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View Full Version : A new day, a new Republican scandal.....



Ocotillo
01-20-2006, 08:21 AM
Insider Trading in Frist and Delay's Office: Story Growing (http://dailykos.com/storyonly/2006/1/19/17445/7449)

In an exclusive last night on Air America Radio's The Majority Report, Rep. Louise Slaughter alleged that day-traders had been operating inside the offices of Senator Frist and Congressman Delay. Telling us that her source was "as good as gold," Rep. Slaughter promised to investigate further and get back to us. Audio available via AMERICAblog here.


"I'm going to track this down, I know it's true," Slaughter told us,"that Frist, DeLay and probably others had some day traders working out of their offices." Those working out of the Congressional offices "would find out there's a bill being written by lobbyists, that there would be no asbestos bill ... and when the market opened the next day, the cost of asbestos stock had doubled."

UPDATE: Congressman Baird (leading this cause on the Hill) laid out the problem on The Majority Report tonight...audio over at AMERICAblog here.

The context of this story, and the practice of spreading insider "political intelligence" is starting to unfold...developments on the other side...


josh orton's diary :: ::
The backstory of this involves what's called "political intelligence." The Hill did a story nearly a year ago on firms that harvest insider political info and feed it to Wall Street to get ahead of the news cycle; obviously much of what happens in DC affects the market.

The Hill piece is here.


"We provide customized political intelligence and deliver the information ahead of the news cycle," Portnoy said.

In a business that is in large measure a gamble, information that helps a trader pick one side or the other is critical.

"It's all about comparative advantage and market efficiency. ... There are lots of things that happen in Washington that affect the market," said Tim VandenBerg, a senior policy analyst at Washington Analysis, a D.C.-based group that advises Wall Street on Congress. "If you are reading about it in The Wall Street Journal, you are reading about what has happened, not will happen."

For its information, the financial sector can turn to firms such as VandenBerg's, which does not lobby. Another example is Charles Schwab's Washington Research Group, which keeps clients abreast of legislative and regulatory moves.

Many larger players, including some major hedge funds, have set up their own offices in town. Others hire such firms as Sonnenschein that specialize in lobbying to mine their Hill contacts for another purpose.

Because they aren't, in fact, lobbying for these clients, firms don't have to register with the Senate or the House. Most firms don't identify their clients or disclose the revenues from the work.


Then, this past December, Business Week reported on the phenomenon:



Washington Whispers To Wall Street

Low-profile firms enjoy a lucrative business selling "political intelligence"

Day traders were confused. On Tuesday, Nov. 15, they couldn't figure out why there was so much action in USG Corp. (), a Chicago building-materials company whose subsidiary is mired in asbestos lawsuits. The stock was trading at double the normal daily volume and would gain $2.12 to close at $61.55. But there wasn't any major news to power the run-up.

Public news, that is. Behind the scenes, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) had decided to override the qualms of Budget Committee leaders and press ahead with a bill to create a $140 billion fund to relieve companies such as USG of their asbestos liabilities. Frist wouldn't announce his move until Nov. 16. But the news got to key Wall Street players a day early via a little-known pipeline: a small group of firms specializing in "political intelligence" that mine the capital for information and translate Washington wonkspeak into trading tips.

The business started with a couple of cottage firms in the early 1970s. But now it's taking off. Industry insiders say the explosion of hedge funds has driven new clients and bigger dollars to Washington-watchers. "What hedge funds do is look for inefficiencies in the market," says one hedge fund manager who buys several firms' reports. "And Washington is the world's greatest creator of [market] inefficiencies."

Unlike lobbyists, political intelligence outfits are not required to disclose their clients or annual revenues, masking the size of this very quiet business. One veteran estimates there are more than a half-dozen contenders collectively raking in $30 million to $40 million a year. Prominent players include the Washington research shops of Prudential (), Lehman Brothers (), and Stanford Washington Research Group, owned by Stanford Financial Group of Houston.

The business stretches beyond Capitol Hill. "We analyze public policy -- macroeconomics, the Fed, budget, trade, currency -- that affects overall financial markets, sectors, or companies," says Leslie Alperstein, a founder of the firm Washington Analysis. And while leaks such as Frist's asbestos news are welcome, Alperstein says his business is mostly about explaining trends. "If we only dealt in [hot tips], I wouldn't be living in Potomac," he says, referring to a pricey Maryland suburb. "It doesn't happen often enough."

LOOSE STANDARDS

It happens enough, however, to trouble some lawmakers. On Nov. 23, Representative Brian Baird (D-Wash.) asked the House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct to issue guidance for staffers sitting on some of the capital's most valuable information. "The possibility of direct kickbacks [is] enormous," says Baird, who read about the political intelligence business in The Hill, a newspaper covering Congress. He worries that the trafficking comes "very close" to insider trading.

But ethics experts say no one's breaking the rules. Hill staffers and government employees are forbidden from personally profiting from confidential data and can't share information that's classified or deemed secret by their employers. But within those loose standards, political intelligence is just another legal way for investors to perform due diligence. The intelligence operatives say that Congress, where decisions are made publicly, is fair game.


So already there is a hugely lucrative practice of trading insider political info...something that needs to be shut-down as is.

