Tag Archives: banking
Fairy Stories and Tales of the Unexpected
Today I shall mainly be keeping a watching eye and reading the fairy stories coming out of the Euroland theme park.
Stories of the mythical beast the Merkozy, that stomps around Europe, ripping off heads of state and terrifying the natives, rumoured to be slain by our brave knight Sir Camerloon last week are quickly unravelling as little more than a boyish quest win the favours that he could display on his lance, to stop the eurosceptic hemorrhaging to UKIP. A quest that one of his fellow knights is now challenging, even after public self flagellation, perhaps we may even get to see an almighty duel as time develops as they fight over who gets the blue smarties as the sweeties run out.
In India, a country that builds space ships and nuclear weapons whilst taking aid from Britain, it seems that its power plant may have run out of steam. Its Industrial Production growth missed market expectations by a mile falling to levels only seen in the middle of the blogal economic shutdown in early 2009. It slowly splutters just as the British aid also runs out.
In the tiny Euro state of Latvia the parlous state of its economy is under pressure having had an SFI (shit fan interface). It is currently suffering from its second bank run in less than a month on rumours that the large Swedish bank Swedbank is about to collapse, whilst next door…
in Lithuania authorities are arresting the bankers. Prosecutors issued an arrest warrant for Vladimir Antonov and Raimondas Baranauskas who are former shareholders of Bankas Snoras AB. Both men are suspected of embezzlement and document forgery, the Prosecutor General said in a statement on its website today. Baranauskas is also suspected of accounting fraud and abuse of authority, it said." Perhaps those prosecutors would like to run a master class for the rest of us…
Meanwhile, as we wait for the markets to finish the job that Sir Cameloon failed to do, one suspects that the mythical Merkozy is already thinking of another cunning plan…
Holy Smoley – another super toxic layer to the banking crisis onion
I could not believe what I have just read over at Zero Hedge, although now it makes perfect sense why there is so much panic and urgency in the ranks of the unelected EU to get the authoritarian EUSSR political shit tied down.
It concludes:
Why the ESM must be strangled at birth
Remember the Treaty to set up the EU Mafia bank, the ESM. I gave a detailed breakdown on it August. I warned then that to allow any of these officials to get away with legislated immunity is madness, and the following story highlights exactly why it must be opposed in every possible way.
From the Testosterone Pit comes news of:
International Bribery Scandal Invades the ECB
Monday, November 28, 2011 at 5:32PM
The bribery scandal came at the worst possible moment for the European Central Bank. Already it’s struggling on a daily basis with the ballooning debt crisis in the Eurozone. And it’s trying to defend its independence against an onslaught of demands to print unlimited amounts of euros and buy the crappy sovereign bonds of the Eurozone’s weaker members. But now, Ewald Nowotny, member of its Governing Council, is up to his neck in hot water.
A spokesperson of the state prosecutor in Vienna, Austria, announced on Monday that the criminal investigation of an international bribery scandal that has been simmering for a while has been expanded to over 20 suspects. And it has now entangled six current directors of the Austrian National Bank (OeNB), including its Governor, Ewald Nowotny (Handelsblatt).
The scandal is centered on a division of the OeNB, the Oesterreichische Banknoten- und Sicherheitsdruck GmbH, (OeBS), which is in the lucrative business of printing money, literally. And it has been active in soliciting bank-note business from foreign governments since 2000. On its website, it claims that it “excels at combining innovative security features with modern designs.” Apparently, it also excels at bribery, kickbacks, and money laundering.
According to the prosecution, OeBS paid €17 million in bribes to Syrian officials to obtain orders from the Syrian government (Wiener Zeitung). Payments were routed to offshore outfits, such as the Panamanian mailbox company Venkoy, with representatives in Switzerland. The prosecutor is further investigating €1.7 million in kickbacks that made their way back to Austria (Die Presse). Similar arrangements with Azerbaijan are also being investigated. Two weeks ago, four people—the managing director and the head of marketing of OeBS and two lawyers—were arrested. Bits and pieces of the affair began to see the light of the day last June, when questions were raised by Austrian tax authorities about the deductibility of these payments.
The OeNB confirmed on Monday that a criminal prosecution has been initiated against six of its directors, including its Governor Ewald Nowotny, Vice Governor Wolfgang Duchatczek, and Director Peter Zöllner, who were accused of having known about the bribery of foreign public officials in connection with the acquisition of bank note printing orders. Of course, it defended its directors: the accusations were based on statements by fired employees, it said—implying that it’s nothing but a vendetta. Based on the information the directors had in front of them at the time, they’d assumed that the payments were for actual and legitimate services, and that the acquisition of orders complied with all applicable rules and laws, it said.
But on November 9, the Vienna-based daily paper Kurier created a stir when it said that it had obtained a copy of the minutes of the OeNB Board of Directors meetings. According to these minutes, the directors had known for years that millions of euros in bribes were being paid to acquire bank-note business from foreign governments.
For example, on March 24, 2010, the managing director of OeBS informed the OeNB board about a possible order from Azerbaijan for 150 million bank notes that carried a “commission” of 10%. And how did the board react? “Duchatczek asked the managing director to initiate the acquisition activities so that the years 2011 and 2012 would be at capacity.”
Over the years, the minutes show, Nowotny, Duchatczek, and their colleagues asked questions about various payments but then did nothing. For example, on December 15, 2008, Nowotny asked about the amount of a commission and the recipient in Azerbaijan. The managing director then “informed that there is a representative in Switzerland,” and that the commission would amount to 20% of the order. And that was that.
The OeNB had already tried to stamp out the brushfire and protect its directors by firing the managing director and the director of marketing at the OeBS. Stated reason? An internal audit revealed “unlawful actions and withholding of information from the Supervisory Board.” At the time, the bribery of Syrian officials had already surfaced, along with €600,000 in “unusual expenses.”
Maximum penalty for bribery is ten years in prison, according to the Handelsblatt. But given the impunity with which central bankers act, I doubt that Nowotny or the other central bankers will ever face any serious risk of ending up there. He might not even lose his jobs at the OeNB and at the ECB. And his future, well, given that he is a central banker, looks bright.
Proton Bank in Greece had siphoned off $1 billion in a scheme of fraud, embezzlement, money laundering, and offshore front companies. And got bailed out. But then a bomb exploded…. European Bailout Fund Pays For Greek Money Laundering And Fraud.
Do you see now why the ESM must be strangled at birth…