Showing posts with label Mortgage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mortgage. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Buffett's Warrants On Goldman Sachs:"Warren Buffett Wants Goldman's (GS) Blankfein To Stick Around" | Buffett's Warrants


The Oracle of Omaha is standing by Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) CEO Lloyd Blankfein and he doesn't plan to cash in his warrants anytime soon.

At the annual Allen & Company conference, when asked by New York Times DealBook if Mr. Blankfein would resign anytime soon, Warren Buffett said, "I don't think he is. I've seen nothing to indicate that myself, and I don't want him to." Buffett wants him to stay on.

Buffett also plans to hold onto the warrants he received in connection with his $5 billion 2008 investment in the company right up until they expire in 2013.

"We'll wait till the last month or two, before their expiration," he said.

The warrants, which have a $115/share strike, are worth approximately $900 million based on Goldman's current market price of $135, DealBook notes. Read More

Buffett's Warrants On Goldman Sachs:"Warren Buffett Wants Goldman's (GS) Blankfein To Stick Around" | Buffett's Warrants


The Oracle of Omaha is standing by Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) CEO Lloyd Blankfein and he doesn't plan to cash in his warrants anytime soon.

At the annual Allen & Company conference, when asked by New York Times DealBook if Mr. Blankfein would resign anytime soon, Warren Buffett said, "I don't think he is. I've seen nothing to indicate that myself, and I don't want him to." Buffett wants him to stay on.

Buffett also plans to hold onto the warrants he received in connection with his $5 billion 2008 investment in the company right up until they expire in 2013.

"We'll wait till the last month or two, before their expiration," he said.

The warrants, which have a $115/share strike, are worth approximately $900 million based on Goldman's current market price of $135, DealBook notes. Read More

Monday, July 11, 2011

Mortgage Fraud Case - Trial Date Set in Multi-Million-Dollar Dallas Mortgage Fraud Case


DALLAS, TX — An August 29, 2011 trial date before Chief U.S. District Judge Sidney A. Fitzwater has been set for three defendants charged with running a multi-million-dollar mortgage fraud scheme in the Dallas area, announced U.S. Attorney James T. Jacks of the Northern District of Texas. Gregory Lashon Thomas, Aja D. Crawford (aka Aja Abercrombie), and Ernest Ohenekitiwa McMillan were arrested on conspiracy to commit mail fraud and mail fraud charges outlined in a four-count indictment returned last month. All three pleaded not guilty and have been released on bond.

According to the indictment, Gregory Thomas, 40, of Desoto, Texas, owned and operated Myriad Investments and Investors Source, two real estate “investment” companies in the Dallas area. Gregory Thomas recruited individuals, including Ernest McMillan, 41, of Dallas, and others to buy residential real estate by telling them that they were purchasing “investment” properties. Thomas further worked with various loan officers, including Aja Crawford, 34, of Irving, Texas, to prepare false loan applications on behalf of the individual purchasers. The loan applications included misrepresentations about the individuals’ monthly income, intention to occupy the property, assets, and liabilities. Some loans also included fake documents attempting to justify an individual’s credit-worthiness, such as fake bank records to show that the individual had sufficient money in the bank to qualify for the mortgage

For certain properties involved in the scheme, Thomas provided the down payment at closing. Shortly after closing, Thomas received payment from the seller that wasn’t disclosed on the HUD-1 Settlement Statement. Thomas would then pay the individual purchaser or another recruiter for purchasing the property.

The indictment alleges that from February 2006 through July 2008, Thomas recruited individuals to purchase real estate properties resulting in approximately $6 million in fraudulently obtained proceeds and $2 million in estimated losses. Read More

Mortgage Fraud Case - Trial Date Set in Multi-Million-Dollar Dallas Mortgage Fraud Case


DALLAS, TX — An August 29, 2011 trial date before Chief U.S. District Judge Sidney A. Fitzwater has been set for three defendants charged with running a multi-million-dollar mortgage fraud scheme in the Dallas area, announced U.S. Attorney James T. Jacks of the Northern District of Texas. Gregory Lashon Thomas, Aja D. Crawford (aka Aja Abercrombie), and Ernest Ohenekitiwa McMillan were arrested on conspiracy to commit mail fraud and mail fraud charges outlined in a four-count indictment returned last month. All three pleaded not guilty and have been released on bond.

