For weeks now, Goldman Sachs (GS) has categorically denied that it will be writing down huge sums of bad debt related to subprime mortgage market. It is a fact that Goldman Sachs is exposed to one of the largest positions of the risky mortgage debt obligations or CDOs. Goldman has stated previously that it would stand behind its valuation of $50 billion dollars of risky mortgage debt obligations. Goldman continues to reaffirm that it has somehow avoided the disasters that its competitors have gotten themselves into.
A lead article on the marketwatch.com is helpful here: http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/goldman-ceo-sees-no-big/story.aspx?guid=%7B4AF9FAF2%2DB0E2%2D4ACA%2D8134%2D5BBD5FCACFD6%7D
Also, please see Herb Greenberg's blog in response to this: http://blogs.marketwatch.com/greenberg/2007/11/goldmans-shorting-of-subprime/
I believe Goldman is not completely forthcoming about their exposure. Dick Bove from Punk Ziegel & Co stated that "The risk-management systems at this company appears to have been effective in allowing Goldman to avoid the worst of the write-downs that others are announcing." But how are they doing that? Are their risk management so good that Goldman's competitors are not privy to? Are they that much smarter than the rest? I don't think so. Do they have some algorithms of computerized mathetmatical formulation that is out of this world? This is in fact what Goldman is contending.
And now this. It's been shorting subprime to avoid losses. But how do you short something that has no clear cut intrinsic valuation or less than transparent pricing? Review what Herb Greenberg is saying in his blog. It makes no sense.
In the end, the truth will have to come out, and Goldman Sachs, like Countrywide Financial (CFC) before it, will have to pay the piper. For those who buy into the Goldman Sachs (GS) BS, they too will feel the pain that Countrywide share holders feel.
If Goldman Sachs is forced to be more transparent and that leads to more write downs, this market will fall into a frenzied free fall. They know that and are painting the rosiest picture it possibly can. That will be the next shoe to drop and it will affect this market in a dire way because all the hopes are being placed on the fact that we finally have some grasp of the magnitude of the subprime mortgage mess and that it is under control. I don't think it is possible for this naive assumption to last forever.
Once the truth comes out, look out.
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