Thursday 12 July 2012

The Grestest Economic Scam in World History


Could you really expect better from the self-regulating casino that is wall street? The house ALWAYS wins, especially if they can create unlimited chips and rig the games.

The fleecing is exposed and was ignored/sanctioned for 5 years



11 July, 2012

You know that the Federal Reserve knew about the manipulation by August 2007. And see this.
But did you realize that the Fed and Treasury threw billions of dollars of taxpayer money at Barclays and the other Libor-manipulating banks after they knew about the manipulation … and did nothing to stop it?
As Richard Eskow notes:
Thanks to the GAO audit of the Fed — an audit which it vigorously resisted — we know that Barclays was the fifth largest recipient of emergency loans. Bailout loans for Barclays came to $868 billion. That means that Barclays probably made billions off the reduced interest rate alone, courtesy of the American people.
Those loans were granted between December 2007 and July 2010. That means the Fed was doling out billions to Barclaysafter it learned that the bank was lying about its LIBOR rates.

Indeed, all of the probable Libor manipulators – including Citi, JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America, UBS, RBS and Deutsche – were huge recipients of bailout money courtesy of the American taxpayer:
Table 8: Institutions with Largest Total Transaction Amounts (Not Term-Adjusted) across Broad-Based Emergency Programs (Borrowing Aggregated by Parent Company and Includes Sponsored ABCP Conduits), December 1, 2007 through July 21, 2010

Bailout U.S. Gave Tens of Billions to Libor Manipulating Banks ... Even AFTER Learining about the Manipulation
Source: GAO analysis of Federal Reserve System data.
(
Click table for larger image)


No, the criminals haven’t paid back the bailout money, American taxpayers are still bailing them out and helping them grow bigger, and the banks are committing more fraud every day.

The government isn’t doing anything to rein in the big banks … no wonder people are starting to call for bankers’ heads.




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