According to the indictment, Gregory Thomas, 40, of Desoto, Texas, owned and operated Myriad Investments and Investors Source, two real estate “investment” companies in the Dallas area. Gregory Thomas recruited individuals, including Ernest McMillan, 41, of Dallas, and others to buy residential real estate by telling them that they were purchasing “investment” properties. Thomas further worked with various loan officers, including Aja Crawford, 34, of Irving, Texas, to prepare false loan applications on behalf of the individual purchasers. The loan applications included misrepresentations about the individuals’ monthly income, intention to occupy the property, assets, and liabilities. Some loans also included fake documents attempting to justify an individual’s credit-worthiness, such as fake bank records to show that the individual had sufficient money in the bank to qualify for the mortgage

For certain properties involved in the scheme, Thomas provided the down payment at closing. Shortly after closing, Thomas received payment from the seller that wasn’t disclosed on the HUD-1 Settlement Statement. Thomas would then pay the individual purchaser or another recruiter for purchasing the property.

The indictment alleges that from February 2006 through July 2008, Thomas recruited individuals to purchase real estate properties resulting in approximately $6 million in fraudulently obtained proceeds and $2 million in estimated losses. Read More

Phoenix Arizona Mortgages; Mortgage Lender in Phoenix, Arizona FHA loans, VA, 30 Year Fixed


Arizona Loan Modifications: 7 Things To Know
  1. Who really “owns” your loan? It may not be who you think
  2. Your permanent loan modification isn’t permanent?
  3. A forbearance is not the same as a principal reduction
  4. Once you are underwater in your mortgage, it is virtually impossible to no longer be underwater
  5. Are loan modification payments current payments?
  6. Does a loan modification save your home?
  7. How long before you can become a homeowner again?

Have more questions about what is possible when it comes to loan modification here in Arizona? Be sure to contact Kevin and learn what your options are.

Thomson Law PLC
Kevin Hardin, Managing Director
2701 East Camelback Road, Suite 150
Phoenix, Arizona 85016
602.774.3757

Read More: http://www.azmortgageguru.com/

Phoenix Arizona Mortgages; Mortgage Lender in Phoenix, Arizona FHA loans, VA, 30 Year Fixed


Arizona Loan Modifications: 7 Things To Know
  1. Who really “owns” your loan? It may not be who you think
  2. Your permanent loan modification isn’t permanent?
  3. A forbearance is not the same as a principal reduction
  4. Once you are underwater in your mortgage, it is virtually impossible to no longer be underwater
  5. Are loan modification payments current payments?
  6. Does a loan modification save your home?
  7. How long before you can become a homeowner again?

Have more questions about what is possible when it comes to loan modification here in Arizona? Be sure to contact Kevin and learn what your options are.

Thomson Law PLC
Kevin Hardin, Managing Director
2701 East Camelback Road, Suite 150
Phoenix, Arizona 85016
602.774.3757

Read More: http://www.azmortgageguru.com/

Phoenix Arizona Mortgages; 2 arrested in Phoenix mortgage fraud scheme


Authorities say a Glendale woman and Phoenix man have been arrested in connection with a $17 million mortgage fraud scheme.

A federal grand jury in Phoenix indicted 43-year-old Michele Marie Mitchell and 32-year-old Jeremy West Pratt on conspiracy and wire fraud charges.

They both were taken into custody Thursday by the FBI.

Authorities say Mitchell portrayed herself as a mortgage broker, loan officer and real estate investor while Pratt claimed to be president of a company that did construction and remodeling work.

The two allegedly recruited people with good credit scores to act as straw buyers to buy one or more properties as investments.

Between October 2005 and February 2007, Mitchell and Pratt allegedly obtained mortgage financing for 17 properties in the Phoenix metro area and all went into foreclosure. 

Phoenix Arizona Mortgages; 2 arrested in Phoenix mortgage fraud scheme


Authorities say a Glendale woman and Phoenix man have been arrested in connection with a $17 million mortgage fraud scheme.

A federal grand jury in Phoenix indicted 43-year-old Michele Marie Mitchell and 32-year-old Jeremy West Pratt on conspiracy and wire fraud charges.

