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  Friday  November 21  2003    12: 34 PM

corrupt financial services

Funds and Games
by Paul Krugman

You're selling your house, and your real estate agent claims that he's representing your interests. But he sells the property at less than fair value to a friend, who resells it at a substantial profit, on which the agent receives a kickback. You complain to the county attorney. But he gets big campaign contributions from the agent, so he pays no attention.

That, in essence, is the story of the growing mutual fund scandal. On any given day, the losses to each individual investor were small — which is why the scandal took so long to become visible. But if you steal a little bit of money every day from 95 million investors, the sums add up. Arthur Levitt, the former Securities and Exchange Commission chairman, calls the mutual fund story "the worst scandal we've seen in 50 years" — and no, he's not excluding Enron and WorldCom. Meanwhile, federal regulators, having allowed the scandal to fester, are doing their best to let the villains get off lightly.
[more]

Exchange traders arrested in NYC
US officials have arrested 48 foreign exchange traders on suspicion of fraud in New York City's financial district.

  thanks to Politics in the Zeros

Fund Scandal Spreads to Sales
Morgan Stanley to pay $50 million over secret payments it received from 14 companies to steer business their way.

  thanks to Politics in the Zeros