But now, it seems as though the traders may have actually been operating from INSIDE the offices of Republicans. So even if mining "political intelligence" is still technically legal, this development seems like unambiguous insider trading if true: Republican lawmakers gave market info exclusively to these firms, info that was not yet available to the general public.

Representative Brian Baird (D-Wash.), quoted in the Business Week story and the Congressional point man on the potential scandal, will be on The Majority Report tonight at approx. 7:51 Eastern tonight to talk to Sam Seder. The audio stream and a list of affiliates can be found here.

The next step is tying the employees of these intelligence firms to both the Repoublican party in general, and Delay, Frist, and their staffers specifically. Rep. Baird has already written to the House Ethics Committee to investigate (we'll hold our breath on that) and is proposing legislation to end this corruption. We've also heard that outside law-enforcement agencies may soon become involved.

We ought to start calling the RNC the landfill.........they both stink to high heaven.

boutons_
01-20-2006, 08:26 AM
The whole financial/political/governmental system is gamed as badly as a Las Vega casino.
The playing field is not level.
Guess who whose goalposts are on the highground?

xrayzebra
01-20-2006, 10:41 AM
Okay, where does something like this show the Dimms. feelings on someone being
critical of them?

Paper Shutters Blog After Ombudsman Post
Jan 19 7:28 PM US/Eastern


WASHINGTON


The Washington Post shut down one of its blogs Thursday after the newspaper's ombudsman raised the ire of readers by writing that lobbyist Jack Abramoff gave money to the Democrats as well as to Republicans.

At the center of a congressional bribery investigation, Abramoff gave money to Republicans while he had his clients donate to both parties, though mostly to Republicans.



In her Sunday column, ombudsman Deborah Howell wrote that Abramoff "had made substantial campaign contributions to both major parties," prompting a wave of nasty reader postings on post.blog.

There were so many personal attacks that the newspaper's staff could not "keep the board clean, there was some pretty filthy stuff," and so the Post shut down comments on the blog, or Web log, said Jim Brady, executive editor of washingtonpost.com.

"We're not giving up on the concept of having a healthy public dialogue with our readers, but this experience shows that we need to think more carefully about how we do it," Brady wrote on the newspaper's Web site. "There are things that we said we would not allow, including personal attacks, the use of profanity and hate speech."

___

Does this mean dimms cant stand the truth? Just asking, ]

boutons, I know you cant, so you don't count.

FromWayDowntown
01-20-2006, 10:56 AM
Wherever there's trouble, xray is there to change the subject.

SA210
01-20-2006, 10:59 AM
Wherever there's trouble, xray is there to change the subject.
and call someone a twerp.

xrayzebra
01-20-2006, 11:35 AM
Wherever there's trouble, xray is there to change the subject.

Same subject, different group. Same comments from the different group.

xrayzebra
01-20-2006, 11:35 AM
and call someone a twerp.

Hi twerp! Did you go down on the river when they cleaned the
place up the other day?

SA210
01-20-2006, 11:49 AM
^^^ Hey, long time no argue, :lol. I hate when the river looks like that but it's got to be done. By the way Xray, Mayor Hardberger plans on getting shelter and help for all the cities homeless THIS year. Did you hear? Oh the pain you must feel.

xrayzebra
01-20-2006, 11:56 AM
^^^ Hey, long time no argue, :lol. I hate when the river looks like that but it's got to be done. By the way Xray, Mayor Hardberger plans on getting shelter and help for all the cities homeless THIS year. Did you hear? Oh the pain you must feel.

Good Morning! Why wouldn't he. The city council spent about 1/4 mil on
a toilet for them. Did they put showers in there for them? Of course, being
the cynic that I am, for that kinda money here in SA and with their
planning they more than likely got one seat surrounded by a shower curtain,
from SAKS fifth Ave, of course. :lol

SA210
01-20-2006, 12:01 PM
We haven't had good leadership in SA for a while, I think this Mayor has some guts. I'm sure I'll disagree with some of his plans, but so far so good in my book. Going after NFL, and taking care of homeless, THIS year, he says? :tu

So much for Garzas great 10 year plan for homelessness and to bring Soccer to SA.

Ocotillo
01-20-2006, 12:59 PM
So much for Garzas great 10 year plan for homelessness and to bring Soccer to SA.

Who? :lol

xrayzebra
01-20-2006, 03:16 PM
We haven't had good leadership in SA for a while, I think this Mayor has some guts. I'm sure I'll disagree with some of his plans, but so far so good in my book. Going after NFL, and taking care of homeless, THIS year, he says? :tu

So much for Garzas great 10 year plan for homelessness and to bring Soccer to SA.

Well this Mayor is a socialist, of that there is no doubt. He is very
free with the taxpayers money for the Arts, homeless, make SA beautiful.
Of course he cant find money for police, wants a new tax increase for that.
Cant take care of streets, curbs and other stuff needed in the older sections of SA, but what the heck. He is going to take care of old joe blow who lives on the streets, right? Great guy the Mayor. He has guts, but no brains.

SA210
01-20-2006, 05:37 PM
Great guy the Mayor. He has guts, but no brains.
Well it's good to have one of the two. Bush has neither guts or brains. :lol


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