They both were taken into custody Thursday by the FBI.

Authorities say Mitchell portrayed herself as a mortgage broker, loan officer and real estate investor while Pratt claimed to be president of a company that did construction and remodeling work.

The two allegedly recruited people with good credit scores to act as straw buyers to buy one or more properties as investments.

Between October 2005 and February 2007, Mitchell and Pratt allegedly obtained mortgage financing for 17 properties in the Phoenix metro area and all went into foreclosure. 

Phoenix Arizona Mortgages; Arizona Mortgage Broker & Associate Arrested in $17 Million Mortgage Fraud Scheme


PHOENIX—A federal grand jury in Phoenix returned an indictment earlier this week against mortgage broker Michele Marie Mitchell, 43, of Glendale, and her alleged associate, Jeremy West Pratt, 32, of Phoenix. The indictment, returned on June 28, charged Mitchell and Pratt each with one count of conspiracy and one count of wire fraud. Special agents of the Internal Revenue Service and the FBI arrested Mitchell and Pratt on Thursday.

“With these arrests, we are confronted once again with the damage and pain that mortgage fraud caused in our community and to our economy,” said U.S. Attorney Dennis K. Burke. “Criminals out to make a fraudulent profit deepened this mortgage crisis and made recovery more difficult. We all appreciate the efforts of the IRS and the FBI in bringing this particular scheme to a stop, and we will continue to investigate and prosecute others like it.”

Special Agent in Charge Dawn Mertz of the IRS Criminal Investigation stated, “This case is yet another example of a ‘get rich quick’ scam gone bad. Unfortunately, mortgage fraud schemes such as this one impact all of us with deflated property values, empty homes, and significant financial consequences to banks, taxpayers, and neighborhoods.”

“Mortgage fraud continues to persist as a serious crime problem in Arizona,” said Steven R. Hooper, FBI Acting Special Agent in Charge, Phoenix Division. “This indictment signifies that the FBI’s Mortgage Fraud Task Force is continuing its efforts to protect our community and financial institutions from the effects of mortgage fraud.”

The indictment alleges that Mitchell portrayed herself as a mortgage broker, loan officer, and real estate investor. She allegedly did business at an office on East Vista Bonita Drive in Scottsdale. Pratt is alleged to be the president of Arizona Cooling Control Plus, Inc. and involved in construction and remodeling work. The indictment charges that as part of their alleged conspiracy, Mitchell and Pratt recruited people with good credit scores to act as straw buyers to ostensibly purchase one or more properties as investments. Mitchell and Pratt allegedly enticed the straw buyers by offering to pay a kickback of up to $15,000 per property or to make the mortgage payments until the property could be resold for a profit, or both. In addition, the indictment charges that the defendants submitted false loan applications and supporting documents to induce lenders to fund loans. Then, at the close of escrow, they enriched themselves by directing a portion of loan proceeds, or “cash back,” to a company which one of them controlled.

The indictment goes on to allege that between October 2005 and February 2007, Mitchell and Pratt obtained mortgage financing for 17 properties and induced lenders to fund approximately $17 million in loans, resulting in over $2.4 million dollars in cash back. The properties are located in Glendale, Scottsdale, Surprise, Peoria, Goodyear, and Phoenix. The indictment charges that the defendants failed to make the mortgage payments as promised and that each of the 17 properties went into foreclosure.

Conviction for the crimes of conspiracy and wire fraud each carries a maximum penalty of 30 years in prison, a $1 million fine, or both. This case has been assigned to United States District Judge James A. Teilborg. In determining an actual sentence, Judge Teilborg will consult the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines, which provide appropriate sentencing ranges. The judge, however, is not bound by those guidelines in determining a sentence.

An indictment is simply the method by which a person is charged with criminal activity and raises no inference of guilt. An individual is presumed innocent until competent evidence is presented to a jury that establishes guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

The investigation preceding the indictment was conducted by special agents of the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigations Division and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The prosecution is being handled by Frank T. Galati, Assistant U.S. Attorney, District of Arizona, Phoenix.

