted: The American Dream Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Low Corporate Taxes = Excessive CEO Salaries

It doesn't matter what a corporation pays in taxes as compared to GDP, or how it's compared to any other index of measure (to skew the numbers), it's what they actually pay to the U.S. Treasury after loopholes (aka "deductions") that matters most. And for the last 25 years corporations have actually paid historically low taxes.

While today some corporations may have paid the maximum rate of 35% (when it was over 50% in the 1950s), many others paid ZERO, with the average being only 18%.

The same can be said for their CEOs and other high-income earners. While although the top bracket is also almost historically low (at 35%, when it was once over 90%), what they actually pay is nearer to 15% because the majority of their income is earned through capital gains.

And because corporations have been paying a low effective corporate tax rate for decades, that didn't keep them from outsourcing jobs overseas for cheap labor, but rather, it did enable them to pay very excessive CEO salaries...who only mostly pay 15% in federal income taxes on their capital gains.


Lobbyists on K St. paid like CEOs on Wall St.

We have a Revenue Problem, Not A Spending Problem

Click here to see what $1 Trillion looks like in cash

U.S. Corporations have $2.2 Trillion hoarded away off-shore

The richest 1 percent have more financial wealth than the bottom 95 percent combined

The total net worth on the Forbes 400 List marks $1.5 Trillion in 2011

The Global Super-Rich Stash: Now $25 Trillion

3 comments:

  1. United Republic

    A bold new coalition fighting back against the undue influence of well-financed special interests over American politics and government.

    http://unitedrepublic.org/

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for the post as usual, Bud! Keep up the good work! Susan

    ReplyDelete
  3. An estimated 47 percent of the lawmakers in Congress, says a new Center for Responsive Politics count, now rate as millionaires. This tally actually low-balls the congressional millionaire cohort — since the Center's calculations don't take into account either primary residences or artwork and other personal valuables.

    How do lawmakers pile up the big dough? Some — like Spencer Bachus, the Alabama Republican who chairs the House Financial Services panel — put the inside info their legislative status provides them to lucrative use.

    In 2008, news reports last week related, Bachus made a series of Wall Street bets that the economy would tank — after a closed-door briefing gave him advance notice that Wall Street was melting. Bachus ended up nearly doubling his money. Why no “insider trading” case against Bachus? Insider trading laws don’t cover members of Congress.

    http://www.slate.com/blogs/weigel/2011/11/14/spencer_bachus_rogue_trader.html

    ReplyDelete