Anyoption Announces Facebook IPO Opportunity

Facebook IPO

Anyoption has announced a once in a lifetime event. Anyoption is the first and only company in the world to facilitate the biggest pre IPO launch ever on Facebook’s upcoming stock!

While the amount of shares and opening price is still not finalized, traders can hedge the market value at the closing of first day of trading and make up to 300% profit.

Take advantage of FaceBook IPO
 

Currently rated 1.0 by 13 people

  • Currently 1/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

UBS Trader Faces Trial For $2.3 Billion Loss

Kweku Adoboli

LONDON — A former UBS trader, Kweku M. Adoboli, pleaded not guilty on Monday to charges of fraud and false accounting that led to a $2.3 billion trading loss at UBS last year.

Standing in a glass-walled box in a London court, Mr. Adoboli, 31, pleaded not guilty to each of the four counts. He faces up to 10 years in prison if found guilty of the two counts of falsifying accounts and two counts of fraud by abuse of position.

The judge, Alistair McCreath, sent Mr. Adoboli back into custody and said the trial would start Sept. 3. Given the “magnitude” of the case, with a vast amount of material and witnesses, “it’s unlikely to try before that,” the judge said. The trial is expected to last as long as eight weeks.

A spokesman for UBS declined to comment, saying that during active criminal proceedings, “English criminal law limits what we can say about this incident.”

Paul Garlick, Mr. Adoboli’s lawyer, said he expected to enter an application for bail “in the near future.”

Mr. Adoboli was arrested Sept. 15 on suspicion of fraud after UBS alerted the police. The bank has said it lost $2.3 billion as a result of unauthorized trades in equity index futures and claimed that Mr. Adoboli had masked those activities from internal controls with fictitious trades.

In a surprise step in December, Mr. Adoboli fired his lawyers at Kingsley Napley, the firm that previously represented Nick Leeson, the rogue trader blamed for the collapse of the British bank Barings in 1995. His lawyer had told a court in September that Mr. Adoboli was “sorry beyond words for what had happened” at UBS. Mr. Adoboli switched to another law firm and then asked the court for more time to enter a plea.

The trading scandal shook UBS and prompted the resignation of its chief executive, Oswald J. Grübel.

While UBS, based in Zurich, has completed an internal investigation into the trading loss, a separate inquiry by the Financial Services Authority, the British regulatory agency, and the Swiss financial watchdog is continuing. The F.S.A. has hired the accounting firm KPMG to help.

The bank’s internal investigation showed that while its risk controls had picked up something unusual and red flags had been raised, those in charge had failed to investigate them sufficiently. UBS said in October that the co-heads of the equity division in London, where the trades occurred, had resigned.

“We have to be straight with ourselves,” Sergio P. Ermotti, the chief executive, said then. “In no circumstances should something like this ever occur.”
 

Currently rated 1.0 by 1 people

  • Currently 1/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Bloomberg Releases Fed's Secret Bank Data

Federal Reserve Bank

Bloomberg News has released spreadsheets showing daily borrowing totals for 407 banks and companies that tapped Federal Reserve emergency programs during the 2007 to 2009 financial crisis. It’s the first time such data have been publicly available in this form.

To download a zip file of the spreadsheets, go to http://bit.ly/Bloomberg-Fed-Data.

For an explanation of the files, see the one labeled “1a Fed Data Roadmap.”

More at Bloomberg News.
 

Currently rated 1.0 by 3 people

  • Currently 1/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Politician Lobbies For Virginia To Have Its Own Currency

Bob Marshall

American politicians are beginning to show their ignorance of basic economics. A couple of days ago, we reported that Walker Stapleton, the Colorado State Treasurer, is lobbying to invest the state's money in the Forex market. Good luck with that.

Now Bob Marshall, a Virginia state legislator with huge balls has introduced legislation to have the State of Virginia create its own currency in response to a decreasing dollar value.

Bob Marshall admits he’s obsessed watching the U.S. dollar’s diminished value.

“It’s everything,” he said, as he walked outside the Manassas Virginia train station. “It’s all I think about. It’s all anyone should be thinking about.”