CASE NUMBER: CR-11-1239 PHX-JAT
RELEASE NUMBER: 2011-139(Mitchell and Pratt)

SOURCE: FBI

Phoenix Arizona Mortgages; Arizona Mortgage Broker & Associate Arrested in $17 Million Mortgage Fraud Scheme


PHOENIX—A federal grand jury in Phoenix returned an indictment earlier this week against mortgage broker Michele Marie Mitchell, 43, of Glendale, and her alleged associate, Jeremy West Pratt, 32, of Phoenix. The indictment, returned on June 28, charged Mitchell and Pratt each with one count of conspiracy and one count of wire fraud. Special agents of the Internal Revenue Service and the FBI arrested Mitchell and Pratt on Thursday.

“With these arrests, we are confronted once again with the damage and pain that mortgage fraud caused in our community and to our economy,” said U.S. Attorney Dennis K. Burke. “Criminals out to make a fraudulent profit deepened this mortgage crisis and made recovery more difficult. We all appreciate the efforts of the IRS and the FBI in bringing this particular scheme to a stop, and we will continue to investigate and prosecute others like it.”

Special Agent in Charge Dawn Mertz of the IRS Criminal Investigation stated, “This case is yet another example of a ‘get rich quick’ scam gone bad. Unfortunately, mortgage fraud schemes such as this one impact all of us with deflated property values, empty homes, and significant financial consequences to banks, taxpayers, and neighborhoods.”

“Mortgage fraud continues to persist as a serious crime problem in Arizona,” said Steven R. Hooper, FBI Acting Special Agent in Charge, Phoenix Division. “This indictment signifies that the FBI’s Mortgage Fraud Task Force is continuing its efforts to protect our community and financial institutions from the effects of mortgage fraud.”

The indictment alleges that Mitchell portrayed herself as a mortgage broker, loan officer, and real estate investor. She allegedly did business at an office on East Vista Bonita Drive in Scottsdale. Pratt is alleged to be the president of Arizona Cooling Control Plus, Inc. and involved in construction and remodeling work. The indictment charges that as part of their alleged conspiracy, Mitchell and Pratt recruited people with good credit scores to act as straw buyers to ostensibly purchase one or more properties as investments. Mitchell and Pratt allegedly enticed the straw buyers by offering to pay a kickback of up to $15,000 per property or to make the mortgage payments until the property could be resold for a profit, or both. In addition, the indictment charges that the defendants submitted false loan applications and supporting documents to induce lenders to fund loans. Then, at the close of escrow, they enriched themselves by directing a portion of loan proceeds, or “cash back,” to a company which one of them controlled.

The indictment goes on to allege that between October 2005 and February 2007, Mitchell and Pratt obtained mortgage financing for 17 properties and induced lenders to fund approximately $17 million in loans, resulting in over $2.4 million dollars in cash back. The properties are located in Glendale, Scottsdale, Surprise, Peoria, Goodyear, and Phoenix. The indictment charges that the defendants failed to make the mortgage payments as promised and that each of the 17 properties went into foreclosure.

Conviction for the crimes of conspiracy and wire fraud each carries a maximum penalty of 30 years in prison, a $1 million fine, or both. This case has been assigned to United States District Judge James A. Teilborg. In determining an actual sentence, Judge Teilborg will consult the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines, which provide appropriate sentencing ranges. The judge, however, is not bound by those guidelines in determining a sentence.

An indictment is simply the method by which a person is charged with criminal activity and raises no inference of guilt. An individual is presumed innocent until competent evidence is presented to a jury that establishes guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

The investigation preceding the indictment was conducted by special agents of the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigations Division and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The prosecution is being handled by Frank T. Galati, Assistant U.S. Attorney, District of Arizona, Phoenix.

CASE NUMBER: CR-11-1239 PHX-JAT
RELEASE NUMBER: 2011-139(Mitchell and Pratt)

SOURCE: FBI

Friday, July 8, 2011

Warren Buffett’s Prophecy Comes True! | Warren Buffett


Citigroup already rebadged its consumer lending business from CitiFinancial to the eye-roll worthy OneMain. We guess one more name change couldn’t hurt: “Grandson of Berkadia.”

Let’s explain.

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway is part of a group in exclusive talks to buy Citigroup’s consumer-lending business, reported our colleagues Serena Ng and Mike Spector. Other members of the bidding group include Centerbridge Partners and Leucadia National Corp.

