Regulator sues Goldman Sachs for fraud 

April 17, 2010 02:07 am | Updated November 12, 2016 05:40 am IST - Washington DC

The United States Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday announced that it has charged investment bank Goldman Sachs and one of its vice presidents, Fabrice Tourre, for “defrauding investors by misstating and omitting key facts about a financial product tied to subprime mortgages,” even as the U.S. housing market began to collapse.

According to the SEC filing in a U.S. court in the Southern District of New York, the cost of Goldman’s fraudulent activities to investors was more than $1 billion.

In a statement the SEC alleged that when Goldman Sachs structured and marketed a synthetic collateralized debt obligation (CDO) whose value was based on the performance of subprime residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS), it failed to disclose to investors the fact that Paulson and Company – a major hedge fund that had bet against CDO – played a key role in the decision to include that CDO in investors’ portfolios.

The SEC further alleged that Tourre had “devised the transaction, prepared the marketing materials and communicated directly with investors,” knowing fully of Paulson and Company’s short interest in the instruments and its role in the collateral selection process.

Tourre also misled a third-party fund marketing firm into believing that Paulson and Company invested approximately $200 million in a long position on the instrument and, accordingly, that Paulson and Company’s interests in the collateral section process were aligned with the fund marketer’s. In reality Paulson and company’s interests were sharply conflicting.

“The product was new and complex but the deception and conflicts are old and simple,” according to Robert Khuzami, Director of the Division of Enforcement at the SEC.

Kenneth Lench, Chief of the SEC's Structured and New Products Unit, added that the SEC continued to investigate the practices of investment banks and others involved in the securitization of complex financial products tied to the then floundering U.S.. housing market.

In a move that heralds a first major prosecution in the aftermath of the financial markets collapse of 2008 the SEC alleged that Paulson and Company paid Goldman Sachs to structure the transaction such that in which Paulson and Company could “take short positions against mortgage securities chosen by Paulson and Company based on a belief that the securities would experience credit events.”

In other words Paulson and Company bet that the instrument would lose value and in a bid to maximise its profit from that event it paid Goldman Sachs to get its clients to bet that it would gain in value.

As per the SEC’s charges the marketing materials for the CDO all “represented that the residential mortgage-backed securities portfolio underlying the CDO was selected by ACA Management LLC, a third party with expertise in analyzing credit risk in RMBS.

The SEC alleged that undisclosed in the marketing materials and unbeknownst to investors Paulson and Company played a significant role in selecting which RMBS should make up the portfolio.

According to the SEC's complaint, the deal closed on April 26, 2007, and Paulson & Co. paid Goldman Sachs approximately $15 million for structuring and marketing the instruments. The SEC went on to note that by October 24 2007, 83 percent of the portfolio had been downgraded and 17 percent were on “negative watch”; by January 29 2008, “99 percent of the portfolio had been downgraded,” the SEC said.

In the filing the SEC sought “injunctive relief, disgorgement of profits, prejudgment interest, and financial penalties.”

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