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Title Four Corners: One Shitty Deal
Published Australia : ABC, 2010
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Description 1 online resource (streaming video file) (44 min. 8 sec.) ; 266350225 bytes
Summary A story that reveals how a toxic cocktail of investment packages helped poison the retirement funds of hundreds of Australians.The Federal Government was quick to boast that Australia avoided the worst of the global financial crisis, but many people here did pay a terrible price.Reporter Marian Wilkinson lifts the lid on the behaviour of investment bank Goldman Sachs in the United States. Speaking to a whistleblower who brought allegations against the company to the US Securities and Exchange Commission and the FBI, she also examines key internal company documents that show how the deal was sold in Australia.Crucially, she asks if some senior figures in Goldman Sachs New York knew the bank was selling investment packages that would almost certainly fail.On the 22nd June 2007, a senior executive at Goldman Sachs, America wrote an email to the head of the company's mortgage division saying:"Boy that Timberwolf was one shitty deal."The email is both revealing and damning. Timberwolf was really just a fancy name for a billion dollar investment package, tied up with the US sub-prime mortgage market and sold by Goldman Sachs. As Four Corners shows, the New York bank had reason to believe the package was not a good investment for their clients.In mid 2007, Goldman Sachs, Australia sold the Australian hedge fund Basis Capital an investment in Timberwolf valued at $100 million. Within days, as the sub-prime market in the United States began its meltdown, Timberwolf began to collapse in value. This week, Basis launched a $1 billion civil case against Goldman Sachs over the deal.The US Senate and the country's regulatory authorities also want to know why one of the country's most respected finance houses was selling a product that was "crap" and why Timberwolf and other products collapsed in value within months.Hundreds of Australian investors are asking the same thing.They invested in Basis believing they could get good returns. But many did not understand that Basis was investing in risky collateralised debt obligations (CDOs) linked to the US sub-prime market. Not only Goldman Sachs, but other big Wall Street firms had also sold CDOs to Basis.Marian Wilkinson talks to the investors in Australia who lost their hard earned cash, and the regulators who were supposed to protect them. Authorities in Australia seem surprisingly relaxed about how the deals were done, suggesting that the securities were marketed to qualified finance houses that knew how to assess the products.For the people in Australia that lost $350 million in Basis, that might be cold comfort. All they know is their investment was infected with something even bank executives are calling "a shitty deal", and so far in this country very little has been done about it
Notes Closed captioning in English
Event Broadcast 2010-06-14 at 20:30:00
Notes Classification: NC
Subject Business enterprises -- Corrupt practices.
Business losses.
Global Financial Crisis (2008-2009)
Goldman, Sachs & Co.
Whistle blowing.
Americas.
Australia.
Form Streaming video
Author Blankfein, Lloyd, contributor
Buckley, Ross, contributor
D'Aloisio, Tony, contributor
Levin, Carl, contributor
Lewis, Eric, contributor
Mapley, David, contributor
McCaskill, Claire, contributor
Orgill, Brad, contributor
Parkes, Margy, contributor
Roach, Bob, contributor
Sparks, Daniel, contributor
Viniar, David, contributor
Walter, Mark, contributor
Ward, Kevin, contributor
Wilkinson, Marian, reporter
Zuckerman, Gregory, contributor