The latter is a sprawling conglomerate some observers have compared to Berkshire. Leucadia owns pieces of businesses from an Australian iron ore miner to investment bank Jefferies. Berkshire Hathaway owns businesses in industries ranging from kitchen knives to railroads. Leucadia’s chairman even scribbles a shareholder letter reminiscent of Buffett’s annual epistles.

In fact, in Buffett’s letter to shareholders of Berkshire Hathaway in February 2010, the Oracle lauded the deals he had done with Leucadia. In 2009, Berkshire and Leucadia bought Capmark, a commercial mortgage origination and serving business, and renamed it Berkadia Commercial Mortgage.

Buffett predicted to Berkshire investors more joint deals would be coming:
“Our partner in this operation is Leucadia, run by Joe Steinberg and Ian Cumming, with whom we had a terrific experience some years back when Berkshire joined with them to purchase Finova, a troubled finance business. In resolving that situation, Joe and Ian did far more than their share of the work, an arrangement I always encourage. Naturally, I was delighted when they called me to partner again in the Capmark purchase.

Our first venture was also christened Berkadia. So let’s call this one Son of Berkadia. Someday I’ll be writing you about Grandson of Berkadia.”

Warren Buffett’s Prophecy Comes True! | Warren Buffett


Citigroup already rebadged its consumer lending business from CitiFinancial to the eye-roll worthy OneMain. We guess one more name change couldn’t hurt: “Grandson of Berkadia.”

Let’s explain.

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway is part of a group in exclusive talks to buy Citigroup’s consumer-lending business, reported our colleagues Serena Ng and Mike Spector. Other members of the bidding group include Centerbridge Partners and Leucadia National Corp.

The latter is a sprawling conglomerate some observers have compared to Berkshire. Leucadia owns pieces of businesses from an Australian iron ore miner to investment bank Jefferies. Berkshire Hathaway owns businesses in industries ranging from kitchen knives to railroads. Leucadia’s chairman even scribbles a shareholder letter reminiscent of Buffett’s annual epistles.

In fact, in Buffett’s letter to shareholders of Berkshire Hathaway in February 2010, the Oracle lauded the deals he had done with Leucadia. In 2009, Berkshire and Leucadia bought Capmark, a commercial mortgage origination and serving business, and renamed it Berkadia Commercial Mortgage.

Buffett predicted to Berkshire investors more joint deals would be coming:
“Our partner in this operation is Leucadia, run by Joe Steinberg and Ian Cumming, with whom we had a terrific experience some years back when Berkshire joined with them to purchase Finova, a troubled finance business. In resolving that situation, Joe and Ian did far more than their share of the work, an arrangement I always encourage. Naturally, I was delighted when they called me to partner again in the Capmark purchase.

Our first venture was also christened Berkadia. So let’s call this one Son of Berkadia. Someday I’ll be writing you about Grandson of Berkadia.”

Warren Buffett Moves on Citigroup | Warren Buffett


Citigroup (NYSE:C) is back in the spotlight once again. After plummeting to near penny-stock status, then rebounding, this banking stock became the darling of the hyper active high frequency trading brigade. The robot traders had a ball with Citi’s deep liquidity and ultra tight spreads. However, this algorithmic army quickly lost interest in the stock when Citi instituted a 10-for-1 reverse split pushing the share price above $40 per share. This strategic move knocked the high frequency trading boys out of the game, but may create more long term institutional interest in the financial stalwart.

Now, perhaps the most interesting Citigroup rumor of all, has hit the underground secrets media network. The Oracle of Omaha Warren Buffett’s juggernaut acquisition machine Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRK) may be part of a consortium to purchase Citi’s troubled consumer finance division, One Main Financial. Pre-financial bust, this unit was known as Citi Financial.