Marshall, who is a Virginia State Representative, says it’s time for something radical.

“I want to see the states step in,” he said. “It’s time. Past time.”

Marshall wants the state of Virginia to have its own currency to create what he calls “competition with the U.S. dollar.” He also says it will protect Virginia if the dollar falls even further.

“Our role as state legislators,” he explained as an Amtrak train rolled through the station, “is to protect the people, and the federal government is not doing its job.”

He points out the dollar’s value has fallen nearly 40 percent since 2001, and he says with a record debt and deficit it’s, only going to get worse.

“What I hope to accomplish,” he said, “is to put the brakes on this train that is running away down the tracks.”

“I don't see any brakes applied in Washington the only ones that can do it are the states.”

Marshal isn’t alone. Fifteen other states, (Wash., Idaho, Mont., Utah, Colo., Okla., Mo., Ind., Tenn., Ga., S.C., N.C.,Vt., Iowa, N.H.) are currently or have recently considered proposals for creating alternative currencies.

Some Constitutional experts call the trend “disturbing” and “blatantly illegal.”

“The Constitution flatly prohibits states from issuing their own currency,” says Eric Freedman, “whether in the form of coins or in the form of paper money.”

Freedman is a professor at Hofstra Law School in New York, and he predicts “economic catastrophe,” if each state has a competing currency.

“That would be the destruction of the country,” he said. “Even at the time of the Civil War it was thought that two separate countries wouldn’t survive with two separate currencies.”

“This is a proposal for 50 [currencies] in the same geographical territory. It’s ludicrous.”

“Well, I will tell you what's more devastating,” replied Marshall, “A Weimar Republic-style inflation where you have to take a wheelbarrow full of money to buy some bread,” referring to the Germany in the early 1900's that suffered under massive hyperinflation.

“The legal experts,” he continued, “should not just look at court decisions. They should look at the original debates about the Constitution.”

Marshall points out that James Madison, who is often considered the “Father of the Constitution,” “expressly talked about eliminating the power of Congress to emit bills of credit.”

“Do you know what bills of credit are? Paper money,” said Marshall.

He said he’s going to spend his time this year to convince fellow legislators to pass the proposal next year.

Bob, Bob, Bob.  Please sit down for a few moments and give some serious consideration to what you are proposing. You know, there is a difference between ignorance and stupidity. Most people can overcome ignorance through education or experience, but if you are stupid... well, then you're in real trouble. Bob Marshall, you are in real trouble.

 

Currently rated 5.0 by 9 people

  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Colorado Treasurer Wants To Invest State Funds in Forex

Walker Stapleton

The latest post in our 'Huge Balls' series.

Colorado state Treasurer Walker Stapleton wants the ability to invest state money in foreign currency in the event of hyperinflation or devaluation of the U.S. dollar, he told the Legislative Audit Committee on Tuesday.

Stapleton, a Republican who took office in January, said that he would want to make such an investment only in a reactive rather than proactive manner if the value of the U.S. dollar begins to decline. But he believes his office should have the ability to make that choice, and he will ask legislators to offer a bill giving him that power next year, he said.

“It’s certainly not great for the brand of this treasurer’s office or any treasurer’s office to see a headline saying ‘State of Colorado investing in foreign currencies,” Stapleton told the committee.

“I view my responsibility first and foremost not to lose money. The next worst thing that a treasurer can do is not having proper liquidity,” he added after the meeting. “If the safety of investing in foreign securities overrides the risk of investing in U.S. securities, that’s a difficult pill to swallow. But it’s one that we should be willing to do.”

State law now allows the treasury to invest only in U.S. securities, such as bonds. But an external audit by Buck Consultants recommended that it should research the benefits of allowing investments in high-quality foreign securities denominated in U.S. dollars at a time when credit rating agencies have made noises about downgrading the credit rating of U.S. currency.

Stapleton specifically cited the Canadian dollar and the Australian dollar as two foreign currencies in which he would be interested in investing.

He said also that he would like to look into investing in precious metals such as gold or silver as well if the U.S. dollar is devalued.
 

Currently rated 3.0 by 2 people

  • Currently 3/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5