Top Wall Street giant Goldman Sachs faced charges of financial fraud yesterday as US financial firms eyed the prospect of a wider crackdown on those that bet on the collapse of the housing market.
A civil suit filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Friday accused Goldman of “defrauding investors by misstating and omitting key facts” about a financial product based on subprime mortgage-backed securities.
The securities were a key contributor to the financial crisis that peaked in 2008 because many contained risky mortgages.
The charges are believed to be the first brought against a Wall Street firm for speculating on the collapse of the housing market, which is still struggling to emerge from the worst financial crisis in decades.
Underlining persistent concerns about the unfettered trade, US President Barack Obama said on Friday he would veto a Wall Street reform bill that lacked tough rules for complex financial instruments.
“I will veto legislation that does not bring the derivatives market under control and some sort of regulatory framework assures that we don’t have the same sort of crisis we have seen in the past,” Obama said.
The SEC said Goldman failed to tell investors that a major hedge fund had helped put together the controversial financial product known as collateralized debt obligation (CDO) and was at the same time betting against it.
Paulson & Co, one of the world’s largest hedge funds, paid Goldman Sachs to structure a transaction in which it could take speculative positions against mortgage securities chosen by the fund, the commission said in a statement.
The deal, which took place during a massive mortgage meltdown in 2007 and as the country was about to fall into a brutal recession, was said to have cost investors around US$1 billion.
Goldman claimed that it lost US$90 million from its own investment in the security.
“We are disappointed that the SEC would bring this action related to a single transaction in the face of an extensive record which establishes that the accusations are unfounded in law and fact,” the company said.
The firm said it would “vigorously contest them and defend the firm and its reputation.”
The lawsuit also named Fabrice Tourre, then a vice-president at Goldman. He was said to be the creator and salesman of the product, which caused investors to lose about US$1 billion.
“The product was new and complex, but the deception and conflicts are old and simple,” said Robert Khuzami, SEC’s director of the enforcement division in a statement.
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