Center Bridge Partners and Leucadia National Corp. (NYSE: LUK) are also rumored to be part of the buyout group. Interestingly, One Main only has a book value of $2 billion but may obtain a bid in the $8 billion range due to its extensive asset base. Citi has been in talks for the last several months about spinning off this division, but this is the first time that Buffett has been involved. The star power of the Oracle combined with his mountain moving resources may just be the impetus Citi needs to actually flip this troubled unit away from itself. Time will tell, watch this one closely! Read more

Tagged as: 2011 top stocks, active stocks, analyst rated stocks, bank stocks, banking stocks, berkshire stocks, best stocks, BRK, building a stock portfolio, c, cheap stocks, finance stocks, good penny stocks to invest in, high volume stocks, hot stocks, ideas for a stock portfolio, investing in penny stocks, investing in small cap stocks, investing in stocks, LUK, most active stocks, newsworthy stocks, penny stock portfolio, penny stocks, personal finance, popular stocks, small cap trading, small cap trading ideas, stock market quotes, stocks moving higher, stocks moving on high volume, stocks trending higher, stocks with high gains, top stock picks, warren buffet 

Warren Buffett Moves on Citigroup | Warren Buffett


Citigroup (NYSE:C) is back in the spotlight once again. After plummeting to near penny-stock status, then rebounding, this banking stock became the darling of the hyper active high frequency trading brigade. The robot traders had a ball with Citi’s deep liquidity and ultra tight spreads. However, this algorithmic army quickly lost interest in the stock when Citi instituted a 10-for-1 reverse split pushing the share price above $40 per share. This strategic move knocked the high frequency trading boys out of the game, but may create more long term institutional interest in the financial stalwart.

Now, perhaps the most interesting Citigroup rumor of all, has hit the underground secrets media network. The Oracle of Omaha Warren Buffett’s juggernaut acquisition machine Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRK) may be part of a consortium to purchase Citi’s troubled consumer finance division, One Main Financial. Pre-financial bust, this unit was known as Citi Financial.

Center Bridge Partners and Leucadia National Corp. (NYSE: LUK) are also rumored to be part of the buyout group. Interestingly, One Main only has a book value of $2 billion but may obtain a bid in the $8 billion range due to its extensive asset base. Citi has been in talks for the last several months about spinning off this division, but this is the first time that Buffett has been involved. The star power of the Oracle combined with his mountain moving resources may just be the impetus Citi needs to actually flip this troubled unit away from itself. Time will tell, watch this one closely! Read more

Tagged as: 2011 top stocks, active stocks, analyst rated stocks, bank stocks, banking stocks, berkshire stocks, best stocks, BRK, building a stock portfolio, c, cheap stocks, finance stocks, good penny stocks to invest in, high volume stocks, hot stocks, ideas for a stock portfolio, investing in penny stocks, investing in small cap stocks, investing in stocks, LUK, most active stocks, newsworthy stocks, penny stock portfolio, penny stocks, personal finance, popular stocks, small cap trading, small cap trading ideas, stock market quotes, stocks moving higher, stocks moving on high volume, stocks trending higher, stocks with high gains, top stock picks, warren buffet 

Warren Buffett To Exercise $5B Goldman Sachs Warrants In 2013 | Warren Buffett


Warren Buffett spoke about Goldman Sachs on Thursday from Sun Valley while attending the Allen & Company conference. The Oracle of Omaha indicated he would be exercising his right to buy $5 billion in Goldman stock in 2013, an option he was awarded in 2008 when he extended a $5 billion life-line to the ailing investment bank. Buffett also noted he’d like questioned Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein to remain as the top dog at the vampire squid.

Buffett will continue to benefit from his $5 billion investment in Goldman Sachs during the financial crisis. The deal included warrants with a strike price of $115 per share to be exercised at any time for a five year term. In conversation with DealBook, the Oracle of Omaha said “we’ll wait till the last month or two, before their [2013] expiration.”

With Goldman stock trading around $135, Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway’s option would be worth about $900 million today. The Oracle, it seems, has a positive outlook for the Vampire Squid. (Read Gold, Banks On The Agenda For Billionaires Soros, Paulson In Q1).

Buffett has profited handsomely from his investment $5 billion, life-saving investment in Goldman Sachs in late 2008 as markets were falling off a cliff. On April 18, the investment bank repaid Berkshire Hathaway, Buffett’s investment firm, its principal payment of $5 billion plus a one-time preferred dividend of $1.64 billion, based on a 10% yearly-dividend that brought in about $500 million a year, according to Trade The News.

Buffett also spoke of the company’s questioned CEO, Lloyd Blankfein. Blamed by many for having tarnished the bank’s reputation, after repeated investigations by the SEC over its practices during the downfall of the U.S. housing market, Blankfein has been under heavy pressure to resign. (Read Goldman Playing Oil Like A Fiddle: Calls Bullish Structural Shift).

