To be published 21 July 2020
From the cars we drive to what toothpaste we use, how a tiny group of corporations have come to dominate every aspect of our lives.
To be published 21 July 2020
From the cars we drive to what toothpaste we use, how a tiny group of corporations have come to dominate every aspect of our lives.
Bill Majcher is a highly experienced professional with 35 years combined experience in public service, international finance, and capital markets. Mr. Majcher started his career as a Eurobond trader in London, England. He later used this experience over a 23 year career with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), where Mr. Majcher enjoyed remarkable success in covert and public market investigations that often saw him working with law enforcement, intelligence, and securities regulators from around the globe.
Robert Morris Morgenthau (July 31, 1919 – July 21, 2019) From 1975 until his retirement in 2009, Mr. Morgenthau was the District Attorney for New York County (the borough of Manhattan), having previously served as United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York throughout much of the 1960s on the appointment of John F. Kennedy. After graduating high school, Morgenthau enlisted in the United States Navy, serving for four and a half years during World War II. He attained the final rank of lieutenant commander, and served as the executive officer of both the USS Lansdale and the USS Harry F. Bauer. After the war, Morgenthau studied law, graduating from Yale Law School in 1948. He joined the New York law firm of Patterson, Belknap & Webb, becoming a partner in 1954.
Robert Morgenthau, Longtime Manhattan District Attorney, Dies at 99
Most aggressive in bold.
SEC Charges Wilson-Davis & Co., Inc. with Failing to Report Suspicious Transactions
Everyone on the street knew this market maker was a complete front for the naked shorts, Goldman Sachs and the other big boys are worse. It’s like they rent their market-maker driving license for fat fees to the hedge funds, no worries how many investors get run over and killed by naked short sellers.
Need to fence the small caps and end market-maker exemptions. Need to make all trades transparent “by name” of the buyer or seller. Need to see the tickets every day, no exceptions. And of course need to hang anyone who fails to settle. DTCC is the enabler — dirty, dirty, dirty.
A public company that crushed short sellers The stock went form $3 to $45 The shorts on Wall St were screaming Fraud even CNBC was in on this one to stop the stock from GOING higher. CNBC story They are now Dateline instead of a business show WHY?
what it does to a public company Its like the Fucking Car wash. Go public, get naked shorted down Raise money at low ISSUE way more shares Dilution is the killer of a public company. instead of a company with 10M shares its now has 100 Million shares Your stock is now pennies instead of dollars and the Fucking Naked short selling Hedge funds hold you down until you need more money and they cover on secondary offerings
ITS CALLED A DEATH SPIRAL a great name because it Kills everything in its way
Continue reading “Tip: The Death Spiral Illustrated – Aurora Cannabis”
Last week, VUZIX announced compatibility of their Augmented reality technology(glasses) with COVID detection. The stock moved significantly higher on close to 20mm shares on Thursday and Friday-normal volume is few hundred thousand shares at most. Each day the swings in the stock price were very significant. VUZIX has been on the Reg Sho list many times(indicating fails to deliver) and has a huge naked short and reported short in the stock.
FB when it went public was a great deal all was great then as time went on the stock went lower and lower to around $18 down from $40+ The negative stories started on how the company had no idea how to make money. The real reason was the lockup period was ending for long term investors you knwo the people who invested early . So Wall St has this trick where they drive stock lower and when they sell ITS always at the lowest point so WALL ST can cover their shorts and then go LONG for the ride back up. AS soon as they sold at the lows around $18. The view on the street changed and all the stories were positive and the stock went to $200 . That’s another way naked shorting and short work together to pick your pocket Here is the data
Your math sucks. Not even close. $35 trillion a year being stolen via naked short selling — times ten years – $350 trillion. How much of that can the President get back at the point of a bayonet? Love the concept. Goldman Sachs first.
Robert – Great series on NSS. You should let President Trump know that Europe is ahead of the USA. Although the Wall Street gangs recently effectively lobbied a postponement. https://www.globalcustodian.
Kenneth C. Griffin founded Citadel in 1990 and has since served as the firm’s Chief Executive Officer. He earned his bachelor’s degree from Harvard University. Griffin serves on the Board of Directors of the Chicago Public Education Fund, and the Board of Trustees for the Art Institute of Chicago, the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and The University of Chicago. He is also a member of numerous business organizations, including G100, the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago, and the Economic Club of Chicago.
Gerald A. Beeson is the Chief Operating Officer of Citadel. As COO, he is responsible for the firm’s key corporate functions globally and is a member of Citadel’s Portfolio Committee. Prior to becoming COO in 2008, Beeson served as Citadel’s Chief Financial Officer, a role he has held since 2003. He joined Citadel in 1993 as an intern and was among the company’s first employees. Gerald received his MBA from the University of Chicago and a bachelor’s degree in Commerce with concentrations in Accountancy and Finance from DePaul University. He is registered as a certified public accountant with the State of Illinois. Beeson is also a trustee of DePaul University .
James Yeh is President and Co-Chief Investment Officer at Citadel and a member of the Portfolio Committee. James oversees Global Quantitative Strategies, Global Fixed Income and Macro, as well as the advanced analytics that support Citadel’s fundamental equities businesses. James joined Citadel as one of the firm’s first employees in 1993, after completing his Ph.D. in Physics at the University of California, Berkeley. James serves as a Charter Trustee of Princeton University and is a Director of the Princeton University Investment Company.
Joanna Welsh is Chief Risk Officer at Citadel. Joanna chairs Citadel’s Portfolio Committee. Prior to joining Citadel, Joanna was at Tudor Investment Corporation for 15 years, most recently serving as Chief Risk Officer. With more than 20 years of experience in financial services and risk management, she also held senior risk positions at Commerzbank and Nomura. Joanna received a master’s and bachelor’s degree from Oxford University.