“I want him to stay,” Buffett told reporters, adding that he didn’t think rumors Blankfein was stepping down were substantiated. “I’ve seen nothing to indicate [he’s quitting] myself, and I don’t want him to,” explained Buffett.

The world’s former richest man, currently third behind Carlos Slim Helu and Bill Gates, spoke about social media and confessed he’s clueless as to what to make of multi-billion valuations being slapped on to tech and online start-ups.

Asked by DealBook about the staggering valuations of companies like Facebook, Groupon, Zynga, and LinkedIn, Buffett said “a few of them will be worth enormous amounts, [but] I don’t know which ones.” Adding he isn’t “the guy to ask about that,” Buffett said the felt the companies that “[figure] out something that somebody wants that they don’t know they want now” were the best positioned to succeed. (Read: Bullish On Japan: Rosenberg Joins Buffett In Calling Crisis An Opportunity). Read More

Warren Buffett To Exercise $5B Goldman Sachs Warrants In 2013 | Warren Buffett


Warren Buffett spoke about Goldman Sachs on Thursday from Sun Valley while attending the Allen & Company conference. The Oracle of Omaha indicated he would be exercising his right to buy $5 billion in Goldman stock in 2013, an option he was awarded in 2008 when he extended a $5 billion life-line to the ailing investment bank. Buffett also noted he’d like questioned Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein to remain as the top dog at the vampire squid.

Buffett will continue to benefit from his $5 billion investment in Goldman Sachs during the financial crisis. The deal included warrants with a strike price of $115 per share to be exercised at any time for a five year term. In conversation with DealBook, the Oracle of Omaha said “we’ll wait till the last month or two, before their [2013] expiration.”

With Goldman stock trading around $135, Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway’s option would be worth about $900 million today. The Oracle, it seems, has a positive outlook for the Vampire Squid. (Read Gold, Banks On The Agenda For Billionaires Soros, Paulson In Q1).

Buffett has profited handsomely from his investment $5 billion, life-saving investment in Goldman Sachs in late 2008 as markets were falling off a cliff. On April 18, the investment bank repaid Berkshire Hathaway, Buffett’s investment firm, its principal payment of $5 billion plus a one-time preferred dividend of $1.64 billion, based on a 10% yearly-dividend that brought in about $500 million a year, according to Trade The News.

Buffett also spoke of the company’s questioned CEO, Lloyd Blankfein. Blamed by many for having tarnished the bank’s reputation, after repeated investigations by the SEC over its practices during the downfall of the U.S. housing market, Blankfein has been under heavy pressure to resign. (Read Goldman Playing Oil Like A Fiddle: Calls Bullish Structural Shift).

“I want him to stay,” Buffett told reporters, adding that he didn’t think rumors Blankfein was stepping down were substantiated. “I’ve seen nothing to indicate [he’s quitting] myself, and I don’t want him to,” explained Buffett.

The world’s former richest man, currently third behind Carlos Slim Helu and Bill Gates, spoke about social media and confessed he’s clueless as to what to make of multi-billion valuations being slapped on to tech and online start-ups.

Asked by DealBook about the staggering valuations of companies like Facebook, Groupon, Zynga, and LinkedIn, Buffett said “a few of them will be worth enormous amounts, [but] I don’t know which ones.” Adding he isn’t “the guy to ask about that,” Buffett said the felt the companies that “[figure] out something that somebody wants that they don’t know they want now” were the best positioned to succeed. (Read: Bullish On Japan: Rosenberg Joins Buffett In Calling Crisis An Opportunity). Read More

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

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Sensex surges; RIL, Infosys, ICICI Bank gain
The NSE Nifty continued to hover around its psychological 5600 mark. All sectoral indices were trading in green. The BSE FMCG index has outperformed other sectoral indices, rising over 2%. Metals, power, IT and banking stocks too have surged.

The BSE broader indices - midcap and smallcap were up by nearly 1% each.

Ambareesh Baliga, COO, Way2Wealth says the pullback is due to short covering. “The current rally may not be sustainable."

He further says because of futures and options expiry tomorrow the Nifty may go towards 5,600-5,650. But he doesn’t see the index moving beyond 5,600-5,650. There will a dip in the market and people should use that dip to buy. He reiterates his prediction of a bull run post August-September."

At 12.54 hrs IST, the Sensex was up 288.78 points or 1.57% at 18701.19, and the Nifty was up 54.30 points or 0.98% at 5599.60.

About 1735 shares advanced, 939 shares declined, and 982 shares remained unchanged.

Top gainers on the Sensex were Reliance Infra at Rs 535.15 up 2.22%, Tata Motors at Rs 1,004.10 up 2.12%, BHEL at Rs 2,044.15 up 2.08%, Sterlite Ind at Rs 165.80 up 2% and ITC at Rs 197.70 up 1.99%.

FMCG major Hindustan Lever was trading at Rs 329.20 up 1.79% from its previous close of Rs 323.40.

Index heavyweight Reliance was trading at Rs 877.50 up 0.8% from its previous close of Rs 870.55.

Tech major Infosys was trading at Rs 2,885.50 up 0.76% from its previous close of Rs 2,863.85.

Cigarette major ITC was trading at Rs 197.70 up 1.99% from its previous close of Rs 193.85.

Top losers on the Sensex were ONGC at Rs 280.95 down 1.25%, Jaiprakash Asso at Rs 77.90 down 1.2%, Bajaj Auto at Rs 1,410 down 0.76%, DLF at Rs 209.60 down 0.26% and L&T at Rs 1,798.65 down 0.06%.

Refinery major HPCL was trading at Rs 402.75 down 1.24% from its previous close of Rs 407.80.

Most active shares on BSE were Financial Tech, Orissa Minerals, GTL, Tata Coffee and SBI.

Top percentage gainers on the BSE : Excel Infoways, Bhoruka Alum, KS Oils, Orissa Minerals and Kinetic Eng were up 12-20%. Read More

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Sensex surges; RIL, Infosys, ICICI Bank gain
The NSE Nifty continued to hover around its psychological 5600 mark. All sectoral indices were trading in green. The BSE FMCG index has outperformed other sectoral indices, rising over 2%. Metals, power, IT and banking stocks too have surged.

The BSE broader indices - midcap and smallcap were up by nearly 1% each.

Ambareesh Baliga, COO, Way2Wealth says the pullback is due to short covering. “The current rally may not be sustainable."

He further says because of futures and options expiry tomorrow the Nifty may go towards 5,600-5,650. But he doesn’t see the index moving beyond 5,600-5,650. There will a dip in the market and people should use that dip to buy. He reiterates his prediction of a bull run post August-September."

At 12.54 hrs IST, the Sensex was up 288.78 points or 1.57% at 18701.19, and the Nifty was up 54.30 points or 0.98% at 5599.60.

About 1735 shares advanced, 939 shares declined, and 982 shares remained unchanged.

Top gainers on the Sensex were Reliance Infra at Rs 535.15 up 2.22%, Tata Motors at Rs 1,004.10 up 2.12%, BHEL at Rs 2,044.15 up 2.08%, Sterlite Ind at Rs 165.80 up 2% and ITC at Rs 197.70 up 1.99%.

FMCG major Hindustan Lever was trading at Rs 329.20 up 1.79% from its previous close of Rs 323.40.

Index heavyweight Reliance was trading at Rs 877.50 up 0.8% from its previous close of Rs 870.55.

Tech major Infosys was trading at Rs 2,885.50 up 0.76% from its previous close of Rs 2,863.85.

Cigarette major ITC was trading at Rs 197.70 up 1.99% from its previous close of Rs 193.85.

Top losers on the Sensex were ONGC at Rs 280.95 down 1.25%, Jaiprakash Asso at Rs 77.90 down 1.2%, Bajaj Auto at Rs 1,410 down 0.76%, DLF at Rs 209.60 down 0.26% and L&T at Rs 1,798.65 down 0.06%.

Refinery major HPCL was trading at Rs 402.75 down 1.24% from its previous close of Rs 407.80.

Most active shares on BSE were Financial Tech, Orissa Minerals, GTL, Tata Coffee and SBI.

Top percentage gainers on the BSE : Excel Infoways, Bhoruka Alum, KS Oils, Orissa Minerals and Kinetic Eng were up 12-20%. Read More